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Historic Anderson County Courthouse, circa 1898, 101 S. Main St., Courthouse Square/Plaza; Robert Anderson Fountain, 202 E. Greenville St. (Anderson County Museum, formerly located in the Courthouse Square/Plaza) Anderson City Hall/Police Department, 401 S. Main St. First Federal Post Office Building circa 1909, 401 N. Main St.
Faith Cabin Library at Anderson County Training School: November 14, 2012 : 145 Town St. Pendleton: Part of the Faith Cabin Libraries in South Carolina 1932-ca.1960 MPS 12: Robert J. and Lula Ginn House
The following 28 pages use this file: Anderson, South Carolina; Anderson County, South Carolina; Andersonville, South Carolina; Belton, South Carolina
Anderson Sports and Entertainment Center, 300-acre (120 ha) park, it includes the Anderson Civic Center, a 37,000-square-foot (3,400 m 2) facility, as well as one of South Carolina's largest amphitheaters that can accommodate 15,000 people, a huge castle-like play structure with play equipment, a 64-acre (26 ha) sports center with seven ...
Bounded by Hampton, Main, Franklin, McDuffie, Benson, and Fant Sts., Anderson, South Carolina Coordinates 34°30′00″N 82°38′52″W / 34.50000°N 82.64778°W / 34.50000; -82
Ashtabula is a plantation house at 2725 Old Greenville Highway near Pendleton in Anderson County, South Carolina, USA. It has been also known as the Gibbes-Broyles-Latta-Pelzer House or some combination of one or more of these names. [2] It was named in the National Register of Historic Places as a historic district on March 23, 1972.
Anderson County is included in the Greenville-Anderson-Greer, SC Metropolitan Statistical Area. [4] Anderson County contains 55,950-acre (22,640 ha) Lake Hartwell, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lake with nearly 1,000 miles (1,600 km) of shoreline for residential and recreational use. The area is a growing industrial, commercial and tourist center.
The Dr. Samuel Marshall Orr House, is an historic house located in Anderson, South Carolina. [2] [3]Built in 1885, the two-story Greek Revival style house features a front façade of four columns that support a broad, plain entablature with low-sloped, boxed cornice pediment.