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The lyrics of the song are based on a poem by Henry Timrod.This poem was edited by G.R. Goodwin and was set to music by Anne Curtis Burgess. [1] On February 11, 1911, acting on a recommendation by the South Carolina Daughters of the American Revolution, the General Assembly of South Carolina adopted Senator W.L. Mauldin's Concurrent Resolution that "Carolina" "be accented and declared to be ...
South Carolina On My Mind" is a song written and recorded by South Carolinians Hank Martin and Buzz Arledge. It was adopted by South Carolina as a second state song [1] on March 8, 1984. It joined "Carolina," which has been a state song since 1911.
The Palmetto State Song" is a song, composed by George O. Robinson and published in 1860, that became the first of several major Confederate anthems of the American Civil War. [1] It was the first published Confederate sheet music. [2] Robinson dedicated the song to the signers of South Carolina's act of secession.
The latest Census data on migration between the states shows that in 2019, North Carolina had the most people at 33,940, to move to South Carolina in 2019. It was far more than the second-highest ...
Meanwhile, 17,933 households made the opposite move, for a net movement of 3,252 from North to South Carolina—the second-highest studywide. Only one state is siphoning households away from South ...
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Other songs were written and sung, but Wauchope's song proved to be the most popular and it was adopted by the university in 1912. [1] In recent years, while singing the phrase "Here's a health, Carolina," fans have raised their right hand as though raising a cup to offer a toast. [2] The phrase "Here's a health" is an old term for a toast. [3]
Dietzel wrote the lyrics for the song, but asked that he remain anonymous because knowledge that the football coach wrote the lyrics might render it unacceptable to the basketball program. The song was officially introduced on 16 November 1968 prior to the football game against Virginia Tech and has been USC's fight song since the fall of 1969. [1]