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The South Carolina Historical Marker Program, originally the
South Carolina Highway Historical Marker Program, was authorized
by an act of the South Carolina General Assembly in 1905 creating
the Historical Commission of South Carolina with authority "to
have direction and control of the marking of historic sites, or
houses, or localities." The program was officially established in
1936 when a marker was erected near the site of the Long Cane
Massacre near Troy, in McCormick County. More than 1000 markers
have been erected by the program since that time. Since
1954 the South Carolina Department of Archives and History, as
the successor state agency to the Historical Commission of South
Carolina, has been responsible for the program as part of the
Historical Services Division. The enabling legislation creating
the Department of Archives and History gave it the responsibility
for "the approval of the inscriptions for all historical markers
or other monuments erected on state highways or other state
property."
South Carolina Historical Markers mark and interpret places
important to an understanding of South Carolina's past, either as
the sites of significant events, or at historic properties such
as buildings, sites, structures, or other resources significant
for their design, as examples of a type, or for their association
with institutions or individuals significant in local, state, or
national history. Historic properties
individually
listed in the National Register of Historic Places are ordinarily
eligible for historical markers, as their status guarantees that
a case has already been made for their significance. Many other
places, however, either not eligible for listing in the National
Register or not yet nominated through that program, are also
eligible for historical markers. National or statewide
significance is not a prerequisite, and many properties of
primarily local significance have already been marked.
In the past, markers were placed along the nearest South
Carolina state highway and contained references to the location
of the place being marked, usually some distance away. More
recently, markers have been erected at the historic site itself
without restriction to state highways and on other public streets
and county roads.
Without state funding, the Historical Marker program has
always depended on the citizens of South Carolina to suggest,
document, sponsor and pay for its historical markers, and to
maintain them once erected. Markers may be sponsored by
historical, patriotic, civic, or other organizations, or by
institutions such as church congregations or schools and
colleges. Though individuals may not sponsor markers, they may
propose and pay for them provided the marker is sponsored by an
appropriate local organization or institution.
- South Carolina Historical Markers are
intended to mark historic places and are not primarily
memorials to individuals or institutions associated with
those places.
- Historic properties less than twenty-five
years old, associated with events that occurred less than
twenty-five years ago, or significant for their association
with significant persons who died less than twenty-five
years ago will not ordinarily be eligible for historical
markers. Any exceptions will only be made on a case-by-case
basis after review by the Archives and History
Commission.
- The sites of significant buildings no longer
standing may be eligible for historical markers under the
same criteria as other historic properties.
- Historic properties or sites closely
associated with significant persons may be marked
primarily for that association only if:
- the property is the property or site in the state
which best
represents the individual's community
of birth or residence, productive career,
association with a particular institution, or
association with a significant event, AND
- no other site in South Carolina closely associated
with the individual and marked primarily for that
association has already been marked.
- Sites of significant events should be
marked, when possible, on the nearest public street, county
road, or state highway.
- Counties, cities, or towns may erect markers
based on their establishment or date of incorporation.
- Cemeteries may be eligible for a single
marker based on their significance to a particular
community, significant persons buried there, their
association with significant events, or their significance
in gravestone art, but individual gravestones, gravesites,
or plots within cemeteries will not be eligible for
historical markers.
- Individual components of a historic property
already marked as an entity will not be eligible for
historical markers.
- South Carolina Historical Markers are made
of cast aluminum. The earliest markers, cast from 1936 to
1954, have a circular device at the top center bearing a
palmetto tree and "S C". They are gray with raised gray
letters or silver with raised black letters. Markers cast
since 1954 have a triangular device at the top center
bearing the state flag; those cast from 1954 to 1990 are
dark blue with raised silver letters, and those cast since
1990 are silver with raised black letters.
- City Size Markers, erected in incorporated
cities and towns, measure 24" x 36", with one title line
(1.5" letters, 17 characters per line) and 18 lines of text
(1" letters, 27 characters per line). These markers are
available with either a standard 7' post or a 10' post if
required by local governments.
- Country Size Markers, erected at all other
sites, measure 42" x 32", with one title line (2" letters,
25 characters per line) and 11 lines of text (1.5" letters,
36 characters per line). These markers are available with a
standard 7' post.
- Prices effective 1 July 2006:
- City Size:
- same text both sides
...... $1475.00
- different text each side
.... $1625.00
- Country Size:
- same text both sides
....... $1575.00
- different text each side .... $1725.00
- DO NOT SEND CHECKS TO THE SOUTH CAROLINA
DEPARTMENT OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY. When the final
marker text is approved by the director, the applicant will
send payment to:
Sewah Studios
P.O. Box 298
Marietta, Ohio 45750
(888) 557-3924
The coordinator of the South Carolina Historical Marker
Program will advise applicants on the procedures for
ordering historical markers once the final text is approved.
It usually takes Sewah Studios, the foundry which casts
historical markers for South Carolina and many other states,
six to twelve weeks to cast and ship a particular marker
once payment is received.
LOCATION OF MARKERS
Markers are usually placed in the right-of-way of state
highways or public roads. The precise location of the
marker must be approved by the South Carolina Department of
Transportation in the case of markers erected on state
highways and the chief elected official of a particular
county, city or town in the case of markers erected on
county or other public roads; when markers are erected on
private property the property owner must approve their
location. Permissions should be obtained early in the
approval process. The Department of Transportation will
often erect or assist in erecting markers, and applicants
should contact:
Assistant Director of Maintenance
South Carolina Department of Transportation
P.O. Drawer 191
Columbia, SC 29202
- Markers may either have the same text on
both sides or different text on each side, depending upon
the significance of the property being marked and the space
required to properly interpret its history. Most markers
for properties of national or statewide significance will
require two sides of text, and while most markers for
properties of primarily local significance will have the
same text on both sides, those properties may also require
two sides of text. Sponsors may wish to prepare draft texts
for both types before making that decision.
- Applicants will submit a draft text for the
proposed marker, which will be reviewed and revised as
necessary by the coordinator of the South Carolina
Historical Marker Program for content, style, and space.
This second draft text will be sent back to the applicants
for their review and approval, and then revised as
necessary. The final marker text will then be approved by
the director of the South Carolina Department of Archives
and History, and copies will be sent to the applicant, the
Department of Transportation, and Sewah Studios. The
approval process generally takes from one to three months;
marker applications are approved in the order in which they
are received.
- Draft marker texts should be accompanied by
documentation of the history and significance of the
property being proposed for a historical marker. Footnotes
or endnotes are not required, but copies of relevant
portions of major primary and secondary sources used
(including family papers; county and state government
records; church, school, or cemetery records; newspaper,
magazine, or journal articles; and county, city, or town
histories, church histories, biographical sketches, or other
pertinent sources) should be included.
MARKER DEDICATION CEREMONIES
Many historical markers, though not all of them, are
dedicated or unveiled with ceremonies that range from the
simple to the elaborate. The coordinator of the South
Carolina Historical Marker Program can help you plan a
ceremony and representatives from the South Carolina
Department of Archives and History can usually attend.
MAINTENANCE AND REPLACEMENT
There are no state funds for maintenance or replacement of
historical markers; sponsoring organizations are responsible
for any maintenance necessary, most often no more than a
simple cleaning or repainting, or for replacing destroyed or
badly-damaged markers. Archives and History Information
Leaflet No. 1, "Cleaning, Repairing, and Repainting
Historical Markers," contains more detailed information on
the maintenance of markers.
APPLICATIONS AND FURTHER INFORMATION
J. Tracy Power
Coordinator, South Carolina Historical Marker Program
South Carolina Department of Archives and History
8301 Parklane Road
Columbia, SC 29223
(803) 896-6182
Fax: (803) 896-6167
Email: power@scdah.state.sc.us
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