Explore the rich history and vibrant culture of the Salkehatchie region. The five-county region abounds with opportunities. Put on your walking shoes and experience all that Salkehatchie has to offer.
Experience the eerie exhilaration of stepping onto the Confederate Army's last battlefield at Broxton Bridge, where they defended the area against the Union Army on February 1, 1865, just before the battle at Columbia.
If the battleground and earthworks are not for you, than choose among 58 miles of trials, including a pristine 10-acre lake.
The significance of the site centers on the battlefield where, on February 2 and 3, 1865, a small force of Confederate soldiers constructed earthworks to slow the advance of General Sherman's army.
It was spared from the torch of General Sherman's soldiers in February of 1865.
A black granite memorial to Americans killed in the Vietnam War is located on the property.
This small town has several stores for your shopping pleasures.
You can choose from an old time five and dime store, a collectibles store, an antique store in a building with a history all its own, an art gallery or a hardware store that sells everything from lumber to fine china.
This old train depot houses a visitors information center and an Amtrak station.
The architectural styles of some of the larger buildings include Georgian Revival, Second Empire, Neoclassical and Gothic Revival.
The 1830's South Carolina Canal and Railroad bed that carried the first steam engine, the Best Friend, runs through the middle of this National Historic District.
This mural, located on the side of the Bamberg Post Office, was painted by Dorothea Mierisch in 1939 as a New Deal Art Program, one of sixteen in South Carolina.
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