South Carolina National Heritage Corridor
United States National Heritage Area in South Carolina
The South Carolina National Heritage Corridor is a federally designated National Heritage Area extending from the Appalachian Mountains to Charleston through seventeen counties of South Carolina. The heritage corridor promotes and interprets the state's history, with emphasis on European settlement, agriculture, Black history, trade routes and the state's ports. Sites associated with the American Revolution and the American Civil War are also included.[1]
The South Carolina National Heritage Corridor was established in 1996.[2]
References
External links
- South Carolina National Heritage Corridor official website
- v
- t
- e
National Heritage Areas of the United States
- Abraham Lincoln
- Alabama Black Belt
- Arabia Mountain
- Atchafalaya
- Augusta Canal
- Aviation Heritage
- Baltimore
- Blackstone River
- Bronzeville – Black Metropolis
- Cache La Poudre Corridor
- Cane River
- Champlain Valley
- Coal Heritage
- Crossroads of the American Revolution
- Delaware and Lehigh
- Downeast Maine
- Erie Canalway
- Essex
- Freedom's Frontier
- Freedom's Way
- Great Basin
- Gullah/Geechee
- Hudson River Valley
- llinois & Michigan Canal
- Journey Through Hallowed Ground
- Kenai Mountains - Turnagain Arm
- Lackawanna Heritage Valley
- Maritime Washington
- Mississippi Delta
- Mississippi Gulf Coast
- Mississippi Hills
- Mormon Pioneer
- MotorCities
- Mountains to Sound
- Muscle Shoals
- Niagara Falls
- Northern Neck
- Northern Plains
- Northern Rio Grande
- Ohio & Erie Canalway
- Oil Region
- Path of Progress
- Quinebaug and Shetucket Rivers Valley
- Rivers of Steel
- Sangre de Cristo
- Santa Cruz Valley
- Schuylkill River
- Shenandoah Valley Battlefields
- Silos & Smokestacks
- South Carolina
- South Park
- Southern Campaign of the Revolution
- Southern Maryland
- St. Croix
- Susquehanna
- Tennessee Civil War
- Upper Housatonic Valley
- Wheeling
- Yuma Crossing