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A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day....01-09-04....South Carolina ~ "Smiling Faces, Beautiful Places"
visualops, dixie sass | Mama_Bear

Posted on 01/09/2004 12:37:34 AM PST by Mama_Bear



A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day
Free Republic made its debut in September, 1996, and the forum was added in early 1997.   Over 100,000 people have registered for posting privileges on Free Republic, and the forum is read daily by tens of thousands of concerned citizens and patriots from all around the country and the world.
A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day was introduced on June 24, 2002. It's only a small room in JimRob's house where we can get to know one another a little better; salute and support our military and our leaders; pray for those in need; and congratulate those deserving. We strive to keep our threads entertaining, fun, and pleasing to look at, and often have guest writers contribute an essay, or a profile of another FReeper.
On Mondays please visit us to see photos of A FEW OF FR'S VETERANS AND ACTIVE MILITARY
If you have a suggestion, or an idea, or if there's a FReeper you would like to see featured, please drop one of us a note in FR mail.
We're having fun and hope you are!

~ Billie, Mama_Bear, dansangel, dutchess, Aquamarine, deadhead ~






Today we have a special treat. Visualops and dixie sass are presenting their beautiful state of South Carolina. And what a great job this team has done! Dixie sass contributed the research and the text; visualops the photos, the tribute to South Carolina's fallen heroes, and the over-all design. I had the easy part, I simply added a border and posted it this morning.

I think, after you have toured our featured state with our Fine FR ambassadors and tour guides, you will agree with me.....there is something very special about South Carolina.

A Finest salute to visualops and dixie sass for this excellent introduction to South Carolina, and to all 201 FReepers who hail from this beautiful state.






South Carolina - doesn't it just sing when you say it? South Carolina - smiling faces and beautiful places! How true - from the foothills of the Smoky Mountains to the Atlantic Coast.

How do I begin to tell you about our beautiful state, one of the original 13 colonies? Well, lets see...

SC Revolutionary Flag

SC State Flag




I know, our State Flag and State Pledge: "I salute the flag of South Carolina and pledge to the Palmetto State love, loyalty and faith."

The history of the flag goes back to 1765 - pre-revolutionary days. If you were around in 1765, you might have seen a flag with three white crescents on a blue background carried by the SC protestors of the Stamp Act. When Colonel Moultrie was asked to design the flag he chose two components from the uniforms of the militia - the blue and silver crescent the soldiers wore on their caps. At the time of Civil War a new banner was created to fly over the newly created nation. Only one change was made and that was to add the Palmetto Tree which was instrumental in the defense of Sullivan Island by Colonel Moultrie against the British warships in 1776. The Cannonballs that were fired from these ships couldn't destroy the walls the fort which were built of the Palmetto logs. The cannonballs sank in the soft, tough wood of the Palmetto. The South Carolina flag with that one addition has flown over this state since 1765.
Our state Flower is the Night Blooming Jessamine
Our state Dog is the Boykin Spaniel
Our state Bird is the Carolina Wren
Our state Tree is the Palmetto


Our state Dance is the Shag .
Our state songs are "Carolina" and "South Carolina on My Mind".
Our state Tartan (yes, we have one because of the many Highland Scots
and Ulster Scots that settled here) , isn't it pretty? This is the Carolina Tartan!




And of course, being the good wholesome folk that we are our state beverage is MILK!!!


We have three major rivers, Savannah, Edisto and the Santee. We also have two rivers, the Ashley and Cooper, that come together in Charleston Harbor to create the Atlantic Ocean!

South Carolina has four major lakes, Hartwell, Marion, Moultrie and Murray. The highest point in the state is Sassafras Mountain - 3,560 feet (1,085 m) above sea level.

Although North Carolinians try to claim him, we know that Andrew Jackson, the 7th President of the United States, was born in Waxhaw, South Carolina on March 15th, 1767.



South Carolina has many "firsts". Here are just a few, both good and bad:


First European Settlement - 1526 - San Miguel de Gualdape thought to be close to present day Georgetown. The settlement failed due to famine, disease and unrest among the black and Indian populations. Only 150 of the original 600 settlers returned to Santo Domingo.
First slave revolt - November of 1526.
First American built ship to cross the Atlantic - 1563 - French Huguenot settlers built a makeshift vessel and sailed from Port Royal for France after being left behind in Charlesfort by their leader. (We would eventually see a large influx of French Huguenots into the Charleston area)
First public library-1700
First professional female artist -1707
First Opera performed - 1735 - Colley Cibber's ballad opera Flora, or Hob in the Well.
First Fire Insurance Company - 1736
First building constructed solely for use as a theater - 1736
First systematic, scientific recording of weather information - 1737
First major slave insurrection - 1739
First musical society - 1762
First cotton exported to England - 1764
First public museum (still in operation) - 1773
First black Baptist Church - 1773
Oldest municipal Chamber of Commerce in continuous operation - 1773
First business publication - 1774
First independent government in the colonies - 1776 - Four months before the Declaration of Independence was signed, South Carolina adopted a state constitution - drafted by a Provincial Congress and elected John Rutledge as the states president and Henry Laurens as the vice-president, titles which were later changed to Governor and Lieutenant Governor by the Constitution of 1779
First major Naval battle of the Revolutionary War - 1776
First treaty between two US states - 1777
First eminent architect born in America - 1781
First golf club - 1786
First cotton mill - 1789
First ice transported commercially - 1799
First tea planted - 1802 (and is still grown in the low country)
First fireproof building - 1823
First Reform Jewish Congregation - 1824
First regularly scheduled rail passenger service - 1830
First municipal college - 1836
First trial in a worker's compensation lawsuit - 1838
First building to be used solely as a college library - 1840
First American Opera written was by George Gershwin and it was set in Charleston on Catfish Row - 1934. It was based on a book by Dubose Heyward.
Read more about it HERE.




South Carolina has every sport imaginable for you sports fans, from professional and college football and basketball, to semi-pro teams of all kinds, hockey, soccer, baseball, Polo and horse racing, etc. The winningest high school football coach in history with over 500 hundred wins in his career at the helm of the mighty Green Wave of Summerville High School: John McKissick.

We have the finest Military College in the south - the Citadel - the first to admit women, albeit under a cloud. A top medical college in the Medical University of South Carolina. We have the University of South Carolina, Vorhees College, Teachers College, Presbyterian College, Newberry College, College of Charleston, you want to learn it, there is a school to teach you.

Our men are handsome and gentlemen and our women are beautiful and ladies.

We have everything from ocean to mountains, a old capital city, Charleston, with it's wealth of history to the new capital city, Columbia, with it midlands beauty to the Spartanburg-Greenville area with it's foot in modern commerce, to Aiken situated in the beautiful horse country.

Angel Oak(on John's Island) is perhaps the oldest live oak at 1400 years plus, and the canopy of Angel Oak produces 17,000 square feet of shade!

Golden Creek Mill in Easley

Downtown Greenville with the flag that's been there since 9-11



In Charleston we live and die by the bells of St. Michaels which presides over the "Four Corners of Law" - ecclesiastical, federal, state and county/city.

We have S.O.B's in Charleston - oh wait, it's not what you think! It means someone who lives "South of Broad".

Rainbow Row, Charleston, South of Broad St.

 We have the international arts festival
Spoleto, with everything from children's theatre to jazz.

We have the Hunley!



We have several distinct areas - the Low Country, the Midlands,
the PeeDee, the Sand Hills and the rest of the state.

Beaufort

Campbell's Covered Bridge

Columbia, the state capital



Actually, everything is the "Up-Country or the Low Country".
Beautiful swamps, marshes and forests. Beautiful weather.

Cypress Gardens

Shem Creek shrimp boats

Golf at Hilton Head Island

We have suffered through hurricanes, tornadoes and the great earthquake of 1886. The earthquake almost accomplished what Sherman couldn't. We came back twice as strong and twice as determined to move forward and make our state great.

We have representatives from all services here, Air Force, Marine, Navy and Coast Guard. We are proud of our training facilities at Fort Jackson and Parris Island.

We have given more of our men and women to protecting this country than any other state. We have fought in every war since the beginning.




South Carolina continues to give her sons and daughters
to the service of their country in Operation Iraqi Freedom. God
rest the souls and comfort the families of these brave men
and women who have given their lives for the cause of freedom.


Capt. Kimberly Hampton, 27
Easley, SC

82nd Airborne Division

Staff Sgt. Patrick Lee Griffin, Jr., 31
Elgin, SC

728th Air Control Squadron

Spc. Rian C. Ferguson, 22
Taylors, SC

Regimental Support Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment

Capt. Josh Byers, 29
Anderson, SC 

Army ranger and paratrooper was a company commander in the 3rd Cavalry Regiment

Sgt. George Edward Buggs, 31
Barnwell, SC

3rd Forward Support Battalion, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, GA

Pfc. Michael Scott Adams, 20
Spartanburg, SC

Loader on an M1A1 Abrams tank assigned to 1st Battalion, 35th Armor Regiment, 1st Armor Division

Pvt. Algernon Adams, 26
Aiken, SC

122nd Engineer Battalion, Army National Guard

Pvt. Nolen R. Hutchings, 19
Boiling Springs, SC

1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, Camp Lejeune, NC

Spc. Darius T. Jennings, 22
Cordova, SC

2nd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment

Pfc. Vorn J. Mack, 19
Orangeburg, SC

3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment

Staff Sgt. Paul M. Neff II, 30
Fort Mill, SC

5th Battalion, 101st Aviation Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault)

Spc. Orenthial J. Smith, 21
Allendale, SC

Company A, 123rd Main Support Battalion

Sgt. Anthony O. Thompson, 26
Branchville, SC

Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 4th Battalion, 42nd Field Artillery

Lance Cpl. Joshua Daniel Speer, 20
Slater-Marietta, SC

Marine Corps (Killed in a car wreck one week after returning home from Iraq)



If you look at South Carolina you will see a History of America. From the first Indian Agent in the 1500's to the late great Senator Thurmond. If you look anywhere in history you will find a South Carolinian, from Fort Moultrie to the Alamo - Col Travers who was from the sea islands of South Carolina.


Andrew Jackson's vice president was another South Carolinian, John C. Calhoun. Strom Thurmond like John C. Calhoun was an American statesman and political philosopher. Calhoun served until his death in these offices - congressman, secretary of war, Vice President, senator, secretary of state and again as senator. Calhoun resigned as Vice President to serve in the senate again because of the nullification problem that was facing the country and the conflict over slavery. Thurmond, like Calhoun was loyal to his Nation, to his state and above all to his principles. Thurmond like Calhoun served at a troubled time in our history.
 

Robert Smalls, a slave whose knowledge of Low Country waters aided the Union forces, eventually served five terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, after serving 5 terms in state government.

I have included here snipped excerpts from an essay of his from North American Review (1890). I'm sure FReepers will get a sense of deja vu!

"In South Carolina there is neither a free ballot nor an honest count, and since the election in 1874 the history of elections in the State is the history of a continued series of murders, outrages, perjury and fraud... 

...Having perfect immunity from punishment, the encouragement, if not the active participation, of the State government, and the protection of the courts of the State, the rifle clubs committed their outrages without restraint, and the election officers their frauds without even the thin veneer of attempted concealment. Elections since then have been carried by perjury and fraud – two things worshipped and adored by the South Carolina Democracy... 

...Many apologists for the rule of the minority in South Carolina assert that the negro votes the Democratic ticket, and that to form a majority from the census giving the entire vote to the Republican party is erroneous. There are colored men who vote the Democratic ticket, and I suppose that there are Irishmen in Ireland who act with the Tories of England...  

....All persons desiring to vote the Democratic ticket are registered without personal application, and certificates are furnished them either before or on the day of election without even the formality of an oath as to eligibility. Registration the fountain-source of election, curtails Republican suffrage by the expense and inconvenience it entails upon persons not living at the county-seat, by refusal through willful neglect to register Republicans, and by fraud of the supervisor in making false entries; it adds to the Democratic vote through his fraud in unlawfully adding to the names on the registration-books those of all persons who are expected to vote the Democratic ticket....  

....At a neighboring poll another scene is enacted. The polls are open, the boxes shown, the voters deposit their ballots, there is general levity, and everything appears to be fair. There are three hundred Republican voters; the Democracy have secured forty or fifty votes, and the polls close. The votes are counted; there are two or three hundred more ballots than names on the poll-list; instead of fifty Democratic ballots there are three hundred and fifty..."

You guessed it, Robert Smalls was a Republican!

More images of South Carolina...

Governor's Mansion

The famous Gaffney "Peachoid" We call it the "Big Butt"!

Hard Rock Cafe, Myrtle Beach



See the Yorktown, the submarine Clamagore, the destroyer Laffey, Coast Guard cutter Ingham and the Medal of Honor museum. Vintage military aircraft are on display at Patriot's Point as well as weapons and living and working areas of ships.



Oh yes, one more thing...we also have LadyX!

 

WE HOPE YOU ALL ENJOYED THIS LITTLE TOUR OF SOUTH CAROLINA!!


 



THIS WEEK'S THREADS

01-05-04...Military Monday

01-06-04...And the Good News Is...

01-07-04...Our Whitehouse Pets...
the exclusive interview...

01-08-04...John's Two Cents...
By JohnHuang2
Opinions by our own 'King of Ping'
The guy's good, folks!
Thanks, Mixer!

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TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: finest; freepers; friends; fun; military; southcarolina; surprises; veterans
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To: JohnHuang2
Thank you John, now that I'm awake, well fed and FRank has left for parts north, I can go back and read yesterday's thread that you, our illustrious political columnist wrote!
61 posted on 01/09/2004 7:08:49 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: Mama_Bear
As a Citadel man it makes me just want to head on down to Folly Beach, kick back with some beach music and sip on a gallon jug of PJ.

Thank you "Sweet Carolina Girls" from someone who would "Rather Be In Carolina" "Cause I've Still Got Some Sand In My Shoes."

62 posted on 01/09/2004 7:09:19 AM PST by N. Theknow (Be a glowworm, a glowworm's never glum, cuz how can you be grumpy when the sun shines out your bum.)
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To: Pippin
And aren't Democrats about to join the Dodos in extinction?

Dare we to hope such a thing? Yesterday I discovered a new word that I think is quite applicable, at least to Dean if not all the Dims, it is Sabellian. It refers to a group of extinct Italic languages that includes Sabine. Also refers to a speaker of one of these languages. Dean's rhetoric is so far removed from the true America he may as well be speaking Sabine. I think the polls are beginning to bear this out. Holler a little louder Howie, we're losing something in the translation. ;)

63 posted on 01/09/2004 7:09:24 AM PST by Donaeus (Behind every great man is a great woman. Behind every brutal tyrant there's a colossal coward.)
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To: deadhead
Inaugral Ball?!?!?! I have nothing to wear!!! LOL
64 posted on 01/09/2004 7:11:18 AM PST by Donaeus (Behind every great man is a great woman. Behind every brutal tyrant there's a colossal coward.)
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To: Pippin
You've got some solid South in there then. Heheheh :)
65 posted on 01/09/2004 7:18:19 AM PST by Donaeus (Behind every great man is a great woman. Behind every brutal tyrant there's a colossal coward.)
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To: The Mayor
Hi, Rus!

It's amazing how fast kids pick up a new language!
I played with the Mexican kids, and I could speak Spanish as well as they did by the time I was eight.
The kids who came with their parents to pull cotton stayed about three months, and by the time they left they could speak English better than most immigrant workers today who have been here for years.

One thing that has been bandied about on the forum is the immigrant workers taking work away from Americans.
It's been said many times that if the pay scale were high enough Americans would do any work.
I'm sure that's true. If someone would pay me $50. an hour to collect garbage, I'd change occupations.
The fact is that it would be a short term employment.
When homeowners had to pay $400. a month for garbage collection, they'd start hauling their own.

On the cotton farm, of which my dad was foreman, there was no way to find the number of workers needed to chop the cotton and pull the cotton.
Working in the fields was hard work for very little pay because farming cotton was not real profitable.
I'm sure it's the same on any farming project.

The demand for higher wages for these menial jobs smacks of unionization and socialism to me.
If temporary immigrant workers can do these jobs and keep the cost of the final product down, it benefits everyone.

I speak from a unique position of coming from a migrant worker family.
For most of my younger life we were chasing crops in Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and California.
I know what kind of life these people live - it's tough.
I understand GW's compassion.
I think he's got a good plan for starters.
I hope the implementation is as good as the plan.

66 posted on 01/09/2004 7:19:15 AM PST by TexasCowboy (COB1)
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To: JohnHuang2
Why thank you sir!
67 posted on 01/09/2004 7:22:38 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: Donaeus
HEE! HEE! HEE! ;O)
68 posted on 01/09/2004 7:25:03 AM PST by Pippin (Bush still has MY vote!)
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To: Aeronaut
Morning Flyboy! Drop into the Charleston Airport and look across the field and see some of the prettiest Air Force Planes around and the biggest! I think they are called C17's, One just got back from Iran carring rescue personnel. The pilot said that they started operating (the docs) as soon as they hit the ground!

They have carried a lot of our equipment and troops to Iraq and Afghanistan also.
69 posted on 01/09/2004 7:25:51 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: Kudsman
YEP! :O)
70 posted on 01/09/2004 7:26:00 AM PST by Pippin (Bush still has MY vote!)
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To: MeeknMing
I love it! But don't you think he looks a little like Dean, with the body shape of Ted Kennedy?
71 posted on 01/09/2004 7:27:02 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: TexasCowboy
(((COBBY)))!

Hope you're still "talking to me"

72 posted on 01/09/2004 7:27:55 AM PST by Pippin (Bush still has MY vote!)
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To: visualops
You did a beautiful job with the photos! Mama Bear's lay out on top of the Tartan is gorgeous!
73 posted on 01/09/2004 7:28:23 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: GailA
Anymore coffee? Sure could use one!
74 posted on 01/09/2004 7:29:11 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: The Mayor
Amen and thank you for that one, Yer Honor.
75 posted on 01/09/2004 7:30:36 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: nicmarlo
Snow is pretty but I'm glad that it's not here!
76 posted on 01/09/2004 7:31:18 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: TexasCowboy
I lived in Arizona for 8 years, I know the effect of illegals and what they do to the labor market.

I worked on framing many apartment complexes, we were all paid piece work. I use to have to work 7 days a week and got paid 390.00 a week that was before taxes. I/we could not live on that kind of money. You were told that if you don't want to do the job for that $$ there was plenty of illegals that would. If we wanted to eat we had no choice.
All ya had to do was to look and soon there was a van full of illegals unloading and starting work. The General Contractor wanted to do the job as cheap as they could, and they did. The only one that made out was the Gen Contractor and the mexicans. The mexicans went home and lived very well off our money in their poor country.
77 posted on 01/09/2004 7:32:45 AM PST by The Mayor (The more you look forward to heaven, the less you'll desire of earth.)
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To: Mama_Bear
Good Morning, Mama_Bear. It's another cold day here in North Texas but reading this post warms the heart. Thanks to all for the beautiful graphics and you all have a good weekend.
78 posted on 01/09/2004 7:33:23 AM PST by Texagirl4W (You should not confuse your career with your life.)
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To: Temple Owl
My Aunt Margaret was a nurse at Fort Jackson and met my Uncle Bill there. I can remember, when I was little, sitting on the side porch and watching for her bus to come us Forest Drive and let her out, then running to meet her when I would stay at Grandmomma and Granddaddy's house.

Granddaddy use to play golf at Fort Jackson. In fact, somewhere I have a picture of him there playing in the snow!
79 posted on 01/09/2004 7:36:20 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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To: Pippin; All
PIPS!!!!!!!!!! You don't have a thing to apologize for! Your opinion is respected here by those of us who know you and care about you!

If you have something to say and need to get it off your chest, then do so - I'm not offended. Goodness girl, we all feel strongly about various things and know that among friends we can spout off, so don't you worry.

Hugs!!!
80 posted on 01/09/2004 7:39:46 AM PST by dixie sass (Meow, pfft, pfft, pfft - (hmmmm, claws needed sharpening))
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