Johnsonville SC History

Browse Items (78 total)

  • A Rural Industry - Blackwell's Mill - SC Electric Co-Op News - 1950s.pdf
  • 36279166_10102628691069034_5412406310543032320_n.jpg

    Article describes the land sale that led to the founding of Johnsonville
  • Land Sale 1912 - Georgetown Daily Item.pdf

    The Daily Item from Georgetown reports on the Johnsonville land sale of 1912
  • Bigham Murders 1.pdf

    Several news articles recounting the Bigham Murders on Old River Road.
  • Photo Jul 17, 8 52 55 PM.jpg

    New street signs are installed throughout Johnsonville, starting at Broadway Street and Georgetown Highway. Photo taken on June 16, 1977.
  • Bubba and Lillian Hanna McCleod.pdf
  • Busy Johnsonville to Have Newspaper - The State - 1915.pdf

    Discusses the creation of the Johnsonville Progress, a newspaper that ran until at least 1917. No issues of the progress have been found so far. If you know of one please contact the site administrator.
  • Cablevison May Come To Johnsonville.pdf

    Article details the first easements for cable television to be provided to the Johnsonville and Hemingway areas. 1 December 1977
  • Cooperative Attitudes Aid Johnsonville's Big Growth - 1956.pdf

    Story of Johnsonville's recent growth due to Wellman, plus article about new church, Westside Free Will Baptist
  • Cooperative Attitudes Aid Johnsonville's Big Growth - 1956.pdf
  • Photo Jul 17, 8 40 24 PM.jpg

    New council members and Mayor Connie DeCamps swarn into office. 17 June 1976
  • Country Club Enters Final Construction Stage, Times of Three Towns, 3-13-1969.pdf

    From the short lived Times of Three Towns newspaper - article discusses the completion of the Wellman Club.
  • county record 6-2-1910 discourses on comets.pdf

    The Sage of Possum Fork, Henry Eaddy
  • Dubois Plant - Nov 27, 1963 Charleston News and Courier.jpg
  • Excited SC Town Awaits New Plant - Charlotte Observer 2 May 1956.pdf
  • Founding of Rival Towns Kept First Community From Growing - News and Courier - 1951.pdf

    Article discusses how Old Johnsonville and the Venters Community didn't grow as fast as Johnsonville and Hemingway.
  • From Troubled Farm Town to Thriving Community 1970_10_04 Florence Morning News.pdf

    Article describes Johnsonville's progress from 1912 to 1970
  • Photo Jul 17, 8 49 27 PM.jpg

    Johnsonville continues progress toward a South Carolina Great Town recognition. 14 April 1977
  • Photo Jul 17, 8 56 15 PM.jpg

    Groundbreaking for Dr. Charles Maxwell's new dentist office on Broadway. 4 August 1977
  • Housing Lags Behind Charleston_News_and_Courier_1956-10-28_35 (1).pdf
  • Hugh_Hanna_Obit_WinyahObserver_9_3_1842.jpg

    Hugh Hanna's obituary appeared in the Winyah Observer, Georgetown, SC
  • Hugo_track2.png
  • Indiantown Church, News and Courier, 29 Jul 1935.pdf
  • Indiantown Church News and Courier 29 Jul 1935.jpg
  • News-SO-FL_MO_NE-1967_10_01-0024.jpg

    Article about the progress in Johnsonville, including sewage projects, street widening, business, and the Fire Department.
  • Industry Impact Great for Small Towns.pdf
  • News-SO-FL_MO_NE-1967_10_01-0024.pdf
  • Bubba and Lillian Hanna McCleod.pdf
  • JMS History - 1996.pdf
  • Copy of Johnson Memorial Hospital--Charleston News and Courier 11-19-1939.pdf
  • Johnsonville Council Moves to Raze Building.pdf

    City works to removed run-down and condemned buildings. 26 August 1976
  • Johnsonville Elects Woman Mayor, Morning News Review, 9-27-1925.pdf
  • Johnsonville Flashes - Florence Morning News - 1973.pdf

    Flashes victory over the Bishopville Dragons.
  • Westside, Florence Morning News, 6-27-1956.pdf

    Westside Free Will Baptist Church
  • The Weekly Observer 1974

    Article from the Weekly Observer about Johnsonville moving to the new high school building for the 1974-75 school year.
  • Johnsonville is Hustling Little Town - Florence Morning News -1952_01_27.pdf

    Includes photos of Seaboard Air Train Depot, town officials, and J.H. Owens, freight and express operator.
  • Johnsonville Jottings WOW Monument, Fin School Opening, Nonogenarian - 1909-10-14.pdf
  • Johnsonville American Legion Dedication Ceremony 30 April 1950.jpg

    Johnsonville Legion Ceremony - When the new American Legion post home was dedicated Thursday night, Post Commander, Joe T. Huggins (second from left) as host of the occasion was surrounded by high officials of the Legion in the state. Seated, left to right are Jess Bullard, of Columbia, state asjutant, Commander Huggins, Mrs. Huggins; O. B. Freeman, of Loris, department vice-commander, and W. J. McLeod, of Walterboro, state commander. The picture at the bottom, taken just before the ceremony and banquet at 8 p.m., shows the new hut, constructed almost entirely by members of the post. In addition to post member and Legion officers of the state and various districts, Governor and Mrs. Thurmond and Florence County officials attended the ceremony. (Photos by Walter S. McDonald) Source: Florence Morning News
  • Johnsonville Looked Good To A Boy From Possum Fork - 1959.pdf

    JOHNSONVILLE LOOKED GOOD TO A BOY FROM "POSSUM FORK"
    JOHNSONVILLE - Half way between Florence and Georgetown - which is to say that particularly favored location location wherein the Low Country comes rushing up to greet the Pee Dee area - is a town called Johnsonville. Two things alone hold together the community - the Wellman Combing Co., with more than five-hundred employees, and an indomitable will on the part of its one-thousand citizens.
    AS towns go, Johnsonville is not old; but it is old enough to have firmly established itself in the affections of those whom therein dwell. One such man is D.B. Haselden. Since the last-named merchant has been a resident without interruption of the town for the past 33 years: and since Haselden was born within 2 and one half miles of his present residence, the stor of D.B. Haselden is the story of Johnsonville. Here it is in Merchant Haselden's own words:
    "When I came to live in Johnsonville there were no paved roads in or out. To a boy from Possum Fork, however, it looked real good. Anyway, I opened a small grocery business here on Oct. 5, 1926. My business kept up with the town - neither grew one iota. In 1927 a lumber outfit moved in unasked but very welcome. The Bennet-Walker Lumber Co., was composed of a planing mill and 5 or 6 sawmills, and remained in business here until the death of John Walker - about 1942. Walker's son still lives here. Much later the Combing Company moved in, and saved what was left of Johnsonville."
    What was left?
    "Yes. In Jan. 1931, in the dead of night a fire broke out. By dawn the Main street looked like Flanders Field after a heavy rain. Only two shops were left standing; a drug store and - you guessed it - the D.B. Haselden Grocery. The heck of it was that folks seemed to be in no hurry about rebuilding. I used to feel like a shopkeeper in the destroyed city of Pompei, I tell you. It looked like that fire was to prove a fatal blow to our town. Do you know, it was not until about 1944 that they started rebuilding from the ashes? Thirteen long years I kept shop on a street all but obliterate. Why it must have been all of twelve months after the fire before the charred smell left Broadway. That's the name of the main stem, you know..."
    The long and lean Mr. Haselden suddenly leaned back and roared with laughter.
    "Pardon me," he said finally. "I was remembering a song which was popular along about those same disheartening days. It went: 'Bright lights on Broadway, sunshine down in Dixie,' et cetera et cetera. We had the sunshine alright but not much illumination on our Broadway.
    "I believe I mentioned Possum Fork a little earlier? Well that's where I was born. If Johnsonville was a bit on the isolated side brother, you should have know the Fork back when I was a boy. It was almost literally out of this world. I recall a school teacher who came to teach out there - they put him up in a deserted house back in a thicket. He wanted. The told him without cracked to know if the place was haunting a smile, that the 'houses were all too small, at Possum Fork, to hold a ghost.' I reckon though, that ma didn't believe them. He didn't stay long.
    "The Fork is still there - only a little better than two miles from Johnsonville. Some folks will say I have no shame - disclosing conditions as they were back fifty years ago. But I am downright proud of being from Possum Fork. If this story reaches the paper, I'll bet there will be hundreds of people who will know that I am telling the truth.
    "I didn't see a train until I was 12 years old. The nearest railroad was at Lake City. I never visited either Florence or Georgetown until I was a married man of 23." Haselden's eyes took on a far away look.
    "I can recall going to Allison's Landing - that's on the Pee Dee - with my father, after we'd heard the boat whistling. Dad used to buy his staples at Georgetown - flour, rice, coffee and sugar, and have them brought up the river. It was about six miles to the Landing, we'd travel by mule and cart. When I was a boy, I thought of Georgetown as the beginning and the end of civilization. My father used to float logs and cross ties to Georgetown, you see. He'd be gone on those trips from five to ten days. Have to walk back, you know. Anyway, upon his return he would tell we children of the wonders of Georgetown; of its bulging shops, its find houses, etc.
    "Sometime during the early 1920s, a momentous thing took place. By popular vote Johnsonville was separated from Williamsburg County, to become part of Florence County. I suspect that Florence - the county, that is - wasn't really overcome with joy by our addition; but the people had spoken. The town itself is not old. Originally the land upon which it was built was part and parcel of the S.B. Poston farm. I can recall when the main street was sold off in lots.
    "I operate the smallest grocery store in Johnsonville, but it's been a living. With the help of my wife - I married Emily Powell of Possum Fork, Dec. 1917 - I've been able to raise and educate five children: there's V.C. - he's practicing law down in Georgetown - Hubert L., who has some 18 years of Navy service behind him, Wilma Ruth, who serves as secretary in the Charlotte office of the FBI, Ken, now rounding out ten years wi the U.S. Air Force, and Reid Nettles, teaching at Johnsonville High.
    World War II, says the Johnsonville merchant, wade for very slight change in the town's leisured pace. "There were no bases or defense plants nearby," he says, "and about the only real difference was in the absence of young people - the boys off to war, their wives (if married), following them to camps and places and cities here, there and everywhere located..."
    Haselden took a deep breath. "And now, I am going to stick my neck out, but good! I believe that Johnsonville is as big as ever it will get. That's my very own and personal conviction, of course. I hope it proves to be in error - but I trust I will be pardoned and forgiven by my neighbors when I say I shall not lose any sleep if the town doesn't swell too rapidly. I like it the way it is."
    Mr. D.B. Haselden, now 62, can look back proudly and declare that he has spent his entire life within a couple of miles radius of Johnsonville.
    "It is fellows like myself," he says, "who account for the existence of small places like this one. On this score, may I had, I make no apologies."
  • Johnsonville Looked Good To A Boy From Possum Fork - 1959.pdf
  • Johnsonville Post Office Holds New Rating - Florence Morning News 27 Jun 1956.pdf
  • Johnsonville Post Office Holds New Rating - Florence Morning News 27 Jun 1956.pdf
  • Johnsonville School Opens - The State - 5 Oct 1911.jpg

    Johnsonville opens for the 1911-1912 school year. R.S. Major is principal. Teachers: Pauline Wilson, Elise Rollins, Pearl Reeves, Claudia Johnson, Elizabeth Wadill, and Emily Hutson. 5 October 1911
  • Johnsonville School Opens, The State, 5 Oct 1911.pdf
  • Johnsonville Theater to be Rebuilt At Once - News and Courier - 25 Sep 1937.pdf

    Article describes the old theater owned by Chevis Prosser. This was the original location that burned, approximately where Jake's BBQ is now located on Broadway. Story of the aftermath of the fire that destroyed the Prosser Theater on Broadway in 1937, causing casualties next door.
  • Johnsonville Welcomes Wellman - Tues Nov 8 1955 - News and Courier.pdf
  • Johnsonville Welcomes Wellman - Tues Nov 8 1955 - News and Courier.pdf

    Article lists local Johnsonville merchants of 1955. Photo of Wellman Combing Company.
  • School Closing - Slogan - Johnsonville a Growing Town - The County Record - 1913.pdf
  • jOHNSONVILLE.pdf
  • Great_Town_Johnsonville_1984.pdf
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