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Home Biographies Boards & Lists Cemeteries Census Families History Lookups Queries Records Resources What's New |
by Betty P.
Myers, 1975; Revised 1977, 1994
Although
Scotland County is relatively young among North Carolina counties,
having been formed in 1899, it has a rich and interesting history. As
is true with all history, the history of this county is so entwined
with our geography, sociology, economics, and government that
separating them is neither feasible nor desirable. Because of this, and
because of the variations in the pattern of settlement in the various
parts of the county, no attempt has been made to make this the typical
chronological history. Instead, a brief background summary will be
presented. Then an imaginary tour of the county will follow, with items
of historical interest inserted geographically rather than
chronologically. The
earliest settlers in what is now Scotland County were composed largely
of Highland Scots. It is fairly well established by several writers of
Scottish history that there were Highlanders living in this area as
early as 1729, when North Carolina became a royal colony. However, much
of the Scot settlement came in the next quarter century. It was during
this period that many Scots pushed up the Cape Fear River into the area
surrounding their Cross Creek settlement, later Campbellton, now
Fayetteville, and consequently, into the area that is now Scotland
County. Through
the ensuing years, other groups and individuals have come to the
county, bringing their own heritage to mingle with that of the Scots,
Scotch-Irish, English, Welsh, and African. Some of our present-day
citizens can even link their heritage to that of the first Americans --
the Native Americans. So although the name of the county is Scotland
and the Scottish influence is quite strong, the Scots have no monopoly
on the county or its history. The
political beginning for Scotland County came when the legislature of
North Carolina, on February 20, 1899, created the new county. The
county was formed entirely from Richmond County. The entire area had
been a part of Anson County and, before that, a part of Bladen. The
main reason given for the movement to break away from Richmond County
was that the county seat, Rockingham, being some twenty to thirty miles
away, was too far from the eastern part of the county. Any business in
the county seat required an all-day trip and sometimes an overnight
stay on the part of many citizens. However, there seem to have been
other factors at work, including a strong red shirt movement and much
dissatisfaction with the county government at Rockingham. There were
charges and counter-charges and strong feeling displayed by both
proponents and opponents of the new county. A petition opposing the
formation of the new county was circulated in the legislature of 1895
by Richmond County opponents of the separation, and in the petition
attention was called to the small number of Populists and Republicans
who voted in Laurinburg. The accusation was that the number was so
small because of intimidation in the heavily Democratic town. One
sentence read: Laurinburg, in politics, ought to be called Rottenburg. Mr.
Maxey John wrote the act which created the county. He had written
similar acts twice before. In 1893, the act failed to pass the General
Assembly, and in 1895, the act passed, but with a provision for an
election in all Richmond County to approve or disapprove the new
county. The election failed to approve the new county, and no serious
attempt was made in the 1897 session of the General Assembly, which was
Republican-Fusionist controlled. However, in 1899, another attempt was
made. The act was introduced in the General Assembly by Mr. Hector
McLean, who is sometimes called the Father of Scotland County. In
the
act establishing the county, the legislature designated Laurinburg as
the county seat and required that the county commissioners select a
site for a jail within a mile of the center of town. The county began
to function in December 1900, and the wills and deeds books begin in
that month. With
this brief background, let us begin our historical tour of the county
in Laurinburg, the county seat and the largest town. Although not
incorporated until 1877, Laurinburg is said to have had its beginning
as far back as 1785 when the first families settled on the present town
site. The name of the town was first written with an h -- Laurinburgh
-- and was pronounced Laur-in-boro by some. The post office was first
called Laurinburgh, but later the h was dropped. The Laurin, of course,
came from the prominent McLaurin family. As late as 1840, there were
only three dwellings, a store, a saloon, and a few shacks in the town.
A private school was established in 1852 and the town seemed to grow
rapidly after that. As a matter of fact, the school was named
Laurinburgh High School, and it was from the school that the town took
its name. For some reason, the act incorporating Laurinburg used still
another spelling, Laurenburg. Mr. Washington Gill was the mayor of the
new town. His home has been preserved and restored. It was also the
home of Edwin Gill, long-time Treasurer of North Carolina. The
Laurinburgh High School stood along what is now Caledonia Road, north
of the Church Street intersection. Some of the older houses along this
road were made from parts of the school buildings after they were no
longer in use. One of these houses was the boyhood home of Terry
Sanford, who served as both Governor of North Carolina and as United
States Senator. Of course, this was many years after the days of the
Laurinburgh High School. Incidentally, the home in which Mr. Sanford
was born has been torn down. It stood on West Church Street. Laurinburg
is said to have had its beginning with the store and blacksmith shop
which were near where our older water tank now stands. This is very
near the site of the high school mentioned earlier. Another
point of interest in Laurinburg is the county’s new courthouse, built
in 1964. The county’s first courthouse was built in 1901, facing Main
Street where the A. B. Gibson Education Center now stands. Court was
first held in a rented building, and Judge Walter Neal, whose picture
now hangs in the Courtroom, held the first term of criminal court in
the county the week of November 18, 1901. On
the
grounds of the new courthouse are two monuments of historical interest
which were moved from the old courthouse grounds. The Confederate
Monument is typical of many erected in the South in the years following
the Civil War. Public subscriptions were taken for it, and it was
originally placed in the center of the street at the intersection of
Church and Main Streets. As automobiles became more common, it proved
to be quite a traffic hazard and was moved to the courthouse grounds.
The Quakenbush Monument honors William Graham Quakenbush, who was
principal of Laurinburgh High School from 1879 to 1900. In fact, the
school was locally known as The Quakenbush School. Mr. Quakenbush was
not only a beloved educator, but he was also one of the leaders in the
movement to form Scotland County. North Carolina’s Education Governor,
Charles B. Aycock, spoke at the dedication of the monument. Recently, a
monument has been erected to honor local veterans of all wars. Laurinburg’s
Main Street is a point of historical interest in itself. It is
difficult to look down Main Street now and visualize the scene
described by residents in the late 1880s and early 1890s. There were
about 15 grocer or general stores and at least 13 of them sold whiskey.
Some of the ladies of the town hesitated to venture downtown alone
because of the boisterous behavior along the street. Mrs. Nettie
McCormick Henley described the situation well in her book, THE HOME
PLACE: A good many decent people lived in Laurinburg, but women-folk
generally thought of Main Street about the same way as the movies show
Western frontier towns. The young sports would brag, ‘There are
thirteen barrooms, and I had a drink in every one of them last
Saturday.’ The
stores along the main street were operated by some of the town’s most
prominent citizens. Mr. John F. McNair started his business at
Springfield and Laurel Hill, and later moved it to Laurinburg’s Main
Street in 1872. Mr. McNair was a prominent businessman with
far-reaching interests in land, textiles, banking, and other
enterprises. Mr. Walter Evans, a black man, was another important Main
Street merchant. He operated a clothing store which specialized in good
quality shoes. Mr. Evans was also a highly respected businessman with
holdings in land and other property. The Everett Brothers and Gill
Store was one of the most prosperous on Main Street during the latter
part of the 1800s and the first part of the 1900s. Everington’s Drug
Store is also one of the older Main Street businesses, started in 1882.
Laurinburg’s Main Street even boasted an opera house. The upstairs of
the building at the corner of Main and Roper Streets was used for
traveling shows and for community events, and was known as The Opera
House. In
the
early days, Main Street was dirt. It was paved in 1914. Main Street has
been the scene of many interesting parades, including a 1910 Fourth of
July parade. Many ordinances, such as this one, had to do with Main
Street and the other streets of the town: No horse or mule driver shall
turn his stock loose on the public street on Sunday between the hours
of 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. In
1883, the town’s charter was amended to include these among other
provisions: That the commissioners shall have power to prohibit by
penalties the riding or driving of horses or other animals in a
careless or dangerous manner, or at a greater speed than five miles per
hour... That
the commissioners shall have power to declare it unlawful for any
horses, mules, cattle, hogs, sheep, goats, and dogs to run at large. The
railroad has always played an important part in the history of
Laurinburg and the county. In 1853, it was announced that the
Wilmington, Charlotte and Rutherfordton Railroad would come through,
and the first trains ran in 1861, just in time to take a group of young
men to fight in the Civil War. During the war, the railroad moved its
shops from Wilmington to Laurinburg. The Northern fleet was
concentrating a good deal of its effort on Fort Fisher and the
management felt that the shops would be safer inland. Railroad
officials first located the shops here with the idea that they would be
here for just a short time. However, they later purchased additional
land and the shops did stay until 1894. Many people in the town lived
in fear that when the shops left, the entire economy of the area would
collapse. Mr. Maxey John describes the feelings in his history: Another
title Laurinburg has given itself is The City of Beautiful Trees, and
efforts have been made from the town’s beginning to preserve our
distinctive trees. An early ordinance read: No person shall willfully,
carelessly, or negligently damage or destroy any of the shade trees. Laurinburg
received a good deal of national attention some years ago with the
story of Cancetto Farmica, known locally as Spaghetti. Farmica, a
carnival worker, was killed in 1911. The family never came to claim the
body, and it was held by a local funeral home until it was buried in
1972. During the years, the body became a kind of tourist attraction. To
the
east of Laurinburg proper is East Laurinburg. It was to East Laurinburg
that the textile industry came. It was in the last days of the 19th
century that the Waverly Mills operation began with the building of its
first plant, Scotland Mill. The town of East Laurinburg is composed
almost entirely of the villages which were built around the textile
plants. East Laurinburg is an incorporated town, legally separate from
Laurinburg. The
oldest church in Laurinburg is the Laurinburg Presbyterian on West
Church Street, an off-shoot of the Old Laurel Hill Presbyterian Church.
This church was organized in 1859 and constructed a building in 1866 on
the site of the present-day church. Many of the early settlers were
Scots and Presbyterian, and there has always been a strong Presbyterian
influence in the community. Laurinburg’s
oldest public school is Central School (now closed). Built in 1909, it
served as the only school for some years, containing both elementary
and high school classes. The
Laurinburg High School, a part of the public school system, was built
on East Church Street in 1924 and was used as a high school until the
building of Scotland High School. It was then used as a junior high
school until it burned in 1973. In
the
northern part of town are two other schools of much historic interest.
Laurinburg Institute is the county’s oldest private school. This
school, in its present location on McGirt’s Bridge Road and in its
former location in the Newtown section, has served several generations
of black students. It was founded in 1904 by Mr. E. M. McDuffie and is
still operated by the McDuffie family. For many years this was the only
school in town for black students, and at one time it operated as both
a public and a private school. One interesting feature of the Institute
in earlier days was the hospital. operated as a part of the school by
Dr. N. E. Jackson. The school now operates as a preparatory school and
has a long list of well-known graduates. I.
Ellis Johnson School was the black high school until the building of
Scotland High School and the simultaneous integration and consolidation
of all county schools. The school was named for Mr. I. Ellis Johnson, a
long-time educational leader in the county and the first principal of
the school. It
is
fitting that we started and ended our imaginary tour of Laurinburg with
schools. The town grew up around and school and actually derived its
name from that school. It is also fitting that we begin our imaginary
tour of the rest of the county with a school. Let us move to the south
of Laurinburg and begin our tour of the county at St. Andrews
Presbyterian College. There
is a legend to the effect that when the first Scottish settlers started
moving up the Cape Fear River and inland from Wilmington, someone
posted a sign which read, The best land lies 100 miles west of here.
The story goes on that those who could read came to what is now
Scotland County. This interest in things educational was rewarded in
1956 with the announcement that a new Presbyterian college was coming
to the land of the Scots. Since its opening in 1961, St. Andrews has
played a vital role in the life of the county. As
the
Scots were settling in the upper part of the county, several families
of Welsh descent moved up from what is now Marlboro County, South
Carolina, to the southern tip of what is now Scotland County. Of
course, some of the Scots in the area also came from South Carolina,
coming by way of the Pee Dee River. This was largely a farming
community, with a few small stores scattered about. As the railroad
came through two small villages sprang up. One of these was Hasty, now
a small, almost deserted village south of St. Andrews. James A. Hasty,
for whom the community is named, owned the property on which the
railroad station was located. A telephone switchboard was installed in
the Hasty depot in 1902, but was transferred to Laurinburg some four
years later. There was a Hasty post office from 1886 until 1930, and a
public school was established in 1897. An interdenominational church
was founded in 1886. The
second community to spring up along the railroad track in the lower
part of the county was Johns Station, often called Johns. Mr. J. T.
John started operating a general store by the railroad in 1886 and a
post office was established there the same year. A school was already
operating in the community. Nearby
Caledonia Methodist Church was organized in 1835 and is the mother
church for most of the county’s Methodist churches. A
school of some historic interest in this part of the county was Oak
Grove. It served as the Indian school until the integration of all
county schools. Another
landmark in the lower part of the county is Stewartsville Cemetery,
founded in 1785. This is one historic place in the county which has
significance for all three races. The cemetery, from its earliest days,
has served as burial ground for black, white, and Indian. The first
burial in the cemetery is believed to have been that of a Revolutionary
War soldier who died at Stewartsville, then a thriving community, on
his way home from the war. Many of the earliest graves have very simple
markers with no names or dates. Two of the graves are those of
Presbyterian ministers whose names today recall colorful stories. One
of
these was the Rev. Archibald McQueen. His tombstone is inscribed: An
able lawyer, a skillful physician, and a consecrated preacher. He
was
born about 1795 and died in 1854. He served Old Laurel Hill and Smyrna
Churches. He was forced to resign as a result of his marriage to his
dead wife’s sister. In those days, this action was a violation of the
Presbyterian Confession of Faith. Another
interesting person buried at Stewartsville is the Reverent Colin
Lindsay. He preached at Red Bluff Church. He, too, was suspended from
the Presbytery for too free use of ardent spirits and violent temper,
but this is not the most interesting story about him. He is the man
born after his mother was buried. He was born in Scotland in 1744 and
migrated to America in 1790. According to the legend, about six years
before his birth, his mother suffered a severe fever and lapsed into a
coma. It was assumed that she was dead and she was buried near her
home. Robbers came during the night to steal her rings. Her fingers
were swollen from the illness and, when the robbers had difficulty
getting the rings off, they proceeded to cut her finger. At this point,
she regained consciousness. As the frightened robbers ran away, the
woman revived and returned to her home. She lived to become the mother
of the colorful Mr. Lindsay, who is buried at Stewartsville. The
nearby James Stewart House is one of the oldest in the county, dating
back to the early 1800s. The house was built by James Stewart, who
served in the United States Congress and was part of the thriving
Stewartsville community, which was a trading center and stagecoach stop
in the early days. Not only is the house important because of its age,
but also because of the birth there of Joseph Hawley, United States
Senator and Governor of Connecticut. Hawley was born there in 1826 when
his father was a local preacher. His family moved away when he was a
child, but he went on to political and military prominence. He served
in the Union Army and was the general in charge of the Wilmington
district, which included this area, during the Reconstruction Period.
From 1873 to 1876, he was president of the United States Centennial
Commission, and the success of the Centennial Exhibition was attributed
largely to him. Continuing
our tour, we come to Laurinburg-Maxton Airport. During the early days
of World War II, the federal government built a glider base in this
location for the training of glider pilots and others. After the war,
the airport and remaining facilities were turned over to the two towns
of Laurinburg and Maxton. The facility is operated by a joint
commission representing the two towns, and the airbase property is used
as an industrial park. On the airbase property we find a portion of Lumber River. The Lumber River was so named because of the lumber that was floated down it in the early days, according to some reports. It has been an important influence on the life of those in this part of the county. It was made famous by John Charles McNeill in his poem, Sunburnt
Boys in SONGS MERRY AND SAD: It
was
called Lumbee River in the poem and has since carried the name by
popular approval. The Indians of Robeson County adopted the name Lumbee
later by legislative enactment. Whether the river or the Indians
claimed the name first is a matter for debate. On
the
Lumbee River we find the unique settlement of Riverton. This quaint
suburb of Wagram is summer home for some, retirement home for others,
permanent home for a few of Wagram’s leading citizens. Because of the
writers, teachers, preachers, and others who have lived there, Riverton
is considered one of the intellectual centers of the county. Our
tour takes us on to Wagram itself. Although Wagram was not incorporated
until 1912, the area around it was settled during the period of the
American Revolution. The early settlers were almost entirely Scottish,
moving here from the Cape Fear Valley area. The town was named by two
lumbermen who built a tram road from Red Springs in connection with
their business. The lumbermen were brothers, James and William
Williams. It was they who called the community Wagram, for a famous
European battleground. The name was originally pronounced Vagrom. Why
this very German name was chosen for this very Scottish settlement has
never been fully explained, except that one of the Williams brothers
was a student of European history and an admirer of Napoleon, who
fought a battle at Wagram. It
is
interesting to note that many of the Scots in the Wagram area are not
Presbyterian, but Baptist. The Reverent Daniel Whyte and his wife came
to the area and converted many of the local people to the Baptist
faith. Spring Hill Baptist Church is one of the oldest in the area,
having been organized at Spring Hill in 1813. It was moved to Wagram
much later. At Spring Hill, the Reverend Mr. Whyte preached in the
morning in English and in the afternoon in Gaelic, for there were many
Scottish people in the settlement who knew no English. Another
historic church in Wagram is Montpelier Presbyterian Church, which was
originally at Montpelier, the stagecoach stop on the Lumber River. Many
years prior to the settlement of Wagram, the community center was
called Spring Hill and was located approximately a mile west of the
present town. Here on the banks of the Shoe Heel Creek were the Spring
Hill Baptist Church, the Spring Hill School, organized in 1820, a grist
mill and a number of houses. The Spring Hill School or Academy was
probably the first school in what is now Scotland County. The nearby
Spring Branch Baptist Church is one of the oldest black churches in the
area, dating back to the days of the Civil War. The
Wagram community has long been noted for its scholarly atmosphere.
Numbers of ministers, lawyers, teachers, and writers have called it
home. John Charles McNeill and Gerald Johnson are two of the best known. In
the
McNeill Memorial Gardens also stands the restored home of one of the
first temperance societies in America, the Richmond Temperance and
Literary Society. The society was organized in 1853 and this home built
shortly thereafter of red brick, which were molded by hand and burned
in homemade kilns. In the center of the ceiling was painted a group of
gold stars, one for each member. If a member died, his star was painted
over with silver. If a member broke his pledge and drank, the star was
painted black. Some stars were said to have several coats of black and
gold paint, for only when one reformed was his star painted gold again.
Here the members met regularly to read poetry and other literature and
to debate the issues of the day. At the apex of the roof a tall
upturned goblet, pointing its base to the sky, stood on a large open
wooden book. The goblet represented the temperance idea and the book
represented the literary idea. Sherman’s army, moving north during the
closing days of the Civil War, shot off the goblet and the book, but
they have since been restored. The Temperance Hall is registered as a
national history place by the Department of the Interior. John Charles McNeill was buried in Spring Hill Cemetery, which is adjacent to the McNeill Memorial Gardens, the Temperance Hall, and his restored home. On the monument is engraved one of his most quoted poems, Sundown: We
continue to one of the most historic spots in the county, Laurel Hill
Presbyterian Church, known locally as Old Laurel Hill. One of the
earliest communities in the county developed here. The church, which
was to be the mother church for most of the other Presbyterian churches
in the area, was established in 1797. This was a thriving business
community in the Post-Revolutionary War Period. Mr. Duncan McFarland
operated a tavern and stagecoach stop for the convenience of passengers
on the New York-New Orleans stage. He owned much land and is said to
have laid out a sizable town, which he hoped would grow to rival New
York, New Orleans, and Paris in time. It was here that the Scottish
Fair was held for years after its beginning in 1783. The fair was the
highlight of the year for many of the local settlers and for those who
came from some distance to spend the week or so camping nearby. As time
went on, the fair became so boisterous that some citizens began to
complain, and in 1873 a bill was passed in the state legislature to
abolish the fair. Old Laurel Hill declined as the business center of
the county after the railroad came through, laying its tracks to the
south. Old Laurel Hill was on the route of Sherman’s army when it
passed through in 1865, and the church yard was used as a camping place. Legend
has it that the soldiers used some of the benches from the church to
build a bridge over the nearby creek and some of the soldiers carved
names and initials in the bell tower. Cool
Springs Methodist Church and Silver Hill Presbyterian Church, two of
the oldest black churches in the county, both grew out of Old Laurel
Hill Presbyterian Church. Both of these are landmarks in this part of
the county. The
route of the stagecoach line which ran through what is now Scotland
County has been marked as a Boy Scout project. The route ran from
Gilchrist Bridge, near present-day Wagram, by way of Old Laurel Hill,
to a point on the South Carolina line near Gibson. An 1839 post office
map shows the route and has marked in the area which is not Scotland
County, only Montpelier (across the Lumber River), Laurel Hill (now Old
Laurel Hill), Stewartsville and Barnes Bridge. Of course, no
Laurinburg, Gibson, Wagram, or present-day Laurel Hill were marked,
because they did not exist at that time. Our
next stop is at Richmond Mill dam. During the years of the Civil War,
this was the site of a thriving gun factory operated by Mr. Murdock
Morrison. Of course, it was destroyed by Sherman’s men when they
marched through in 1865. Mr. Morrison married the granddaughter of Mr.
James Buchanan who had begun the manufacture of a well-known rifle in
the years before the war. Several of these Buchanan rifles are still in
the possession of county residents. Richmond Mill was also the site of
the county’s first textile plant, built by Colonel Charles Malloy in
1869. The machinery was said to have been of English origin and came
out of the hold of a wrecked blockade runner off the cost near
Wilmington. It was turned over to Colonel Malloy as payment for grading
work done by him when the railroad went through. Colonel Malloy hired
as superintendent Mr. Mark Morgan, a Cumberland County man with a good
deal of textile experience, and Mr. Morgan became a partner in this
first county textile plant. Thus began Morgan Mills, a business which
was to influence this county for more than a century. We
move on to Laurel Hill, a community which grew up around the railroad
depot. When the route of the railroad missed Old Laurel Hill, that
community declined as the business center of the area and much of the
economic activity moved to Laurel Hill depot. Records indicate there
were about a dozen families living there in 1861. The first industries
were the turpentine distilleries which existed prior to the war and for
some years afterward. Another early industry was tub-making. The tubs
were made of local juniper and the industry flourished for a number of
years. In the 1870s a mercantile business was being operated by Mr.
John F. McNair, who had started his business at Springfield. Later, the
McNair interests moved to Laurinburg and Mr. Z. V. Pate operated the
business in Laurel Hill. That business has been an important influence
in the community since that time. A post office was established in
1875. Laurel Hill is the largest unincorporated community in Scotland
County. Near
Laurel Hill is Old Hundred. This small settlement marks the end of a
78-mile stretch of straight track beginning near Wilmington. This is
reportedly one of the longest stretches of straight track in the world.
We
travel on to Gibson. No community could be better named than this one
for, according to some local jokesters, there is a Gibson per square
inch in Gibson. The town was incorporated in 1899, but its history is
much older. It seems to have started when a widow, Mrs. Ziba Gibson,
and her two sons came to the area in the late 1700s. Mrs. Gibson’s
grandson, Noah, is believed to be the Gibson for whom the town is
named. He built and operated a store on the present town site. His
brother, Thomas, a Methodist minister, organized a church in the
community, and in 1835, it was moved to the site of the present-day St.
John’s Church. Records show there was a school as early as 1858. During
the latter part of the nineteenth century, Gibson was a thriving,
prosperous town with stores, businesses, and even a newspaper. Mr.
Frank B. Gibson, of Gibson, was chairman of the first board of county
commissioners for Scotland County. The
nearby Quaker settlement of Rockdale influenced the history of the area
greatly. The existence of the community is substantiated by deeds in
the possession of local residents. Some of the deeds mention the name
of the village and name streets in it. It is difficult, however, to
picture the thriving village with its grist mill, cotton gin,
blacksmith shop, and general store when one looks now at the deserted
fields that were once Rockdale. The Quakers came from Pennsylvania by
way of Guilford County and apparently planned their town in their
characteristic neat manner and laid off streets around a village
square. The village was located just south of Springfield, near Mason’s
Cross. Mary Marine, mother of Indiana’s famous poet James Whitcomb
Riley, was born at Rockdale. Her family and most of the other Quakers
left for Indiana when slavery became prevalent. They greatly opposed
slavery and would not live where their neighbors were slave holders.
However, some of the Quakers remained in this area because they had
married into local families and many of their descendants still live in
the county. Not
far from Rockdale is the retirement home of one of the county’s most
distinguished citizens, Bishop Walter Peele. Dr. Peele, a native of the
county, had a long and distinguished career as a Methodist minister. He
became a bishop of the Methodist Church and, upon retirement, returned
to Scotland County to live his last years in a home on X-Way Road. His
is buried in a family cemetery nearby. Mr.
James Lytch, inventor of a cotton planter which was patented in 1878,
lived and had his workshop at nearby X-Way. Mr. Lytch designed and made
a number of other implements used in farming throughout the South.
Another inventor and manufacturer of farm implements, Mr. John Blue,
lived and worked in the same area. His house has been restored and is
used by the Scotland County Parks and Recreation Commission. This is
the site for the annual John Blue Festival. We thus end our imaginary tour of Scotland County. The history of Scotland County is not the longest in the state, nor can we claim that it is filled with glorious deeds. Our history, however, is and has been a source of pride for most of our citizens. Those who can look back on long family histories in this county have joined with the many who have come from other areas to highlight and preserve that which was good in the past, and to establish a firm foundation for a future in which we can all take pride. |
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