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"S" is for Sea Pines Company [1957-present]South Carolina Public Radio
General - Culture, Music, & S.C. History
Find popular podcasts series from South Carolina Public Radio.
A Minute with Miles is hosted by longtime NPR commentator Miles Hoffman.
Historian Walter Edgar hosts Walter Edgar's Journal and South Carolina from A to Z with Walter Edgar.
Within this Series
Secession Crisis of 1850-51 | South Carolina Public Radio
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"S" is for Secession Crisis of 1850-51.
Secessionville, Battle of | South Carolina Public Radio
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“S” is for Secessionville, Battle of [June 16, 1862). Union general Henry Benham launched an assault on Tower Battery near the planter village of Secessionville. The Confederate defenders, supported...
Segregation | South Carolina Public Radio
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“S” is for Segregation. Segregation, the residential, political, and social isolation of African Americans, by law and custom was accomplished in South Carolina in the last quarter of the 19th century...
Seigler, Marie Samuella Cromer | South Carolina Public Radio
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“S” is for Seigler, Marie Samuella Cromer [1882-1964]. Educator. Girl’s club founder. In 1909, Seigler, an Abbeville County native, heard a representative of the U.S. Department of Agriculture extoll...
Self, James Cuthbert | South Carolina Public Radio
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“S” is for Self, James Cuthbert [1876-1955]. Textile manufacturer, philanthropist. A native of Bowles Mountain in Edgefield County [now Greenwood County], Self attended a business college in Virginia...
Sellers, Cleveland Louis, Jr. | South Carolina Public Radio
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“S” is for Sellers, Cleveland Louis, Jr. [b. 1944]. Civil rights activist. Educator. Sellers attended Howard University where he met several student activists, including Stokely Carmichael—later...
Selvy, Franklin Delano | South Carolina Public Radio
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“S” is for Selvy, Franklin Delano [b. 1932]. Basketball player. Born in Kentucky, Selvy played his college ball at Furman. He is best known for his high-scoring performances that made national...
Seneca | South Carolina Public Radio
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“S” is for Seneca [Oconee County; population 7,652]. Founded in 1873, as Seneca City, the town took its name from an earlier Indian village and the nearby Seneca River. As was the case with several...