Cherokee County is home to many unique stories and historical sites instrumental to American independence. From our three national parks to historic forts and natural points of interest, our area offers many ways to rediscover our local history and commemorate the 250th anniversary of our nation's independence.
The 1780 American victory at Kings Mountain marked a turning point in the Revolutionary War. The national park preserves the site of the battle and offers events, trails, and camping.
2625 Park Rd, Blacksburg, SC 29702
Daniel Morgan's army secured a pivotal victory over British forces in 1781 at the Battle of Cowpens, leading to the eventual Patriot victory at Yorktown. The national park commemorates the battle and offers events, trails, and horseback riding.
4001 Chesnee Hwy, Gaffney, SC 29341
The Overmountain Victory Trail follows the route of the Patriot militia during the Kings Mountain campaign of 1780. Spanning four states, the 330-mile trail includes motor routes and walkable trails.
2635 Park Rd, Blacksburg, SC 29702
Explore a rotating collection of thousands of artifacts across four galleries at the Cherokee County Museum. The Land of Revolutions exhibit features displays and interactive tools chronicling America's quest for independence, including an immersive video portal and a 90-foot revolutionary war mural.
301 College Drive, Gaffney SC 29340
*Site Opening Soon
Immerse into the lives and conflicts of America’s earliest patriots. Guests can interact with the characters and environment of the Southern Campaign through state-of-the-art 3D video technology. Motion-activated controllers will allow participants to control the 3D view area within the video environment. As guests see through the eyes of Cherokee County’s patriots and loyalists, they will discover previously untold stories of the Revolutionary War.
Early Scot Irish pioneers built Thicketty Fort out of heart pine logs around 1769 to protect themselves from Cherokee raiders. During the Revolutionary War, Loyalists commandeered it. In the summer of 1780, a combined force of Spartan Regiment Patriot militiamen and Overmountain Men, under the command of Colonel Isaac Shelby, surrounded and took the fort from Loyalist Colonel Patrick Moore and his 96 men without firing a shot.
State Rd S-11-584, Gaffney, SC 29340
On October 8, 1780, at the end of the Battle of King’s Mountain, Patriot Colonel James Williams was mortally wounded. His men carried him from the battlefield and tended his wounds, but to no avail. He died of his injuries and was buried on Buffalo Creek, where it meets the Broad River, and his body was later removed and reinterred in the front yard of the Carnegie Free Library in Gaffney. This location is soon to become Carolina Rising: A Revolutionary Experience.
210 North Limestone Street, Gaffney, SC 29340
Col. Charles McDowell of North Carolina and his Overmountain Men met with Col. Elijah Clarke of Georgia and two local Spartan Regiment of Militia companies at Cherokee Ford. They intended to prevent British Major Patrick Ferguson and his 1000 Loyalists from crossing the Ford into North Carolina. Hearing of nearby Fort Thicketty, a Loyalist stronghold, McDowell detached Col. Clarke with some Overmountain Men and the Spartan Regiment to capture the fort. The raid was successful.
199 Wolf Den Lane, Gaffney, SC 29340
In 1780, the Trail to Dogwood Springs was used as a route for Patriot forces to traverse the area during the Revolutionary War. It served as an escape route for American troops retreating from British forces, making it strategically important.
Corner of College Drive and Union Street, Gaffney, SC
Fords, or river crossings, were strategic intersections where settlements and commerce grew. Grindal Shoals, at the time of the Revolutionary War, was used by Brigadier General Daniel Morgan’s “Flying Army” and British Legion Colonel Banastre Tarleton’s forces just before the Battle of Cowpens. The community of Greater Grindal Shoals was decimated.
On the Pacolet River about a hundred yards upstream from the Highway 18 bridge
During the 18th century, Smith’s Ford (named for owner William Smith) was an important crossing and trade link with the Cherokees in the Tryon Mountains to the west. Patriot Col. Charles McDowell’s Overmountain Men used this crossing in 1780, sending raiders to attack Loyalists and British at Musgrove’s Mill. Also, the same year, Patriot Brigadier General Thomas Sumter, severely wounded at the Battle of Blackstock’s Farm, was carried in a litter tied between two horses over this ford into the mountains to avoid capture by British Colonel Tarleton’s pursuers.
This cemetery contains memorials for Greater Grindal Shoals pioneers, the early Backcountry of South Carolina. Early settler names are Whelchel, Ashworth, Barnes, Blanton, Collins, and Ownby. Zebulon Vance Whelchel (1901-1973), for whom Lake Whelchel in Gaffney is named, is a direct descendant of early pioneer Martha Ann Stockton Whelchel (1732-1816), buried in this cemetery. Lake Whelchel is located on the Overmountain Trail of Revolutionary War fame.
Take Brickhouse Road out of Gaffney, turn right onto Spring Lake Road, and go to the end of the road at the cull-du-sac.
John Nuckolls, Sr. (1732-1780) settled this land around 1767, built a farm, raised his family, and was murdered by Loyalists at McKown’s Mill nearby in 1780. Nuckolls fought the Cherokees to make the Grindal Shoals community safe for his family and pioneer neighbors. He was known as a stout Whig or American Patriot; thus, his farm became known as Whig Hill.
Union Highway (Hwy. 18) to Old Racetrack Road, Gaffney, SC
@Cherokee250-All Rights Reserved