Aiken County — Celebrating 150 Years | Cabinet of Curiosities

Here at the Aiken County Historical Museum, we normally have a Founders Day celebration during March to celebrate the creation of our county. This year’s celebration is particularly special because Aiken County turns 150 years old in 2021. The land that Aiken County encompasses has thousands of years’ worth of stories about a multitude of lives that existed between heartbreak and hope. With that, let’s delve into a smattering of curious stories that took place in our fair county.

A rose by any other name would still be… Aiken County

After decades of petitioning the South Carolina State Legislature, a bill was finally passed in March of 1871 to create a new county with the city of Aiken at its core. The bill was put forward by Barnwell District Representative (later Senator) Charles D. Hayne, who was born a freeman of color in Charleston, South Carolina. According to the charter, this new county would consist of portions cut from Barnwell, Edgefield, Lexington, and Orangeburg counties.

Out of an abundance of originality, the new county was named Aiken. Oh, they tested the waters with potential names such as Woodbury and Randolph, but settled on the less creative option of Aiken. This resulted in 150 years of confusion as to whether one is referencing the city of Aiken or the county of Aiken. Oh well, moving on — now let’s explore our past.

Beech Island

One of the first European cultures to settle in the Beech Island area was Swiss. Starting in 1730, the royal government of South Carolina advertised large tracts of land to Europeans. One European town that really took to the pamphlets was the town of Appenzell in Switzerland, and in 1737, over 200 Appenzell citizens arrived in Beech Island, South Carolina. One of the lasting reminders of these settlers is their cemetery. You can explore the Zubly Cemetery when it is open to the public each year in April during the Beech Island Historical Tour.

North Augusta

In an effort to attract folks to their new city of North Augusta, the Jackson brothers built a natatorium in the late 1890s near the modern-day streets of Bluff Avenue and Crystal Lake Drive. They used the word natatorium (a building containing an indoor swimming pool) incorrectly — the North Augusta Natatorium was a fancy swimming pond fed by a natural spring. This particular natatorium was constructed in the Turkish style, with multiple spring boards along with a double trapeze over the water. In the middle of the natatorium structure was a grandstand for people-watching and musicians. Can you imagine swimming in clear, cool water in the middle of a Southern summer while listening to lovely orchestral music? It must have been a treat for those who could afford it and were allowed to enter its doors. Unfortunately, the natatorium succumbed to fire in 1904.

Midland Valley

As early as the 1850s, the Langley area of Horse Creek was dammed to create power for nearby mills. Starting in March of 1871, an investor named Langley gathered a group of men to invest in a new cotton mill. The company was named the Langley Manufacturing Company in his honor. 150 years later, the 285-acre Langley Pond, which technically qualifies as a lake, remains. Although Langley Pond Park is well-known for its disc golf course, water sports, and hiking trails, one of its most famous moments was the arrival of Olympians.

In 1996, Langley Pond Park became a prominent training ground for rowers ahead the 1996 Olympics, which were held in Atlanta, Georgia. Teams from around the world traveled to Langley to train, and they became celebrities in the CSRA. For years after the 1996 Olympics, Langley Pond continued to be a favored training ground for elite rowers.

Wagener-Salley

Many of the small towns that sprang up in Aiken County around the building of the railroad wanted to take the name “Wagener” in honor of local mercantile owner and strong railroad supporter George Wagener. The current town of Wagener won the honor, after having also been known as Pinder Town and Gunter’s Cross Roads. The Gunters were a prominent family in the area, and Gunters settled much of the town. Pinder is another word for a peanut, and legend has it that Wagener was called Pinder Town because the peanuts that grew there were so tasty!

Follow us at AikenCounty150.org and on social media for more fascinating facts about our community. Take time this anniversary year to explore Aiken County’s history and find out what makes you curious!

Aiken County — Celebrating 150 Years | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

The North Augusta Natatorium, which burned in 1904.

Aiken County — Celebrating 150 Years | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

The Zubly Cemetery. The oldest marked grave in the cemetery belongs to David Zubly, Sr. who was buried in 1790.
Photo credit: Lauren Virgo.

Aiken County — Celebrating 150 Years | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

During the earthquake of 1886, the Langley Dam breached and drained the pond.
Photo donated by Linda Sabick. ACHM Collection.

Picture of Lauren Virgo and Leah Walker

Lauren Virgo and Leah Walker

Picture of Lauren Virgo and Leah Walker

Lauren Virgo and Leah Walker

In the know

Related Stories

To Keep Christmas Well | Palmetto Bella

To Keep Christmas Well

“…and it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well …” It is among the closing lines from Charles Dickens’ classic story, “A Christmas Carol.” It may be one of the best remembered and most cherished sentences in the book. “To keep Christmas well,” I suspect, implies different things to each of us. But in the language of the day when this book was written, it meant to observe, or to honor, or to celebrate something. To actively remember. Perhaps in this year of rather lopsided “celebrations” — with their often double-edged experiences and wobbly sense of imbalance — I have found myself searching for

Read More »
Story of Hanukkah | Palmetto Bella

Story of Hanukkah

Hanukkah is the Jewish Festival of Lights, celebrated to commemorate the rededication of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem after Judah Maccabee’s victory over the occupying Greek army in 165 BC. In the land of Judah, ruling Syrian King Antiochus ordered the Jewish population to reject all their religious beliefs and practices and worship Greek gods. For fear of the occupying Greek military that enforced King Antiochus’ decree, some Jews obeyed that command, but the majority chose to rebel against it. Thus were sown the seeds of what would ultimately become the celebration of Hanukkah. Fights broke out in a village near Jerusalem when Greek soldiers demanded that the Jewish villagers

Read More »
Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities

Have you ever watched A Charlie Brown Christmas television special and wondered about the metal Christmas tree lot that Charlie Brown visits? Did you know that cutting down a holly tree almost became illegal in our area? Let’s explore this curious affinity for metal Christmas trees and an early effort to save the holly tree in the latest episode of the Cabinet of Curiosities! The History of Christmas Trees When imagining our ancestors and how they may have spent Christmases a few hundred years in the past, many of us picture a happy family around a large, decorated tree, with a blazing fire in the hearth and children playing at

Read More »
A Thrifty Christmas Celebration | Palmetto Bella

A Thrifty Christmas Celebration

Christmas in Ireland is a massive celebration over the entire month of December. Normally we would be celebrating Friendsmas, a great huge gathering of my husband’s mates from Blackrock College and their spouses in a nice large restaurant spilling over with people. There is also the grand adventure of The 12 Pubs of Christmas, where friends and family take on a pub crawl that is not for the faint of heart, as revelers must complete a set of challenges for each pub. Anyone sick of his family on Christmas Eve can wander down to his local watering hole, always bursting to the door with people. For television entertainment, there is

Read More »