The Barrett House
SC 67 & Bryan Dorn Rd., Greenwood
Added to the national registed of historic places in 1985.
Brooks, J. Wesley, House (Scotch Cross House)
2 mi. S of Greenwood on U.S. 25, Greenwood
Added to the national registed of historic places in 1973.
Lander College's Old Main Building
Stanley Ave. and Lander St., Greenwood
Also known as Greenwood Hall, Laura Lander, and Wilson hall, Old Main was added to the historic register in 1984. It is today Lander University's oldist standing structer.
Magnolia Cemetery
416 Magnolia Ave, Greenwood
In 2004 Magnolia Cemetery was added to the National Historic Register.
Mays, Benjamin, Birthplace
0.5 mi NW of jct. of US 179 and Scott Ferry Rd., Epworth
Dr. Benjamin Elijah Mays (1895-1984) was an African-American minister, educator, scholar, social activist and the president of Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia. He was also a significant mentor to civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. and was among the most articulate and outspoken critics of segregation before the rise of the modern civil rights movement in the United States. Mays was born in 1895 in Ninety Six, South Carolina, the youngest of eight children - his parents were tenant farmers and former slaves.
Currently the site of Mays' birth is vacant, and there are no services availiable for visitors.
Ninety Six National Historic Site
2 mi. S of Ninety Six between SC 248 and 27, Ninety Six
Part of the National Parks service, Ninety Six National Historic Site comprises 2 Revolutionary War battle site, the most famos being Star Fort. The Site was added to the historic register in 1969. Special events are hosted by the Parks Service throughout the year.
Old Cokesbury and Masonic Female College and Conference School
N of Greenwood at jct. of SR 246 and 254, Cokesbury
Entered into the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, Cokesbury College is maintained by the Cokesbury Historic Commission. The college was built in 1854, and was one of the first Masonic Female Collegiate Institutes in the southeast.
