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The South
Carolina National Heritage Corridor
Anderson
County Heritage Corridor Board of Directors
& Region Coordinator
Mountain Lakes Region 1 Map
(For a free
map or web link see the bottom of this page.)

Belton has been selected as a site to visit
along the South Carolina National Heritage Corridor. Other Stops and
Sites currently in Anderson County are:
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Stops |
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Hunters Store in
Pendleton, Anderson Museum, REVIVA Museum in Iva |
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Sites |
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Belton Square, Honea
Path Library, Townville, Split Creek Goat Farm,
Woodburn Plantation |
The nationally recognized South
Carolina National Heritage Corridor is a grassroots initiative
designed to use natural, cultural, and historic resources to
provide economic development through tourism. Conceived and
initiated in one rural community, the 240-mile corridor has
grown to include 14 counties of western South Carolina, from
the mountains of Oconee County to the port city of
Charleston. These counties are divided into four regions,
which reveal a vibrant history of the land and its people.
The management of the corridor
combines a non-profit partnership board, state agencies,
regional boards, local governments and private sector
partners to create a network of sponsors that touch every
aspect of the 14 corridor countries. The South Carolina
Department of Parks, Recreational & Tourism coordinate the development process
with the Heritage Partnership Board having the overall responsibility for
the corridor. As testament to its significance, the South
Carolina Heritage Corridor attained federal designation as a
national Heritage Area in 1996.
Belton is in the Region One
sector and lies directly on the Discovery Route on the
Heritage Corridor.
Discovery and nature routes: Two parallel corridor-wide routes will
run the length of the Heritage corridor to act as entrances
to the corridors regions. The routes will connect and tie the
14 countries into one tourism destination. The discovery
route links many of the corridors many of the corridors
significant historic sites and settlements. This route will
begin in the mill villages of the Upstate, run through the
historic courthouse towns of Pendleton, Edgefield and
Abbeville, visit the military sites of Ninety-Six, follow the
south Carolina Railroad through Aiken's horse country, and
arrive in historic Charleston's wealth of African-American
and Antebellum history. The nature route is a gateway to a
wide variety of South Carolina's natural resources. Beginning
in the waterfalls and mountains of Table Rock and the
Mountain Bridge Wilderness Area, the nature route winds along
Russell and Thurmond Lakes and on to the Savannah River. The
route follows the Edisto River, the longest free flowing
black water river in America, until it reaches the ACE Basin
and coastal plain of the Low country.
Regional Discovery Centers: A primary element of the
Corridor's framework are the regional discovery centers. These centers present the Corridor to the visitor and
provide regional education and information. The
interpretation provided accent the themes unique to each
region as well as demonstrate the common threads that run
throughout the corridor. From these centers, visitors can
embark on a series of Regional Trails ranging from military
history, bird watching, and arts and crafts, to the story of
cotton and African-American heritage. The Region 1 Discovery
Center is named the Fran Hanson Discovery Center and opened in May 2001.
The Fran Hanson Discovery Center is located in the SC Botanical Garden on
the Campus of Clemson University and serves Pickens, Oconee and Anderson counties.
In its first year of operations it saw over 20,000 visitors. Region
II's Discovery Center is on target to open in April 2003, and it will be
located in Edgefield. Region III's Discovery Center is scheduled to
open in December 2003 in Blackville (Barnwell County), and Region IV's will
be opened in Charleston in 2004.
Regional Trails: Each of the four regions will have
regional trails to feature the key resources and activities
of the area. These routes will encircle each region's
Discovery Center and enable visitors to explore the area
resources. Customized itineraries will be developed to
accompany the routes and tell visitors the special stories of
each part of the corridor.
Benefits of the Corridor: As an economic development initiative for
rural South Carolina, the Corridor could attract 700,000
visitors while generating a possible $83.5 million in tourism
revenue each year. Designated as a national heritage area,
the Corridor brings in tourism's dollars that create
employment opportunities, supports existing businesses,
increases tax revenues, and provides opportunities for new
economic activity.

South Carolina's Heritage
Corridor plan also illustrates how a strategically developed
state local, public-private initiative can bring capital
investment, jobs, thousands of visitors, and millions of new
tourism dollars to the undiscovered rural areas of a state."

Support - South Carolina's first heritage effort has
gained recognition and support as a vehicle for rural
economic revitalization since its inception in 1990. Since
then more than 1000 people have organized themselves at
community, county, and regional levels to inventory and
analyze the resources available for developing South
Carolina's Heritage Corridor. An ISTEA grant from South
Carolina's Department of Transportation provided the funding
to hire the nationally recognized heritage areas planning
team of Lane, Frenchman & Associates from Boston to
formulate a strategic plan for the development and management
of the corridor in addition, nearly $2 million in grants has
already been awarded to the project from such sources as the
South Carolina Arts commission, the south Carolina Arts
commission, the South Carolina Humanities Council, the U.S.
Department of Highways and Public Transportation. Currently,
the corridor is awaiting congressional designation as a
National Heritage Area. This designation will recognize South
Carolina's Heritage Corridor as an area that tells a
nationally significant story, the story of a way of life that
eventually led to a war that threatened to divide a nation.
Strategy - In addition to providing a blueprint for
developing and managing a heritage tourism program. South
Carolina's Heritage Corridor plan also illustrates how a
strategically developed state-local, public-private
initiative can bring capital investment, jobs, thousands of
visitors, and millions of new tourism dollars to the
undiscovered rural areas of a state. Key elements of the plan
are the development of new tourism products using each
region's unique resources and the creative marketing of these
products for positive visitor experiences. This development
strategy will be implemented in a number or ways.
1. Themes The central themes Working Places and
southern Culture will provide a frame-work for
understanding how the varied quality of the land forms
located along the corridor not only influenced the
man-made environment and how settlers develop their
economies but also produced the two distinctively
different cultures of South Carolina's Up Country and Low
Country.
2. Corridor Wide Discovery Routes Parallel byways running the length of
the Heritage corridor will emphasize its historic and
natural resources. Serving as spines that link the
various resources of the regions through a distinctive
system of signs, these discovery routes will show the
corridor's identity and provide a planned itinerary for
visitors by linking significant historic sites, towns,
and natural resources.
3. Regional Heritage
Discovery Centers Each region will develop a Discovery
Center to provide interpretation of regional attractions
and to serve as a gateway for exploring the lesser known
resources of the Heritage Corridor in addition, the staff
and volunteers will assist visitors with itinerary
planning and reservation. Properties characteristic of
each region have been chosen as the sites for theses
Discovery centers.
4. Regional Discovery trails A network of Regional Trails is being
developed by each region to compliment the Regional
Discovery Centers. This network will feature the key
resources in the corridor and guide visitors in their
exploration of each region.
The development and marketing of
these and other tourism products throughout each region of South
Carolinas Heritage corridor will:
strengthen the demand for goods and
services in communities for goods and services in communities
of all sizes.
maintain or raise the quality of life in
existing communities and encourage rural economic
development.
In addition, there will be
development opportunities throughout the corridor for the private
sector. Businesses that compliment heritage-based and
nature-based tourism, such as bed and breakfasts, museums,
restaurants, and retail shops will be assisted as part of the
overall heritage tourism initiative.

For more information and a free map of the
Heritage Corridor, please write to the following address or visit their web site
using their web link below:
The South
Carolina National Heritage Corridor
1205 Pendleton
Street
Columbia, South
Carolina 29201
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