Fairfield County is rich with resources; excellent
schools, public and private; top tier medical facilities; beautiful
lakes and serene parks for your leisure. Click the following icons for
more information or visit www.fairfieldsc.com



From the longest running clock in America to colonial buildings, the
County has many historical attractions. Located in the upper Piedmont
region of South Carolina, Fairfield County, with its rolling hills and
fertile valleys, is well-known for its picturesque scenery. The County
is also known for its "pines, ponds and pastures" and as a place for
people to enjoy living in a serene country atmosphere. The County is
steeped in history and populated by people proud of their heritage.
Fairfield County has over 100 historical buildings, churches and homes.
And scattered throughout the picturesque county are monuments and memories
that speak of the unique traditions and culture of the area and the
Upcountry.
Situated between the Broad River on the west and the Wateree River (now
Lake Wateree) on the east, the area was hunting ground for several Indian
tribes. Arrowheads and pieces of Indian pottery can still be found on
the banks of these bodies of water. The name of the town was changed
to "Winnsboro" and incorporated in 1832. The first settler to come to
the area was Thomas Nightingale. His love of horses drew him in 1740
to a "cow-pen" establishment about five miles from where a town began.
Other settlers came in the middle of the 18th century. These were primarily
Scotch-Irish, a proud, religious people with a strong belief in education,
but also included Germans, English and Huguenots. "Winnsborough," settled
on land owned by the Winn family, had about 20 houses when it was occupied
during the Revolutionary War by British soldiers under Lord Cornwallis.
The British camped in the town from October, 1780 to January, 1781.
Richard Winn, John Winn and John Vanderhorst led "Winnsborough" to be
chartered in 1785 and made the seat of justice for the Fairfield District.
Mount Zion Institute in Winnsboro was the first school to be established
in the South Carolina Upcountry. Begun in 1777, Mount Zion was the forerunner
of other schools in evidence until public schools were mandated by law
in 1878. The occupation of Winnsboro by Lord Cornwallis during the Revolution
only interrupted classes. A granite marker on the campus is a reminder
of his encampment. Mt. Zion did not close during the War Between the
States, but classes were relocated to the Baptist Church and other buildings
when it was taken over for a military hospital. Federal troops occupied
the building late in the war. The school continued in operation as an
elementary and high school for many years and later as an elementary
school. The facility was closed in 1991. South Carolina's General Assembly
authorized Winnsboro's town fathers to build a market house that "shall
not be of greater width than 30 feet" to allow 30 feet of wagon travel
on either side. The narrow building was modeled after Independence Hall
in Philadelphia and built on the site of a duck pond. A clock was added
in 1837, and the building has since been known as the Town Clock. Residents
boast the clock is the longest continuously running clock in the United
States. The County Courthouse, across from the Town Clock, has watched
Winnsboro's daily activities since 1823. Designed by South Carolina
architect Robert Mills, the courthouse houses records dating as far
back as the middle 1700s.
Fairfield County has numerous churches, some of which have been in existence
for over 200 years. Perhaps the most famous church, built in 1788, is
the Old Brick Church, where the Synod of the Carolina for the Associate
Reformed Presbyterian Church was organized in 1803. A note penciled
on the wall of the Old Brick Church is testimony to a Union soldier's
regret at the church's floor boards being taken up to build a crossing
over the nearby river for General Sherman's troops. The second largest
town in the County, Ridgeway, was originally know as "New Town". The
name was changed when the owners of Charlotte and South Carolina Railway
decided not to build the railroad on the Camden route but to use the
"ridge way". Until the early 1900's, agriculture was the primary economy.
The early settlers in the mid-1700's brought cotton to the County, and
it remained the main crop until depletion of the soil and boll weevil
called the industry to a halt in the 1920's. Granite deposits in the
County led to the early development of quarrying. Winnsboro blue granite,
"The Silk of the Trade," is used worldwide in buildings and monuments.
The excellent hunting and fishing that the Indians enjoyed still exist
today. Fairfield County, with an abundance of deer and wild turkeys,
is a focal point for sportsmen.
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