
The Grand
Strand begins at the South Carolina state line at Little River (in Horry County)
and stretches south to Pawleys Island, S.C. (inside Georgetown County.)
Considered one of the nation’s top vacation destinations, the Grand Strand hosts
an estimated 13.5 million visitors annually. The Grand Strand has seen
steady growth in population in the past several decades. This population
explosion has been evident in the increase of the number of residential
construction starts and infrastructure development.
Money magazine rated
the Grand Strand as one of the top 20 places to retire in America. The number of
persons over the age of 65 has grown from nearly 18,262 in 1990 to an estimated
30,793 in 2000. This increase of 69 percent boosted this portion of the
population of Horry County to account for nearly 17 percent of the resident
population. In the year 2010, almost 21 percent of the county population will be
65 and over. Similarly, in Georgetown County, the population of persons over the
age of 65 is 9,019, which is 16.8 percent of the total county
population.
In 2000, The Searchers, Inc., a St.
Louis-based data research company, named the Myrtle Beach area and Horry County
as an Outstanding Community. Quality of life, taxes, crime rate, and
affordability of housing were among the criteria in The Searcher’s selection.
Travel managers from AAA named the Myrtle Beach area the second most popular
travel destination for the summer of 1999. And the readers of Southern Living
selected the area their second favorite family vacation destination and their
favorite beach in 1999.
The history of the Grand Strand includes
an unlikely tale of two neighboring, but vastly different, cultures and
geographical areas. Georgetown County developed from a thriving colonial
plantation culture that reached its zenith just before the Civil War, while the
more isolated Horry County rose from humble beginnings in farm and timber
trades.
Long ago, Waccamaw and Winyah Indians called the area "Chicora,"
meaning "the land." Recorded or documented history about the Native Americans is
difficult to retrieve, but their lifestyles have been recreated in several
exhibits at the Horry County Museum in Conway. A burial mound is located at
Waites Island near Little River, and the remains of an Indian village have been
excavated on Wachesaw Plantation near Murrells Inlet.
English colonists
laid out plans for Georgetown, the state’s third oldest city, in 1730.
Surrounded by intricate rivers and marshlands, Georgetown became the center of
America’s rice empire. Crops of indigo, cotton, and lumber also contributed to
the wealthy economy. A rich plantation culture took root here and
flourished.
Before the Civil War, wealthy
plantation owners turned Pawleys Island into one of the first summer resorts on
the Atlantic coast. Planters and their families spent summers on the cool,
breezy island to avoid malaria and other deadly diseases associated with the
more swampy, still conditions of the plantation sites. Historic cottages, inns
and other buildings still stand on Pawleys Island.
After the Civil War,
Georgetown’s rice plantation culture disappeared. Today, the Georgetown Historic
District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In addition to
being a major industrial center, the city is well known for careful preservation
of its past with historic churches, homes, and storefronts, fine restaurants,
and plantation sites.
In 1900, Burroughs & Collins Company, a
timber-turpentine firm with extensive beachfront holdings, began developing the
resort potential of the Grand Strand by constructing a railroad to the beach.
They built the first hotel, the Seaside Inn, in 1901. Mrs. F.E. Burroughs, wife
of the founder of the Burroughs & Collins Company, hosted (and won) a
contest to name the town. Myrtle Beach was chosen for the many wax myrtle trees
growing wild along the shore.
The Intracoastal Waterway was opened to
pleasure boats and commercial shipping in 1936. Myrtle Beach was incorporated in
1938. The Myrtle Beach Air Force Base was established in the 1940s and used for
coastal patrols during World War II. The Myrtle Beach Pavilion began delighting
children and their parents in 1949.
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