South Carolina Department of Archives and History
National Register Properties in South Carolina

Cheraw Historic District, Chesterfield County (Cheraw)
S1081771300131 S1081771300132 S1081771300133 S1081771300134 S1081771300135
Catherine Quilty
House
126 High St.
Chancellor Inglis
House
226 Third St.
Brasington House Duvall House Evans-Page-
Spear House
S1081771300136 S1081771300137 S1081771300138 S1081771300139 S1081771300140
Harrall-Godfrey-
Sprill House
Kinsey-Duvall
House
McCreight-Bourne
House
McClain House McNair-Tillman
House
S1081771300141 S1081771300142 S1081771300143 S1081771300144  
Ramseur-Hurt
House
Reid-Thurman-
Wannamaker House
Third St. Median Cedar Ave.

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Around 1736 Welsh Baptists came to South Carolina and settled in the Pee Dee region. In 1766 Eli Kershaw, who had been given a grant of land along the Pee Dee River, laid out the town of Cheraw. It was incorporated in 1820. Located at a key navigational point, Cheraw began to develop as a commercial center of interior South Carolina; however, the Civil War and Reconstruction temporarily halted this progress. For a time development was impeded and rebuilding was delayed. Although the town eventually prospered, much of its physical character remained unaltered. The town of Cheraw also played an important role in South Carolina military history. During both the American Revolution and the Civil War, British and Union troops used St. David’s Episcopal Church as a hospital. The meeting house style church still stands today. Additionally in 1825, Revolutionary War figure Marquis de Lafayette stayed in Cheraw during his tour of the United States. Located within the district are a variety of architectural styles that include the early frame homes of the 1800s (often called upcountry farmhouses, or essentially I-House in type), antebellum structures with Classical Revival details and Greek Revival porticos, and Victorian houses from the turn of the century. The district also includes several churches, a cemetery, and the towns’ original boundary markers dating from 1766. Listed in the National Register November 20, 1974.

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