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

Elmwood Park Historic District, Richland County (Columbia)
S1081774010041 S1081774010042 S1081774010043 S1081774010044 S1081774010045
1100 Price Ave. 1105 Price Ave. 2428 Clark St. 2420 Clark St. 1035 Bryan St.
S1081774010046 S1081774010047 S1081774010048 S1081774010049 S1081774010050
1044 Bryan St. 2216 Rembert St. 2228 and 2230
Rembert St.
1102 Belleview Ave. Wardlaw Junior
High School
1003 Elmwood Ave.
S1081774010051 S1081774010052 S1081774010053 S1081774010054  
Logan School
815 Elwood Ave.
729 and 731
Elmwood Ave.
2226 Wayne St. 2228 Wayne St.

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Elmwood Park Historic District is a turn-of-the-century suburb developed at a time of major suburban growth in the Columbia area. The district is a collection of 279 primarily residential properties, 219 of which are considered contributing. The district’s resources date from the turn of the twentieth century to 1940. Elmwood Park’s southern boundary, Elmwood Avenue, was the northern border of the city of Columbia. There had been scattered settlement in the area since at least 1872, but no planned suburban growth until 1891 when the first part of the neighborhood was platted on land off Main Street. The bulk of what would become Elmwood Park was used as a fairgrounds until 1903. The area developed rapidly as land became available. Many of the houses in the suburb typify the trend in architecture away from elaborate styles and toward “the comfortable house.” Styles range from the numerous Queen Anne, Four-Square, and gable-front houses, to a few Colonial Revival houses. One-story structures are predominantly Craftsman influenced. Brick bungalows are evident as infill from the 1920s and 1930s. There are also a number of shotgun houses in the earliest developed part of the neighborhood. Two neighborhood schools in the district are typical of school design of the day, being monumental in scale. Logan School is the work of well-known local architect, J. Carroll Johnson, chief draftsman for Wilson & Sompayrac. James Burwell Urquhart, another prominent Columbia architect, designed Wardlaw Junior High School. As a nearly intact suburb, Elmwood Park illustrates the shift in Columbia, and nationwide, to the suburbs. Listed in the National Register May 3, 1991; Boundary increase May 13, 2002.

Most National Register properties are privately owned and are not open to the public. The privacy of owners should be respected. Not all properties retain the same integrity as when originally documented and listed in the National Register due to changes and modifications over time.

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