Cherokee County Formation History

Formation History

The Cherokee County South Carolina USGenWeb Project Pages



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About Cherokee County South Carolina

Cherokee County South Carolina is located in the upstate section of South Carolina east of the Blue Ridge Mountains and south of the North Carolina piedmont.

The county was formed in 1897 from parts of York, Spartanburg, and Union Counties.   This makes us a relatively new county without much of the historical record keeping that some others have.  Even so, we are a community rich in history.  We are bordered by our parent counties on three sides and by the North Carolina counties of Cleveland and Rutherford to the north.  We are reached by Interstate 85 and US29.  The county seat is Gaffney.  There is a great picture of the Limestone Street business district as it was in 1912 on my Gaffney postcard page.  Prior to about the 1930's, Cherokee County industry was primarily agricultural.  From then until relatively recently the county has relied on textiles and manufacturing.

The Naming of Cherokee County South Carolina:

Cherokee County seems to have been so named for as much political reasons as any other.   It seems to have originally been a move to encourage a positive vote from the residents of the area around Cherokee Falls and those of the Cherokee Township.   Reasoning that Cherokee Falls was among the earliest villages in the area and that the area had been home to the Cherokee Nation before 1750 [facts not confirmed] led to general acceptance of the name throughout the area.
In a vote on the name of the county Cherokee won over Limestone by a landslide.

primary source - The Gaffney Ledger at A Slice of History

 

It is clear from early (pre-1800) historical accounts of the area, that the Broad River was the western boundary of the Catawba Nation and that same boundary was the eastern boundary of the Cherokee Nation.  [see our Native Research Page for more on this] There are scant indications that either nation frequented the area, instead considering it "no mans land" between the two boundaries.  There probably should be some archaeological study in the areas around the Broad River and the known trading path through the county to determine the influence of the native nations in what is now Cherokee County.  There are anthropological and genealogical indications that descendants of the early native nations still reside in the communities that make up Cherokee County South Carolina.  

 

Since Cherokee County South Carolina was formed in 1897 from parts of York, Spartanburg, and Union Counties, this means simply that printed records research before 1897 must be conducted in one of those counties and that some place research from those counties prior to 1897 needs to be conducted in present Cherokee County.

This map shows the county boundaries before 1895.

an early map of the area

It's clear that everything East of the Broad River in what is now Cherokee County South Carolina was then a part of York County South Carolina.  The more difficult division determination is between Spartanburg and Union Counties in what is now Cherokee County.

The town of Gaffney was in Spartanburg County as was all of the county west of Gaffney.  So, what is now the Floyd Baker Blvd./SC11 corridor was then in Spartanburg County.  The dividing line to the East of Gaffney and South of the Broad River is much harder to determine just glancing at a map.  The Pacolet River marks one southern boundary and the former Broad River boundary of York/Union now marks much of the southern Cherokee/York boundary.

Hopefully I'll be able to match a Cherokee County outline map to the map above and show the lines a little better.

COMMUNITIES:

The following "populated places" are listed for Cherokee County in the GNIS system:
ABINGDON : ppl : Cherokee : 345932N 0812959W : Hickory Grove
BLACKSBURG : ppl : Cherokee : 350716N 0813058W : Blacksburg South
CASHION CROSSROADS : ppl : Cherokee : 350523N 0813029W : Blacksburg South
CHEROKEE FALLS : ppl : Cherokee : 350353N 0813233W : Blacksburg South
DRAYTONVILLE : ppl : Cherokee : 350258N 0813538W : Blacksburg South
EAST GAFFNEY : ppl : Cherokee : 350448N 0813759W : Gaffney
GAFFNEY : ppl : Cherokee : 350418N 0813900W : Gaffney
GOUCHER : ppl : Cherokee : 345853N 0814150W : Pacolet Mills
GRASSY POND : ppl : Cherokee : 350813N 0814021W : Boiling Springs South (NC)
KINGS CREEK : ppl : Cherokee : 350426N 0812613W : Kings Creek
MACEDONIA : ppl : Cherokee : 350414N 0814538W : Cowpens
SARATT : ppl : Cherokee : 345345N 0813225W : Wilkinsville
SMITH FORD : ppl : Cherokee : 345948N 0812908W : Hickory Grove
THICKETTY : ppl : Cherokee : 350059N 0814330W : Gaffney
WHITE PLAINS : ppl : Cherokee : 345937N 0814414W : Pacolet Mills
WILKINSVILLE : ppl : Cherokee : 345818N 0813159W : Wilkinsville

If we consider the history even further back:  Note the location of the Broad River on the above map.  It is generally considered that into the mid-1700's and earlier that the area West of the Broad River was within the Cherokee Nation while the area East of the Broad River was within the Catawba Nation.  Further, part of this area was disputed border with North Carolina and the early county of Tryon...

[more to come here...]

 

 

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last edited on Tuesday, July 30, 2002
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