The Liberty Woman's Club was the driving force in opening a library in 1947. The Library was located in a small corner of a room upstairs over the ...
Read More
Although the official date of the library's beginning is April 30, 1935, efforts began as early as 1929 to provide a library in Easley. At this tim...
Read More
Mission Statement:
The Anderson County Library System is dedicated to providing access to information of all types and facilities for educatio...
Read More
History:
When northern Greenville County was still Cherokee country during the Revolutionary War, hardy settlers moved in to set up farms. In 1...
Read More
Vision:To be a beacon of learning excellence that is recognized as a world-class organization, a cultural and information leader of the upstate, an...
Read More
Before it was chartered in 1855, Belton was a major stop on the wagon trail leading from the Blue Ridge Mountain foothills to Augusta, Georgia. The...
Read More
History: The Transylvania County Library was founded in 1912 by the local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. The library's collect...
Read More
About us
The museum is a non-profit, tax-exempt corporation that is dedicated to an accurate portrayal of the War for Southern Independence. The...
Read More
Mission :
The mission of the 16th Regiment, South Carolina Volunteers, Museum of Confederate History, is to protect, preserve and defend the memor...
Read More
Ella Emmons Hudson, a newcomer to the young town of Highlands, dreamt of providing reading material for the town and its surrounding communities. S...
Read More
About Us
Hart County Library is a Georgia PINES Library. Georgia Library Public Information Network for Electronic Services, or PINES, is Georgia...
Read More
Branch History:Captain Nathaniel Austin, the first permanent white settler in Greenville County, built a log cabin in the Mauldin area, and one of ...
Read More
Branch History:Before the American Revolutionary War, everything west of the present Spartanburg County line belonged to the Cherokees by treaty.&n...
Read More
The area between Greenville and Greer was just farmland, and farmland it would have remained had it not been for the mineral spring five miles east...
Read More