Located on Haynie Street, Jesse Jackson grew up in this house in Greenville, South Carolina. Born on October 8, 1941, Jackson graduated from Sterling High School. Known as a leader in high school, Jackson became known as one of the members of the “Greenville 8,” eight men and women who entered the Greenville public libraries to desegregate them.
Jackson’s mother, Helen Burns Jackson, lived in Greenville until she died in 2015.
The J. D. and Millicent Massey House was built in the 1930s from a Leila Ross Wilburn plan. It stayed in the Massey family for several decades. It is now a law office.
The Lanneau-Norwood-Funderburk House was built in 1877 for Charles H. Lanneau by Charleston architect Jacob Cagle. Lanneau was involved in several local textile mills. He even founded the Lanneau Manufacturing Company on adjacent land to the home. Like many homes during this time period, the home was destroyed by fire twice and rebuilt both times.
After becoming bankrupt in 1907, Lanneau sold the Second Empire home to local banker John Wilkins Norwood. When he passed away in 1945, his daughter Frances Norwood Funderburk inherited the home. She then passed it to her son, George Norwood.
To view photos of the inside, the house can be seen in a 2021 listing.
White Oaks was designed by noted architect Philip Trammell Shutze in 1957 for Charles and Homozel Daniel. Charles Daniel was a contractor and co-owner of Daniel International Construction Corporation. He was a trustee of Clemson University and a generous donor to the College of Architecture at Clemson. He also briefly served as a United States Senator in 1954.
The 9,750-square-foot home is a copy of the rebuilt Governor’s Palace in Williamsburg, Virginia. In 1992, Homozel Daniel donated White Oaks to Furman University. It now serves as the President’s house.
Brutontown was founded in 1874 when Benjamin Bruton, a freedman, bought 1.75 acres in the northwest part of South Carolina. Over time, it became a Black settlement as more Black families moved around Bruton’s land.
The Bruton Temple Baptist Church was the first church for the community. It was built in 1921. The church is still active.
Monument for Matilda (1824-1900) and George (1819-1892)
Springwood Cemetery, located in Greenville, South Carolina, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. It is an important cemetery because it reflects the history of the city within its walls. Several early Greenville citizens call Springwood their final resting place. It also contains several Victorian markers and reflects the rural cemetery style that became popular with Mount Auburn Cemetery in Boston, Massachusetts.
The first burial was in 1812. Springwood has been known as the Elford Cemetery, the Old Graveyard, and the Old Village Burial Ground. Springwood features a formal, planned design. The pathways and design of the cemetery were created by landscape architect, G. L. Norrman, a noted architect in the Southeast, who was inspired by the rural cemetery movement.
Zahiya (1898-1975) and Alfred (1890-1951) SaadMarker for the Efstration family plotClose-up of the Efstration sculpture“Stand back! I’m coming up!”-James Davis, Jr. (1927-2010)The interesting crypt of Tweetie Carter (1876-1931). Marker for dentist and violinist Dr. Ben C. Jones (1880-1966)
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