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BRIEF HISTORY:
McCormick County and its county seat, the town of McCormick, were named for
inventor Cyrus Hall McCormick (1809-1884). The county was formed in 1916
from parts of Edgefield, Abbeville, and Greenwood counties. This area was part of
Old 96 District, and was settled in the mid-eighteenth century by Scotch-Irish,
French Huguenots, and German farmers. Some of the early inhabitants were
massacred by Cherokee Indians at Long Cane in 1760, and the British subsequently
built Fort Charlotte to protect the region; this fort was one of the
first seized by the Americans in the Revolutionary War.
About 1850 gold was discovered where the town of McCormick now stands. The Dorn
Gold Mine, which later also produced manganese, was bought by Cyrus
McCormick in 1871; he donated land for the town, which was
named for him in 1882. This mine continued to operate until
the 1930s.
Several prominent South Carolinians have resided in the area that is now McCormick
County, including governor and U. S. senator George McDuffie
(1790-1851), Unionist leader James Louis Petigru (1789-1863),
and Moses Waddel (1770-1840), who taught many of the future
leaders of the state at his Willington Academy.
REF: South Carolina State Library
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