South Carolina - Facts and Information
If you are interested in traveling to SC here is some information about the state.
SC Geography
- Borders – Atlantic Ocean, Georgia, North Carolina
- Time zone – Eastern
- Coastal water area – 72 square miles
- Inland water area – 1,006 square miles
- Land area – 30,109.47 square miles (96.5%)
- Total area – 31,189 square miles (40th largest state)
- Greatest distance north to south – 219 miles
- Greatest distance east to west – 273 miles
- Geographic center – Richland County (13 miles southeast of Columbia)
- Largest county, land area only – Horry County at 1,133 square miles
- Largest county, land and water area – Berkeley County with 1,230 square miles
- Smallest county – McCormick County with 360 square miles
- Highest waterfall – Raven Cliff Falls at 400 feet
- Highest mountain – Sassafras Mountain at 3,560 feet
- Largest island – Johns Island
- Largest barrier island – Hilton Head Island
- Largest river – Santee River at 143 miles long and drains 40% of the state
- Largest lake – Lake Marion with 172.8 square miles
- Longest river – 238 miles of the Savannah River segment that borders SC
- Miles of general coastline – 187
- Miles of coastal shoreline – 2,876, 11th longest in US (calculated by measuring the outer coast, offshore islands, sounds, bays, rivers, and creeks to head of tidewater, or to point where tidal waters narrow to width of 100 feet)
- Lowcountry – Area along SC coast from Pawleys Island south to the Savannah River – sometimes spelled Low Country
- Midlands – Located in the center of the state stretching from Aiken County in the west to Clarendon County in the east, Fairfield County to the north and Orangeburg County at the south. Columbia is in the heart of the Midlands region.
- Pee Dee – Northeast area of SC including the Grand Strand
- Upstate – Northwestern part of SC featuring the Appalachian Mountains – sometimes called Upcountry
SC Climate, Natural Disasters
- 49.84 inches – Average annual precipitation
- 34.5° F – Average January low
55.3° F – Average January high
- 70.9° F – Average July low
91.2° F – Average July high
- -19° F – Record low set in 1977 at Caesar's Head
111° F – Record high set in 1925 at Blackville and Calhoun Falls and most recently in 1954 at Camden
- Worst earthquake on record – Charleston earthquake on August 31, 1886
- Worst hurricane on record – Hurricane Hugo on September 21-22, 1989
Population, Demographics
- Estimated population – 4,625,364 (2010, 24th largest state)
- Population per square land mile – 153.6 (2010)
- Smallest town – Smyrna - 45 (2010)
- Largest city – Columbia - 129,272 (2010)
- Smallest county – McCormick County - 10,233 (2010)
- Largest county – Greenville County - 451,225 (2010)
- Percent urban – 76 (2010)
- Percent rural – 24 (2010)
- Percent women – 51.3% (2009)
- Percent men – 48.7% (2009)
- Percent white – 66.2% (2008, ranked 26th in US)
- Percent black – 27.9% (2008, ranked 14th in US)
- Percent Hispanic – 5.1% (2008, ranked 30th in US)
- Median age – 37.9 (2010)
- Percent under 18 – 23.7% (2009)
- Percent 18-64 – 62.6% (2009)
- Percent 65 and older – 13.7% (2009)
History – Timeline
Below is a quick list of notable SC historical facts.
- South Carolina is named for – Charles I of England.
- June 1521 – First European contact with Native Americans was by the Spanish at Winyah Bay
- July 1521 – First European enslavement of Native Americans was by the Spanish at Winyah Bay
- 1562 – The French established their first settlement at Parris Island
- 1629 – Charles I of England granted "Carolana" to Sir Robert Heath
- March 24, 1663 – Charles II of England granted "Carolina" to the Eight Lords Proprietors
- 1670 – First English settlement was Charles Town (named for Charles II)
- 1710 – Separated from North Carolina
- December 21, 1719 – Lords Proprietors overthrown
- 1766 – Capital moved from Charleston to Columbia
- March 26, 1776 – First state constitution signed and John Rutledge was elected president of South Carolina
- June 28, 1776 – America's first military victory when the British fleet was defeated at the Battle of Sullivan's Island
- August 2, 1776 – Declaration of Independence signed in Philadelphia and includes the signatures of four South Carolinians Thomas Heyward, Jr., Thomas Lynch, Jr., Arthur Middleton, and Edward Rutledge
- 1779 – John Rutledge was elected to be the state's first governor
- May 23,1788 – Ratified US Constitution, the 8th state to do so
- December 20, 1860 – Seceded from Union and was the first state to secede
- April 12, 1861 – Shots fired on Fort Sumter marking the beginning of the Civil War
- October 18, 1865 – First SC governor elected by popular vote was James Lawrence Orr
- July 9, 1868 – Rejoined the Union during the Reconstruction Period
- April 11, 1877 – End of Reconstruction
- 1919 – Last county formed was Allendale County
- 1929 – Mary G. Ellis from Jasper County was the first woman elected to SC Senate
- 1965 – Public colleges integrated
- Late 1960s – In-migration begins to exceed out-migration
- 1970 – Public schools fully integrated
- 1970 – First black state representatives elected in the 20th Century
- 1975 – First Republican governor since Reconstruction, James B. Edwards
- 1983 – First black state senator elected in the 20th Century, I. DeQuincy Newman
- 1992 – First black US Representative elected since Reconstruction, James E. Clyburn
Government, Elections
- Capital – Columbia
- Number of counties – 46
- Number of Supreme Court justices – 5
- Name of legislature – General Assembly
- Number of state representatives – 124
- Number of state senators – 46
- Number of US representatives – 7
- Number of US senators – 2
- Number of electoral votes – 9
- Number of registered voters – 2,677,766 (July 2011)
- Percent of potential voters registered – 75% (November 9, 2010 election)
- Percent of registered voters who voted – 38.3% (November 9, 2010 election)
- Percent of potential voters who voted – 51.64% (November 9, 2010 election)
Taxes, Licenses
- Sales tax rates
– 6% – 6 counties
– 7% – 25 counties
– 8% – 11 counties
– 8.5% – 1 county
- 16.8 cents – State fuel tax per gallon
- 5% – Corporate state income tax rate (no local tax on corporate income)
- 7% – Highest income tax rate for individuals
- Driver's licenses – Non-commercial | Commercial (CDL)
- Vehicle inspections – South Carolina no longer has a vehicle inspection program
Education
Economy, Business, Jobs
- 1 – Fortune 500 company headquarters (Domtar)
- 7% – Employed by foreign-owned companies (2010)
- 13.6% – Business failure rate (2010)
- $12,273 – Per capita retail sales (2007)
- $124 billion – Gross sales (rounded in 2010)
- Germany – Largest foreign investor country
- Leading agricultural products – Poultry, greenhouse/floriculture/nursery, turkeys, soybeans, cattle (2009)
- $12.43 – Average hourly earnings for all jobs (May 2005)
- $16.29 – Average hourly earnings in manufacturing (2009)
- 4.6% – Union membership (2010 - US average 11.9%)
- South Carolina is a right-to-work state
- $33,884 – Annual personal income per capita (2010 - ranked 45th in US)
- $42,580 – Median household income (2009)
- 81% – Annual personal income per capita as a percent of US annual income per capita (2008)
- $611 – Average monthly contract rent (2005)
- $128,400 – Median value of owner-occupied homes (2009)
- 70% – Homes owner-occupied (2009)
- Cost of living index rates
– Anderson – 89 (2010)
– Charleston – 97 (2010)
– Columbia – 95 (2010)
– Florence – 90 (2010)
– Greenville – 89 (2010)
– Myrtle Beach – 91 (2010)
– Spartanburg – 100 (2010)
– Sumter – 93 (2010)
Transportation
- 842.6 – Miles of interstate highways in South Carolina (2010)
- 8,344 – Number of bridges (2010)
- 9,478.03 – Miles of state primary roads (2010)
- 31,138.40 – Miles of state secondary roads (2010)
- About 5 hours – Longest driving time within state
- 54,621 – Public vehicles (2010)
- 3,559,779 – Private & commercial vehicles (2010)
- 2 – Ports in South Carolina (Charleston is the busiest)
- 6 – Commercial airports
– Charleston International Airport is busiest passenger airport
– Columbia Metropolitan Airport is busiest cargo airport
- 68 – General aviation airports (2010)
- 2,404 – Miles of railroad tracks in use (2007)
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