The country roads in the Upstate hold all sorts of secrets: old battlefields, Native American sites, drive-up movie theaters and quirky stores... Americana from a by-gone era, and modern-day wayside stops. On our recent hike with the South Carolina 7 Expedition we found ourselves in Glenn Springs, SC, an unincorporated community in Spartanburg County, and what we discovered there was a lot of history for such a little place!
Glenn Springs historic marker |
The mineral springs
Not far from present-day Pauline, SC, there is a spring. The
waters from this spring are said to have healing properties, and for over one
hundred years were visited by people who came to enjoy their waters. According
to the Glenn Springs Preservation Society, it was a Cherokee medicine man that discovered
the mineral properties of the spring. Later, legend has it that soldiers
returning from the Revolutionary War with various skin ailments came to the
spring for its healing powers after finding that the minerals in the mud cleared
up their health issues. Even George Washington was said to have stopped there
to try the waters on a trip to neighboring Georgia. Recent water analysis shows
calcium, sulphur and magnesium compounds, lending credence to the idea that the
water had special properties.
Glenn Springs Mineral Water label photo, courtesy of Glenn Springs Preservation Society |
J W Bell owned Glen Springs from the 1930s until 1970. When the
hotel burned down in the 1940s, it was never rebuilt, but the J W Bell Company
in Spartanburg kept bottling the spring water in gallon glass bottles, 12,00-15,000
cases a year being shipped throughout the US and Europe until the Great
Depression.
Glenn Springs Hotel photo, courtesy of Glenn Springs Preservation Society |
Today
While you will not find a bottling plant or fancy hotel, the
Glenn Springs Historic District and Williams Place are listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. If your family is interested in visiting, here is
what you need to know!
Your first stop should be the Old Stone Church (3700 Glenn
Springs Road). Built in 1908, the property was built by the Glenn Springs Preservation Society in 2013, the old
stone church is now an event and community center. The neighboring wooden
building was originally the Cates Store, used as a Sunday school building until
1961. The wooden kiosk at the site has plenty of information on the area, as
well as driving tour brochures that feature 23 historic structures, most on the
National Register of Historic Places.
Kiosk at Old Stone Church |
Take the driving tour
The brochure features a list of the Glenn Springs sights,
including whether it is still standing, the address, and if it is on the
National Register of Historic Places. The hotel was located near the Old Stone
Church site, as is the spring – the entrance to the original springs and the
bottling plant was off what is current-day Boys Home Road, across from the
Episcopal Cemetery. Also on the tour is the Browning Home, which was haunted by
resident ghost “Willie” who would knock over floor lamps and turn on radios
until he was asked to leave in 1992. Nearby Camp Hill got its name after
British Army Major Patrick Ferguson and his loyalist militia camped on the site
in 1780, prior to their defeat by Patriots at the battle of Kings Mountain,
and today features a Greek Revival style house built in the 1830s. The Storey
Cabin, built by Henry Storey after he obtained the land grant from King George
III in the 1750s, is located near a second spring (that feeds Storey Creek) and
is still owned by the Storey family. The Old Jail House could hold two people,
and was once a stage coach stop before being used for storage, and the Glenn
Springs Post Office (and saddler’s shop) has been restored and moved to the
very center of historic Glenn Springs.
Glenn Springs Historic Post Office |
Go on a hike
The Post Office can be accessed from a parking lot at 3670
Glenn Springs Road. This is the parking area for the Glenn Springs Passage of
the Palmetto Trail, which connects Croft State Park to Stagecoach Road. The
Passage is unique in that it traverses mostly private property, in contrast to
most of the Palmetto Trail which is located on state and federal public lands.
From the parking area, follow the connector trail behind the kiosk for a third
of a mile to reach the Palmetto Trail. From this point it is a little over 3
miles north to Croft Park, or 4 miles south to Stagecoach Road.
For more information on parking and the trail, please visit the Palmetto Trail Glenn Springs Passage page. We found the hike to be easy to moderate, though it did involve walking along roadsides for short distances, not ideal for children. Mountain bikes are allowed on most of the trail, and there is a bypass for the section that doesn’t. Highlights for us were the farm animals we saw (chickens, goats) on the farm next to the trail on the south end of the Passage, historic Glenn Springs, and Mineral & Storey Branch creeks.
Glenn Springs passage trailhead |
Nearby things to do:
Glenn Springs provides a great stop during a day of
exploration in Spartanburg County. Old Stone Church could be a great picnic spot,
while the driving tour offers an opportunity to rest after a hike. A short
drive away are several other attractions:
- Walnut Grove Plantation is just 15 minutes away in Roebuck. In addition to the home and outlying buildings, visitors can also view the property’s cemetery and walk a nature trail, or enjoy a picnic at the pavilion. Walnut Grove Plantation recounts how free and enslaved people settled the South Carolina Backcountry, fought for independence, and built a new nation.
- Once an army training base, Croft State Park covers more than 7,000 acres of rolling, wooded terrain just a few miles from downtown Spartanburg. The Park offers over 20 miles of biking and hiking trails, a playground, picnicking and camping, as well as fishing and boating in one of two lakes.
- 20 minutes north of Glenn Springs is Glendale Shoals Preserve, featuring a 1928 pedestrian bridge, trails, mill ruins and gardens.
Goats as seen from the trail |
This post was originally published on Kidding Around Greenville in conjunction with the South Carolina 7 Expedition as Hike and Explore Historic Glenn Springs, SC.