Laura

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Gaffney, SC, United States

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Nation Ford Road & The ASC Greenway

We recently spent a day in Fort Mill SC geocaching on the Anne Springs Close Greenway.   The greenway is a nature nirvana in the middle of urban sprawl.  The ASC Greenway is over two thousand acres, of multi-use land.  The greenway is a major attraction for horseback riding, hiking, geocaching, birding,  as well as primitive camping, kayaking and fishing.  There are several old cabins, as well as a restored dairy barn on the property.
 
 One of two cabins we visited on the property.


Another cabin on the property.
 

 
 
I love the texture of the wood and stone of this old cabin.
 

 
 Swinging bridge over Steele Creek.
 
The restored Dairy Barn.
 
 

 
We were there for the geocaching and the birding.
 

 
 
One of the most interesting things I discovered about the Greenway is the fact that the Nation Ford Road runs through the property.  
 
 
 The stone marker pictured below, gave travelers along the Nations Ford rd. a indicator of mileage.
As you can see, this side shows 14 mile to the town of Fort Mill SC.
 
The opposite side shows sixteen more miles for weary travelers to reach Charlotte NC.
 
 

 
 This is a old map of the Nation Ford Rd.
 

The following information on Nation Ford was gathered from:
 "http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/york/S10817746050/index.htm"

Listed in the National Register March 1, 2007.
Nation Ford Road is significant because it provides evidence of a prehistoric transportation route which has helped to shape the modern world. Several segments of Nation Ford Road are still visible today. One of the oldest documented travel routes in the southeast, it began at the James River, traversed southern Virginia, crossed the Piedmont of North Carolina, passed into South Carolina, and forked just south of Nation Ford. The presence of Nation Ford as one of the few reliable crossing places on the Catawba River led to its use by the Catawba Indians and other tribes. Gradually, a north-south path developed which led from Virginia to the Nation Ford. This path was being used by white traders as early as 1650. The trading path which crossed at the river here was known by many names, including the “Occaneechi Path,” the “Catawba Path,” and on Mouzon’s map of 1775 as the “Indian Road.” The presence of the road led many early European settlers to locate in the area. As the major transportation artery in the area, it influenced the course of events in everyday commerce and in the most important armed conflicts to be fought on American soil. The development of the railroad, which largely followed the earlier route of Nation Ford Road, helped to shape the modern development patterns of the area by determining the location of depots which would grow into Rock Hill and Fort Mill. Although superseded by more modern highways, Nation Ford Road established the basic route that they followed, from U. S. Highway 21 in the 1920s to I-77 in the 1970s. Although largely forgotten today, Nation Ford Road had a significant role in shaping the face of eastern York County."

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