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History of Hilton Head
In 1525, Spanish sailors encountered a prominent
headland on the coast of South Carolina and named it "la Punta de Santa Elena."
The anglicized St. Helena (near Beaufort) survives and is one of the oldest
continually used European names of geography in North America.
In 1663,
the untamed island was surveyed by William Hilton, an English sea captain,
sailing from Barbados in search of tropical lands on which to establish
profitable English plantations. Hilton then claimed it for the British crown,
establishing the legacy with his own name... Hilton's Head lsland.
Hilton
touted the island's beauty, encouraging settlement there. English settlers
waited for the threat of both Spaniards and Native Americans to dispel before
colonizing in 1670 to found South Carolina's first permanent settlement at the
confluence of the Ashley and Cooper Rivers, then called Charlestowne, now
Charleston. Immigrants from Switzerland and lowland Scots from Northern Ireland
settled the early townships. In the early 1700's, the current town of Beaufort
was chartered, becoming the second English settlement in South
Carolina.
As the Lowcountry grew, plantation owners looked for new crops
to thrive in this welcoming climate. The early 1800's saw the advent of
agriculture to the rich island soil, and among the crops grown was Sea Island
Long Staple Cotton, which flourished in the warm subtropical climate. Rice and
indigo were also grown. These labor intensive crops allowed planters to prosper
during the pre-Civil War time period; however, with the onset of the war,
gracious homes and prolific crops were abandoned by the planters. The striking
blow was what was later seen as the largest naval engagement of the entire war,
The Battle of Port Royal. In many ways, Hilton Head remains much the same as
its earliest beginnings. Yet, it has emerged to become a relaxed, easy-paced
environment that is home to over 27,500 residents and considered the preferred
vacation destination for over a million and a half visitors each year. The
"modern" Hilton Head Island has existed for only a few decades. Its development
began in the fifties. The first bridge was erected in 1956.
Vacationers
come for the scenery as well as for the limitless attractions and recreational
opportunities like the more than twenty championship golf courses and hundreds
of tournament-quality tennis courts. Hilton Head Island as we know it today
experienced a rebirth during the 1950s and beyond due to a man named Charles
Fraser. He had inspiration to create an unprecedented resort community which
would encompass uncommon beauty and spirit while preserving the land's inherent
natural endowments. With exactingly careful preparation, Fraser developed Sea
Pines, the first planned island community. Since then, his same environmentally
sound covenants have become effective guidelines for all subsequent
development. |
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