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Lyman, South Carolina
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==History== The town of Lyman originally grew around a [[general store]] owned by Augustus Belton Groce,<ref name= "visitspar"/> which opened in the mid-1870s.<ref name= "official"/> This led to the community becoming known as '''Groce's Stop'''.<ref name= "official"/><ref name= "sciway"/> In 1923, the Groce family sold over {{convert|700|acre}} to [[Pacific Mill]]s. By the following year the Lyman Printing and Finishing Mill had been constructed, and by 1927, Pacific Mills had built 375 homes as housing for their employees.<ref name= "official"/> The town was then renamed in memory of Arthur T. Lyman, a former president of the mill.<ref name= "official"/><ref name= "sciway"/> Lyman prospered for years as a [[Mill town|textile town]], but by 2005 the last mill was closed.<ref name= "visitspar"/> The Pacific Mills company kept up their employees' houses, the streets and the back alleys. The back alleys were dirt, so crews from the plant would bring dump trucks of cinders from the burnt coal at the boiler room, and spread them up and down the back alleys to keep them from getting muddy. The houses were finished on the outside, with cypress wood for the underpinning. In the late 1940s the company removed the lattice-work and put brick underpinning in its place. The houses were four, five and six room houses with modern designs. Pacific Mills broke from the usual, salt-box style house design of most cotton mill villages. When the village of Lyman was built, it was a showcase for cotton mill villages. Ridge Road was set aside for the executive staff of the company. The houses there were made out of the same materials as the other houses, but they were larger and of nicer designs.<ref name="batson">{{cite journal |last1=Batson |first1=Stephen |title=Our Town: Memories and History of Lyman |url=https://lookaside.fbsbx.com/file/History%20of%20Lyman.pdf?token=AWxsr8-O-3xSogBGKur6n6FUQJpAck5FxXBrfQfRBeEyj_BExs6VNlCj0RuIp99SwKfdH-wUL0mqaPNdMZCYpi8Q5DsBEH4GX5J5uQ0FiXsrS4zDg4_KdAL-OJeeI4zLJdFvo-_dBAFRLxSS-wS_5y0B2i-L94cDe-2msd4c-KvT3lplVVU3qpjGIa5Iior0KMitnfP2a4xXVbJ-HaCJWnxrXnjSIj7oD0VWriiIJ9tqgRW3tyBJ2EODifwzhjratKwSkxgExNpMJ28RZkHuUvjI2wmHkTty8DA6Wr7TNrThvB1FRKaIPd2GBQ0-Fx26UFTXwwcLQO6k3b3UHvznfd606kzlhSjc-kvyvvmkxj7BYcWpP4c1z2V-WbLsEqRlQxWcB30-VVolrmerbmoucvyhNYaKl9yGJsh3jwlT7YAI8j9E6vM00NHuTaDcZ5p4bkr1FlPGyPQrUI31rqOZQPPAJS6MD-IMltjmp1yc3kYuiwy6lvcn7AVdf1zo3368kKolbvNwXZWZr1l4DwZ5ECfBcM1ZQmekB7QeKOV1Sd1Pdw0YgLev_syE1liJJ8daclL-xMN62R2Uo-SWoi_oOEFBDru88nBwyVOgAnwfmznBx2PN71zz5YB3E7hR84HGdSU |access-date=February 18, 2021}} </ref> ===Neighborhoods of Pacific Mills=== [[File:LawrenceStreetHouses.jpg|300px|thumb|alt=Houses on Lawrence Street|Houses on Lawrence Street]] [[File:LittleStreetHouses.jpg|300px|thumb|alt=Houses on Little Street|Houses on Little Street]] [[File:GroceRdHouses.jpg|300px|thumb|alt=Houses on Groce Road|Houses on Groce Road]] When Pacific Mills built the village of Lyman, they laid water mains and sewer pipes under the streets. All of the houses and buildings were hooked up to these. They therefore had indoor plumbing, with running water and sewage disposal (which in 1923 could have been considered a luxury item), then a rarity for many people in South Carolina. The sewage pipes ran from the village down to a concrete holding tank next to the river, across from where the library is today.<ref name="batson"/> [[McMakin's Tavern]] was listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 1974.<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|version=2010a}}</ref>
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