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Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of Charleston (1789 - 1865)
Son of Gen. Thomas Pinckney, grandson of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (1699-1758)
Lt. Gov. of SC (1832-1834)
Built house at Woodburn Plantation as a summer retreat
Wife: Phoebe Caroline Elliott
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David S. Taylor
Wife: Lucy Hannah Taliaferro
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Rev. John Bailey Adger (1810 - 1899)
Presbyterian Minister & Missionary
Son of James Adger, owner of shipping company in Charleston (James Adger & Co.)
Wife: Elizabeth K. Shrewsbury
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Joseph Ellison Adger of Charleston (1824 - 1889)
Charleston Businessman
Younger brother of Rev. John B. Adger
Wife: Susan Cox Johnson
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Augustine Thomas Smythe (1842 - 1914)
Lawyer and a founding partner in Charleston law firm of Smythe and Smythe, 1866
Son of Margaret Milligan Adger and Rev. Thomas Symth, pastor of Second Presbyterian Church of
Charleston
Nephew of John B. & J. Ellison Adger
Wife: Louisa McCord. grandaughter of Langdon Cheves
Member of SC Senate 1890's, Trustee of Clemson College 1900-1906
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William Frederick Calhoun Owen of Greenville
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S. C. State Bank of Greenville
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John Frank
Later incorporated as Woodburn Farms, Inc., Virginia Frank Neff, Pres.
Then returned to private ownership of John Frank
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U. S. Government: Resettlement Administration / Land Policy Section of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration
Under long-term lease to Clemson College
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Foundation for Historic Restoration in the Pendleton Area, a private non-profit organization whose name was changed to
the Pendleton Historic Foundation in the 1990's.
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Pendleton District Commission
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1983 - Present
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Foundation for Historic Restoration in the Pendleton Area, a private non-profit organization who changed its name to
the Pendleton Historic Foundation in the 1990's.
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Ashtabula, c. 1825
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Original four-room , two-story brick house build on land granted to Thomas Lofton
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Large clapboard house build by Lewis Ladson Gibbes of Charleston
Wife: Maria Drayton of Drayton Hall in Charleston. Her mother was a Middleton.
Both died before new house has completed
Children continued to occupy house under guardianship of two oldest sons, Lewis Reeves Gibbes, a renouned
scientist and naturalist, then Charles Drayton Gibbes.
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Dr. Oze R. Broyles, moved to Anderson
Wife: Saran Ann Taliaferro
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James T. Latta enlarged the house to present size and increased acerage
Wife: Angela Lott of NJ
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Robert Adger for daugher Clarissa W. Bowen and husband O. A. Bowen
O. A. Bowen later purchased Rivoli Farm near Pendleton from Robert Adger
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William Dalton Warren
Wife: Sarah E. Adger, daughter of Robert Adger
Converted acreage to model Jersey cattle farm, J. C. Stribling, Mgr.
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Francis J. Pelzer, founder of Pelzer Mills
Absentee landlord, J. C. Stribling, Manager
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1889-1920
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John Linley
Anderson Real Estate Developer
House occupied by family members
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1920 - 1940
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Roger Inglesby
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Frederick W. Symmes
Greenville textile industrialist and philantropist
Born in Pendleton - purchased house to preserve it
Occupied by caretaker
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Mead Paper Co.
Operated as tree farm
Donated house for house museum and sold surrounding land to Brunswick Paper and Champion Paper Companies. Property
acquired by Charles Cheesum and operated as the Ashtabula Hunt Club.
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Foundation for Historic Restoration in the Pendleton Aream a porivate non-profit organization who changed its name to
the Pendleton Historic Foundation in 1990's
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Last updataed April 4, 2006 - Pendleton Historic Foundation, an IRS 501(c)(3)
non-profit organization
Pendleton Historic Foundation
P. O. Box 444
Pendleton, SC 29670
Phone: 864-646-7249
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