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History of Oconee County




Oconee County, located in the northwest corner of South Carolina on the edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains, takes its name from a Cherokee word meaning "land beside the water." The county was formed in 1868 from Pickens District, and the county seat is Walhalla.


This area was home to the Cherokees, but the Indians gave up their lands in treaties signed in 1777 and 1816.


After the American Revolution, settlers from other parts of the state began moving in, including the Germans from Charleston who founded the town of Walhalla in 1850. In 1856, work began on a tunnel for the Blue Ridge Railroad that would have linked Charleston with Knoxville, Tennessee, but the Civil War ended that project; the unfinished Stumphouse Tunnel can still be seen today.


Adapted from the South Carolina Reference Room


Luthern Church
St. John’s Lutheran Church, Walhalla
  Photo courtesy of Jennifer Denney Photography


Area Tourist Information




Area Organizations 


Wild and Scenic Chattooga River Wild and Scenic Chattooga River
  Photo courtesy of oconeecountry.com




Photos from left to right:  Oconee Station, courtesy of oconeecountry.com; Oconee Veterans Park, courtesy of Jennifer Denney Photography; Chattooga River courtesy of oconeecountry.com

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