714 TOWNS OF SOUTH CAROLINA. 



brick manufactured there. DAvelling houses rent from six dollars to 

 eight dollars a month. Town taxes, one mill on the dollar. In the 

 neighborhood are two mineral springs, containing sulphur, iron and mag- 

 nesia. 



Wellford, ten miles west of Spartanburg, on the railroad, has an Epis- 

 copal Church and the AVellford High School. Rate of tuition, board and 

 washing, §12.50 per month. The school-room accommodates one hun- 

 dred and twenty-five pupils. 



Glenn Springs, twelve miles south of Spartanburg, is a summer resort 

 noted for its mineral waters and healthful climate. There are two 

 churches, a white and a colored school. Large numbers of visitors come 

 during the summer. Dwellings rent for sevent3^-five dollars to one hun- 

 dred dollars a year, cottages for thirty dollars during the summer. The 

 mineral waters are bottled and shipped. 



UNION COUNTY^ 



traversed by the Union, Spartanburg and Columbia railroad, has eight- 

 een towns and trading settlements with eighty-four stores, as follows : 

 Union Court House, forty-eight stores ; Santuc, eight stores ; Jonesville, 

 live stores ; Cross Keys and Skull Shoals, four stores each ; Mountjoy, 

 three stores ; Fish Dam, Mount Tabor, and Smithford, two stores each ; 

 Asbury/Colerain, Goshen Hill, C^urdysvill, Meador, Pinegrove, Sedalia, 

 West Spring, and Wilkinsville, one store each. Of this number five sell 

 liquors, three dry goods, twenty -five miscellaneous articles, and thirty- 

 one general merchandise. The estimated wealth of the storekeepers is 

 $785,000. 



YORK COUNTY 



has twenty-one towns and trading settlements, with one hundred and 

 thirty -seven stores, distributed as follows : Yorkville, forty-five stores ; 

 Rock Hill, twenty -seven stores ; Black's, eleven stores ; Fort Mills, 

 eleven stores ; Whitaker and Clover, seven stores each ; Bullock's Creek, 

 four stores ; Clay Hill and Smith's, three stores each ; Blairsville, Bow- 

 ling Green, Clark's Fork, Guthriesville, Sandersville, Zeno and Bethel, 

 two stores each ; Corncob, Hickory Grove, Tirzah, Bethany, and j\IcCon- 

 nellsville, one store each. Of this number four sell liquors, two Hard- 

 ware, six dry goods, forty -three miscellaneous articles, and eighty-two 

 general merchandise. The estimated wealth of the storekeepers is 

 $920,000. 



Yorkville, on the Chester and Lenoir narrow-gauge railway, is the 

 county seat. In 1823 it had a population of 441, being fifty-two me- 



