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Is this mysterious Upstate spot cursed, or filled with potential?

Near the fast-growing city of Greenville, SC, there sits an oddly abandoned and overgrown 6-acre lot, just a short distance from a busy highway — a property with a long and storied past — and a name familiar to locals. The property, off Wade Hampton Boulevard, is in the Greenville suburb of Taylors. It is…

Whispers in the wisteria

Elizabeth Garraux planted a wisteria vine at the family’s homestead in Greenville that grew so outstandingly, it was mentioned in newspaper articles several times. Initially, the vine was written about as having a stem as big around as a man’s boot. Later it was described as having a woody trunk that was “as thick as…

“A porterhouse steak for .25 cents? No thanks, we’ll eat at home!”

Elizabeth Garraux, the central figure of my novel, “When He Was Gone,” became well-known for being a great cook during the late 1800s in Greenville. A newspaper article even mentioned the tantalizing smells of freshly baked bread, and meats slow-roasted in brown sugar and spices coming from her kitchen. So, what was cooking and dining…

A peek at the past

Greenville is the setting of my historical fiction novel, “When He Was Gone,” which is focused on the remarkable true story of Elizabeth Garraux, one of the city’s early settlers. So, what was Greenville like back then? The city is now the state’s sixth largest, with a population of 74,000. But in the 1890s, Greenville…

How things change …

The site of the old Greenville News building has recently been transformed into spiffy Camperdown Plaza, but long ago, it was the location of one of Greenville’s early successful businesses. George Heldman was a contemporary of Elizabeth Garraux, whose life story is the focus of my novel, “When He Was Gone.” George was a saddlemaker…

Trolley time travel

You may have ridden in or have at least seen the free trolleys that run through downtown Greenville, but you may not know that trolleys started moving people around the city almost 150 years ago. The Street Railway Company laid the first trolley tracks in 1875. There were seven cars pulled along the 2.25 miles…

What’s the Greenville connection to poinsettias?

With Christmas weeks away, poinsettias are already beginning to show up in stores — but you may have also noticed that the name Poinsett is common in Greenville.  There’s the Poinsett hotel, bridge, highway, apartment complex, and the upcoming Christmas parade that bears the name. Since flower growing was a dominant part of Elizabeth Garraux’s…

History, still visible

The iconic Wyche Pavilion in downtown Greenville was built in the mid-1800s by a contemporary of the Garrauxs, the subjects of my book, “When He Was Gone.” The big, brick structure was built as a paint shop for the highly successful Gower, Cox and Markley Carriage Company (the wooden building in the foreground). The carriage…