The southern Williamsburg County town of Lane, S.C., once was a thriving railroad town, photographer and retired editor Linda W. Brown of Kingstree writes. Now, however, few businesses remain. A number of store fronts are open to the elements; others are boarded up.
This old house in the Cedar Swamp community of Williamsburg County, S.C., has served many purposes over the years, writes photographer and retired editor Linda W. Brown of Kingstree, S.C.
The building started out as a farmhouse but in later years it was a venue for community parties and dances. Now it is slowly being dismantled.
The back portion and the chimney are all that are left of this farmhouse that once stood on Cedar Swamp Road in Williamsburg County, S.C., photographer and retired editor Linda W. Brown writes.
The rusty roof of an empty, old farmhouse overlooks fields that are still planted each year, photographer and retired editor Linda Brown writes from Kingstree, S.C.
The house is on Thurgood Marshall Highway, a few miles outside of Kingstree in Williamsburg County.
Lawnmowers, rusting equipment and an old boat have a final resting place on Simms Reach Road in Williamsburg County, S.C., photographer and retired editor Linda W. Brown writes. It’s not hard to find locations like this anywhere in the Southern Crescent, which stretches from Tidewater Virginia, across the eastern Carolinas through Georgia to the Mississippi Delta.
Dry weather has had an effect on this field of corn in rural Williamsburg County. Farmers are all too often at the mercy of the weather when it comes to the success or failure of their crops, observes retired editor and photographer Linda W. Brown of Kingstreet, S.C.
A vine-covered tobacco barn in the middle of a cotton field signals changing times in agriculture in the South and in the Cedar Swamp community of Williamsburg County, S.C., where this barn is located.
Photo taken June 29, 2014, by Linda W. Brown. All rights reserved.
An old barn and a country lane beckon the passerby to see what’s around the bend just off Cedar Swamp Road in rural Williamsburg County, South Carolina.
Copyrighted photo was taken June 29, 2014, by Linda W. Brown. All rights reserved.
This old barn on Roper Woods Road in eastern Williamsburg County, S.C., is giving way to time, writes photographer Linda W. Brown of Kingstree. The photo was taken earlier this spring when the winter wheat crop in the foreground was green.
Williamsburg County, which is about 75 miles north of Charleston, S.C., has a population of just under 34,000 people. Population peaked in 1950 at 43,807, but has dropped slowly since then.
About two-thirds of county residents are black, with almost all of those remaining being white. Only 2 percent of those in the county are of Hispanic descent. Some 32.8 percent of residents live in poverty, according to the Census. Of the county’s 1,92
1 firms, 36.5 percent are black-owned — a percentage that is three times South Carolina’s average.
A rusting awning covers windows on a house that is showing some signs of renovation in Cades, a small community 10 miles north of Kingstree, S.C., in Williamsburg County, writes retired editor and photographer Linda W. Brown. Once a thriving railroad town, Cades is now known as a crossroad on U.S. Highway 52.
Photo by Linda W. Brown taken April 17, 2014. All rights reserved.