Brief History:
The County
of Marlboro was established on March 2, 1785 and originally
called Marlboro District. It was named for John Churchill,
first Duke of Marlborough, whose Blenheim Palace in
Oxfordshire, England, was a gift to him from Queen Anne.
Marlboro District was carved from Cheraw District. Later
Marlboro, Chesterfield, and Darlington Districts became
Counties.
When Marlboro District was created, legislation required
that each district select a site and erect a courthouse and
jail. The site chosen for Marlboro's first courthouse was on
the banks of the Great Pee Dee River near Gardner's Bluff. A
few years later, it was moved a short distance inland and
near the north bank of Crooked Creek where it crossed the
old River Road. The county's first town named either
Carlisle or Winnfieldville was developed. Its presence is no
longer noticeable except for a granite marker denoting the
location of the first courthouse as being at that location.
As the county's population grew away from the river,
settlers requested that a more central location for the
courthouse and jail be secured. In December of 1819, the
S.C. General Assembly authorized the removal of the
courthouse from the river to a more central location along
the old stagecoach road. This was on a high bluff above
Crooked Creek. That location was the beginning of our
current county seat, Bennettsville.
During the mid-19th Century, communities throughout the
county began around churches, principal roads, and at the
county's most famous mineral springs, Blenheim. Planters and
farmers continued to find Marlboro County's loamy soils
excellent for farming.
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