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- Travel > United States > South > South Atlantic (DC, DE, FL, GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV)
- History > United States > State & Local > South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)
- Photography > Subjects & Themes > Historical
- Sports & recreation > Surfing
- Travel > Pictorials (see also PHOTOGRAPHY > Subjects & Themes > Regional)
- Travel > United States > South > South Atlantic (DC, DE, FL, GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV)
2 products
Surfing in South Carolina
9781467115131
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
For centuries, the ocean waters of the Atlantic have impacted the daily lives of those on the South Carolina coast. Beginning in the 1960s, those waves caught the imagination of young beachgoers who studied magazines and Super 8 films and refined their moves on rent-a-floats until the first surfboards became available in the area. The buildup to the Vietnam War brought GIs and their families from the West Coast and Hawaii to South Carolina, and their surfboards came along with them. Unbeknownst to each other, local surfers concentrated in the beach and military base areas of Beaufort/Hilton Head, Charleston, and Pawley's Island/Grand Strand began to conquer nearby surf breaks. When contests finally brought these groups together, a statewide sport was born.

Congaree National Park
9781467126427
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
Located in central South Carolina, only a few miles from the capital city of Columbia, Congaree National Park is the largest old-growth bottomland hardwood forest left in the country and one of the most biologically diverse parks within the national park system. Nearly 100 species of trees have been documented within the park, almost as many as in the entire Pacific Northwest. The park has one of the tallest hardwood forests anywhere in the temperate world and features numerous trees of record-setting proportions, a distinction that has earned it the name "Forest of Champions." This book discusses the early history of the area that later became the Congaree National Park, shows efforts to protect it from logging by a citizen's grassroots campaign, traces the park's early beginnings and development, and illustrates some of the park's notable flora and fauna.
