The Rock Hill Herald reported on May 13, 1880 – “An effort is being made to erect a monument to the memory of Henry Timrod, the poet, whose remains were buried at Trinity in Columbia.”
City Directories and History: WASHINGTON PARK
Developed 1818; redesigned and renamed 1881

Postcard image courtesy of the AFLLC Collection – 2017
“Originally laid out as part of the City Square following construction of the Bank of the United States building (city hall) but developed in its present form as part of a civic improvements program during the administration of Mayor William Ashmead Courtenay, this park was renamed in honor of George Washington to commemorate the centenary of the victory at Yorktown. In addition to the large granite obelisk in memory of Confederate soldiers, a bronze bust of the poet Henry Timrod and more modern commemorations of important figures such as Rachel Jackson, mother of President Andrew Jackson, and Francis Salvador, a member of the South Carolina Provincial Congress who was the first Jew elected to public office in America, ornament the park’s double axial walks and east wall. The yellow brick statue base on the west end formerly supported the 1767 statue of William Pitt, moved here from the Orphan House grounds in the 1880s and relocated to The Charleston Museum one hundred years later.”
Information from: The Buildings of Charleston – J.H. Poston for the Historic Charleston Foundation, 1997
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