City Directories and History: This school began as the high school but by the 1950’s it had become the grammar school site. It was constructed about 1926 and once it closed it was used as the Byar’s Machine Company headquarters.
Cross Hill is located in the lower part of the county. The fertility of the soil made this area attractive to early settlers who named the settlement because of its location at a crossing of a foot trail and a wagon road at the top of a hill. There is little evidence today of the original settlement, however, because of the later relocation of the town. In the early 1890’s the Seaboard Airline Railroad came through the area. In order to take advantage of the railroad, the town of Cross Hill was relocated one mile south of the original settlement. As anticipated, proximity to the railroad stimulated the economic life of the community and made it for many years an important business and social center. The railroad also brought people from throughout the state to the nearby family’s and health resort known as Harris Lithia Springs which was widely known for its mineral water. Another change in the mode of transportation, the appearance of the automobile in the early 1900’s, contributed to a decline in the prosperity of the turn-of-the century period. With the greater mobility of automobile travel, the population of the area went elsewhere for employment and entertainment.
(Information from: Names in South Carolina by C.H. Neuffer, Published by the S.C. Dept. of English, USC)
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