About Pawleys Island SC......

 

Sea View Inn
Offers the ultimate beach vacation on Pawleys Island.  More than a bed and breakfast, Sea View Inn offers oceanfront accommodations, 3 lowcountry meals each day, access to a private beach, outstanding service, and rooms with a view of the ocean.
Evans Pelican Inn
Built around 1830 as the Summer Home for Plowden C(harles) J(ennette) Weston and his wife Emily, the house was used after Weston's death by the Mazycks as a boarding house and in the early 1900s as a retreat for the Executives of the Atlantic Coast Lumber Company.

 

About Pawleys Island South Carolina (courtesy of Wikipedia)

Pawleys Island is both an Atlantic coast barrier island and an incorporated town in Georgetown County, South Carolina. The population was 138 at the 2000 census.The post office address also includes an unincorporated area on the mainland adjacent to the island, which includes a commercial district along the Ocean Highway (US Route 17) and a residential area between the highway and the Waccamaw River. The island is on the southern end of The Grand Strand and is one of the oldest resort areas of the US East Coast. The community of Pawleys Island is part of Waccamaw Neck, a long, narrow peninsula between the ocean and the river.

The earliest known inhabitants of the area were Waccamaw and Winyah Indians. They called the area "Chicora," meaning "the land," and the term is frequently used by local businesses.

With European colonization, George Pawley was an early settler, giving his name to the community. The breezy island quickly became a refuge from the mosquitoes that were notable during the summer. With African slaves that were brought to the area came malaria, so those of means would move to summer cottages on the island to avoid the mosquito-vectored malaria and other sicknesses.

In 1791, two years after he was elected president, George Washington toured the Grand Strand. He passed right down The King's Highway in the unincorporated portion of Pawleys Island to visit the Alstons, who were wealthy plantation owners just to the south. Rice plantations occupied the Waccamaw River side of the neck.


Pawleys Island, South Carolina Town HallThe Grand Strand began to develop into a major tourist area during the early 20th century, but Pawleys was among the last areas to be heavily developed. Cypress sided cottages on the island gave the community one of its monikers: arrogantly shabby. With the coming of Hurricane Hugo in 1989 some of these cottages were swept away, and have since been replaced by more upscale homes, but the island's codes prohibit large high rise condos.

The town government was incorporated in 1986 (some sources say 1984 or 1985). The inland areas are developing very rapidly.

A local legend on the island has grown about The Gray Man, a friendly ghost who warns of impending hurricanes. Serious hurricanes have struck in 1724, twice in 1752, 1822, 1911, 1954, and 1989.

The island is connected to the mainland by two bridges, the Northern Causeway and the Southern Causway. At the southern tip of the island is a public beach access area.

There is no industry or trade on the island. There is a town hall/sheriff's office, a chapel and there are two inns.

The Coastal Observer, a weekly newspaper covers Pawleys Island, Litchfield and Murrells Inlet.

Although less secluded, and more up-scale than it was only a decade ago, Pawleys Island still retains a quaintness and a relaxed pace which makes it a rare island along the U.S. east coast. The water temperature is comfortable from May to October, and there is abundant fishing, crabbing, shrimping, and birdwatching most months of the year.

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