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Beaufort County offers powerful places, layered stories, and meaningful ways to connect with Revolutionary War history.

We’re here to help you experience it.

History That’s Easy to Find

Experiences That Fit Your Life

Rooted in the Lowcountry

Did You Know?

In 1775, Patriots from Beaufort District seized 16,000 pounds of British gunpowder off Daufuskie Island. Munitions that would help fuel Washington’s siege of Boston and change the course of the war.

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Explore Beaufort County’s Revolutionary War Legacy

Over 100 ambushes, battles, and skirmishes happened here. More than almost any other region.

This land didn’t just witness history. It made it.

Click on the Map to Learn More About the Sites

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Old Sheldon church

Old Sheldon Church Rd, Yemassee, SC 29945

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Battle of Port Royal Island

32°28'50.9"N 80°44'23.2"W

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Beaufort Arsenal:

713 Craven St, Beaufort, SC 29902

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Fort Parish Church of St Helena

505 Church St, Beaufort, SC 29902

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Fort Prince Frederick Site

601 Old Fort Rd, Port Royal, SC 29935

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Zion Chapel of Ease Cemetery

574 William Hilton Parkway, Hilton Head Island, SC 29928

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Stoney-Baynard Ruins

Plantation Dr, Hilton Head Island, SC 29928

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Haig Point Ruins

44 Old Haig Point Rd, Daufuskie Island, SC 29915

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Battle of Bloody Point

94 Fuskie Ln, Daufuskie Island, SC 29915

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Montpelier Cemetery

95 Myrtle View St, Bluffton, SC 29910

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Ten Sites You Shouldn’t Miss

Old Sheldon Ruins

1. Old Sheldon Church

Built in 1753 and burned by a Tory neighbor in 1779, this once-majestic church was a meeting place for the Beaufort district militia and now stands in ruins.

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Old Sheldon Church Rd

Yemassee, SC 29945

Battle of Port Royal Island

2. Battle of Port Royal Island

The Patriots’ first land-based win in South Carolina, this 1779 battle thwarted a British advance and saw two Declaration signers take the field alongside a heroic young Arican-American drummer, Jim Capers.

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Historical Marker

32°28'50.9"N 80°44'23.2"W

Arsenal (2)

3. Beaufort Arsenal

Originally home to the Beaufort Volunteer Artillery, this 1798 structure now houses the Beaufort History Museum, still echoing its Revolutionary origins.

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713 Craven St

Beaufort, SC 29902

Parish Church

4. Parish Church of St. Helena

The third-oldest church in the American Colonies. It's the churchyard that holds the graves of twelve Patriots and two British officers killed in the Battle of Port Royal Island.

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505 Church St

Beaufort, SC 29902

Fort Fredrick

5. Fort Prince Frederick Site

The southernmost British fort in North America, established in 1729, was enhanced with tabby walls in 1733 and garrisoned by British Regulars until it was replaced by Fort Lyttleton in 1758.

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601 Old Fort Rd

Port Royal, SC 29935

Zion

6. Zion Chapel of Ease Cemetery

On the grounds of a former militia meeting house, this cemetery honors four Patriot planters and marks Hilton Head Island’s only known Revolutionary War death in action.

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574 William Hilton Parkway

Hilton Head Island, SC 29928

Stoney Barnyard Ruins

7. Stoney-Baynard Ruins

Remains of 1793 tabby mansion were built on site of Revolutionary War and Early Colonial lookout station. Includes remains of Antebellum slave cabin foundations

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Plantation Dr

Hilton Head Island, SC 29928

Haig Point Ruins

8. Haig Point Ruins

Remains of tabby slave cabins and structures from a plantation founded in 1733 by Scottish immigrant George Haig, and once the site of one of the largest tabby mansions on the sea islands in SC.

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44 Old Haig Point Rd

Daufuskie Island, SC 29915

Bloody Point

9. Battle of Bloody Point

In 1775, Patriot militia and a schooner named Liberty seized 16,000 pounds of British gunpowder, supplies that would later sustain Washington's army in Boston.

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94 Fuskie Ln

Daufuskie Island, SC 29915

Montpelier Cemetary

10. Montpelier Cemetery

Site of the Revolutionary War home of the Pendarvis family, and the murder of Loyalists Richard Pendarvis and William Patterson by the Hilton Head Island Bloody Legion in 1781.

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95 Myrtle View St

Bluffton, SC 29910

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