South Carolina has endured through some pretty tough times, including the Great Depression. The quality of life has greatly improved since the 1930s when times were so hard. But folks here in the Palmetto State are still willing to lend a hand to our neighbors in need. Here are some photos of the Great Depression in South Carolina from around the state that show what life was like back then.
1. The cook on a fishing boat in Charleston peeling potatoes for Christmas dinner. 1938.
2. Three girls in Port Royal pose for a photo - a novelty back then. Around 1920.
3. Everyone here has a smile - in spite of the hard times. Lady's Island near Beaufort, SC. 1936.
4. Children near Manning bring in tobacco from the field in 1939.
5. And everyone lent a helping hand around the farm. Manning, 1939.
6. This woman from St Helena Island paid her taxes in 1938 with oranges she grew on her land.
7. This home in Summerville, SC has a cane grinder in the front yard. 1939.
8. At the time this photograph was taken in 1938, this Chesnee man had 45 children.
9. In this photo, a family sorts tobacco on this farm near Hartsville in 1938. They farmed 6 acres and made $900 that year, but only got to keep half.
10. This mother of 14 children is the grandmother of 54 children. Spartanburg, SC 1937.
11. A sharecropper's children near Chesnee, SC. 1937.
12. An FSA Rehabilitation client in Manning, SC in 1939. The FSA (Farm Security Administration) grew out of Roosevelt's "New Deal" as an effort to help impoverished rural families.
13. Back then, doctors made house calls. In this photo a public health doctor is giving malaria medicine to a family in Columbia. 1939.
14. Children in Summerton, SC. 1939.
15. During the Great Depression shoes were a luxury to many people, like this tenant sharecropper near Columbia. 1939.
16. These cows were owned by C.N. Morgan who lived on the Maverick Estate in Pendleton, SC. 1937.
17. A storefront in Charleston's historic district in 1936. No place in the state went unaffected by the Great Depression.
18. In this image, a family is rendering lard in Laurens, SC. 1936.
19. Children of a sharecropper in Manning, SC. 1939.
20. A sharecropper plows a field near Chesnee in 1937.
21. A child, a cat and canned food on the porch near Gaffney in 1937.
For those of us who weren't around during the Great Depression, these photos give us insight into the hard life our parents, grandparents, or great-grandparents endured in the 1930s. Folks lost their homes and their jobs but they had each other.
Today in the Palmetto State we still have each other. Because at the end of the day family is what's most important.
What did you think of the photos? Here is some incredible video footage of South Carolina from the 1930s that will show you the history in motion.
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