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Loris City was an untapped, under populated town
just 90 years ago. J.W. Ogilvie, who settled down in Horry County
a scant 15-years after the War Between the States, wrote in 1909,
"Loris was unknown. The site of that coming city was but a
worn out corn field that would not have brought at forced sale more
than 25 cents an acre." Much has changed since then. Now, Loris
is a bubbling city with a few thousand people, a nearby hospital,
franchise restaurants, various ethnic food, and one of the more
racially diverse populations in South Carolina.
The Chadbourne Lumber Company was rolling through
vacant Carolina land in the 1890s, plowing through trees and laying
down railroad tracks, and purchased the Loris area property from
James Gould Patterson. Historians are unsure exactly why the lumber
company
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named the area Loris, but according to one story,
Chadhourne named the land after his pet dog. The towns first
major cash crop was tobacco, and by 1909 Loris sold over 1,500,000
pounds in just one season. By the time the mid-1930s rolled around,
50% of South Carolinas tobacco product grew within a 25-mile
radius of Loris.
Loris is a little over 15-miles away from the
Alabama Theater and the Long Bay Symphony in Myrtle Beach and about
90-miles away from Charleston city limits. Just outside the bustle
and commotion of these larger, more crowded communities, Loris provides
safe haven for retirees seeking warm weather and a great location.
Loris is also home to four different golf courses, and duffers will
find an additional ten courses within 16-miles of town.
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