
































|
Murrells Inlet, SC
While just a few miles from the hustle and bustle of Myrtle
Beach, Murrells Inlet, known for its relaxing atmosphere and second- to-none
seafood, has quietly become a favorite retirement spot for those seeking the
easy going water-front lifestyle with all of the modern conveniences of a near
by city.
Named after a notoriously brutal pirate, Captain Murrell, who used the quiet
inlet as a home base between pillaging trips down island, the village of Murrells
Inlet looks out onto Drunken Jack Island. Legend has it, a mutinous pirate,
Jack, was marooned on the sandy spit of land by his shipmates with nothing but
his wits – and a few bottles of rum – to get him by. When his former ship came
back by several months later, he found the beach littered with empty bottles
and a pile of sun-bleached bones, presumably Jack’s. Local legend also asserts
that none other than Blackbeard hid his ill-gotten booty somewhere on the island.
But despite several archeological digs, no treasure has been found.
Treasures of another kind are abundant on Murrells Inlet – in the form
of centuries old live oak trees, and other beautiful vegetation that grows along
the many salt marshes and tidal creeks in the area. Inlet residents can hike
at nearby Huntington Beach State Park which, along with Brookgreen Gardens,
was once part of a massive plantation owned by the railroad heir Archer Huntington,
stepson of Colis Huntington, one of four men who built the Transcontinental
Railroad (and from whom California’s Huntington Beach is named). Brookgreen
Gardens is the very first, and still the largest, sculpture garden in the United
States, featuring over five-hundred works, including a piece by Archer’s wife,
Anne Hyatt Huntington.
“Inlet residents can hike at nearby Huntington Beach State Park
and Brookgreen Gardens."
The close proximity to Myrtle Beach affords Murrells Inlet residents and visitors
almost unlimited recreational options. There are 27 golf courses within ten
miles of the village. Not surprisingly, the quiet town has become increasingly
popular with retirees. The town now has over 1,000 senior citizens (20 percent
of the population) living there on a full-time basis.
|