Cooking demonstration at the L.W. Paul Living History Farm – Cancelled

L.W. Paul Living History Farm 2279 Harris Short Cut Rd, Conway, SC, United States

Due to the uncertainty of the forecast and conditions related to Hurricane Dorian, the Horry County Museum and the L.W. Paul Living History Farm have cancelled their scheduled programs for the week of September 3rd through September 7th.

Cancellations include:

The Museum Matinee: South Carolinians in WWII, the Cooking Demonstration at the Farm, Jr. Farmers, Farm Harvest Day, and Lee Brockington: Women of the Waccamaw.

Junior Farmers at the L.W. Paul Living History Farm – Cancelled

Horry County Museum 805 Main Street, Conway, SC, United States

Due to the uncertainty of the forecast and conditions related to Hurricane Dorian, the Horry County Museum and the L.W. Paul Living History Farm have cancelled their scheduled programs for the week of September 3rd through September 7th.

Cancellations include:

The Museum Matinee: South Carolinians in WWII, the Cooking Demonstration at the Farm, Jr. Farmers, Farm Harvest Day, and Lee Brockington: Women of the Waccamaw.

Farm Harvest Day at the L.W. Paul Living History Farm – Cancelled

L.W. Paul Living History Farm 2279 Harris Short Cut Rd, Conway, SC, United States

Due to the uncertainty of the forecast and conditions related to Hurricane Dorian, the Horry County Museum and the L.W. Paul Living History Farm have cancelled their scheduled programs for the week of September 3rd through September 7th.

Cancellations include:

The Museum Matinee: South Carolinians in WWII, the Cooking Demonstration at the Farm, Jr. Farmers, Farm Harvest Day, and Lee Brockington: Women of the Waccamaw.

Lee Brockington: Women of the Waccamaw – Cancelled

Horry County Museum 805 Main Street, Conway, SC, United States

Due to the uncertainty of the forecast and conditions related to Hurricane Dorian, the Horry County Museum and the L.W. Paul Living History Farm have cancelled their scheduled programs for the week of September 3rd through September 7th.

Cancellations include:

The Museum Matinee: South Carolinians in WWII, the Cooking Demonstration at the Farm, Jr. Farmers, Farm Harvest Day, and Lee Brockington: Women of the Waccamaw.

How Does the Garden Grow? Organic Gardening at the L.W. Paul Living History Farm

L.W. Paul Living History Farm 2279 Harris Short Cut Rd, Conway, SC, United States

Experience life on the “one horse farm” in Horry County from 1900-1955 at the L.W. Paul Living History Farm. Join us on September 11th from 9:30 AM until 10:30 AM for a program on gardening where visitors can learn about growing a garden using heirloom varieties of vegetables and only organic fertilizers. […]

South Carolinians in WWII: Liberation

Horry County Museum 805 Main Street, Conway, SC, United States

The 2019 Horry County Museum Documentary Film Series continues with South Carolinians in WWII: Liberation.  This episode follows our veterans past the Battle of the Bulge and through the Siegfried Line as they battle their way into Germany to discover the horror of concentration camps. Combining first-person accounts of the holocaust survivors […]

Jr. Curators at the Horry County Museum

Horry County Museum 805 Main Street, Conway, SC, United States

Junior Curators continues at the Horry County Museum on Saturday, September 14th from 9 AM-10 AM. This free, family friendly, program is open to children ages 5 and older and will teach children the history and natural history of Horry County through hands on activities. In this session, children will learn about the different types of Native American dwellings, including local Wattle and Daub structures. Parents must remain with children. To participate, sign up with Marion Haynes at haynesm@horrycounty.org or call 843-915-7861.

Lesta Sue Hardee: Legendary Locals of Myrtle Beach

Horry County Museum 805 Main Street, Conway, SC, United States

The Horry County Museum and the AVX Foundation present a program by local author Lesta Sue Hardee, on Saturday, September 14th on her book, Legendary Locals of Myrtle Beach.
Simeon B. Chapin was an entrepreneur and visionary who, along with Franklin G. Burroughs, helped create the foundation of what is Myrtle Beach today. B.B. Benfield built and opened the area’s first movie theater, and Lawrence Boulier was a landscape artist and founder of the Waccamaw Arts and Crafts Guild. Earl Husted brought the first amusement park rides to this area, and Anthony James left after high school to make a name for himself as the first widely known actor from the Myrtle Beach area. Some of these names may be unfamiliar, but each of these legendary locals, in his or her own way, has helped make Myrtle Beach the historical hometown and vacationers’ paradise that it is today.