Myrtle Beach: A History, 1900-1980

Front Cover
Univ of South Carolina Press, 2007 - Biography & Autobiography - 258 pages

How a coastal farming region became an internationally renowned tourist destination

A relatively young city, Myrtle Beach has earned an international reputation as a tourism mecca on the South Carolina coast. Barbara F. Stokes provides the first comprehensive history of the community's quick rise to prominence as she maps the development of the Grand Strand's centerpiece in this account of the historical, economic, climatic, and cultural forces that shaped Myrtle Beach.

The arrival of the railroad in 1902 began the transformation of Myrtle Beach from an isolated agricultural community into a summer beach resort. While the Great Depression brought economic distress to much of the nation, it presented wealthy industrialist John T. Woodside with the opportunity to expand Myrtle Beach's borders with the purchase of some sixty-five thousand acres. His construction of a golf course and the magnificent Ocean Forest Hotel inaugurated Myrtle Beach's resort culture. Likewise Horry County officials made full use of New Deal programs to develop infrastructure and service institutions supporting the region. But, as Stokes explains, it was the war effort that had the greatest impact on the development of Myrtle Beach. The region's population and economy both swelled with the creation there of what was called the Myrtle Beach Army Air Force Base during World War II. The base brought new jobs, new faces, and a growing national and international awareness.

In separate chapters Stokes explores the importance of religious and educational institutions in developing the family-oriented identity of the city, the evolution of family-owned guesthouses into the high-rise hotels and sprawling resorts that now pepper the shoreline, the transformation of leisure activities from hunting and fishing to golf, racing, and watersports, and the efforts of city government to facilitate and encourage growth since incorporation in 1938. Stokes also looks at the history of African Americans in Myrtle Beach and in particular at the importance of Atlantic Beach. She examines the Pavilion's role as the site where tourism and community met. And she recounts the tragedy and opportunity Hurricane Hazel brought in October 1954.

 

Contents

Two Transformation of the Sand
10
Illustrations
11
Three DepressionEra Developments
23
ad promoting Myrtle Beach
25
Youpon Dunes built in 1936 by Simeon B Chapin
35
Myrtle Beach State Parks Greekrevival bathhouse built in 1936
51
Grand Strand
63
Six The Ties That Bind Us Together
70
Cruising Ocean Blvd in the mid1960s
132
Downtown Myrtle Beach in the late 1940s
138
Barry Goldwater campaign headquarters
148
Eleven Grand Strand Leisure
158
Recreational fishing
162
Twelve Hurricane Hazel and Its Transformation
168
Thirteen The African American Community
185
Myrtle Beach Colored School
190

A Monument to Community
85
Childrens rides Myrtle Beach Pavilion amusement park 1965
87
Eight FamilyOwned and Operated
97
Myrtle Lodge built in the early 1920s
112
Mammys Kitchen in 1954
118
The Sun Fun Festival circa 1965
125
Atlantic Beach in the 1940s
202
Notes
203
Bibliography
225
Index
235
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Barbara F. Stokes earned her B.A. in journalism from the University of Houston and her M.A. in public history from the University of South Carolina. She is the curator of archives and collections for the Museum of South Texas History in Edinburg.