February 28, 2020 Greenville Journal

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SHE NEVER SAID NO Xanthene Norris' legacy of leadership|PAGE 6

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This week we conclude our coverage of Black History Month. We hope you have enjoyed our features on African American community leaders, artists and the historical events and locations that made an impact on the Greenville community. WORD OF THE WEEK

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GIVING MATTERS

A Child’s Haven provides mental health services for at-risk preschoolers

n story by REBECCA HOWERTON | photos PROVIDED

In the bright, orderly therapy rooms at A Child’s Haven, Sandra Casanova plays with preschool-aged children, most of whom have been expelled from a typical child care setting. All have a mental health diagnosis and many have suffered abuse, neglect, poverty or other adverse childhood experiences that lead them to outbursts that mainstream child care providers can’t manage. Using an evidence-based intervention model called Incredible Years, Casanova and the center’s other therapeutic providers create an environment that facilitates optimal development, with predictable routines and activities that promote social, emotional and behav-

A Child’s Haven is committed to providing atrisk children and families with therapeutic services they need to thrive.” -Tanya Camunas, executive director, A Child's Haven ioral learning. They teach and reinforce coping strategies for managing anxiety, giving children skills needed to deal

with overwhelming emotions. Casanova’s bilingual clinical treatment provider position was created last year to provide more services for Spanish-speaking children and their families. It was made possible with the help of a grant of $40,000 a year for two years from the Community Foundation’s Margaret Linder Southern Endowment. “Adding Sandra to our staff has made it possible for us to provide behavioral-health services to our growing at-risk, Spanish-speaking population in our community,” said Tanya Camunas, executive director. Children with social or emotional delays and behavioral challenges are referred to A Child’s Haven by the Department of Social Services and other agencies, or families can self-refer. A licensed therapist performs a mentalhealth evaluation on-site, and once enrolled children receive four to five hours of therapeutic child care each weekday. But therapeutic child care is only part of the center’s multigenerational continuum of services. A Child’s Haven is the only facility in South Carolina that also provides center-based individual psychotherapy and in-home family psychotherapy.

FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING IN JUNE 2019

100 out of 114 children served demonstrated improved functioning

88% of them successfully

transitioned to a mainstream child care center or school

“We include caregivers in the treatment process because we know having responsive caregivers is essential to overall child well-being,” Camunas said.

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“Many parents have had the same traumatic experiences as their children. We equip them with tools to respond to their children’s behavior in a way that nurtures success and strengthens bonds, so they don’t have to resort to counterproductive reactions.” This child- and family-focused program’s goals include preventing re-abuse and neglect, improving health and education, and promoting economic well-being by helping parents gain or maintain employment. A Child’s Haven staff refers families to outside agencies to further these goals when needed. Camunas joined A Child’s Haven in 2017 as director of quality assurance and program evaluation, charged with tracking program data to position the program for statewide replication. In 2018, she became senior director of program and strategy and was appointed executive director in January 2020. Under her leadership, the center employs results-driven, data-informed programming to help the most families possible. Recent data show real benefits for the children: For the fiscal year ending in June 2019, 100 of 114 children served demonstrated improved functioning as measured by meeting 85% to 100% of their treatment-plan goals, and 98% of them successfully transitioned to a mainstream child care center or school. The results for families are heartening as well. On completion of the pro-

gram, 96% of caregivers reported being able to deal more effectively with daily challenges. None of the families successfully discharged from A Child’s Haven became re-involved in the childwelfare system. The majority of unemployed caregivers reported gaining employment, improving the economic well-being of the whole family. The center will break ground soon on a renovation that will allow it to optimize existing space to serve more children, growing from its current capacity of 75 to 95. “A Child’s Haven is committed to providing at-risk children and families with therapeutic services they need to thrive,” Camunas said. “Our hope is that our clinically proven model will be replicated in other communities.”

G iv ing Mat ters is sponsored by t he


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From the publisher... As we conclude our Black History Month coverage, we want to recognize and thank TD Bank and Synnex for supporting local journalism by making the stories and profiles we have shared over the past four weeks possible. Unlike many news organizations, Community Journals has made a choice to keep all of our content free and available to everyone. We are locally owned, and for more than 20 years, we’ve been committed to bringing our readers relevant and engaging content each and every week. We love telling local stories. It’s our calling — we are passionate about informing, connecting and inspiring the people of our community. Since we do not charge for our content, we rely on community partnerships with companies like TD Bank and Synnex and the many other advertisers who fund what we do. Just like Community Journals, both TD Bank and Synnex have deep roots in our community. At a time when local news coverage is on the decline, we are grateful these organizations recognize the value of our work and are willing to step up and support important news initiatives such as our Black History Month coverage. If you are interested in supporting community journalism initiatives, please let us know. Thank you, Mark Johnston

EDUCATION

Should schools pay sales tax on security-related purchases?

n story & photo by EVAN PETER SMITH

A group of South Carolina lawmakers have introduced a bill that would remove the 6% sales tax for all security-related purchases made by schools, colleges and universities. The tax exemption would apply to both public and private schools. “You know, we send our children to school to learn,” said Rep. Jason Elliott, who co-sponsored the bill. “This common-sense legislation will improve the safety of South Carolina students.” In today’s climate of mass school shootings, school security infrastructure has rapidly expanded to include emergency radio systems, access control, building and property security, radio frequency identification, surveillance, detection and emergency medical response equipment, among other precautions. And all that stuff doesn’t come cheap. Lawmakers spoke about the bill at a gathering at Southside Christian School. Sam Barfell, Southside Christian School superintendent, said their school system alone spends roughly $150,000 a year on security.

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“And we’re not flush with cash by any means, so any help is always a win for us,” Barfell said, adding that any savings from the tax exemption would likely go right back into adding additional security measures. Rep. Bobby Cox, another co-sponsor of the bill, said additional security for soft targets like schools was crucial for ensuring their safety. “I come from an Army Ranger background, so I know a lot about soft targets and hard targets, and about protecting people from those who want to cause harm to innocents,” Cox said. “That’s what this bill does: protects our most valuable resources in the community, our children.”

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FROM THE COVER

T

he sum of Xanthene Norris’ life is displayed in her sitting room. Tabletops are cluttered with grade-school photographs, wedding portraits and civic awards framed by the window. “The Lord has blessed me because I never said no; I always found a way,” Norris says from her tidy brick home of 60 years in Greenville’s Nicholtown community. Never say no. It’s a motto that has shaped her life, nearly of all of which has been spent in education and public service.

Norris, 90, is serving her fifth and last term on Greenville County Council after being elected to the District 23 seat in 1997. As an educator, she taught generations of students as a French teacher at Sterling High School, then as a guidance counselor at Greenville High. Her pupils have included the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., Greenville Mayor Knox White, Greenville City Councilman Russell Stall and state Rep. Chandra Dillard. “There’s a quality about her,” says Dillard, who’s known Norris all of her life. “She wants excellence from the people she works with, and she’s not afraid of tough issues. She realizes that when a door closes, it doesn’t mean it’s locked forever. You just have to find a different door.”

THE TEACHER AND GUIDANCE COUNSELOR

Born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Norris grew up in Greenville’s Southernside and attended segregated schools. Her father worked for the railroad company before finding employment as an elevator operator at The Greenville News. Her mother was a schoolteacher.

The Lord has blessed me because I never said no; I always found a way. -Xanthene Norris

“We were able to live another life,” Norris says of segregation. She attended Sterling High School, where she worked on the yearbook staff and graduated valedictorian of her class. Her college years were spent

SHE NEVER SAID n story by ANNA LEE | photo by BONFIRE VISUALS

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NO


FROM THE COVER

She’s one of a kind and an icon in this community. Her life speaks to how one person, when they work with others, how they can be a force for good in so many things. -State Rep. Chandra Dillard

A LEADER'S LIFE so far

Retired from Greenville County Schools

1984

Joined coalition to memorialize the site of Willie Earle lynching; honored with Amy K. Stubbs Women of Achievement Award

1950

Won first of five terms on Greenville County Council

Graduated from Clark College in Atlanta, returned to Greenville and began teaching at Sterling

1997

Pictured Norris graduated from Sterling High School in 1946 before returning to teach at her alma mater. The school burned down in 1967. GREENVILLE COUNTY LIBRARY SYSTEM

2005

Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday became a holiday in Greenville County after a nearly decade-long fight led by Norris and others

Graduated from Sterling High School in Greenville as valedictorian

2020

Born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

1946

In 1997, Norris was approached by several people who wanted her to run for County Council. Norris was game — she was by then retired and widowed. Dillard says the campaign was her first entry into politics and recalls going door to door with Norris. “Every door that we knocked on she had either taught the person, their parents or their uncle or somebody,” Dillard says. Norris won the Democratic primary easily, receiving 83% of the vote against the incumbent, H.M. Bowen, according to county election results.

Pictured (bottom): Norris as a French teacher and guidance counselor in the 1968 edition of “The Torch,” Sterling High’s yearbook. GREENVILLE COUNTY LIBRARY SYSTEM

2009

THE COUNTY COUNCILWOMAN

In her 22 years on County Council, Norris has been known to be firm but never loud. A 2006 Greenville News editorial endorsing Norris for reelection praised her as a quiet, effective leader. “On more than one occasion during a contentious council debate, she has demonstrated her ability to make her point forcefully but without a hint of hostility,” the editorial read. Part of Norris’ political legacy is her nearly decade-long fight to make Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday a holiday in Greenville County. The issue grew into a movement that made national headlines. News outlets made sure to point out that Greenville County was the last county in the last state to adopt King holiday legislation. County Council meetings were marked by protests in the months leading up to the vote. In more than one meeting, Norris recalls seeing Confederate flags in the audience. But Norris and County Councilwoman Lottie Gibson continued to champion the cause. Eventually Jesse Jackson would join the fight, leading a rally of 10,000 people in support of the holiday. Norris was also part of a coalition of local civil rights activists who pushed to memorialize the site of the Willie Earle lynching in West Greenville in 2009. That same year, Norris was honored with the Amy K. Stubbs Women of Achievement Award. It’s just one of the many honors that has been bestowed on Norris over the course of a long, distinguished career. “She’s one of a kind and an icon in this community,” Dillard says. “Her life speaks to how one person, when they work with others, how they can be a force for good in so many things.”

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Pictured (top): Xanthene Norris pictured outside Greenville County Council chambers in 2005 | PROVIDED

1929

in Atlanta, which Norris says was the place to be at the time. The city then was a convergence of young educated blacks who came from all over the country to attend the many black colleges in the area, which included Spelman, Morehouse and Clark, where Norris studied French and social studies. She came back to Greenville after graduation and got a job teaching at Sterling. There, Norris would teach or mentor some of Greenville’s most famed civil rights activists, working closely with the Rev. James S. Hall Jr., vice president of the South Carolina NAACP, to counsel a young Jesse Jackson and other members of the “Greenville Eight.” “We governed those kids on how to act and get ready for the sit-ins,” Norris says. The Greenville Eight would later help integrate Greenville’s public library, airport and the Woolworth’s lunch counter downtown.

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Will end her last term on County Council at age 91 presented by

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BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Clemson’s Men of Color Summit highlights high school program for young men n story by ALEX COOPER | photo by CRAIG MAHAFFEY

Retired basketball legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson will discuss his story of entrepreneurial and athletic success during the 2020 Clemson Men of Color National Summit. Hosted by Clemson University’s Division of Inclusion and Equity, the summit focuses on closing the opportunity gap that affects young African American and Hispanic men. The event, which will be held March 3-4 at the Greenville Convention Center, brings business, government, athletic and academic leaders together to speak to stu-

Senior students of the 2019 Tiger Alliance cohort had a

98% GRADUATION RATE dents about unlocking their potential. “The caliber of speakers at the summit is something we have been proud of every year,” Lee Gill, Clemson’s chief inclusion officer, said in a release announcing Johnson’s participation. “Not only are they

inspirational examples for the students in attendance, but they embody the leaders we know our students can and will be.” At the center of the event is Clemson University’s Tiger Alliance. Started in 2017, the program provides ninth-12th grade male high school students with college readiness experiences such as mentorship, college visits and collegeprep workshops. Attending the Men of Color National Summit is one of the benefits for the students involved. “We are trying to illuminate pathways to college for all of our young men so that when they get to their senior year of high school, they’re making more informed decisions about what they want their next steps to be,” said Matthew Kirk, associate director of Tiger Alliance. The program creates a community out of these young men to help overcome issues at school and in their local communities. Tiger Alliance, Kirk said, creates “a space of like-minded people” for students to “be a little more vulnerable” and speak openly about what they want in their futures.

Another obstacle Tiger Alliance helps students overcome, Kirk said, is the racism and discrimination they can face in their schools. “A lot of educators look at black and brown men and women and assume that they are not college ready,” he said. Kirk, through the program, aims to overcome this by working with families and encouraging students to advocate for themselves. Senior participants of the 2019 Tiger Alliance cohort had a 98% graduation rate, according to the release. Students who graduate from the program can continue to be involved by serving as student ambassadors. José Rodriguez, 19, became one last year. A Clemson pre-med student studying languages and international health, Rodriguez speaks highly of Tiger Alliance and, with Kirk and other team members, will give a presentation on

the program during the South by Southwest conference this March in Austin, Texas. “Before Tiger Alliance I didn’t know what my plan was after high school,” Rodriguez said. “My parents didn’t go to school, so I never had guidance as to what exactly to do [when applying to colleges]. They were really encouraging though.” Kirk said about 80% of Tiger Alliance students are first-generation college students. “We should all have access to education,” Rodriguez said. “If I didn’t have a program like Tiger Alliance, I’m not sure where I would be today.” presented by

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ARTS

The Bank Building Studios now home to four local artists n story & photos by ALEX COOPER

The Bank Building Studios will hold its grand opening on Friday, March 6. Sitting at 1279 Pendleton St., the building will be the new location of four local artists’ studios.

I think it’s necessary for the Village of West Greenville to continue to attract and keep people from the artist community.” -Michael Watts, co-owner, Bank Building Studios Janina Tukarski Ellis, Patricia Kilburg, Traci Wright Martin and Barbara Castañeda all have individual studios in the new arts hub. It’ll be a space for these established artists to create and share their work with the public and their clients. It’s a site that even the owners of the building wanted to keep in the art com-

munity. “The Village of West Greenville has always had artists,” says co-owner Michael Watts. “I think it’s necessary for the Village of West Greenville to continue to attract and keep people from the artist community.” Ellis and Kilburg have been studio mates at the Flatiron building on Pendleton Street for years. Ellis’ studio had been there for 10 years before the move to the Bank Building. “I love this part of town,” Ellis says. The opportunity at the Bank Building was “too good to give up” she says, given the structure and its location “right at the heart of the arts district.” She says the artistic dynamics of the area made her want to stay in the Village. It’s a sentiment shared by Kilburg. “It’s a very cool building,” Kilburg says. “It’s got these wonderful sculptures [out front] and it feels like it’s the most energy-filled spot in West Greenville.” Martin says the building allows her to get more involved in the art community in Greenville. Having moved to the area only

GRAND

Pictured: Back row (left to right): Traci Wright Martin, Janina Tukarski Ellis; Front row (left to right): Patricia Kilburg, Barbara Castañeda

OPENING:

about a year and half ago, she’s been trying to find her place in the scene. “All of us in this building have such unique styles of work,” Martin says. “Hopefully there’s something for everyone.” The desire to connect to the community resonates with all four of these artists. Not only do they share the Bank Building, they share a passion for the Village. “I hope we can contribute to all the great things that are going on down here,” Castañeda says.

Friday, March 6 6:00-9:00PM 1279 Pendleton St. Grand opening will take place during the March First Fridays Gallery Crawl.

As they head into their opening on March 6, the artists also want to make themselves known as a presence in the community. “We consider this long-term,” says Kilburg, adding that they want to show “one more example of why this is an arts area.”

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Beautifying Main Street to the mountains Across generations, the Wyche family works to improve the vista for all n story by STEPHANIE TROTTER

Dr. Cyril Thomas Wyche

Pictured: View of Main Street looking North, 1950s | GREENVILLE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY

B

rad Wyche checks his phone for the time. It seems to be passing more quickly nowadays, in a life hitting a major milestone, yet still filled with plans to impact the entire region. “I’m actually having a hard time believing I’m really going to be 70 years old,” admits the attorney and environmentalist. “They say age is just a number. Well, that’s a really big number!” Aside from family gatherings, Brad Wyche also plans to attend Upstate Forever’s annual awards luncheon that will honor him for founding the conservation group and leading it for 17 years. “I’m really pleased with where I am now in my life and with Upstate Forever,” he reveals. “I had a serious health scare two years ago. Out of the blue, I had a stroke. It made me realize it’s all about carpe diem. Get the most out of every day. Live life to the fullest.”

Granville Wyche

Rooted in Nature:

Thomas “Tommy” Wyche

Harriet Smith Wyche

Bradford “Brad” Wheeler Wyche

Diane Smock

Tommy Wyche inherited an altruistic spirit from his father Granville, then passed on a love of the outdoors to his son, Brad.

The Wyche definition of “full” is different than most. No one can walk Greenville’s Main Street or drive across the Upstate without witnessing the family’s handiwork. And it all started with a country doctor.

PROSPERITY OR BUST

Against the odds of the Civil War and Reconstruction, Cyril Thomas Wyche managed to leave his native North Carolina to attend medical school and set up practice in Prosperity, a town in Newberry County. The doctor immediately injected public service into the Wyche family DNA. He rode on horseback to house calls and served in the state House of Representatives for 14 years, where he advocated for education and the creation of a state health department.

Delving into the Wyche Family History 1857

Cyril Thomas Wyche born near Henderson, NC 10

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

C. Granville Wyche born in Prosperity, SC 1890

1906

U.S. Congress passes the National Pure Food & Drug Act, advocated for by Cyril Wyche

Granville Wyche moves to Greenville 1916


NEED TO KNOW

The doctor’s youngest son, Granville Wyche, witnessed this life of personal sacrifice, and in 1916 accepted an appointment as assistant U.S. attorney for the district of South Carolina. Through that post, Granville became the first Wyche to move to Greenville.

That became an expectation the firm continues to this day. The lawyers need to give back. They need to be involved. That’s always been the expectation in the firm and in the family.” -Brad Wyche

Above: Tommy with law partners Jim Parham (left) and David Freeman (right) | PROVIDED

“I remember Papa Wyche well,” shares his grandson, Brad Wyche. “He lived to 97. Dad and I would go visit him on Sunday afternoons at his home on Augusta Road that’s now the Chandler School. He was such a nice guy, so friendly and selfless.” After five years in public law, Granville Wyche entered private practice with Cothran, Dean & Wyche. The firm changed names multiple times over the years, but one element stayed the same: The practice served as a springboard for its attorneys to aid the community. “That became an expectation the firm continues to this day,” explains Brad Wyche, who worked at Wyche, Burgess, Freeman & Parham for 19 years. “The

1921

Granville Wyche joins Cothran, Dean & Wyche, which operates today as Wyche, P.A.

Tommy Wyche attended Greenville High, where he stood out as a leader and courted younger classmate Harriet Smith, who would become his wife. In college, he and Granville exchanged many letters about his joining the family firm. He soon committed himself to the firm, family, pro bono work and community improvements. Each day, he took in his surroundings while entering the office on Main Street, above where Soby’s now sits. In the 1960s and 1970s, many viewed downtown Greenville as an eyesore. Tommy Wyche dreamed of R&R: restoration and renovation. First, he collaborated with others to create the civic center cluster now called Heritage Green. He then focused on Main Street and contacted an architectural design firm to build water sculptures. Their feedback went far beyond fountains and against conventional wisdom, recommending narrowing Main Street from four lanes to two, planting trees and widening sidewalks to make them pedestrian friendly. “Dad got fired up,” recalls Brad Wyche. “He worked with his friends Max Heller, who was mayor, and Buck Mickel, a wellrespected corporate executive. They were a great team. Max was the leader, the politician. Buck was real gregarious, talking things up. Dad was quiet behind the scenes, getting the legal work done.” That plan formed the foundation of Greenville’s award-winning streetscape, which thousands walk today. “Tommy was one of our community leaders who insisted on ‘going bold,’” says current Mayor Knox White. “That’s the lesson I learned from him. Bring in the best designers you can and insist on excellence.” Tommy Wyche and his son soon set their sights on much bigger places for the public to play.

Tommy Wyche born in Greenville 1926

1930

Cyril Wyche passes away

Brad Wyche is born in Greenville 1950

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FALLS PARK

lawyers need to give back. They need to be involved. That’s always been the expectation in the firm and in the family.” Granville Wyche volunteered his legal skills with the Greenville Chamber of Commerce and Rotary Club. He also leveraged his oratory skills at multiple state and national Democratic Party conventions, campaigning for Franklin D. Roosevelt. As they say, like father like son. But Granville Wyche’s son, Tommy, took the family’s altruistic intentions to new elevations in the surrounding mountains and city streets.

CHANGING LANES

|

Harriet Wyche was instrumental in leading the Carolina Foothills Garden Club to build what is now Falls Park Falls Park in the 1960s and ’70s. “She was a visionary herself,” Brad Wyche states. “The first domino to fall in rebuilding downtown was the park in the ’60s with mom. The river was badly polluted. But they were determined they were going to have a park to celebrate Greenville’s birthplace.”

Pictured: Brad Wyche at the Saluda River photo by PATRICK CAVIN BROWN

Naturaland Trust protected lands: Table Rock Watershed Raven Cliffs Falls Poinsett Watershed Caesar’s Head State Park Mountain Bridge Wilderness Jones Gap State Park Jocassee Gorges Wilderness Area

Upstate Forever protected lands: Swamp Rabbit Trail Stumphouse Mountain Chauga Heights Nine Times Gap Creek (Jones Gap Extension) Lake Conestee Nature Park Conservation efforts achieved with assistance from multiple groups, agencies and individuals.

1965

Tommy Wyche fully engages efforts to build current day Heritage Green

26 acres set aside for Falls Park 1967

1973

Tommy founds Naturaland Trust

Granville Wyche passes away 1987

FEBRUARY 28 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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FEATURED

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NEED TO KNOW

1990

Peace Center opens

Jocassee Gorges acquired 1997

1998

Brad Wyche founds Upstate Forever

Upstate Forever receives first conservation easement 2000

Harriet Wyche passes away of congestive heart failure

2009

Swamp Rabbit Trail opens, later renamed as Prisma Health Swamp Rabbit Trail

2011

2015

Tommy Wyche passes away

Upstate Forever celebrates 20 years, and Naturaland Trust celebrates 45 years 2018

FOR MORE: GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

LAND LORDS

As focused as Tommy Wyche was on revitalizing the city, he also enjoyed the wilderness. Brad Wyche recalls countless canoe and hiking trips with his dad, and one story of warning. The first time Tommy flew to Los Angeles and witnessed sprawl and smog creeping up the nearby hills, he vowed to stop that from happening to his beloved Blue Ridge Mountains. In 1973, he created the Naturaland Trust, one of the Southeast’s oldest conservation land trusts. The organization protects significant tracts of land in South Carolina, making them available for public use. “His 40-plus year effort has resulted in 100,000 acres of protected wilderness,” Brad Wyche says. “It’s one of the most significant conservation achievements in our nation’s history.” Brad Wyche also embraced Tommy Wyche’s love of the outdoors and, after experiencing the inaugural Earth Day as a college student, changed his undergraduate major to environmental studies. After obtaining a master’s degree in natural resources management and a law degree, he too joined the family practice, specializing in environmental law. “As much as I enjoyed it, I just felt like I needed to give back more,” admits Brad Wyche. “I saw a true need for a group like Upstate Forever. I could see development coming and thought we’ve got to manage that and protect special places before it’s too late.” In 1998, he gave up his job to jumpstart Upstate Forever from his home. The first project secured land for the Prisma Health Swamp Rabbit Trail. Today, the nonprofit group employs 21 people, who have inked 123 conservation agreements protecting 23,500 acres, while guiding land planning and policy.

“Brad is a visionary. He was talking about land-use planning and land protection before the Upstate was experiencing this unprecedented growth,” says current Upstate Forever Executive Director Andrea Cooper. “One of his legacies is that he’s insured the protection of many iconic places, while allowing for sustainable development.” At 65, Brad transitioned from executive director to senior adviser. He just capped off chairing the organization’s capital campaign, which brought in $8.4 million. He wants to travel more with his wife, Diane, and spend more time with his children and grandchildren. The living patriarch hopes future generations will carry on the family tradition of serving others. “Granville was very well respected and had impeccable integrity. My father is an impossible act to follow,” confesses Brad. “If I can do 10% of what Dad did in my life, I’ll be very happy. We need to give back.”

WYCHE PAVILION The open-air brick building on the shores of the Reedy River dates back to the early 20th century, when it served as a coach factory paint shop and then a mayonnaise production and packaging plant. The Peace Center obtained the abandoned building in the late 1980s, and it was named The Wyche Pavilion in honor of Tommy and Harriet for their dedication and leadership in “restoring downtown Greenville.” 12

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

Pictured: Tommy checks out the progress of the water feature at RiverPlace | PROVIDED

TOMMY WYCHE'S LEGACY: DoWNtoWN LoCAtIoNS WYCHE HELPED DEVELoP

The Hyatt Regency photo IRINA RICE

Peace Center photo IRINA RICE

Bi-Lo Center (Now Bon Secours Wellness Arena) photo BON SECOURS WELLNESS ARENA

RiverPlace photo JOHN OLSON

SC Governor’s School for the Arts & Humanities photo PROVIDED

Cleveland Street YMCA photo PROVIDED

Heritage Green photo JOHN OLSON


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NEWS

COMMUNITY

National Boy Scout bankruptcy will have ‘no effect’ on local scouting programs, CEO says n story by EVAN PETER SMITH

“Scouting is strong in Upstate South off of generous local donors.� Carolina.� The Blue Ridge Council Scouting proThose words, written in bold and under- gram operates under a charter from the lined font, were sent in an email to the board national organization, paying the national of directors and advisory board of the Blue organization fees for membership registraRidge Council, the organization that has tion, program handbooks and uniforms. There are currently about 6,000 youth provided Scouting programs in the Upstate members and 1,500 adult volunteer leaders for nearly 100 years. The email was sent just hours after the in the Upstate. Stressing that the Blue Ridge Council is Boy Scouts of America’s national organization announced it is filing for Chapter not filing for bankruptcy, Balog noted all lo11 bankruptcy protection in order to ad- cal camps, the volunteer services center and dress the economic implications related to finances are owned and controlled by the thousands of allegations of sexual abuse Blue Ridge Council and are all secure. suffered by Scouts. Nevertheless, Tim Kosnoff, the lawyer “All local representing Scouting proclose to 2,000 grams will conclients allegWhile we understand tinue as usual, ing abuse, told the economic reasons for the and we are the New York committed as Times that he bankruptcy at the national ever to deliverfinds it “difficult level, the bankruptcy does not to impossible� ing an impactful Scouting for the organihave an impact on the local zation to conprogram to Scouting programs provided by tinue to operUpstate youth,� adding that stated Blue us in Upstate South Carolina.� ate, “it would reRidge Council -Greg Balog, Blue Ridge Council Scout Executive quire changing Scout Executive Greg Balog into something in a separate people wouldn’t news release. “While we understand the recognize as Scouting.� In a statement, the national office of economic reasons for the bankruptcy at the national level, the bankruptcy does not have the Boy Scouts of America expressed an impact on the local Scouting programs “outrage that there have been times when individuals took advantage of our proprovided by us in Upstate South Carolina.� In an interview, Balog reiterated that lo- grams to abuse innocent children.� cal Scouting is and always has been an inThe statement went on to call the prodependent 501(c)3 legal entity operating cess behind the bankruptcy filing a “sigseparately from the national Boy Scouts of nificant step for the organization and for America organization that filed for bank- the victims of the abuse.� ruptcy. The Chapter 11 protection is expected to “Our funding model is a local model,� freeze all pending lawsuits related to alleged Balog said. “So we operate independent- sexual abuse suffered by Scouts, set a deadly of the national organization when it line for future claims of abuse and create a comes to finances. We do all of our fun- victim’s compensation trust, as opposed to draising locally, and we operate primarily thousands of case-by-case lawsuits.

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SPORTS

Spring is in the Air!

Palmetto Curling Club celebrates 10 years n story & photo by JESSICA MULLEN

Pictured: Daniel Fort, a founding board member of the Palmetto Curling Club, 'throws a rock' at the Greenville Pavilion.

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

This year marks the Palmetto Curling Club’s 10th anniversary. The club has met on Tuesday nights at the Pavilion Recreation Complex in Taylors since 2010. This season, the club is moving to its own dedicated ice rink for the first time. The new rink, which Palmetto Curling Club will share with the Carolina Rage youth hockey league, is located at 211 School St. in Greer. Daniel Fort, a current board member who was one of the club’s founding members, says he expects the membership to grow this year, but it currently stands at an average of 85 members. Every Olympic year, curling grows exponentially. Typically, its number of players doubles in membership across the U.S., according to Fort. The Vancouver Olympics in 2010 first inspired Fort to reach out to Beau Welling, a Greenvillian who competed on the U.S. Curling Team. “I fell in love with curling in the 1998 Olympics, but it was 12 years before I touched my first curling stone,” Fort says. “In 2010, I saw an article in the news about Beau Welling competing in Vancouver, so I looked him up on Facebook and said ‘Hey, I’m in Greenville and have wanted to curl for 12 years; let’s do this.’” Together with Welling, who currently sits on the board of the World Curling Federation, Fort formed the Palmetto Curling Club.

THAT'S INTERESTING:

ALMOST ALL

curling rocks come from the same quarry of granite in Scotland named Ailsa Craig.

I fell in love with curling in the 1998 Olympics, but it was 12 years before I touched my first curling stone.” -Daniel Fort, board member, Palmetto Curling Club It was the first curling club in South Carolina. Now there are two additional clubs, in Charleston and Columbia, but it’s still an unusual sport in the South. Fort says, “We’d be at the bonspiels [tournaments] and people would ask, ‘You’re from South Carolina and you curl?’” The club is primarily social. At present, membership is open to men and women above the age of 18, and Fort reports that the club’s oldest member is in his late 70s. In its new home, the club’s leadership is hoping to expand membership to junior throwers aged 10-12. Palmetto Curling Club also offers paracurling with wheelchairs donated by the Roger C. Peace Center. Fort says he’s excited to see the coming growth the Ice Station move will allow. “We’ve been limited on our ice time, because there’s hockey, ice skating, curling, and everyone needs ice time. With the expansion of the Pavilion, there will be additional common areas, but currently there is no handicap access to the common area because of the stairs.” Due to the renovations, the club’s normal 10-12 week schedule would have been shortened to five or six weeks had they not been able make the Ice Station move. The 2020 Spring League begins Feb. 25. Those interested in learning to curl or joining the league can find more information at www.palmettocurling.com.


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NEWS

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Greenville’s black athletes helped moved the goal posts for national sports’ desegregation n story by JOHN JETER | photos PROVIDED

Like a quarterback drilling pass after pass, Merl Code fires off names of the Greenville athletes he played against during high school in the 1960s. They all went on to make their marks in professional football as the NFL slowly moved the ball down the desegregation field. Code’s voice rises like the litigator he is as he recalls his former gridiron opponents: J.D. Smith, who later played for the San Francisco 49ers, Chicago Bears and Dallas Cowboys; Bill Thompson, Denver Broncos; Roy Kirksey, New York Jets; and Willie Belton, Atlanta Falcons. “I played against all of them,” says Code, a lawyer at Ogletree Deakins and the first African American municipal court judge and first African American president of the Greater Greenville Chamber of Commerce. “I played all these guys in high school.”

As it turned out, he faced off against them in college, too. Code grew up in Seneca, where he played for Blue Ridge High School until graduating in 1966. A cornerback at North Carolina A&T, Code found himself opposite many of them again in college. Smith and Thompson played for Sterling High School, the all-black school that closed in 1970. Belton and Kirksey played at Washington High. Smith went on to the Aggies, while the others became standouts at University of Maryland Eastern Shore. “At the time, Maryland State had the largest and probably one of the best football teams in the country, but it was segregated,” he says. “It was hard to explain

how much talent each of those teams had. If you remember, segregation put us all together; it did not allow us to go but to black schools, so you had some extraordinary talent all compiled in black schools.” What happened to all those talented athletes who never made it to Above: Top: J.E. Beck High School basketball team, late '60s | courtesy the pros? of PIEDMONT ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION HALL OF FAME “They got jobs,” he says, Above: Bottom: Sterling High School football, 1968 | courtesy of “went into high school GREENVILLE COUNTY LIBRARY coaching, went into the service.” That’s what happened to Richard Kerns, who was a track star and football player for the Sterling Tigers. After winning a scholarship to Allen University, an HBCU in Columbia, he was drafted into the Army. In 1966, stationed in Nuremburg, Germany, he ran the 100-yard dash in 9.2 seconds, a tenth-second off It was hard to explain the record at the time. how much talent each He later founded the Quick Striders Track Club here and, now 79, he recalls of those teams had. If the doors that remained closed to black you remember, athletes in 1960s Greenville. But they all kept running, he says. segregation put us all “We wanted to run against the whites, together. It did not but we couldn’t. We felt that we were much better, much faster than they allow us to go but to were,” he says. “We offered to run against black schools, so you them in the street. Matter of fact, we ran against some fellas, the white boys, and had some extraordinary we would beat ’em.”

talent all compiled in black schools.

-Merle Code, lawyer & former athlete

presented by

Above: Roy Kirksey (left) and Willie Belton (right) | courtesy of PIEDMONT ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION HALL OF FAME

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BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Pictured: E.B. Holloway (far right of the last row) with the staff of the U.S. Post Office in Greenville, c. 1900. | PROVIDED

E.B. Holloway championed African American interests in early 20th century Greenville n story by JOHN JETER | photos PROVIDED

Greenville’s first black letter carrier, hailed as one of the earliest proponents for a park in West Greenville, is now seen as an inspiration for what is becoming Unity Park. “The Negroes of this city have been seeking for some time for an outlet for the surplus energy of their boys and girls, also for people in general.” Elias Brown Holloway wrote in a letter published in the Greenville Piedmont newspaper on March 30, 1939. “We want the park because we need it. We want the park because our social and recreational life is at stake. Please give us a park.” Holloway also made his case to Greenville City Council in June 1939, bearing 376 names on a petition, according to the city’s Unity Park website.

While the city today puts Holloway at the forefront of advocates for a recreational site for people in general, “what became of the plan for a new African American park is unclear,” the site says. What is clear is that Holloway, who was born in Charleston in 1888, became an outspoken leader, a deacon at John Wesley United Methodist Church, a teacher and principal. He was also a prolific contributor to newspapers’ editorial pages with columns and letters to the editor. “He was quite vocal,” says Courtney Tollison, distinguished university public historian and scholar at Furman University. “You get the sense that was his personality. He’s really kind of an earlier member of the pantheon of people who established the foundation for Greenville’s He’s really kind of an earlier member of civil rights the pantheon of people who established movement.” Accordthe foundation for Greenville’s civil rights ing to the movement. U.S. Postal Service, the -Courtney Tollison, university public historian & scholar, Furman University 1891 “Official Register of the Unit-

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

E.B. Holloway At A GLANCE: Greenville's first African American mail carrier Deacon at John Wesley United Methodist Church Prolific contributor to newspapers’ editorial pages ed States” shows Holloway was one of five carriers at the Greenville Post Office, “along with one substitute carrier.” “The regular carriers like Holloway earned $850 per year,” a Postal Service historian says, adding that by 1911, “Mr. Holloway was listed as earning $1,200 as a letter carrier at Greenville.” The John Wesley church bulletin for Feb. 16 showcases Holloway, along with a contemporary, Benjamin E. Mays, the renowned civil rights activist who was born in 1894 in Ninety Six, South Carolina. Holloway died in 1976 and Mays in 1984. “There are several records (19291947) of John Wesley Methodist Church involving Holloway, including minutes of meetings, financial records and other church papers,” the bulletin says.

Above: Elias B. Holloway | FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE SOUTH CAROLINIANA LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA

In a 1942 letter to the S.C. Conference of the Methodist Church, Holloway wrote about a ”profitable year for farmers reflected in the large amount of money collected from congregations,” the bulletin says, and another “condemning the Ku Klux Klan and its activities.” The University of South Carolina holds a trove of Holloway’s papers, while Tollison says Greenville still holds the benefits of his legacy. “He was someone,” she says, “who defended and promoted African American interests in the city in a time when there were not many voices advocating for them.” presented by


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ART IN FOCUS

TRANSFORMATION ARtISt: YuRI tSuZuKI

COMPLETED 2017 n photo by IRINA RICE

Post yo photos in ur of the m front u "Transform ral at ation" #gvlar tinfocus

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GJ: WHAT WAS THE INSPIRATION BEHIND THE PIECE? YT: The Butterfly Project is a three part art installation. The very first butterfly was installed April 1, 2015. Since then, I have placed over close to 500 steel butterflies all over Downtown Greenville. Eventually, the butterflies “migrated” to the entrance of the Cancer Survivors Park in “Butterfly Journey” – an archway of blue butterflies to symbolize the journey of transformation that begins for patients and families diagnosed with cancer. “Transformation” is the final artwork of this project. I thought it was important to share with passersby the impetus and inspiration of the butterfly. GJ: HOW LONG DID THE PIECE TAKE TO CREATE? YT: Much time was spent with Hubbell Lighting to select the correct lighting fixtures. All in all the fabrication process took six months. GJ: WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE PART OF THE PIECE AND WHY? YT: I like the minimal and quietness of this sculpture. But even more importantly, it tells a story.

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SPORTS

Greenville Derby Dames searching for temporary home rink

n story by ANNA LEE | photo by AARON BRIDGEMAN

Greenville’s roller derby team is looking for a new home court — at least temporarily. With the Pavilion Recreation Center in Taylors closed and under renovation through October, the Derby Dames are scrambling to find a suitable rink to hold their home bouts for the 2020 season, said Alexandria Dougherty, a Derby Dames board member who skates under the name Axle. Dougherty said the team needs to find an indoor venue in Greenville County with at least 10,000 square feet of space and access to restrooms. “The WFTDA [Women’s Flat Track Derby Association] has regulations on our space size so skaters and fans can enjoy the sport safely,” she said. In roller derby, two teams skate around a track, competing to score points against one another. A team comprises four blockers and a jammer, who acts as the ball in the game. It’s the jammer’s job to make

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laps around the other team — each skater she passes is worth a point. Currently, practices are held at Skate Land USA off White Horse Road. Dougherty said the team has already been forced to cancel its first home game of the season due to its lack of venue. The Dames’ next home game is in May. “If we cannot find a space soon, our team and our skaters will be displaced,” Dougherty said. To help, contact the Dames at greenvillederbydames@gmail.com or find them on their Facebook page.

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REAL ESTATE

The evolution of the Southern Bleachery and Print Works A century of change brings a textile mill full circle to a modern-era marketplace facilitating craft and commerce for a new generation.

CURRENT TENANT LIST FOR TAYLORS MILL • 13 Stripes Brewery • Appalachian Spirit Folk Instruments • ASR Enterprises LLC • BoltAffect • Humble Web Developers • Carolina Recycling Company • Carrington Films • Cotton Rouge & Company

n story by JEANNIE PUTNAM | photos WILL CROOKS

• C&W Roofing, Siding, & Window Co.

Joining other textile mills in Greenville County in 1924, the Southern Bleachery was designed by the J.E. Sirrine Co. This facility allowed neighboring mills to send their unfinished cotton over to be bleached, dyed and finished into material to make clothing and other items. During operation, the Southern Bleachery grew into a campus with houses, stores, churches, school, athletic teams, a tennis court, a nine-hole golf course and more. In 1928, Piedmont Print Works bought acreage from the Bleachery and ran as an independent business until 1932, when the companies merged into the Southern Bleachery and Print Works. Like many other industries, the bleachery switched its operations to support the war effort during World War II. While this business survived the Great Depression and two world wars, it eventually found that it could not compete against globalization, third-world labor rates and inexpensive foreign imports. The Southern Bleachery closed its doors in 1965, resulting in area businesses drying up and homes being auctioned. The property, consisting of the main building, warehouses, a smokestack, detached boiler room with smokestack, a filtration plant and two ponds, sat dormant until 2007, when Kenneth and Ruby Walker began to envision how its nearly 1 million square feet could be used. The Walkers found the massive structure overgrown with vegetation, boarded over in places and exposed to the elements in others. Under their guidance, the idea of Taylors Mill, a space for artists, craftsmen, hobbyists, small business and entrepreneurs to all come together, was born. After hearing the plans for the space, Lawrence and Ashley Black signed on to the project. In addition, the building was listed as a national landmark in 2012. Following the trend of old mills repurposed as high-end apartment buildings, the Blacks decided to create a development everyone could enjoy, including an event space for gatherings. Since 2015, the Venue by Southern Bleachery; the Marketplace for artists, makers and regional industries; the Hill outdoor space for concerts, plays, picnics and more; 13 Stripes Brewery; Junto Coffee and other tenants have joined. The over 15-acre property also features walking trails, rocking chairs and an old truck that serves concessions.

• David Butts

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Chick Springs Road

St.

Wade Hampton Boulevard

E Main Street

d

a Ro

29

rk

Ma

How to find Taylors Mill:

Lincoln Road

Reid School Road

113 Mill Street, Taylors

Riverside Drive

Circle Street Taylors Mill

Freeman Drive Boling Road

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

• Elements Design Build L.L.C. • Daydream Lane Photography • Furr & Friend • Matthew and Sarah Furr • IVIVA • Maritime Supply Co.

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• Model Trains Station

Interesting facts about Southern Bleachery and Print Works

• Mog Studios

Made a historical landmark in 2012

• Our Creative Adventures

Construction began in 1922 and the Southern Bleachery opened in 1924

• Mary Denman Photography

• Pinpoint Creative Studio • Ring Studio • Shed Labs • Sofia Invitations and Prints • Southern Bleachery/TME • Southern Lumber Reclaimed • Tessha Zimmerman Dickey Studios • The Blue Ox Hatchet House • The Farehouse • The Indigo Tribe • The James Pittman Gallery • The Mad Smash • The William Felton School of Crafts • Vatalaro Studio *Some tenants choose not to be listed online; this is not a comprehensive listing of all tenants at the Taylors Mill. List taken from Taylorsmill.com

Southern Bleachery and Piedmont Print Works merged in 1932, at its peak the facility employed over 1,000 people and had its own mill village, store, baseball fields and even a golf course. Closed in 1965 causing economic impact felt across the entire community

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BRAXTON RIDGE BRAXTON RIDGE Featured Home

505 Rustic Outland Drive, Simpsonville, SC, 29681

505 Rustic Outland Drive, Simpsonville, SC, 29681

HOME INFO

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MLS #: 1409916

PRICE: $529,900 MLS #: 1409916 BEDROOMS: 3 BATHS: 2/1 SQ. FT: 2946 BEDROOMS: 3 BATHS: 2/1 SQ. FT: 2946 LOT SIZE: 0.44 Acres YEAR BUILT: 2019 LOT SIZE: 0.44 Acres YEAR BUILT: 2019 Bryson Elementary, Bryson Middle, SCHOOLS:SCHOOLS: Bryson Elementary, Bryson Middle, andHigh Hillcrest High and Hillcrest

AGENT: AGENT: Chet SmithChet Smith

864.458.7653 864.458.7653 info@chetandbethsmith.com info@chetandbethsmith.com

Brand new custom 3BR/2.5BA home located in Braxton Brand new custom 3BR/2.5BA home You’ll located in Braxto Ridge, a new upscale custom home community. Ridge, a new home You’ find spacious interior with upscale beautiful custom hardwoods floorscommunity. and interior with beautiful floors an open floor find plan spacious that makes entertaining easy. The hardwoods Kitchen floorwith plancustom that makes easy. The Kitche is a chef’sopen dream built entertaining cabinets, quartz countertops, tile backsplash, under cabinet lighting, huge is a chef ’s dream with custom built cabinets, quart walk-in pantry, Bosch stainless steel appliances much lighting, hug countertops, tile backsplash, underand cabinet more! Thewalk-in oversized Great Bosch Room stainless features asteel gas fireplace pantry, appliances and muc with custom mantel, andGreat hearth. It opens to thea gas fireplac more! Thesurround oversized Room features large screened porch, the perfect spot to enjoy your morning with custom mantel, surround and hearth. It opens to th cup of coffee or a cool Carolina evening. Upstairs you will large screened porch, the perfect spot to enjoy your mornin find a large Bonus Room (or possible 4th Bedroom) with its cup of coffee or a cool Carolina evening. Upstairs you wi own full bath. All the custom finishes you would expect in a find a large Bonus Room (or possible 4th Bedroom) with it J. Francis Builder home! Extensive crown moldings, granite own full bath. the custom you would expect in countertops, tankless hotAllwater heater finishes just to mention J. Francis Builder home! Extensive crown granit a few! Quality craftsmanship and precision to detail moldings, are countertops, tankless hot water heater just to mentio evident in this home! Amenities will include pool/cabana, a few! Quality craftsmanship and10precision walking trail, fishing pond and common areas. minutes to detail ar from DT Simpsonville, DT Fountain Inn and Five evident in this home! Amenities willForks. include pool/cabana

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I am a scientist. I am curious.

AREA OPEN HOUSES 22 PINCKNEY STREET • $950,000 HAMPTON-PINCKNEY HISTORIC: Own a piece of Greenville's history! This Circa 1910 Gallivan - Fewell home has been restored to a beautiful showpiece.

I am a Monstessori student.

SPECS:

I am Five Oaks Academy. 2-4pm | Sunday, March 1

Lydia Jane, age 5, observes outcomes and classifies objects while performing an experiment in the outdoor classroom.

1101 Jonesville Road Simpsonville, SC (864) 228-1881

3+2 | MLS 1403962

Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 blair@wilsonassociates.net

204 GARDEN TRAIL • $860,000 CHANTICLEER: Amazing views, amazing location, amazing home! Opportunities like this do not come around very often. SPECS:

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414 MCIVER STREET • $775,000

Minds Opened Here!

ALTA VISTA: Come and see what it is like to live at this prestigious address in the sought after Alta Vista area! SPECS:

Schedule a tour to see how Five Oaks Academy can unlock your child’s unique potential. 2-4pm | Sunday, March 1

4|

3.5 | MLS 1405875

Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 blair@wilsonassociates.net

25 E HILLCREST DRIVE • $775,000 NORTH MAIN: Do not miss this fabulous home on a double lot in the great school district of the North Main area. SPECS:

2-4pm | Sunday, March 1

4|

4 | MLS 1391287

Nick Carlson, Wilson Associates 864.386.7704 nick@wilsonassociates.net

21 KIMBOROUGH STREET • $529,900 HOLLINGSWORTH PARK: Gorgeous well maintained 3 bedroom/2.5 bath home in sought after Hollingsworth Park. Freshly painted exterior with large front covered porch. SPECS:

2-4pm | Sunday, March 1

3|

2.5 | MLS 1412022

Linda O'Brien, Wilson Associates 864.325.0495 linda@wilsonassociates.net

126 CHIPLEY LANE • $289,500 CHESTNUT HILLS: Amazing transformation! This adorable brick ranch was just renovated with the finest taste in mind. SPECS:

2-4pm | Sunday, March 1

20

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

5|

4+2 | MLS 1410267

Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 blair@wilsonassociates.net


HOME REAL ESTATE

NOW ON THE MARKET

and REAL ESTATE

107 W ROUND HILL ROAD • $499,999

208 MORGANSHIRE DRIVE • $318,000

GREEN VALLEY: Updated ranch on 2.31 acre lot w/ finished basment & awesome mountain views! Gourmet Kitchen. Luxury Master. Basement includes large living area and more. SPECS: 4| 3.5 | MLS 1412126

TREYBERN: 4BR/2.5 bath+ bonus room-open floor plan. Kitchen w/center island/tile backsplash/farmhouse sink/updated fixtures/pantry SPECS: 4| 2+1 | MLS 1412031

Cy Bagheri, Carolina Moves 864.349.7653 cy@carolinamoves.com

Maggie Toler, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS® 864.616.4280 mtoler@cdanjoyner.com

407 BUCKLEBURY ROAD • $275,000

108 LINWOOD AVENUE • $234,900

FRANKLIN POINTE: 4BR/3.5 bath+bonus(5thBR). Built 2018, Open floor plan. Kitchen-w/granite, stainless, tile backsplash, eat-in island. SPECS: 4| 3 | MLS 1412028

MCSWAIN GARDENS: Classic brick ranch full of updates. Great in town Greenville location. hardwood floors and neutral color scheme. Granite counter tops. SPECS: 3| 2 | MLS 1404695

Maggie Toler, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS® 864.616.4280 mtoler@cdanjoyner.com

Will Thomason, Carolina Moves 864.3505.7124 will@carolinamoves.com

107 GETTYSBURG COURT • $219,900

75 EAST 7TH STREET • $169,900

POWDERHORN: Ranch with finished basement. +/.51 acres cul-de-sac lot with fenced backyard. Bonus room, full appliance package. Massive rear deck, patio, fire pit and natural area to creek. SPECS: 4| 2.5 | MLS 1411171

DOWNTOWN: Completely renovated inside & out! New roof, plumbing, electric, HVAC, & interior! Near Swamp Rabbit Traill! SPECS: 3| 2 | MLS 1409251 Cy Bagheri, Carolina Moves 864.349.7653 cy@carolinamoves.com

Ernie Truman, Carolina Moves 864.918.3325 ernie@carolinamoves.com

New entrance. New reception. Same warm welcome.

There’s a big, beautiful expansion about to take shape. With more independent living options, more dining, more lounges, more activity rooms, and more ways to enjoy life than ever before.

I n d e p e n d e n t L i v i n g | A s s i s t e d L i v i n g | M e m o r y C a re | R e h a b i l i t a t i o n | S k i l l e d N u r s i n g

To learn more, call 864.991.3100. One Hoke Smith Blvd., Greenville, SC 29615 | RollingGreenVillage.com

Part of Greenville. Part of your family.

.

Rolling Green Village is a not-for-profit community. FEBRUARY 28 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

21


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PRICE

CLIFFS AT GLASSY EAST SUNSET HILLS PELHAM POINTE MARKLEY PLACE AUGUSTA ROW TRAXLER PARK KILGORE FARMS CLIFFS VALLEY LAKESIDE MARKLEY PLACE WOODRUFF PLACE SWANSGATE ALEXANDER FARMS STRATTON PLACE COACHMAN PLANTATION CURETON TOWNHOMES

CHELSEA HOLLINGSWORTH WATERSTONE COTTAGES SAVANNAH HIGHGROVE COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK JONES MILL CROSSING ROBINSON LANDING CREEKWOOD RIVERBEND ESTATES MCBEE STATION RESIDENTIAL CARRIAGE PARK CARSON'S POND RIVERSTONE COTTAGES RIVERWOOD FARM ARBOR WOODS ONEAL VILLAGE HIGHCREST HOLLINGSWORTH CHELSEA HOLLINGSWORTH LOST RIVER BRIAR OAKS GLENS @ LEXINGTON PLACE FOOTHILL VIEWS GOWER ESTATES FOOTHILL VIEWS ASHFORD THE OAKS AT FOWLER THISTLEDOWN GLENS @ LEXINGTON PLACE

LOST RIVER GLENVIEW PARK HOWARDS PARK 1200 PELHAM GANTT HTS. MOSS CREEK WATERS RUN DEVENGER PLACE HARTWOOD LAKE

$4,062,500 $3,825,000 $2,018,785 $1,350,000 $922,000 $840,000 $827,500 $780,000 $699,900 $650,000 $624,601 $575,000 $559,439 $540,000 $534,900 $530,000 $520,000 $515,000 $512,000 $505,000 $500,000 $490,469 $465,000 $455,000 $425,000 $410,576 $402,500 $397,700 $390,000 $381,900 $380,000 $375,000 $375,000 $366,500 $365,000 $362,500 $360,000 $360,000 $360,000 $355,779 $349,000 $344,000 $336,875 $335,000 $329,522 $327,353 $315,400 $314,900 $314,900 $314,500 $314,175 $305,000 $301,510 $300,000 $300,000 $300,000 $298,000 $292,849 $289,545 $280,000 $275,000 $275,000 $272,000 $270,000 $270,000 $269,900

PROPERTY TRANSFERS FOR JANUARY 27-31

SELLER 1220 WADE HAMPTON LLC GROVE 1005 LLC SPECIALTY BAR PRODUCTS C RAMSAY WARNE LLC FORD R T LIVING TRUST ROI FINANCIAL LLC ELLIS ALLISON B (JTWROS) BGMD LLC MARKLEY PLACE LLC STARBUCK TAYLOR K WEP CONSTRUCTION LLC HAUSER LYNN M FAMILY 201 MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH CLIST ELIZABETH CAROLE MARKLEY PLACE LLC KENNEDY JOANNE ELIZABETH GALLOWAY DEVELOPMENT LLC JENNINGS GLADYS P DUCHAN MELINDA J (JTWROS BEARDEN C PAXTON HILL MALACHI (JTWROS) MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L SCR GREENVILLE CURETON L PROVIDENCE INC M2DEVELOPMENT LLC LS RESIDENTIAL LLC CURRY JOYCE R SZABO JOSEPH G (JTWROS) SEWELL DARRIC SCHREINER JASON D ELEANOR-RANDOLPH GROUP L COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK LL TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN ANDERSON WILLIAM R BRASWELL CHRISTOPHER (JT BRYANT MELISSA CASHION ( MOON AND BACK LIVING TRU MARIA ANGELICA V BERRY KIMBERLY A NVR INC SILLSTROP TERESA BROOKSH CRESCENT HOMES SC LLC TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN BRUTOSKY BRYN (JTWROS) LS RESIDENTIAL LLC MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN NVR INC DHILLON PAMELA S ENCHANTED CONSTRUCTION L ANDERS SARAH ELIZABETH ( ENCHANTED CONSTRUCTION L HOOD ELIZABETH M D R HORTON INC OTT JOYCE A RAMOS HELENE TRUSTEE 50 METTS STREET LLC DISTINGUISHED DESIGN LLC MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL D R HORTON-CROWN LLC SPRAGUE CYNTHIA G LIVING BB 1031 LLC SCHOON BONNIE M MATHIS EVAN (JTWROS) CARLSON SCOTT K D R HORTON - CROWN LLC

BUYER BAYROCK FREEDOM LLC PRISMA HEALTH-UPSTATE 3QL LLC COFFEE INVESTMENTS LLC BEHRENS JUDITH A REVOC T BEST SUPPLY PROPERTIES L CRAWFORD JOHN G (JTWROS) BICKMANN PROPERTIES LLC GOODFRIEND CATLIN T (JTW FARTHING JOHN I (JTWROS) CHAUDRY MOHAMMAD IMRAN BRIDGES EMILY IRENE GRAYWAL MANJIT (JTWROS) JONES MATTHEW J JONES PA LAND ANTONIONETTE LOGAN LOPRESTI ALLISON (JTWROS WOODRUFF PLACE 129 LLC KEHL ELIZABETH A REVOCAB MILLER KRISTEN P (JTWROS STOKES MARK D (JTWROS) S BOBBITT IAN MICHAEL (JTW MATTHEWS DEBRA S (JTWROS BUTLER KATINA S AMERIDANSK GROUP LLC 2NDS IN BUILDING MATERIA DAVIS-HALL KELLIE JEAN ANDERSON ELIZABETH SUSAN STAAK MARILYN (JTWROS) T CREAMER JOSEPH RYAN CREA DE VASCONCELOS GISELE SE DICKSON CHRISTINA L SKIPWITH STEPHEN D (JTWR STEINER CHRISTOPHER J (J CAMPBELL BRENDA (JTWROS) PLANTE MATTHEW JOSEPH (J CANTRELL BRADLEY T CANTR DISHAROON MEREDITH GARDINSKY ALAN M (JTWROS KURTZ THOMAS R KING BRIAN (JTWROS) KING BEARDEN CHARLES PAXTON ( STEWART RAMON WEINSTEIN AARON (JTWROS) MOORE LINDSAY R MARSHALL ANDREA M ERICKSEN BRADLEY SCOTT ( NAVARRO ANGELIKA ESTEFAN BOYCE ANDREW (JTWROS) BO GARCIA KELSEY MULLIKIN GRAHAM T BUDLONG DONALD P (JTWROS MASTRANGELO LUCAS WIGGINS CLYDE CHRISTOPHE MORALES UBIRDA KHALIL MARIAM (JTWROS) M GREENCO PROPERTIES LLC RIVERA LILIANA (JTWROS) ROSA JUAN J COVIL JAMES P II (JTWROS MALONE ANNA BELLE (JTWRO FINCH ADRIA BRADSHAW 14 CRYSTAL LLC DARROW ROBERT WALLER BRITTNEY M FOX DEREK (JTWROS) DOEHLER JOHN MICHAEL (JT

ADDRESS 1307 W MOREHEAD ST STE 208 300 E MCBEE AVE 309 E STONE AVE 101 E WASHINGTON ST STE 400 2 SHARPTOP TRL 33999 MELINZ PKWY 2117 CHALYBE DR 116 HOLBROOK TRL 110 N MARKLEY ST UNIT 208 211 WALNUT ST 329 SEEWEE CIR 132 MOUNT VISTA AVE 29 LAROSE CT 101 LONG SHADOW LN 110 N MARKLEY ST UNIT 303 73 QUINLAN DR 129 WOODRUFF PLACE CIR STE B 208 CRESCENT AVE 34 ALEXANDER MANOR WAY 12 WHITTINGTON CT 45 ED FEW RD 212 SCOTTS BLUFF DR 15-B CURETON ST 234 STONE LAKE DR 6052 LEE HWY 13 PECKHAM STREET 116 STEPHENS LN 116 SHAPTON LN 408 ABERCORN WAY 103 CHARDMORE CT 208 MACO TER 115 GREENRIDGE DR 915 BERWICK DR 239 CLEARRIDGE WAY 428 RIVER SUMMIT DR 201 PLEASANTWATER CT 400 E MCBEE STREET UNIT 4202 1000 CARRIAGE PARK CIR 204 GREAT PINES DR 4 BLACKFOOT RD 206 MEDFORD DR 2 ARBOR WOODS LANE 3 TOWNSEND AVENUE 228 ROCKY SLOPE RD 9 PECKHAM ST 319 LINDSTROM CT 509 BRIAR OAKS LN 8 MAN O WAR CT 19 UPCOUNTRY LN 142 SHALLOWFORD RD 16 UPCOUNTRY LN 502 MARY KNOB CT 408 WOODLAND OAKS CT 39 THISTLE BROOK CT 205 BELMONT STAKES WAY 10 METTS ST 230 MCCALL RD 324 BRISTLE FERN TRL 318 KELBY ST 1100 DOWNING BLUFF DR 1202 SHADOW WAY 101 E WASHINGTON ST STE 400 400 BELGRAY CT 816 SILVERWOOD WAY 104 INWOOD CT 216 HARTWOOD LAKE LANE

SUBDIVISION RIVERSTONE RYDERS RIDGE JONES MILL CROSSING FORRESTER WOODS ARBOR WOODS SHADY FORD KELSEY GLEN

ANNANDALE ESTATES TRIPLE CREEK STILLWOOD BELL'S CROSSING SUMMERSIDE ROLLING GREEN KATHERINES GARDEN PARKER'S PLACE ROCKBRIDGE TOWNHOMES 100 EAST BROOKWOOD PARK SUMMER WOOD AUTUMN RIDGE IVYBROOKE HALF MILE LAKE MAPLESTEAD FARMS COUNTRY GARDENS HIDDEN LAKE PRESERVE ANNANDALE ESTATES WESTVIEW SEVEN OAKS BLUE RIDGE GRIFFIN PARK MAPLESTEAD FARMS WHITE HORSE HEIGHTS ECHO RIDGE POINSETT CORNERS TRIPLE CREEK ANNACEY PARK INDIGO POINTE HERITAGE VILLAGE WINDSOR FOREST II ANNANDALE ESTATES FAIR HEIGHTS WILDFLOWER MEADOWS MAPLESTEAD FARMS MONTCLAIRE COLEMAN HEIGHTS SPARROWS POINT

BEECHWOOD PLACE THE RESERVE AT RIVERSIDE STEEPLECHASE CASTLEBROOK FAIR HEIGHTS LAUREN WOODS CANEBRAKE MAPLESTEAD FARMS LOCKELAND PARK COUNTRY KNOLLS HERITAGE VILLAGE SOUTH MAIN TOWNES ORCHARD CREST HALF MILE LAKE MCSWAIN GARDENS SOUTHCREEK HERITAGE VILLAGE

PRICE $269,065 $266,400 $262,975 $260,000 $257,825 $253,000 $251,000 $250,000 $249,900 $248,000 $245,000 $244,990 $244,900 $240,000 $239,999 $239,900 $239,900 $235,000 $231,000 $229,900 $229,007 $228,900 $228,500 $224,980 $224,900 $224,900 $223,375 $223,000 $222,400 $221,000 $220,735 $220,000 $220,000 $220,000 $217,990 $216,580 $216,000 $215,726 $215,000 $214,970 $214,500 $212,500 $210,995 $209,900 $206,000 $202,000 $200,000 $200,000 $200,000 $200,000 $199,900 $199,900 $199,900 $199,900 $199,000 $198,500 $196,580 $192,000 $191,500 $188,835 $187,890 $185,198 $185,000 $185,000 $184,900 $183,525

SELLER NVR INC SK BUILDERS INC TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN PARCELL FAMILY LIVING TR CRESCENT HOMES SC LLC SMITH ARETHA G (JTWROS) ELLINGTON JOHN V ANDERSON ANTHONY D DICKSON CHRISTINA L BAISDEN DERRICK (JTWROS) KENNEDY JOANNE ELIZABETH D R HORTON INC KURTZ THOMAS R (JTWROS) MARTIN NINA BAKER TRUST SK BUILDERS INC GREER GORDON K TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN MAJKA MATTHEW JACOBS MEGHAN MURPHY JONES PAUL J (JTWROS) SK BUILDERS INC COLLINS SUSAN E REVOCABL BARNETT JENNA M (JTWROS) NVR INC FARAH ENTERPRISES LLC ADAMS HOMES AEC LLC NVR INC REEVES GWENDOLYN MICHELL SK BUILDERS INC BERESIC PHILIP (JTWROS) NVR INC SUGIRA PROPERTIES LLC MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH SMITH MATTHEW KEITH (JTW D R HORTON INC BAFFOUR ERIC O IBI FORRESTER LLC NVR INC GRESHAM WILLIAM M NVR INC KOENIG ROBERT MARK ROZYLOWICZ KIM KNIEF NVR INC LEGO PROPERTIES LLC HART CORY KHRISTIAN (JTW MUNRO KAREN DALE LLEWELLYN RITA POOLE MARSHALL CURTIS HOGAN THOMAS M FITZGERALD REAL ESTATE C MORRISON PAUL R GAULT NIYA (JTWROS) NVR INC PTR INVESTMENTS LLC FRIDLEY TERI TRUST YANT AARON C (JTWROS) NVR INC SUNCREST HOMES LLC BURSING ANDREW J (JTWROS NVR INC NVR INC ENCHANTED CONSTRUCTION L POOLE VALDA LABOONE LAUREN DIXON DAVIDSON CAROLINE E (JTW NVR INC

BUYER HAMEL JEANNETTE (JTWROS) HILL CRYSTAL A (JTWROS) BURNS ANN HOTTEL DAVID T (JTWROS) LINN CANDICE VERONIQUE ( DIXON ISAAC JR (JTWROS) MINA MARK T (JTWROS) MIN PEREZ JULIA DENISE COHEN JEREMY DEAN (JTWRO MAUHAR MICHAEL MOORE JANICE HAYES JENKINS THALIA WILEEN SINCLAIR ANDRIA LEE (JTW EVANS JANET E LIVING TRU BAUER WILLIAM CHOW STEPHEN J (JTWROS) NUNEZ KIMBERLY KELLY KENT PATRICIA C FAMILY T DUNN BRONWEN K HONEYCUTT CHRISTOPHER M KANDOLL BRIAN J KINCAID ANN B ALICEA ANDRES CARLOS RUI LYONS GRETCHEN MARIE (JT KALPAKCI GOKAY (JTWROS) FUENTES MARCO A FUENTES SCHULMAN JANICE MCCLURE TIFFANY A (JTWRO CUNNINGHAM CARLOS L MITCHELL JANICE M HARRIS MYLOTIA NICOLE (J GIL JAIME ALBERTO PATEL DLPLKA (JTWROS) PA SOBOTA MICHELE BURNSIDE KRISHONDA DENAE 107 CHALET LLC MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L MCRAE DALTON WAYNE (JTWR MEHRLING CHARLES KENNETH MCPHERSON CAMERON (JTWRO TOMPKINS KATRINA OWERS TERRY M MCAVOY ERIC FELIZ GINA BASTOW JACK (JTWROS) BAS GAILLARD GARTH HUNTER GOSS CLIFFORD EARL JR (J RICHARDSON DEVIN BLAKE RAY CAROL S RAY RANDALL A2E PROPERTIES LLC ORMAN JACQUELINE ELIZABE CEBALLOS GUSTAVO A (JTWR MEACHEM RACHAEL M (JTWRO SMITH GEORGE L JR NORRIS KENNETH BRIAN (JT BURRELL MARIE SALISBURY SOBOTA CHARISE HARBUCK LUCAS A (JTWROS) SULLIVAN ROBERT LEE LARSON SCOTT (JTWROS) LA KANAGARI DONY RAGHA DEEP JORDAN BRIAN P (JTWROS) RISE PROPERTIES LLC BOOKTER SHANNON K EPPS MATTHEW CHANCE PATEL RAJNIKANT G

ADDRESS 4 PEQUOT DR 201 RYDERS WAY 718 TORRIDON LN 211 GILDER CREEK DR 314 TIMBERLAND WAY 301 BELLONA LN 67 CHAPEL HILL LN 150-A LEDBETTER RD 101 BRUNSON ST 422 PERRY AVE 506 HARWOOD CT 803 LONGHORN DR 315 AMBERLEAF WAY 180 JOE LEONARD RD 308 ANSEL WOODS LN 114 ROBERTS HILL DR 115 COOGAN LN 323 ANGIE DR 104 HENDERSON DR 46 RUSTCRAFT DR PO BOX 634 837 WOODSFORD DR 107 THREE FORKS PL 330 MAPLESTEAD FARMS COURT 1105 AUTUMN LEAF LN 110 STARLIGHT DR 403 EDGEHILL CT 812 CANTON CT 116 CHERRYBARK LN 5208 12TH ST NE 813 DANFORTH DR 35 HURSHFIELD CT 115 OUTBACK DR 224 S LAURENS ST UNIT 102 800 LONGHORN DR PO BOX 5795 441 WESTERN LN 24 WILLOMERE WAY 331 STILLWATER CT 651 BROOKFIELD PKWY STE 200 210 CUMBERLAND AVE 5 CLEMATIS DR 317 MAPLESTEAD FARMS CT 124 MANCHESTER DR 27 WEST DR 18 GRAYHAWK WAY 110 W SUMMIT HILL DR 180 BRAMLETT RD 10 BRANDI STARR CT 1724 LOCUST HILL RD 12 SUNFIELD CT 816 PALOMINO CT 651 BROOKFIELD PKWY STE 200 119 CUMBERLAND AVE 106 LAUREN WOOD CIR 125 VALLEY FORGE DR 406 MAPLESTEAD FARMS CT 253 LOCKELAND PARK DR 15 COUNTRY KNOLLS DR 128 BENTWATER TRL 21 COUNTRY DALE DR 417 THOMAS EDWARDS LN 108 GANDER PL 736 RICHBOURG RD 300 SOUTHCREEK DR 112 ROUNDTREE DR

The Legacy Continues. Since 1913, the McAfee family has been part of the Greenville community. Tommy and John McAfee are proud to introduce the fifth generation of the firm. Downtown Chapel, (864) 232-6733 Northwest Chapel & Cremation Center, (864) 294-6415 Southeast Chapel, (864) 688-1600 Tommy McAfee, Elizabeth McAfee, Jay McAfee and John McAfee

22

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PROPERTY TRANSFERS FOR JANUARY 27-31 SUBDIVISION RIVER MIST SOUTH MAIN TOWNES WOODS AT BONNIE BRAE WHITE OAK RIDGE CARRINGTON

STANDING SPRINGS ESTATES WESTERN HILLS ENOREE POINT COUNTRY GARDENS DOGWOOD TERRACE LEWIS VILLAGE PEBBLE GARDENS HALF MILE LAKE BELLINGHAM TIMBERLAKE DREXEL TERRACE PINE SHADOWS OLD MILL ESTATES LEWIS VILLAGE WOODCREEK HOLLYVALE LAUREL HEIGHTS MILLS MILL RIVERDALE PINE FOREST DRUID HILLS

WEST GREENVILLE HOUSING PEBBLECREEK PARAMOUNT PARK LEWIS VILLAGE CHESTNUT POND

PRICE $183,000 $180,535 $179,900 $179,000 $178,500 $178,000 $175,000 $172,000 $170,000 $170,000 $170,000 $168,000 $165,000 $160,000 $157,500 $155,200 $155,000 $150,500 $150,000 $150,000 $149,000 $149,000 $146,500 $145,000 $145,000 $141,000 $140,000 $135,000 $135,000 $131,000 $130,000 $130,000 $128,950 $128,000 $120,000 $120,000 $118,500 $112,685 $112,500 $110,000

SELLER MONTEITH HEATHER NVR INC BOYER ALAN KINGSLAND DAVID H HAMMONS KATHRYN S ENSLEY COURTNEY ROSE (JT HARJU DOUGLAS R TM PROPERTIES LLC OLACHEA DANIEL D (JTWROS 304 TUSCON DRIVE LAND TR DIRTON INGRAM M WILLIAMS CANDACE J CHANN PREUSS KATHERINE S (JTWR LIKES ESCAPE LLC HOOPER LYNN W HB1 ALTERNATIVE HOLDINGS ECC4712 LLC ROBINSON MEGHAN SPENCE DOROTHY BASS GREGORY SCOTT HONEST HOME SALES LLC MCLAUGHLIN BARBARA FDA FAMILY TRUST BOITER JAMES M YOUTZ RICHARD D WALLACE DEBRA C (JTWROS) NYE ANTHONY D SHADE KARALYNN PEAKE JOHN G HENSON SHERRY E PARIS CHRISTIE RHODES BALLEW TIMOTHY SCOTT EVANS LESA JENKINS THALIA BYRD CRISSY DJ WATSON PROPERTIES LLC GREEN JOSHUA S CMH HOMES INC HAMBY ELAINE C CRAW PROPERTIES LLC

BUYER MOORE JONAH VANDENBERG STACI LABRADOR LEOMAR ALFREDO ARIAS MARIA M CANALE PETER J (JTWROS) BLASCH ALEENA CLARE GAILLARD PAMELA Y (JTWRO ANDERSON TAMMY ANDERSON PANCHISHIN IGOR (JTWROS) CROWN ASHLEY MARIE BLUE OCEAN INVESTMENTS L MCCLAIN JACOB CODY (JTWR HAMMONS KATHRYN S HENLEW15B LLC ENNAMORATO ANTHONY JR EN ORIOLE PROPERTIES LLC TURNER PIERCE LESLIE UPSTATE RENOVATORS LLC DEAN MELISSA RENE GODSEY ALLEGIANCE VENTURES LLC PYLES CECIL PAXTON NANETTE SUE SRE LEWIS VILLAGE LLC ORIOLE PROPERTIES LLC SIEBEN MICHAEL PATTILLO REGINA BYRD HAND WILLIAM BUCKEYE INVESTMENTS LLC PALMETTO REALTY DEVELOPM MACLANDERS JUSTIN PARENT COMPANY LLC THE GONZALES HUGO SALDIVAR G REAL ANTHONY LEE RICO SABINO SC HOME OFFER LLC FATTAH SUHA A (JTWROS) H MOODY TIMOTHY SINGLETON DAVID L SINGLE BOOMER HOLDINGS LLC WOODLAND CUSTOM HOMES LL

ADDRESS 201 RIDGEBROOK WAY 31 COUNTRY DALE DR 39 BROCKMORE DR 1717 ANDERSON RIDGE RD 114 MIDWOOD RD 7 OXBOW CT 302 ROSEMARY LN 440 COOLEY BRIDGE RD 119 WAVERLY HALL LN 304 TUCSON DR 100 VERDAE CREST DR 1 REAGAN WAY 4 ALPINE DR 300 WOODLAND WAY 20 ROCK GARDEN LN PO BOX 4068 104 ABBOTSFORD DR 25 DRAPER ST APT 136 875 OLD BUNCOMBE RD 403 WOODS LAKE RD STE 100 112 PINE NEEDLE RD 67347 FRYREAR RD 10 LONGVIEW TER PO BOX 4068 13 WOODBERRY WAY 622 GRAYTHORN LN 36 HALE ST 116 DELMAR DR 3 GREENTREE RD 211 CANNON AVE 507 BENNETT ST 140 ANDERSON MILL RD 556 NEW HARRISON BRIDGE RD 393 OLD FARRS BRIDGE RD 31 BOLAND CT 5 CALICO CT 207 CROSBY CIR 214 HART CUT RD PO BOX 17492 PO BOX 24277

and REAL ESTATE

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SUBDIVISION

PRICE

SELLER

BUYER

ADDRESS

HOWARDS PARK

$107,400 $107,000 $105,000 $100,000 $100,000 $96,000 $95,000 $90,607 $90,607 $85,000 $84,000 $83,650 $82,000 $80,000 $80,000 $76,500 $75,000 $75,000 $75,000 $70,000 $70,000 $69,000 $68,000 $65,000 $65,000 $64,300 $62,000 $60,373 $55,000 $55,000 $55,000 $54,695 $53,650 $50,000 $50,000 $45,011 $45,000 $45,000 $44,000 $43,200

MARK III PROPERTIES INC TAYLOR VERA SOSEBEE (L-E HACKETT CATHERINE B BENSON BRANDDON L FFMLT TRUST 2006-FF13 O'NEAL CDSF LLC JP ALLIANCE LLC NPS DEVELOPMENT LLC NPS DEVELOPMENT LLC HOLCOMBE CHARLES WILBORN ELECTUS DEVELOPMENT GROU 40 ACRES LLC K&L INVESTMENTS INC MIDDLEHOUSE BUILDERS INC RAMSEY STUART CRAIG TRUS THOMAS ERIC R OWEN EDWARD S ANDREADE RESHAWN DAVIS JOHN W MIDDLEHOUSE BUILDERS INC GEORGE CLARENCE ANTHONY FOX LENDING LLC SLOAN FAMILY PROPERTIES ALLEN RODNEY DAVID JONES PERRY L SR FREEMAN CHRISTINE T BRAXTON RIDGE LLC BE STILLWATERS LLC KAPA LLC KIRBY WILTON R BRAXTON RIDGE LLC MASTR ALTERNATIVE LOAN 2 MARK III PROPERTIES INC BEAMAN CHARLES DOUGLAS J GILLETTE DAVID STIERWALT LINDA M DCW PROPERTIES LLC VALLE VILMA 4 WALLS PROPERTIES LLC THOMAS GENEVA

D R HORTON-CROWN LLC STERR TIM RICHISON ANDRE (JTWROS) ANSTEL ENTERPRISES LLC VALLABHANENI KRISHNA SK BUILDERS INC PRICE MARCY ROSEWOOD COMMUNITIES INC ROSEWOOD COMMUNITIES INC BALTAZAR ARTURO MIGUEL STONE DUANE A DAWSON ANTHONY WILSON ALEXANDER TERPENING REVOCABLE TRUS CHASTAIN CAROLYN (JTWROS G & DUB PROPERTIES LLC SC HOME OFFER LLC KINGPRIEST HOLDINGS LLC NUNEZ JOEL MOLNAR JEANNE C (JTWROS) GAMBRELL BARRY T TOM BRIAN PROPERTIES LLC GREERFOODMART INVESTMENT GROUT DENISE A (JTWROS) MATHIS RALPH B (IRA) BUITRAGO CHARLEE STHEP FRANCIS REALTY & BUILDER MIDDLEHOUSE BUILDERS INC GREGORY WALTER COLE ROBYN GALLOWAY CUSTOM HOMES WOJTUN ENRIQUE NVR INC LECLAIR EDMOND R (JTWROS SHEAD LLOYD D SR SHEAD M KELLY SAMUEL JASON SK BUILDERS INC ROSALES LISBETH LOPEZ DAVIS LISA A (JTWROS) DA CJ CREATIVE LLC

100 VERDAE BLVD STE 400 303 SMYTHE ST 27 STARSDALE CIR 17 E MOUNTAINVIEW AVE 504 SUMMERGREEN WAY 955 W WADE HAMPTON BLVD STE 7 217 WALDEN CREEK WAY 109-D REGENCY COMMONS DR 109-D REGENCY COMMONS DR 406 HIGHLAWN AVE 117 MOUNTAIN SLOPE CT 105 REVERE CT 406 PENNSYLVANIA AVE 1305 BURGOS DR 306 TYLER OAKS DR 4166 S BLUE RIDGE DR 31 BOLAND CT 1943 BOILING SPRINGS RD #16201 412 ANSEL ST PO BOX 1089 25 PIEDMONT AVE 400 MILLS AVE UNIT 314 404 S LINE ST 208 SCENIC RIVER WAY 190 THOMPSON DR 723 PIEDMONT HWY 10 S ACADEMY ST STE 350 PO BOX 1089 105 EARLE DR 257 WOODVILLE RD 129 WOODRUFF PLACE CIR STE C 348 HILLSIDE CHURCH RD 651 BROOKFIELD PKWY STE 200 119 BLAZING STAR TRL 312 EDGEMONT AVE 2601 DUNCAN CHAPEL RD C-102 955 WADE HAMPTON BLVD SUITE 7 207 FORK SHOALS RD 4809 NATIONAL DR 1209 S CHURCH ST APT 1209

STARSDALE MANOR BELLE MEADE ONEAL VILLAGE RIDGEWALK COTTAGES RIDGEWALK COTTAGES RIVERSIDE THE PINELANDS GREER MILL VILLAGE STILLWATERS

WILLIAMSBURG AT BOTANY TIMBERWALK NORWOOD HEIGHTS STILLWATERS SOUTH FOREST ESTS RIVERBEND ESTATES

BRAXTON RIDGE STILLWATERS WOODVILLE BRAXTON RIDGE RIVERSTONE CLIFFS AT GLASSY RIVERSIDE COURT RIDGE AUTUMN RIDGE AUGUSTA ACRES VALLEY VIEW "GOLF" NICHOLTOWN HEIGHTS

FEBRUARY 28 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

ARTS & CULTURE

Do You Hear the People Sing... A grittier ‘Les Miserables’ returns to the Peace Center

What strikes Mary Kate Moore about the musical “Les Miserables,” returning to the Peace Center on March 3, is how real, relevant and often raw the story seems. Take, for instance, the character Moore plays, Fantine. Jilted by her lover, Fantine raises her child alone, suffers physical abuse and falls into destitution, losing her beauty and her health.

I think it can be hard for people to watch, but it’s really a powerful story because it draws attention to the fact that it’s still happening.” -Mary Kate Moore, Fantine

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“What she experiences still happens to millions of women around the globe,” Moore said. “I think it can be hard for people to watch, but it’s really a powerful story because it draws attention to the fact that it’s still happening.” “Les Miserables,” based on Victor Hugo’s epic novel, centers on Jean Valjean, imprisoned for 19 years — for merely stealing a loaf of bread — and later trailed obsessively by the self-righteous police inspector Javert. The main plot is set against the backdrop of the Paris uprising of 1832 with students and workers fighting for “les miserables” — the impoverished and starving people of France. It’s really a story about social justice, redemption and forgiveness, Moore said, and the national tour of “Les Miserables” emphasizes the timelessness of those themes. “In past productions, it’s been more about the music than the story, but we

n story by PAUL HYDE | photo by MATTHEW MURPHY

represent our characters as very human, honest and real,” Moore said, speaking by phone from Cincinnati during a tour stop. “These characters could be alive now.” With a cast of 38, this production is based on the 2014 Broadway revival, featuring scenery inspired by Hugo’s paintings. Eight performances are scheduled at the Peace Center.

BROADWAY CLASSICS

The musical spotlights songs and ensemble numbers that have become Broadway classics, including “On My Own,” “Stars,” “Bring Him Home” and “One Day More.” And then there’s the heartbreaking “I Dreamed a Dream,” sung by Moore’s Fantine. “It’s an awesome responsibility,” Moore said. “I’m really honored to play this role simply because of the amazing female performers who’ve gone before me.” Among the acting legends who’ve por-

“LES MISERABLES” MARCH 3-8 | TIMES VARY PEACE CENTER $45-$115 PEACECENTER.ORG trayed Fantine in the past are Patti LuPone, Andrea McArdle, Lea Salonga and (in the film version) Anne Hathaway. Moore’s favorite part of the show is the Act I finale when the chorus, ready for battle, sings the rousing “One Day More.” At that point, Moore, in a dark wig, is no longer Fantine but has rejoined the ensemble. “I love marching in the famous ‘V’ formation with the red flag flying above us,” Moore said. “It’s an iconic moment in theater history.”


AMAZING GRACE

David Drake, circa 1800 to circa 1870 storage vessel, 1857 alkaline-glazed stoneware inscribed: Aug 16, 1857, Dave I wonder where is all my relation Friendship to all and every nation

I wonder where is all my relation Friendship to all and every nation Experience the powerful story of David Drake, an enslaved African-American who worked as a “turner” in several pottery manufacturing facilities in South Carolina’s Edgefield District. Drake, who was known only as “Dave” before 1865, learned to both read and write, dangerous and even illegal skills for a slave to possess. Drake openly expressed his literacy by inscribing original poems on many of the utilitarian works he created. The identities of millions of enslaved African-Americans, whose talents and labor supported the development of American culture, were overlooked or disregarded by recorded history. Through the modest wares handcrafted and inscribed by David Drake, at least one remarkable voice remains to speak on behalf of the lives and stories irretrievably lost. The GCMA is home to the largest institutional collection of pottery vessels by David Drake, including single-handle jugs, storage jars, pitchers, a syrup jug, and a rare butter churn.

Journal FP Amazing Grace 4.20.18.indd 1

Greenville County Museum of Art

420 College Street on Heritage Green 864.271.7570 gcma.org Wed - Sat 10 am - 5 pm Sun 1 pm - 5 pm

admission free

4/23/18 10:41 AM


ARTS & CULTURE

THRILLING, SPECTACULAR & UNFORGETTABLE” The New York Times

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

THEATER

Timely ‘Hedwig’ roars into the Warehouse Theatre PAUL HYDE Contributor

T H E

M U S I C A L

P H E N O M E N O N

MARCH 3-8

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“Hedwig and the Angry Inch” seems to be a musical whose time has arrived. Though it debuted 22 years ago, the hardcharging rock show explores issues that are a big part of today’s cultural debate: gender fluidity, diversity and inclusion. “Hedwig” roars into the Warehouse Theatre on Feb. 28 even as local community groups call on Greenville County Council to rescind an anti-gay resolution dating from 1996. That’s just a coincidence, but it seems a reflection of the times. Stephen Trask’s musical centers on the genderqueer song stylist Hedwig, a largely overlooked rock goddess who also happens to be the victim of a botched sex reassignment operation. Backed by the live rock band “The Angry Inch,” Hedwig tells her story through song and comedy — about her deprived boyhood in East Berlin, her relationship with an American soldier, that imperfect sex-change operation, her journey to the U.S. and abandonment by her husband. It’s a rocking, funny, touching and ultimately inspiring musical, said Clay Smith, a Greenville native who returns to the city to play Hedwig. “I think it reminds everyone that you’re a whole and worthy person as you are,” Smith said. “You don’t need to seek permission to be anything other than who you are.” Hedwig herself is a complex character, flamboyantly extroverted but also full of pain and anger at a life that has given her an inch when she feels she deserved a mile. “She is desperate for peace in understanding who she is, which is not very different from every one of us,” Smith said. The show reflects Hedwig’s own journey of self-discovery and acceptance, he said. A high-octane rock score propels the musical. “The music is infectious,” Smith said. “It’s hold-your-lighter-in-the-air rock ‘n’

“HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH” » THRU MARCH 22 | TIMES VARY » WAREHOUSE THEATRE » $40-$65 WAREHOUSETHEATRE.COM

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It’s hold-your-lighterin-the-air rock ‘n’ roll. It connects to your soul. You cannot leave this show unaffected by it.” -Clay Smith, Hedwig roll. It connects to your soul. You cannot leave this show unaffected by it.” Smith, now based in New York, is best known for his cabaret performances and his appearances on America’s Got Talent as the drag queen Delighted Tobehere. He also hosts a regular drag brunch at Greenville’s Café and Then Some. Smith said of Hedwig, “It’s a monster of a role, but I’ve been supported wonderfully by the Warehouse Theatre and [director] Andrew Scoville, the most compassionate, driven and authentic person I’ve ever worked with. I feel safe being uncomfortable.” The only other character in the play — aside from Hedwig and the four-person band — is Hedwig’s assistant and husband, Yitzhak, played, in another gender-bending twist, by local actress Miranda Barnett. Scoville, the New York-based director staging the Warehouse’s “Hedwig,” normally approaches a theatrical work in a carefully controlled fashion, but this musical is all about spontaneity, he said. “Playing to find the best way to tell the story has been scary but also freeing and not something I get to do very often,” said Scoville, who directed the Warehouse’s “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson two years ago. “It has been a unique and joyful part of the process.” Theater-goers should note: The show includes strong language.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

DOVE DUPREE: uSING HIS VoICE, KEEPING tHE fAItH n story by JOHN JETER | photo PROVIDED

Dove Dupree adopted his stage name only within the last few years, but he began his music/poetry/theater career in fourth grade at Elwood Elementary School in Philadelphia. “I did a rap in front of my school assembly called ‘Don’t Do Drugs,’ and, like, I was mumbling and I don’t think anybody understood a word that I said,” the 29-year-old multi-artist recalls. “When you’re 7, you’re rapping about crayons and cartoons. It’s nothing great, but I never stopped.”

The thing I want to do is, I want to make an impact in a positive way — every song, every poem that I do. -Dove Dupree, poet

These days, Dupree’s a rising force in Greenville’s literary and performing-arts scene, especially in spoken-word poetry. He found opportunity and community in Greenville after graduating from Gardner-Webb University, a Christian university in Boiling Springs, North Carolina, where he earned a degree in theater and communications in 2013. In Greenville, he worked for about five years as a substitute teacher and in the library at East North Elementary School. Now he’s a “lyricist, poet and educator,” as Wit’s End Poetry describes him. As a member of the Say What?! Greenville poetry-slam team, he earned finalist and semifinalist spots in the Southern Fried and National Poetry Slam competitions, respectively. Last summer, Dupree threw himself full-time into writing, music and performing. He beams about a recent week that saw him filming a commercial in Greensboro; working on a new song in a recording studio and on a film in Columbia; and teaching poetry at a middle school. He also runs social-media marketing and video services and teaches poetry and acting through the Metropolitan Arts Council’s SmartARTS program. “It has been inspiring to watch Dove’s transformation from an emerging poet

into one of the top lyricists in the Southeast,” says Kimberly Simms Gibbs, Wit’s End Poetry’s founder and executive director, who also works at the arts council. “With his level of talent and his commitment to mentoring youth, Dove Dupree has big things on the horizon.” Likewise, award-winning poet Moody Black effuses about the young man he calls “my little brother.” “I love him to death. He’s such a talented individual, a high-spirited person, just a good guy,” says Black, who was featured in the Greenville Journal in 2017 as one the city’s “hidden gems.” “It’s really rare to say that about a lot of people, but he is just an all-around good guy — like, he aspires to be good in everything he does.” Black describes Dupree’s poetry much the same way the artist himself does. “Healing, growth, everything he does — all his work exemplifies that. A lot of his poems are from the perspective of telling someone else’s journey, how they’re trying to overcome something or grow from something.” Dupree shies away from dwelling on African-American issues in his work, be it rap or straight-ahead poetry. “You see me, I wake up black, obviously, but, no, I just want to make sure that I’m just doing the right thing. There are issues to address as a black person, as a male, as a believer, but I think the thing that ultimately shapes my life, more than anything, has been my faith.” Says Black, “His story’s from our plight, much as he may not admit it, but he has a lot of tales from the African diaspora. Even his own personal struggles reflect a lot of our struggles, but once you break it all down, we all have the same basic struggles — seeking love, seeking healing.” Ultimately, that’s what Dupree says he wants: to make art that makes an impact. That, and marrying his fiancée, Kristan Alewine, an administrator at Tanglewood Elementary School, and starting a family one day and opening his own rec center where he can teach and work on all of his art. “The thing I want to do is, I want to make an impact in a positive way — every song, every poem that I do.” pp r er e se se nn t et e d db b yy

A MIGHTY VOICE: For a selection of poems and videos, visit GreenvilleJournal.com FEBRUARY 28 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

MUSIC

Nine acts slated to perform at Upstate Music Awards ceremony n story by VINCENT HARRIS | photo PROVIDED

The lineup of performers for the March 1 Upstate Music Awards ceremony at Zen-An Elegant Space For Hire in downtown Greenville has been set. Nearly all of the performers have been nominated in one or more of the 14 categories, and they run the gamut from pop to folk to hard rock to hip hop and beyond.

KYLIE ODETTA

Nomination: Best Video (for “Too Broke Too Busy”) Odetta will be playing her catchy, electronics-tinged pop music to kick off the evening.

CHOOSE YOUR

ADVENTURE!

Adventure TECH 2020 at Greenville Tech

Summer day camps in STEM, culinary & more for 11-14 year olds

Learn. Discover. Experiment.

Returning for a third summer! Greenville Technical College invites rising 6th through 8th graders to explore career pathways at its Adventure TECH day camps June 15 – July 30. Fun, hands-on learning experiences taught by leaders in their fields at three GTC campuses across Greenville County. Early-bird registration is going on now! Open Registration begins March 3. Visit www.gvltec.edu/summer-camps/ for more information and to sign-up for our mailing list to receive information about our early-bird registration discount and 2020 camp announcements.

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HOWL IN THE VALLEY

Nominations: Best Album Art, Best EP, both for their self-titled debut recording A new group on the Upstate scene, Spartanburg’s Howl In The Valley plays vocalharmony-drenched folk-rock with more than a little country music mixed in.

PHAT LIP

Nominations: Best Single, Best Video, both for “Coyote” Upstate music fans will probably already be familiar with Kelly Jo’s remarkably powerful voice, but this project has really helped her shine as a songwriter.

BROTHER OLIVER

Nominations: Album of the Year (for their album Well, Hell), Best Collaboration (for “What Will Be Will Be,” with Greenville’s Finding Freedom band), Best Producer (for Andrew Oliver), Artist of the Year Brother Oliver’s sound blends folk-rock, elegant pop and psychedelic instrumental flourishes into a seamless whole.

HORRIBLE GIRL & THE HOT MESS Nomination: Artist of the Year Greenville’s Horrible Girl & The Hot Mess play propulsive, punk-influenced indierock highlighted by Hall’s righteous, socially conscious fury and fiery lead guitar playing.

THE OLD EARTHQUAKE

Nomination: Best Album (for Loud Ones) The Greenwood duo's debut album, Loud Ones, mixes bracing, guitar-heavy rootsrock with folk-style vocal harmonies.

SHYLAND FLOWERS

Greenville rapper/producer Shyland Flowers is a unique MC with a sweet-and-sour flow and a lyrical approach that eschews braggadocio in favor of nostalgia.

SALTI RAY

Nomination: Best Live Act The Spartanburg indie-rockers Salti Ray are a relatively new band, but they’ve had time to hone their songwriting skills and most certainly their live show.

SEVEN YEAR WITCH

Nomination: Best Live Act Anderson’s Seven Year Witch closes out the evening with a dose of old-school, loud-and-proud hard rock. For more information and coverage on the Upstate Music Awards visit GreenvilleJournal.com

UPSTATE MUSIC AWARDS Zen – An Elegant Space For Hire 924 S. Main St., Greenville Sunday, March 1 | 5PM Admission is FREE UPSTATEMUSICAWARDS.COM


The Warehouse Theatre

THE MAC ARTCARD With a donation of $50 or more to the Metropolitan Arts Council, MAC, you will receive an ArtCard which entitles you to buy-one-get-one-free tickets for one time at each of the following venues for one full year! The ArtCard is a great way to sample the fantastic performing arts in Greenville at a substantial savings. In just two uses the ArtCard pays for itself.

*select shows

Get your ArtCard today!

You can donate through PayPal on our website, over the phone or at our office in downtown Greenville.

*MainStage productions

Metropolitan Arts Council 16 Augusta Street | Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 467-3132 | greenvilleARTS.com/donate @macARTScouncil | #gvlARTS


ARTS & CULTURE

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

DATE NIGHT

artscalendar

February 28 - March 5 FURMAN UNIVERSITY MUSIC DEPARTMENT Furman Symphony Orchestra Feb. 28 ~ 294-2086 PEACE CENTER An Evening with Edwin McCain, Maia Sharp & Special Guests Feb. 28 ~ 467-3000 THE WAREHOUSE THEATRE Hedwig and the Angry Inch Feb. 28-Mar. 22 ~ 235-6948 GREENVILLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Rising Stars Feb. 29-Mar. 1 ~ 467-3000 GREER CENTER FOR THE ARTS Works by Jose Romero Through Feb. 29 ~ 848-5383 YOUNTS CENTER FOR PERFORMING ARTS James and the Giant Peach, Jr. Through Feb. 29 ~ 409-1050 CAROLINA YOUTH SYMPHONY Winter Concerts Mar. 1 ~ 467-3000 COFFEE UNDERGROUND Say What! Poetry Mar. 1 ~ 298-0494 PEACE CENTER Les Miserables Mar. 3-8 ~ 467-3000 FINE ARTS CENTER Jazz Concert Mar. 5 ~ 355-2550 METRO. ARTS COUNCIL @ CENTRE STAGE Works by David Armstrong Through Mar. 6 ~ 233-6733 FURMAN UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Art by Matthew Baumgardner Through Mar. 31 ~ 294-2191 CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM Trumpets, Weird & Wonderful Through Apr. 12 ~ 520-8807 CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM 7 Centuries of Keyboard Instruments Through Apr. 24 ~ 520-8807

www.GREENVILLEARTS.com 16 Augusta St. | 864.467.3132

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Dinner&a Show n DINNER story by ARIEL TURNER | photo PROVIDED

n A SHOW story by VINCENT HARRIS | photo PROVIDED

where we're EATING

Quest Brewing Co. is only a 7-minute drive from Local Cue

LOCAL CUE 30 ORCHARD PARK DR., GREENVILLE Homegrown is the name of the game this week. With a band of all Greenvillians playing near Haywood Road, the obvious nearby family-friendly dinner pairing is Local Cue. Tucked away in the corner of Haywood Plaza at 30 Orchard Park Drive, this local-fave sports bar isn’t only for those late-night wing cravings and cornhole matches. The restaurant menu is geared toward families with all the options adults and kids will enjoy, and before 8 p.m., you won’t have any concerns about the more mature atmosphere of a sports bar. Order individual dishes, or better yet, go for the barbecue sampler for the whole family.

LOCAL CUE FEATURES ROTATING SPECIALS

RECOMMENDED DISHES: Brisket Nachos ......................$11.95 Southern slaw, pico de gallo, cheese sauce, Memphis red BBQ

House Smoked Jumbo Wings .$14.95 10 wings, three sauces, celery

The Smokehouse ...................$45. 95 pork, chicken, brisket, sausage, ½ rack ribs, 4 wings, 3 sides, 2 muffins, 4 bbq sauces

what we're SEEING EXCONS

@ QUEST BREWING COMPANY Greenville’s Excons members jokingly refer to themselves occasionally as a “Dad rock” band, because, well, some of them are dads. But they’re also pretty talented dads. On the Excons’ newest album, “Sea Shanties,” the band open with a deceptively straightforward jangle-rock tune (“Romans of the Modern Age”) before expanding their reach. Veteran Upstate drummer John Byce and bassist Taylor Vandiver play with different rhythmic patterns, stretching and compacting the song structures underneath guitarist Porter Whitmire and keyboard player Brett Helsel’s subtle shading, lending the songs a sort of eerie calm.

CHECK OUT EXCONS' TWO ALBUMS: "SEA SHANTIES" AND "NEW LIFE"

EXCONS » SATURDAY, FEB. 29 | 7PM » QUEST BREWING COMPANY » 55 AIRVIEW DR, GREENVILLE » FREE QUESTBREWING.COM


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

10 years of ‘One Voice’ with Jeremiah Dew n story by JESSICA MULLEN | photo PROVIDED

Now in his 10th year of sharing his "One Voice" performance, Jeremiah Dew looks back on the African American voices that have shaped his community and his country. In February 2011, Dew booked the Warehouse Theater for what was originally intended to be a two-night show. On the day he turned 27, Dew recalls, “I showed up and I was told by the artistic director that there was somebody coming from the hospital system so they could screen 'One Voice' for me to potentially perform it for their employees. I said to the director, 'What do you mean they heard about the show? We haven’t done it yet! I just finished memorizing it this afternoon!'” After the hospital, he performed "One Voice" at a church. “And that was right around 100 performances ago,” Dew says. Over 50,000 audience members and 10 years later, Dew still wonders over the show’s impact, saying, “I had no idea how many people would be emotionally moved by this show. I didn’t realize how timeless it was going to be." He’s performed the show locally dozens of times, as well as traveling to Charleston and Charlotte. He’s taken the show on the road as far as Pennsylvania, Illinois and even California.

I’m not telling you how to think. You’re hearing the actual words from these people, and you get to decide what to do with your one voice moving forward. -Jeremiah Dew

In "One Voice," Dew portrays five notable figures of African American history: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Barack Obama, Muhammad Ali, Frederick Douglass and James Weldon Johnson. "The most relatable [of these five] and the hardest to relate to is the nonviolent, passive approach to social change that Dr. King embodies. He was jailed 29 times over the course of his career for trumped-up charges. His retaliation was more marches, more speeches, more songs, more prayers and more organizing. It was never violence," Dew says. "In 2020 … I see a lot of name

SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE RUSSIAN RENAISSANCE APRIL 14

"ONE VOICE" » SATURDAY, FEB. 29 | 7:30PM » BOB JONES UNIVERSITY » $8 (GENERAL ADMISSION) BJU.UNIVERSITYTICKETS.COM calling and bullying in social-media comments, and I am learning not to retaliate. I try to think, 'How would Martin Luther King respond?'” Dew also shows video vignettes of the local heroes who have shaped the Upstate's civil rights movement. In recent years, he has added new stories, all of which share experiences of “being Greenvillian while black in the '30s, '40s, '50s and '60s,” Dew says. In 2018, 50 years to the day after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination, Dew debuted the story of Dr. Grady Butler, a Sterling High graduate who sat in jail with King for four days after being arrested at a restaurant sit-in in the Atlanta area. This past January, Dew added Elayne Wittenberg-Boyce’s voice to commemorate the 50th anniversary of desegregation of Greenville County Schools with a 20-minute mini-documentary. “There’s no commentary on the show. You’ll never see JDew on stage,” the renowned local emcee says of himself and his role in the show. “I’m not persuading you. I’m not telling you how to think. You’re hearing the actual words from these people, and you get to decide what to do with your one voice moving forward.” Those interested in seeing the final "One Voice" performance of 2020 on Feb. 29 can find tickets at bju.universitytickets.com.

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BLACK HISTORY MONTH

I was raised to live with the music before searching for the next thing. You live with the music for a few weeks or a few months because opinions can change. -Shyland Flowers, rapper

Hip-hop artist Shyland Flowers is nostalgic by nature VINCENT HARRIS Contributor

Sometimes necessity is, in fact, the mother of invention, and Upstate rapper, producer and songwriter Shyland Flowers says he was initially drawn to hip-hop music for one very simple reason. “If I’m being completely honest,” he says with a laugh, “it’s because I can’t sing. If I could sing, I’d be doing a whole different thing.” It’s a good line, but the truth is a little more complex than that. Flowers also became a rapper because he loved the hiphop genre and wanted to explore it. “Hip-hop is the most loved, but most misunderstood, genre of music,” he says. “When you’re young and impressionable, you see the Jay-Zs or the Cam’rons or the Kanyes, and you want to be those types of people. And I’d always written poems, anyway, so I kind of just fell into that.”

Is Safe,” all of which put his confident, unpredictable delivery front and center over creative beats and synth-spiked arrangements. Flowers can vocally dance around a track with ease, laying down double-time and offkilter rhymes that always land dead center, but he says it’s taken some time for him to feel confident about his rapping. And that’s probably because he was influenced by some of the best, and most intimidating, MCs of all time. “It’s taken 10 years for me to finally be comfortable with my flow,” he says. “I think Jay-Z is probably the greatest rapper of all time, and when I was coming up, I was listening to a lot of Jay-Z, a lot of Nas, a lot of East Coast kind of rap. To me, their flow was like water; that’s who I looked up to the most.”

FLOW LIKE WATER

‘A NOSTALGIA-BASED ARTIST’

Over the past year or so, the Upstate-byway-of-Washington rapper has released a slew of singles and an EP called “No One

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Lyrically, Flowers eschews the typical braggadocio or gangsta tales and comes from the heart, whether he’s talking about

memories of his youth or a woman he’s pining after, or both, as he does on his recent single, “Monalisabonet.” “I can get political and I can do my social commentary, but a lot of my stuff comes from nostalgia,” he says. “I refer to myself as a nostalgia-based artist. I talk about my childhood and my upbringing or my experiences in middle school and high school. And I love talking about girls that I love that I could never actually be with; those are my favorite topics. Despite releasing various singles, collaborations and an EP in the last year, Flowers says that in general, he prefers to take his time with his material. “I don’t like releasing a lot of music,” he says, “and a lot of people have told me that that’s to my detriment. And maybe I’m not where I want to be in life, but I was raised to live with the music before searching for the next thing. You live with the music for a few weeks or a few months because opinions can change. I try to space out singles and release albums when I really need to,

n photo by BONFIRE VISUALS

and then keep moving.” Flowers is a mainstay of the Upstate hip-hop scene, and he says there’s been a steady improvement on that scene over the last few years, citing fellow local artists like Skully, Khemo and Wordplay Luck as inspirations. But he also says there’s a lot more room to grow. “It’s not at the place where I’d want it to be, but it’s in a way better place than it’s ever been,” he says. “I feel now that there are more studios and there are more live acts. When I first started, there was maybe one studio for rappers to go to in Greenville, but now there are more avenues. It’s growing, and growth is always good.” presented by


FEATURED EVENTS

THINGS TO SEE & DO

|

ARTS & CULTURE

THE LATEST CAN’T-MISS EVENTS

FEB. 28

Murder Mystery Night Dinner Party

6:30-10PM

$

The year is 1936 somewhere near the Austrian border. On Zen Greenville a train ride through the Alps, a 924 S. Main St, murder has been committed. You are a suspect. Did the butler Greenville do it? Or was it the actress, or even the detective? Dress in character, play your part and enjoy a Bavarian dinner as you solve the mystery. $60

MARCH 21 NACAC

THRU FEB. 29

1-4PM

9AM-1PM

National College Fairs

Furman University Timmons Arena

$

3300 Poinsett Hwy, Greenville

Students and parents are invited to attend. Hosted by the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC), the National College Fair is free and open to the public. The event is the perfect place to kick off your college search.

Free

UpstateInternational.org

5th annual African American History Month art exhibition

Greenville Technical College Beattie E. Huff Student Center

506 S. Pleasantburg Drive, Greenville

The show includes the work of several African American visual artists. Current and former Greenville Technical College students, faculty and staff are among them. South Carolina native John Pendarvis is one of the featured artists.

GVLTEC.edu

GoToMyNCF.com

APRIL 24

Cancer Society of Greenville Hope Ball

7-11PM

The Cancer Society of Greenville hosts this black-tie dinner and dancing gala that raises money that goes towards help, hope and healing for cancer patients.

The Poinsett Club 807 E. Washington St., Greenville

$

$250

CancerSocietyGC.org

$7,000 SIGN-ON BONUS

Open NOW through May 10, 2020

for Experienced Ortho/Trauma RNs

Through Darkness to Light: Photographs Along the Underground Railroad

Open NOW through May 24, 2020

Opening March 7, 2020

Spring into a new career with Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System

ORTHO/TRAUMA REGISTERED NURSE HIRING EVENT Exciting things are happening at Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System. Join us at City Range for an evening of light dinner, interviews and possible on-the-spot offers!

Wednesday, March 11 6 – 8:30 p.m. City Range 774 Spartan Boulevard Spartanburg, SC 29301

Spartanburg Medical Center is proud to be the only American College of Surgeons (ACS)-verified Level I Trauma Center in Spartanburg.

RSVP at SpartanburgRegional.com/Careers 864-467-3100 | upcountryhistory.org EOE

FM0220

FEBRUARY 28 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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ARTS & CULTURE

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

FEBRUARY 28 English for All Levels

Our sincere thanks to the sponsors of the 2020 ForeverGreen Awards Luncheon! EMERALD SPONSORS

JOHN & PRIS HAGINS SPRUCE SPONSORS

• February 28: 10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. • Upstate International, 9 S. Memminger St. • $85 – $320 Upstate International offers language classes from beginner through advanced and conversational. Regular classes are 60 minutes and meet once a week for 10 weeks. Intensive classes are 90 minutes long and meet twice a week for 10 weeks. Language classes generally run with 3-15 students per class. All students must be members of Upstate International. Register early to guarantee a spot. Classes are dependent on registrations and we cannot offer refunds.

using an ancient Japanese technique and Sumi-Ink. In this workshop, we will create beautiful designs on paper that can be used as stationary, envelopes or be mounted as works of art themselves. Drop-by-drop, different colors of the special Sumi-Ink are floated on the surface of a water basin and a piece of paper is carefully lowered, picking up the floating Sumi-Ink design.

Painting With Paper-Watermedia Collage • February 28: 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $89 UBS Financial Services, Inc. The Gallivan Group Empowering Family Legacies

CEDAR SPONSORS

This workshop will guide you in developing collage "paintings," utilizing papers from your own collections or papers made in a previous workshop. The process will include planning colors and composition, how to adhere and layer papers and painting into your collage. The work may be representational or non-objective. Brush technique is not a requirement. The previous workshop, titled "Creating Papers for Collage" is suggested, but not required for participation if you already have papers.

James Carter Jazz Master Class

• February 29: 10:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. • Pecknel Music, 1312 N. Pleasantburg Drive Award-winning jazz saxophonist James Carter leads an interactive jazz master class on Feb. 29. Musicians are encouraged to bring their instruments. The class is free and open to the public, but seating is limited.

Our Own Work, Our Own Way

• February 28: 12:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. • The Johnson Collection, 100 Dunbar St., Suite 203 • Spartanburg, SC

NEW LOOK.

SAME SOUL. Get 12 issues of TOWN directly in your mailbox.

"Our Own Work, Our Own Way" champions a roster of female artists, notable and quotable women whose aesthetic achievements transcended convention and invigorated the South’s modern milieu. This exhibition is on display until Apr. 17 and is curated by Susanna Johnson Shannon and Carter Lee Johnson.

The First Pitch Invitational • February 28: 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. • Fluor Field, 945 S. Main St., Greenville • $9

The First Pitch Invitational will feature Michigan State against the Ball State Cardinals, and the Kansas Jayhawks against the Western Carolina Catamounts on Feb. 28-Mar.1.

African-American Genealogy at Simpsonville • February 28: 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. • Simpsonville Library, 626 NE Main St.

Come to the Simpsonville branch library and learn about African-American genealogy. This event is led by South Carolina room staff. Registration is required.

FEBRUARY 29

TOWNCAROLINA.COM/SUBSCRIBE

Suminagashi: Paper Marbling with Japanese Sumi ink • February 29: 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $75

Suminagashi is a very fun and meditative way of marbling paper, making marble-like designs on paper,

34

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

Winter Weave

• February 29: 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • Greenville, SC United States + Google Map • $175

Bring the outdoors in this winter while you have a tactile experiences with yarn, reed, recycled materials, shells, roving, embellishments from nature and naturally dyed thread. Learn about the use of traditional and nontraditional materials for contemporary works while gaining an understanding of how and where to connect and source from nature, farmers and artisans. Design, composition, color and tool use, including various looms and natural dyes, will be covered to assist you with the creation of a small wall…

Paris Mountain Polar Plunge

• February 29: 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. • Paris Mountain State Park, 2401 State Park Rd Upstate fans can take the plunge at Paris Mountain State Park in Greenville. Grab your co-workers or classmates and help the Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics continue to support the athletes of South Carolina. Costumes are encouraged and refreshments will be available. Teams must raise a minimum of $50.

HeartMath® Workshop

• February 29: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. • SC Test Prep on Morgan Square, 139 W. Main St. • Spartanburg, SC$99 Daily challenges can take a serious toll on health, wellbeing and performance. HeartMath participants develop the ability to build and sustain physical, emotional and


THINGS TO SEE & DO mental resilience. HeartMath is based on over 25 years of research and is backed by over 400 peer-reviewed studies. You will learn skills for building resilience in the face of change and uncertainty; intelligent energy self-regulation techniques to reduce stress and related symptoms of fatigue, burnout, anxiety, frustration, and sleeplessness; and how to have more control,…

Kids’ History Camp

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ARTS & CULTURE

understanding of fundamental drawing techniques. In this class, you will learn basic drawing concepts while studying line drawing, perspective and shading, as well as studies of organic shapes found in plant life and trees. The class will also cover contour drawings and quick sketches of familiar subjects to increase hand-eye coordination. You will learn to work from small sketches and observations to create large scale drawings.

• February 29: 2:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. • Upcountry History Museum @ 540 Buncombe St, Greenville • $3 – $10

Plein Air Prepare (Session II)

We will travel back in time to learn about Greenville's Civil Rights Movement, while also touching on our history of slavery and reconstruction. Hear about the movement from local activists that personally created change through their oral histories. We will also explore the traveling exhibit, "Through Darkness to Light: Photographs from the Underground Railroad." There is a limit of 30 children. This event is recommended for children ages 6-12.

This class will specifically deal with watercolor as a plein air medium. Perspective will be explored both mechanically and atmospherically through thumbnail sketches that will become designed compositions for personal watercolor paintings. If weather permits, exploration of plein air on campus may occur.

• March 2: 9:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $229 – $249

Circles of Women, Greenville • March 2: 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. • Greenville ONE Center, 1 N. Main St. • Free

SC Women in Leadership, working in collaboration with the League of Women Voters of South Carolina and the League of Women Voters Greenville invites you to learn about key redistricting bills before the SC legislature and what you can do to influence the votes of your elected representatives. The makeup of our districts will be further impacted by the US Census beginning Apr. 1. SC Counts 2020 will join us to tell us why it is so important. This event is free

MARCH 3 Greenville Heritage Main Street Fridays

LaunchGVL and Learn

• March 1: 5:30 p.m. - September 1: 9:30 p.m. • Free

• March 3: 8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. • Greenville Chamber, 550 S. Main St.

Wind up the work week listening and dancing to the best in music entertainment performed by local, regional and national talent. Greenville Heritage Main Street Fridays at The Hyatt is a 28-week free music series running every Friday.

Interested in hiring a LaunchGVL intern? Learn more from the experts at this informative session detailing all the ins and outs of the program. This event is an information session for companies to learn about the LaunchGVL program and processes. Details will be shared regarding requirements, time lines and how to overcome possible barriers to employing students.

MARCH 2 Spanish Intermediate

• March 2: 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. • Upstate International, 9 S. Memminger St. • $85 – $320 Upstate International offers language classes from beginner through advanced and conversational. Regular classes are 60 minutes and meet once a week for 10 weeks. Intensive classes are 90 minutes long and meet twice a week for 10 weeks. Language classes generally run with 3-15 students per class. All students must be members of Upstate International. Register early to guarantee a spot. Classes are dependent on registrations and we cannot offer refunds.

Drawing and Painting for Teens

• March 3: 4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $170 – $190 This class functions as a survey to various drawing and painting techniques. Although technique will be a focus in this course, self-expression and creativity will partner alongside the foundations being implemented. All projects are aimed to give you choices and leave room to incorporate personal content. Media included in this course are: graphite, watercolor, acrylic, oil paint, colored pencil, nu’pastels and charcoal. This class is open to students from 12-18 and is suitable for all skill levels.

GRE E N VI LLE ’S

St. Patrick’s PAR A D E A N D FE ST I VA L

Saturday

M A R C H 14, 2020 11AM

Parading up Main Street (Begins at County Square)

12PM - 8PM

Festival at NOMA Square

FE ATUR I NG :

Pipe and Drum Bands Irish Step Dancers Full Schedule of Bands and Entertainment Family Friendly Activities Irish Food and Beverage

SP ECIAL T H ANKS TO OU R SP ONSOR S

Connolly's Irish Pub

Nature Drawing (Session II)

• March 2: 9:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $229 – $249 Learn to sketch with pencil, charcoal and ink to gain an

SEE MORE EVENTS ONLINE

GreenvilleJournal.com FEBRUARY 28 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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ARTS & CULTURE

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

PUZZLES

COLOSSAL CORNERS ACROSS

1 Green, yellow, orange or red vegetables 13 Song from “Kiss Me, Kate” 21 Broadcasting range 22 Still too hot to eat, maybe 23 United States territory 24 Teasing a bit 25 Disease treatment using tiny-scale technology 26 Drop off 27 Warhol of pop art 28 Blowup stuff 29 Put in a pile 30 Shiny balloon polyester 32 Croaking creature 36 Restaurant seen in “Manhattan” 38 Arm-twist 43 Rare lunar phenomena 46 Evaluation with a money-back guarantee 48 Medium for Rembrandt 49 Brand of fleece-lined boots 50 “The Thin Man” novelist Hammett 51 Procedures to detect a hazardous household gas 53 Writer Kesey 54 TV host Ripa 55 Even way to finish

56 Streaming media format 60 Verbalizes 61 Twirl in the opposite direction 64 Car sticker abbr. 68 Incidentally 69 “Faust” author 71 Step on it 75 Place 76 Crossover SUV similar to the Chevy Equinox 79 Org. for university cadets 81 Expert 83 Former first lady Carter 84 Tennis, chess or bridge 86 Left on a voyage 87 “Affirmative, captain!” 88 Diagram showing data as nested rectangles 90 Biological bristle 91 Pithy 93 Tropical devil ray 95 Waitress on “Alice” 98 “Pity!” 102 “Uh-uh” 103 1985-91 “Saturday Night Live” cast member 107 Master musicians 109 Notches on surfaces 110 Like the period between 1918 and 1939 111 Deadlocked

112 Tuna snarer 113 Like hand-eye coordination

DOWN

1 Not sufficient 2 Child bearer 3 Time of noteworthy goings-on 4 Architect Saarinen 5 Pare down 6 Walk back and forth 7 “Yikes!” 8 Contrite people 9 Pressure units 10 Beethoven symphony in E flat 11 Ann of “All That Jazz” 12 Shop lure 13 Fried egg preference 14 Actress Tatum 15 Cold applications to sprains 16 Drop off 17 Hit for the Kinks 18 Lena of “Alias” 19 Peddle from a stall 20 Avant-garde 30 Body of eau 31 Painter Mark 33 Transplants, in a way 34 Neighbor of a Saudi 35 Thyroid gland swellings 37 Eggy quaff 39 U.S. border lake 40 Currency unit of Cambodia 41 Give a ring

42 — May (Jed Clampett’s daughter) 43 Karloff of old films 44 Jungle vine 45 With 78-Down, 2,000 pounds 47 Gospel singer — Patty 49 People online 52 Foot the bill 53 Top 40 DJ Casey 57 “— recall ...” 58 Narrow shelf 59 Eats 62 Some bridge hands 63 Casual top without a circular collar 64 Red wine 65 Keeps out of debt 66 Cologne’s river 67 Md. neighbor 68 Expert 70 Pontificate 71 Epic tale 72 Supplicate 73 One-named model who wrote “True Beauty” 74 Irises’ places 77 Entered stealthily 78 See 45-Down 80 Famed 81 Heady brew 82 Roberto of baseball 85 Great anger 86 Ashen look 89 City across the Missouri River from Bismarck 92 Tabulae — (blank

Be part of the local publication, formerly known as Behind the Counter, that has featured hundreds of businesses for over 17 years!

YOUR BUSINESS. YOUR STORY. LOCAL BUSINESS MATTERS. Live Local will showcase the people and personalities of businesses across all Upstate industries. It’s about you and what your business offers locally —and how our readers can connect with you! Tell your story to the community with 31,000 copies, delivered directly to Greenville County homes! Reserve your space today.

L I V E

L CAL

the local people, the upstate businesses that you need to know SPACE RESERVATION DEADLINE MARCH 6, 2020. For information call 864.679.1242 or email meredith@communityjournals.com

36

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

Crossword Solution: Page 26 slates) 94 “— Is Born” 96 Slowly, in scores 97 Brian in the World Figure Skating Hall

of Fame 98 Hertz rival 99 Conga-dancing formation 100 Intro drawing class

101 “Nana” actress Anna 103 “Buenos —” 104 Timbuktu’s nation 105 News tidbit

106 “Stretch” car 108 Suffix with press

Local Business Matters. WE'RE LISTENING!

Recently we made some changes to our puzzle selection and several readers have expressed an interest in bringing a Sudoku puzzle back into the mix. We're listening and want your input! We have created an online poll where you can vote for your favorite puzzle. The top two will be included each week in the Greenville Journal. Voting will be open Thursday, Feb. 27th through Monday, March 2nd. CROSSWORD

A grid of squares and blanks into which words crossing vertically and horizontally are written according to clues.

SUDOKU

A puzzle in which missing numbers are to be filled into a nine by nine grid of squares, subdivided into 3 x 3 boxes. Made up of letters arranged in a grid which contains a

WORDSEARCH number of hidden words. KAKURO IDENTICAL PAIRS

A crossword puzzle with numbers. Each "word" must add up to the number provided in the clue above it or to the left. An image-based puzzle to find identical pairs of images.

CAST YOUR VOTE AT BIT.LY/3A1NJSS


GREENVILLE COUNTY, SC

|

LEGAL NOTICES

THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT (QUIET TITLE PURSUANT TO TAX SALE) (NON-JURY) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT C.A. NO. 2019-CP-23-04148 Genesis Homes, a South Carolina eleemosynary corporation, Plaintiff, v. Maxie Wright, Defendant. YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve your Answer to the Complaint upon subscriber at 307 Pettigru Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you fail to answer the Complaint within that time, the Plaintiff shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply to the Court the relief demanded in the Complaint. HORTON LAW FIRM, P.A. s/Bruce B. Campbell Bruce B. Campbell (S.C. Bar #65343) 307 Pettigru Street Greenville, S.C. 29601 (864) 233-4351 bcampbell@hortonlawfirm.net ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF

LIS PENDENS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT C.A. No. 2019-CP-23-04148 Genesis Homes, a South Carolina eleemosynary corporation, Plaintiff, v. Maxie Wright, Defendant. TO: DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED Notice is hereby given that an action has been commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County, South Carolina, by the above-named Plaintiff against the abovenamed Defendant to have a title to real property quieted in the name of the plaintiff. The property covered and affected by the action at the time of the filing of this Notice is described as follows: ALL that piece, parcel or lot of land in Greenville Township, Greenville County, State of South Carolina, just outside the corporate limits of the City of Greenville, known and designed as Lot No. 11 according to plat of Mrs. S. E. Sirrine’s property, which plat is recorded in Plat Book A at Page 111 in the Register of Deeds Office for Greenville County, South Carolina. Reference is made to said plat for a more detailed description. LESS however any portion previously conveyed and subject to restrictions of record.

PUBLIC NOTICE THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION 6-11-470 OF THE CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, AS AMENDED. ON TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2020, GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED A RESOLUTION, WHICH ENLARGED THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT BY INCLUDING CERTAIN REAL PROPERTIES AS LISTED: Greenville County TMS# Site Address P036000101414 15 Buckhorn Dr P035000106300 125 Buckhorn Dr P035000106306 129 Buckhorn Dr P025000200403 67 E Mountain Creek Rd P025000200401 69 E Mountain Creek Rd P036000104200 117 E Mountain Creek Rd P036000104300 121 E Mountain Creek Rd P024000200603 160 E Mountain Creek Rd P024000200602 170 E Mountain Creek Rd P024000200609 9 Hannah Springs Court P024000200610 10 Hannah Springs Court P035000100715 2252 State Park Rd P035000100700 2254 State Park Rd P036000101424 101 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101402 115 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000103900 116 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000104000 118 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000104100 120 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101400 123 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101407 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101412 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101423 W Mountain Creek Church Rd THE REASON FOR THE INCLUSION OF THE AFORESAID PROPERTIES IS DUE TO THE PROPERTY OWNERS HAVING PETITIONED THE COUNTY TO BE ANNEXED INTO THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT IN ORDER THAT THEY MAY RECEIVE SANITATION SERVICE FOR THAT RESIDENCE. THE RESULT OF THIS ACTION IS THE NEW BOUNDARY LINE WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE AREA AND TAX MAP NUMBERs LISTED ABOVE. MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARY AND A LEGAL DESCRIPTION ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. NO BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT, AS A RESULT OF THIS ACTION, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGES IN THE COMMISSION NOR IN THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

This is the same property conveyed to Genesis Homes, Inc. by Tax Deed recorded in Deed Book 2503 at page 1536 on December 28, 2016 by the Register of Deeds Office for Greenville County, South Carolina. Property Address: Ackley Road Ext. Greenville, SC 29607 TMS No: 0200.00-10-001.00 HORTON LAW FIRM, P.A. By: s/Bruce B. Campbell Bruce B. Campbell (S.C. Bar #65343) 307 Pettigru St. Greenville, S.C. 29601 (864) 233-4351 bcampbell@hortonlawfirm.net ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF July 16, 2019

SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville

County,

301

University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville,

SC

29601,

will

accept bids for the following: •

Stormwater

Management

Services, RFP #69-03/31/20, until 3:00 PM, EST,March 31, 2020. Solicitations may be found at http://www.greenvillecounty. org/procurement/ or by calling (864) 467-7200.

LEGAL NOTICE RATES ABC Notices $165 Summons, Notices, Foreclosures, etc. $1.20 per line

864.679.1205

email: aharley@communityjournals.com

GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION COMMISSION NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING A hearing to enlarge the boundaries of the Greater Greenville Sanitation District to include certain properties located at 1 Hartsville Dr (Wildaire-Merry Oaks Condos) off Wade Hampton Blvd and Watson Rd and to provide public notice thereof. PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that on (3/24/2020) at 4:00 p.m. in the Conference room of the Greater Greenville Sanitation District Administration Building located at 1600 West Washington Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, a public hearing will be held for the consideration of enlarging the boundaries of the Greater Greenville Sanitation District to include certain properties located at 1 Hartsville Dr (WildaireMerry Oaks Condos) off Wade Hampton Blvd and Watson Rd and to provide public notice thereof. Anyone wishing to be placed on the Agenda for Public Comment is asked to call Greater Greenville Sanitation Commission at 864-232-6721 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Thursday. Public comments will be limited based on the number of persons addressing the Commission. Public comment can also be posted on the website. www.GGSC.gov

p r e s e n t e d

b y

Greenville Journal honors the history and lives of African Americans in our community. Each week, during the month of February, we will highlight the inspirational stories, events, notable people, music, culture and more.

PUBLIC NOTICE OF CANDIDATE FILING Public Notice of Candidate Filing GREENVILLE COUNTY Greenville County Any candidate seeking a political party’s nomination for any office in the 2020 General Election must Any candidate seeking a political party’s nomination for any office in the 2020 General Election must file file with the appropriate county board of voter registration & elections or the South Carolina Election with the appropriate county board of voter registration & elections or the South Carolina Election Commission (see below) during the upcoming filing period. Commission (see below) during the upcoming filing period. Filing opens noon, March 16, 2020, and closes noon, March 30, 2020 Filing opens noon, March 16, 2020, and closes noon, March 30, 2020 Offices U.S. Senate U.S. House of Representatives residence or SEC Office)

Filing Location (3,4) (file in county of

State Senate (Districts) 5,6,7,8,9,12,13, (file in county of residence or SEC Office) State House of Representatives (10,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,27,28,35&36) (file in county of residence or SEC Office)

State Election Commission (SEC) 1122 Lady Street, Suite 500 Columbia, SC 29201

Greenville County Board of Voter Registration and Elections County Square, 301 University Ridge, Suite 1900, Greenville, SC 29601 Phone (864) 467-7250

Follow along with the series each week in the Greenville Journal and on GreenvilleJournal.com

Clerk of Court, Coroner, Register of Deeds, Sheriff, County Council Districts (18, 20, 21,22,24,25,27) (file in county of residence) SEC Filing hours:

Weekdays: 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. SEC Filing hours: Weekdays: 8:30 a.m. –Registration 5:00 p.m. and Elections Filing hours: County Board of Voter Weekdays: 8:30ofamVoter to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Filing hours: County Board Registration and Elections Weekdays: to 5 pm,ofMonday Friday.& Party Pledge (SICPP) form required for filing is Filing Form:8:30 Theam Statement Intentionthrough of Candidacy available in theThe “Candidate Information” of scVOTES.org and at the county elections office. Filing Form: Statement of Intentionsection of Candidacy & Party Pledge (SICPP) form required for filing isFiling available the “Candidate scVOTES.org andthe at nomination the county of elections Fee: in Filing fees are paidInformation” at the time of section filing byofcandidates seeking a party office. nominating primary. of filing is available and at thethe election Filing Fee: byFiling feesThe arelist paid at thefees time of filing atbyscVOTES.org candidates seeking nomination of a commission office.byFiling fee checks should to the at appropriate state political party. A party nominating primary. The list of fibe lingmade feespayable is available scVOTES.org and at the election candidate seeking the nomination of a party nominating by convention does not pay a filing fee. commission office. Filing fee checks should be made payable to the appropriate state political party. State Ethics Filings: Candidates are required to file a Statement of Economic Interests and a Campaign A candidate seeking the nomination of a party nominating by convention does not pay a filing fee. Disclosure online with theCandidates State Ethicsare Commission to fileInterests these State Ethics Filings: required attohttp://ethics.sc.gov. file a Statement ofFailure Economic and a documents may result in a candidate fine but will not disqualify a candidate from the election. Contact Campaign Disclosure online with the State Ethics Commission at http://ethics.sc.gov. Failure to file the State Ethics Commission for more information. these documents may result in a candidate fine but will not disqualify a candidate

FEBRUARY 28 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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LEGAL NOTICES

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GREENVILLE COUNTY, SC

THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING OF COMPLAINT AND NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION (NON-JURY MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE) C/A NO: 2019-CP-23-06701 DEFICIENCY WAIVED STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS Ronen, LLC, PLAINTIFF, vs. Richard A. Joseph aka Richard Alan Joseph and if Richard A. Joseph aka Richard Alan Joseph be deceased then any children and heirs at law to the Estate of Richard A. Joseph aka Richard Alan Joseph, distributees and devisees at law to the Estate of Richard A. Joseph aka Richard Alan Joseph, and if any of the same be dead any and all persons entitled to claim under or through them also all other persons unknown claiming any right, title, interest or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; Any unknown adults, any unknown infants or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe, and any persons in the military service of the United States of America being a class designated as Richard Roe; John M. Joseph; Kyle Doggett; Amy Doggett; Chrissy Doggett aka Linda Christine Doggett; AIS Recovery Solutions, LLC as agent for Bank of America, N.A.; Discover Bank; KIA Motors Finance; South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles; Capital One, National Association; County of Greenville DEFENDANT(S) TO THE DEFENDANTS, ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscriber at his office, Hutchens Law Firm LLP P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, or otherwise appear and defend, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity for Greenville County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE

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MINOR(S) RESIDES, AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff immediately and separately and such application will be deemed absolute and total in the absence of your application for such an appointment within thirty (30) days after the service of the Summons and Complaint upon you. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity in/for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. NOTICE OF FILING OF SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing Summons, along with the Complaint, was filed with the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on November 15, 2019. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to the South Carolina Supreme Court Administrative Order 2011-05-02-01, (hereinafter “Order”), you may have a right to Foreclosure Intervention. To be considered for any available Foreclosure Intervention, you may communicate with and otherwise deal with the Plaintiff through its law firm, Hutchens Law Firm LLP, P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202 or call 803-726-2700. Hutchens Law Firm LLP, represents the Plaintiff in this action and does not represent you. Under our ethical rules, we are prohibited from giving you any legal advice. You must submit any requests for Foreclosure Intervention consideration within 30 days from the date of this Notice. IF YOU FAIL, REFUSE, OR VOLUNTARILY ELECT NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION, YOUR MORTGAGE COMPANY/ AGENT MAY PROCEED WITH A FORECLOSURE ACTION. If you have already pursued loss mitigation with the Plaintiff, this Notice does not guarantee the availability of loss mitigation options or further review of your qualifications. THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. THE PURPOSE OF THIS COMMUNICATION IS TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE, except as stated below in the instance of bankruptcy protection.

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // FEBRUARY 28

IF YOU ARE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT OR HAVE BEEN DISCHARGED AS A RESULT OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU PURSUANT TO STATUTORY REQUIREMENT AND FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND IS NOT INTENDED AS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT OR AS AN ACT TO COLLECT, ASSESS, OR RECOVER ALL OR ANY PORTION OF THE DEBT FROM YOU PERSONALLY. NOTICE TO APPOINT ATTORNEY FOR DEFENANT(S) IN MILITARY SERVICE TO UNKNOWN OR KNOWN DEFENDANTS THAT MAY BE IN THE MILITARY SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ALL BEING A CLASS DESIGNATED AS RICHARD ROE: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED that Plaintiff’s attorney has applied for the appointment of an attorney to represent you. If you fail to apply for the appointment of an attorney to represent you within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you Plaintiff’s appointment will be made absolute with no further action from Plaintiff.

PUBLIC NOTICE THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION 6-11470 OF THE CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, AS AMENDED. ON TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2020, GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED A RESOLUTION, WHICH ENLARGED THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT BY INCLUDING CERTAIN REAL PROPERTIES AS LISTED: A. That certain real property located at 548 Old Howell Road, Greenville, South Carolina bearing TMS# 0541030102401; and B. That certain real property located at 471 Mountain Creek Road, Greenville, South Carolina bearing TMS# P036000100803. THE REASON FOR THE INCLUSION OF THE AFORESAID PROPERTIES IS DUE TO THE PROPERTY OWNER HAVING PETITIONED THE COUNTY TO BE ANNEXED INTO THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT IN ORDER THAT THEY MAY RECEIVE SANITATION SERVICE FOR THAT RESIDENCE. THE RESULT OF THIS ACTION IS THE NEW BOUNDARY LINE WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE AREA AND TAX MAP NUMBER LISTED ABOVE. MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARY AND A LEGAL DESCRIPTION ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. NO BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT, AS A RESULT OF THIS ACTION, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGES IN THE COMMISSION NOR IN THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

GREENVILLE COUNTY ZONING AND PLANNING PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE There will be a public hearing before County Council on Monday, March 16, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. in County Council Chambers, for the purpose of hearing those persons interested in the following items: DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-14 APPLICANT: Raymond P. and Sue S. Clement CONTACT INFORMATION: ssclement123@gmail.com or 864-640-9634 PROPERTY LOCATION: 125 Oak Place PIN: 0529030100100 (portion) EXISTING ZONING: R-S, Residential Suburban REQUESTED ZONING: I-1, Industrial ACREAGE: 0.11 COUNTY COUNCIL: 21 – Roberts DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-15 APPLICANT: Raymond P. and Sue S. Clement CONTACT INFORMATION: ssclement123@gmail.com or 864-640-9634 PROPERTY LOCATION: 559 E. Suber Road PIN: 0528030101709 (portion) EXISTING ZONING: I-1, Industrial REQUESTED ZONING: R-S, Residential Suburban ACREAGE: 0.62 COUNTY COUNCIL: 21 – Roberts DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-16 APPLICANT: Roger Ervin Barnes for Jose G. Lopez and Olmer Puentes CONTACT INFORMATION: rbarnes@langston-black.com or 864-915-4622 PROPERTY LOCATION: 1215 Miller Road PIN: 0547010102000 and 0547010102003 (portion) EXISTING ZONING: R-12, SingleFamily Residential REQUESTED ZONING: C-1, Commercial ACREAGE: 2.417 COUNTY COUNCIL: 24 – Seman DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-17 APPLICANT: Edward D. Jones for Furman Square, LLC CONTACT INFORMATION: accounting@ legacypropertymgt.com or 864-415-3125 PROPERTY LOCATION: 5205 Old Buncombe Road PIN: 0432000301400 EXISTING ZONING: C-2, Commercial REQUESTED ZONING: S-1, Services ACREAGE: 2.1 COUNTY COUNCIL: 19 – Meadows DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-19 APPLICANT: Eric Jackson, RealtyLink for SC Greenville Garlington, LLC CONTACT INFORMATION: ejackson@realtylinkdev.com or 864-263-5431 PROPERTY LOCATION: Entertainment Boulevard and Garlington Road PIN: 0533020105500, 0533040100724, 0533040100725 0533040100726 and 0533040100700 (portion) EXISTING ZONING: S-1, Services REQUESTED ZONING: PD, Planned Development ACREAGE: 20.5 COUNTY COUNCIL: 21 – Roberts DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-20 APPLICANT: Don Oglesby for Homes of Hope, Inc. CONTACT INFORMATION: don@ homesofhope.org or 864546-4637

PROPERTY LOCATION: 200 Honour Street PIN: 0111000400700 EXISTING ZONING: R-M20, Multifamily Residential REQUESTED ZONING: FRD, Flexible Review District ACREAGE: 0.17 COUNTY COUNCIL: 23 – Norris DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-21 APPLICANT: John Darrohn, Darrohn Engineering, LLC and Fred Rosen, Rose Water Investments, LLC for RFJ, LLC, Bell Industrial Park, LLC, Rose Water Investments, LLC and Jack Foster CONTACT INFORMATION: john@ darrohnengineering.com or 864-603-1988 PROPERTY LOCATION: Henry Street and McKoy Street PIN: 0152001000200, 0152001100300, 0152001100400, 0152001100500 and 0152000901100 EXISTING ZONING: I-1, Industrial REQUESTED ZONING: FRD, Flexible Review District ACREAGE: 4.46 COUNTY COUNCIL: 23 – Norris DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-22 APPLICANT: John Beeson, Mark III Properties, Inc. for Martha Diane Hubbard and Rebecca Lynn White CONTACT INFORMATION: john@ markiiiproperties.com or 864595-1735 PROPERTY LOCATION: 846 and 900 Fairview Road PIN: 0566010102900 EXISTING ZONING: R-S, Residential Suburban REQUESTED ZONING: R-10, Single-Family Residential ACREAGE: 27.85 COUNTY COUNCIL: 26 – Ballard All persons interested in these proposed amendments to the Greenville County Zoning Ordinance and Map are invited to attend this meeting. At subsequent meetings, Greenville County Council may approve or deny the proposed amendments as requested or approve a different zoning classification than requested.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING OF COMPLAINT AND NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION (NON-JURY MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE) C/A NO: 2019-CP-23-07328 DEFICIENCY WAIVED Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, as Trustee of Stanwich Mortgage Loan Trust A, PLAINTIFF, vs. Mary Ann Hooper and if Mary Ann Hooper be deceased then any children and heirs at law to the Estate of Mary Ann Hooper, distributees and devisees at law to the Estate of Mary Ann Hooper and if any of the same be dead any and all persons entitled to claim under or through them also all other persons unknown claiming any right, title, interest or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; Any unknown adults, any unknown infants or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe, and any persons in the military service of the United

States of America being a class designated as Richard Roe; Tammy Hooper aka Tammy Cox; Michelle Hooper aka Michelle Pace aka Linda Hooper aka Linda Pace; DEFENDANT(S) TO THE DEFENDANTS, ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscriber at his office, Hutchens Law Firm LLP P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, or otherwise appear and defend, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity for Greenville County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDES, AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff immediately and separately and such application will be deemed absolute and total in the absence of your application for such an appointment within thirty (30) days after the service of the Summons and Complaint upon you. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity in/for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. NOTICE OF FILING OF SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE

NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing Summons, along with the Complaint, was filed with the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on December 18, 2019. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to the South Carolina Supreme Court Administrative Order 2011-05-02-01, (hereinafter “Order”), you may have a right to Foreclosure Intervention. To be considered for any available Foreclosure Intervention, you may communicate with and otherwise deal with the Plaintiff through its law firm, Hutchens Law Firm LLP, P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202 or call 803-726-2700. Hutchens Law Firm LLP, represents the Plaintiff in this action and does not represent you. Under our ethical rules, we are prohibited from giving you any legal advice. You must submit any requests for Foreclosure Intervention consideration within 30 days from the date of this Notice. IF YOU FAIL, REFUSE, OR VOLUNTARILY ELECT NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION, YOUR MORTGAGE COMPANY/ AGENT MAY PROCEED WITH A FORECLOSURE ACTION. If you have already pursued loss mitigation with the Plaintiff, this Notice does not guarantee the availability of loss mitigation options or further review of your qualifications. THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. THE PURPOSE OF THIS COMMUNICATION IS TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE, except as stated below in the instance of bankruptcy protection. IF YOU ARE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT OR HAVE BEEN DISCHARGED AS A RESULT OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU PURSUANT TO STATUTORY REQUIREMENT AND FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND IS NOT INTENDED AS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT OR AS AN ACT TO COLLECT, ASSESS, OR RECOVER ALL OR ANY PORTION OF THE DEBT FROM YOU PERSONALLY. NOTICE TO APPOINT ATTORNEY FOR DEFENANT(S) IN MILITARY SERVICE TO UNKNOWN OR KNOWN DEFENDANTS THAT MAY BE IN THE MILITARY SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ALL BEING A CLASS DESIGNATED AS RICHARD ROE: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED that Plaintiff’s attorney has applied for the appointment of an attorney to represent you. If you fail to apply for the appointment of an attorney to represent you within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you Plaintiff’s appointment will be made absolute with no further action from Plaintiff.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that BI LO LLC / DBA Bi Lo #5195 intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and OFF premises consumption of BEER & WINE at 12435 E. North Street Suite # 1106, Greenville, SC 29615-1442. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 1, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Slicks Inc intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/ permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 953 N. Pleasantburg Drive, Greenville, SC 29607. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 8, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Magnolia Breeze Inc. intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and OFF premises consumption of LIQUOR at 320 White Horse Road, Greenville, SC 29605. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 8, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Michael's Seafood and Wings LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER & WINE at 5054 Old Buncombe Road, Greenville, SC 29617. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 8, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF SELF STORAGE SALE Please take notice Fort Knox Storage Units - Mauldin located at 117 North Murray Drive Mauldin SC 29662 intends to hold a Auction of storage units in default of payment. The sale will occur as an Online Auction via www.lockerfox.com on 3/18/2020 at 11:30AM. This sale is pursuant to the assertion of lien for rental at the selfstorage facility. Unless listed otherwise below, the contents consist of household goods and furnishings. Taphnaiah Mcclodden unit #D01; Kevin M Vaughn unit #E09; Alicia Kilgore unit #F87. This sale may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain terms and conditions apply. NOTICE OF SELF STORAGE SALE Please take notice Prime Storage - Greenville located at 1260 E Butler Rd., Greenville, SC 29607 intends to hold a Auction of storage units in default of payment. The sale will occur as an Online Auction via www.storagetreasures. com on 3/16/2020 at 12:00 PM. This sale is pursuant to the assertion of lien for rental at the self-storage facility. Unless listed otherwise below, the contents consist of household goods and furnishings. Carl Williams unit #D11. This sale may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain terms and conditions apply. NOTICE OF SELF STORAGE SALE Please take notice Prime Storage - Greenville - East North Street located at 4329 East North St., Greenville, SC 29615 intends to hold a Auction of storage units in default of payment. The sale will occur as an Online Auction via www.storagetreasures. com on 3/16/2020 at 12:00 PM. This sale is pursuant to the assertion of lien for rental at the self-storage facility. Unless listed otherwise below, the contents consist of household goods and furnishings. Donald Maynard/PORTOFINOS unit #A010; Broadus Wilson unit #A020; Jose Robles unit #A126; Nathaly Pajon unit #A161; Christy Crumley unit #A178; Dexter Pepper units #A194 & #B216; Mark W Crossland unit #B064; Sebastian S Gomez unit #B075; Judy D Penland unit #B266; Derrick Garman unit #C001; Gregory J Barton unit #C011; Joy Garman unit #D011. This sale may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain terms and conditions apply. NOTICE OF SELF STORAGE SALE Please take notice Prime Storage Simpsonville located at 2711 Woodruff Rd., Simpsonville, SC 29681 intends to hold a Auction of storage units in default of payment. The sale will occur as an Online Auction via www.storagetreasures.com on 3/16/2020 at 12:00 PM. This sale is pursuant to the assertion of lien for rental at the selfstorage facility. Unless listed otherwise below, the contents consist of household goods and furnishings. Joseph Hyden unit #E071; Sanford Williams units #F015 & #H042. This sale may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain terms and conditions apply.


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