What is Lake City SC close to?

Places to visit about 30 miles from Lake City, SC



30 miles:   Lamar, SC

29 miles:   Rhems, SC

29 miles:   Brittons Neck, SC

28 miles:   Quinby, SC

28 miles:   Quinby Forest, SC

27 miles:   Lane, SC

25 miles:   Timmonsville, SC

24 miles:   Florence, SC

23 miles:   Salters, SC

23 miles:   Lynchburg, SC

23 miles:   Nesmith, SC

20 miles:   Johnsonville, SC

18 miles:   New Zion, SC

17 miles:   Pamplico, SC

16 miles:   Turbeville, SC


These are approximate driving distances in a radius from Lake City, South Carolina. Search for vacation spots within driving distance for a day trip or weekend getaway. There are many towns within the total area, so if you're looking for closer places, try a smaller radius. If you're willing to drive farther, try 80 miles.

Please note that these cities are closest to your specified radius of 30 miles. You can switch to the largest cities within 30 miles (even if they are closer), or search for places to eat. Not sure where to go? Take a day trip from Lake City, or if you have more time you can explore weekend trips from Lake City, but make sure you also check road conditions around Lake City. Looking for small towns or communities around Lake City, South Carolina? Get a full list of up to 500 cities nearby Lake City.

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RV campgrounds 30 miles from Lake City, SC



More cities around 30 miles away

Here are more cities based on a flight circle radius of 30 miles. The driving distance may be different from the straight line flight distance.

30 miles:   Jonestown, SC

30 miles:   Yarborough Crossroads, SC

30 miles:   Harper Crossroads, SC

30 miles:   Bowens Manor, SC

30 miles:   McLaughlin Crossroads, SC

30 miles:   Pages, SC

30 miles:   Jordanville, SC

30 miles:   Good Hope, SC

30 miles:   Saint Charles, SC

30 miles:   Wachovia Hills, SC

30 miles:   Choppee, SC

30 miles:   Iseman Crossroads, SC

30 miles:   Shaws Crossroads, SC

30 miles:   Rains, SC

30 miles:   Tompkins, SC





Travel time from Lake City, SC

cities within 1 hour of Lake City, SC
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3½ hr drive from Lake City, SC
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within 4½ hours of me in Lake City, SC
5 hour drive from me in Lake City, SC
5½ hour drive from Lake City, SC
within 6 hours of Lake City, SC
7 hour drive from Lake City, SC
driving 8 hours from Lake City, SC
9 hours from Lake City, SC

Distance from Lake City, SC

30 miles east of Lake City, SC
cities within 10 miles of me in Lake City, SC
within 20 miles of me in Lake City, SC
30 mile radius of Lake City, SC
40 mile drive from Lake City, SC
located 50 miles from Lake City, SC
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within 150 miles of Lake City, SC
200 mile road trip from Lake City, SC
distance of 250 miles from Lake City, SC
driving 300 miles from Lake City, SC
350 mile trip starting from Lake City, SC
400 mile drive from Lake City, SC
drive for 450 miles from Lake City, SC
500 miles from Lake City, SC
day trips from Lake City, SC

experience

Lake City, South Carolina

When you visit Lake City, you do more than visit a historic community with deep roots in the agricultural traditions of our past —you experience the best of what a Southern small town can be. While walking through our downtown historic district, you’ll see eye- catching floral scapes made of native plants grown locally by professional horticulturalists at Moore Farms Botanical Garden, as well as beautiful, colorful murals that express our artistic heart & soul.

By the 1730ʼs, the greater Lake City area of the Pee Dee was known as Williamsburg Township. Williamsburg Townshipʼs population began to grow because settlers immigrated to this area for its good reliable water, similar Scots-Irish neighbors, inexpensive or even free land, and close proximity to the Lynches Creek “highway” to Georgetown and Charleston markets. The more densely populated areas all along this waterway became known as Lynches Lake.

Lynches Lake is a series of lakes, extending east from Williamsburg Township to Witherspoonʼs Ferry, which is present-day Johnsonville. Lynches Lake was a geographical designation on plats and maps during the colonial era, before there were many towns, hence few town names. Lynches Lake was frequently cited as the home area of many patriots in General Francis Marionʼs Brigade.  Lake City is located at the western tip of the northern branch of Lynches Lake.

In the 1820ʼs Lake City was called the “Crossroads,” the place where the road between Charleston and Cheraw crosses the road between Georgetown and Camden. By the 1850ʼs, this crossroads had developed into a plantation with a smoke house, a gin, several barns and slave quarters, and had become known as “Grahamʼs Crossroads.” The North Eastern Railroad completed their north-south line with a freight depot in 1858, built several hundred feet west of Grahamʼs Crossroads. This railroad and its depot provided a nucleus around which an energetic mercantile community developed. The town chartered itself officially as “Graham” on March 4, 1874. Nine years later in 1883, due to statewide postal delivery problems, the name of Graham had to be changed and this town became “Lake City.”

Lake Cityʼs first major industry other than farming was turpentine. Turpentine harvesters from North Carolina and Virginia came here shortly after Reconstruction ended to “bleed the piney wood” of its turpentine and the market boomed. By the 1900’s this market had dwindled, so the local citizenry needed another industry to replace turpentine.

A local farmer named Henry Horace Singletary unknowingly took the agricultural lead around 1890 when he observed that the soil content here was well adapted for growing strawberries. He wondered why they had never been cultivated here in any kind of quantity large enough to ship to a major market. After several earnest attempts, Mr. Singletary succeeded in growing fine strawberries and shipping them North, thus laying the foundation for Lake Cityʼs second major industry, strawberries. By the turn of the nineteenth to the twentieth century, Lake City claimed one of the largest strawberry markets in the Southeast, shipping between twelve and eighteen railroad cars per day during the peak season. The crop was discontinued after the northern and eastern buyers failed to make adequate payments.

Lake Cityʼs principal claim to significant historic value is her prominence as an agricultural center. She could boast of the largest snap bean market in the world at one time. In 1939, as much as 30,000 bushels of produce were sold per day at auction in the municipally owned market building erected three years earlier. This produce market typically handled approximately half a million bushels, or packages, of produce each year, each type of produce sold in its own season. Lake City shipped over 850 railroad carloads in an average year. According to the marketʼs accounting books for the 1938 season, 450,000 bushels were shipped. The market handled peas, beans of most kinds, cucumbers, squash, and limas in large quantities - other vegetables in lesser amounts. Lake City has had the most diversified agricultural market in the two Carolinas. From its season opening in late April continuously until late July or early August, it sold assorted produce.

Then from August 1 until well into the fall, it operated as a tobacco market, the second largest in the state. The tobacco market took root in Lake City in in the late 1890’s and as the market grew, so did the small community. According to census records, the village had 300 inhabitants in 1900 and by the 1910 census had more than tripled to over 1,000 people. Tobacco was king in Lake City. As demand for the golden weed continued to grow, so did the town. During August of 1929, Lake City sold ten million pounds of tobacco, the record for the most tobacco sold anywhere ever in a single month in the history of the tobacco industry. During the 1930ʼs, Lake City got five tobacco warehouses. The tobacco market here has sold over twenty-three million pounds annually. Farmers here and from eleven nearby counties have received over $5,000 for tobacco sold here. This industry, with an investment of over one million dollars in Lake City, provided employment for over 3,500 persons for a period of from two to four months at a weekly payroll of $100,000. By 1958, Lake City had nine large warehouses whose volume of business placed it second in the state and eleventh in the nation. Tobacco was indeed King in Lake City.