South Carolina Department of Archives and History
National Register Properties in South Carolina

Springwood Cemetery, Greenville County (Main St. and Elford St., Greenville)
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Main Gate Mrs. Elizabeth
Williams Grave
Chancellor Waddy
Thompson Grave
Duncan Family
Plot
Rev. James C.
Furman Grave
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George Heldmann
Marker
Efstration Family
Monument
Hodges Monument Unmarked
Confederate Graves
World War I
Veterans' Graves
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Potters Field

Springwood Cemetery is locally significant for its association with a number of persons important to the early history and development of Greenville, and for its funerary art and distinctive landscape design which reflect the rural cemetery movement of the mid to late nineteenth century. The first burial in what would become Springwood occurred in 1812. Over the years Springwood has been known by various names including Elford Cemetery, the Old Graveyard and the Old Village Burial Ground. Springwood features a formal, planned design. A series of winding paved roads run throughout the cemetery and dissect it into several sections labeled chronologically from A to T. Sections dating from the mid to late nineteenth century feature circular and semi-circular walks designed by Gottfried L. Norrman, a landscape architect inspired by the rural cemetery movement. According to survey completed in 1978, the plots contain approximately 7,700 marked graves. It is estimated that another 2,600 unmarked burials are located in the cemetery. Gravemarker types and materials vary dramatically from natural fieldstones to raised brick tombs to elaborate Victorian monuments to Greek peristyles and sculptures to contemporary marble headstones. The variety and style of monuments reflects the long history of the cemetery as well as the socio-economic diversity of those buried there. Listed in the National Register October 4, 2005.

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