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

Waxhaw Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Lancaster County (off U.S. Hwy. 521, Van Wyck vicinity)
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Overview Overview Andrew Jackson, Sr.
Grave Marker
Memorial Marker to
Andrew Jackson's Mother
Leckie Enclosure
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Leckie Enclosure
Detail
James Shaw
Grave Marker
Rev. William
Richardson
Grave Marker
Rear of Rev. Willliam
Richardson
Grave Marker
William Blair
Grave Marker
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Gov. William R. Davie
Grave Marker
Davie Family
Enclosure Gate
Davie Family
Enclosure Gate Detail
James and Maragret
Walkup Grave Marker
Major Robert
Crawford Grave Marker
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Dr. Samuel Dunlap
Grave Marker

(Old Waxhaw Cemetery) Scotch-Irish immigrants settled the historic Waxhaws community in the 1750s. These settlers established a Presbyterian meeting house (1755) and cemetery as the center of their community. The original meeting house has been replaced by another church structure but the cemetery remains as one of the oldest historic sites in present day Lancaster County and as a visual reminder of that pioneer settlement. The grounds were part of land that belonged to the Reverend Robert Miller, and the land was deeded to the Presbyterian Church in 1757. The Waxhaw Cemetery is probably the most significant site remaining related to the Revolutionary War Era figures Andrew Jackson, William Richardson Davie, and Andrew Pickens, who contributed to the early development of the state and nation. The cemetery also contains noteworthy examples of eighteenth and nineteenth century tombstones. Many of the eighteenth century tombstones are marked with bas-relief carvings illustrating the lives of the deceased. These stones are flat, vertical tombstones with rounded or scrolled tops. Much of the lettering is clearly carved and is still legible. The vertical eighteenth century stones are distinguishable from the flat, horizontal nineteenth century slabs and massive monuments. Listed in the National Register September 11, 1975.

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