South Carolina since c. 1950
News •
South Carolina underwent economic, demographic, social, and political revolutions after World War II. Between 1950 and 1980, nonagricultural employment grew exponentially as the State Development Board, created in 1945, actively promoted industry. Income per capita, which had consistently lagged far behind that of the rest of the country, increased dramatically, and by the 1980s it was approaching the national average. This economic revolution was paralleled by a demographic revolution. The urban population grew many times faster than the rural population. Additionally, after 1975 new economic opportunities reversed migration patterns: more people, both Black and white, moved into South Carolina than left it.
The social revolution that ended racial segregation included some tragic events, such as the Orangeburg Massacre (1968), in which three African American students died in a confrontation with state police on the South Carolina State College campus after attempting to integrate a bowling alley. Moderate governors, such as Ernest F. (“Fritz”) Hollings (1959–63), Donald S. Russell (1963–65), Robert E. McNair (1965–71), and John C. West (1971–75), led South Carolina through this difficult but generally peaceful era. The concurrent political revolution involved both the rise of the Republican Party and the increased participation of African Americans, who by 1970 accounted for about one-fourth of the state’s registered voters. Strom Thurmond, first elected to public office in 1946, successfully navigated the shifting currents of the electorate. He was the presidential nominee of the segregationist Dixiecrats (States’ Rights Democratic Party) in 1948 and became a conservative Republican in 1964. Thurmond served in the U.S. Senate from 1954 until his death in 2003 with wide support, becoming a nationally recognized spokesman for Southern conservatives.
South Carolina’s achievements during the 20th century brought new challenges for the 21st. Sustainable economic growth called for further diversification of the industrial base, coupled with increased protection of the environment. While health services, educational programs, and employment opportunities—especially in rural counties—remained perennial concerns, uncontrolled urban sprawl also emerged as a pressing issue.
Donald O. Bushman John J. Winberry