I'm doing some historical research on Spanish era mining in the Appalachians, and stumbled across a reference to a Spanish mine legend on Coronaka Creek, near Greenwood.
According to an early history of South Carolina,* In the early 1800’s, a group of Revolutionary War veterans searched for a Spanish silver mine on Coronaka Creek, in the District of Abbeville, near the old Rock Church, northeast of Greenwood, South Carolina. According to legends, the mine had been worked by the Spanish, but most of the Spanish miners were killed by the Cherokee, and the mine was hidden by the tribe. The mine was supposedly 2 miles east of a local feature known as the "Pointing Rock." The veterans sank a shaft 60-70 feet on a hillside above the east bank of Coronaka, a little way south of “old Captain Slunge,” John Calhoun’s Revolutionary tub-mill, but never found anything.
Would appreciate any information others might have on this.
* Logan, John H. A History of the Upper Country of South Carolina from the Earliest Periods to the Close of the War of Independence. Charleston, Columbia: S.G Courtenay & Co., P.B. Glass, 1859. https://archive.org/stream/historyofupperco00loga
According to an early history of South Carolina,* In the early 1800’s, a group of Revolutionary War veterans searched for a Spanish silver mine on Coronaka Creek, in the District of Abbeville, near the old Rock Church, northeast of Greenwood, South Carolina. According to legends, the mine had been worked by the Spanish, but most of the Spanish miners were killed by the Cherokee, and the mine was hidden by the tribe. The mine was supposedly 2 miles east of a local feature known as the "Pointing Rock." The veterans sank a shaft 60-70 feet on a hillside above the east bank of Coronaka, a little way south of “old Captain Slunge,” John Calhoun’s Revolutionary tub-mill, but never found anything.
Would appreciate any information others might have on this.
* Logan, John H. A History of the Upper Country of South Carolina from the Earliest Periods to the Close of the War of Independence. Charleston, Columbia: S.G Courtenay & Co., P.B. Glass, 1859. https://archive.org/stream/historyofupperco00loga