5 Best Sights in The Midlands and Upstate, South Carolina

Burt-Stark Mansion

It was in this 1820 home that Jefferson Davis disbanded the Confederate armies, effectively ending the Civil War. Now a popular wedding venue, the house was a private residence until 1971, when Mary Stark Davis died. She willed the house to the Abbeville County Historic Preservation Commission, with a provision that nothing be added or removed from it; thus it's filled with lovely antiques, carved-wood surfaces, and old family photos.

400 N. Main St., Abbeville, South Carolina, 29620, USA
864-366–0166
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $10, Closed Sun.–Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 1:30-4:30

Hampton-Preston Mansion and Gardens

Main Street Area

Dating from 1818, this grand home is filled with lavish furnishings collected by three generations of two influential families. The mansion was rehabilitated and outfitted with new interactive exhibits and expanded gardens to celebrate its 200th anniversary in 2018. Buy tickets at the Robert Mills House.

1615 Blanding St., Columbia, South Carolina, 29201, USA
803-252–7742
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $10, Closed Mon., Tues.–Sat. tours at 11:30 and 2:30; Sun. 2:30 only

Robert Mills House and Gardens

Main Street Area

The classic, columned 1823 house was named for its architect, who later designed the Washington Monument. It has opulent Regency furniture, marble mantels, and spacious grounds. This is the home of the Historic Columbia Foundation, where you can get walking and driving tour maps of historic districts and buy tickets to other historic homes.

1616 Blanding St., Columbia, South Carolina, 29201, USA
803-252–7742
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $10, Closed Mon., Tues.–Sat. tours at 10 and 1; Sun. tours at 1 and 4

Recommended Fodor's Video

Shoeless Joe Jackson Museum and Baseball Library

Historic West End

This collection is housed in the former home of baseball great Joe Jackson, who along with seven other White Sox players, was accused of throwing the 1919 World Series. Though he was found not guilty, Jackson was banned from playing baseball. The museum, which is open only on Saturday from 10 to 2, has records, artifacts, photographs, and a film, along with a library of baseball books donated from fans around the country. At the end of each summer, staffers challenge their peers at Georgia's Ty Cobb Museum to a vintage baseball game.

Woodrow Wilson Family Home

Main Street Area

This boyhood home of President Woodrow Wilson displays the gaslights, arched doorways, and ornate furnishings of the Victorian period. Museum exhibits explore the life of the president and the South in the 1870s.

Buy tickets at the Robert Mills House, where you get a discount if you plan to visit more than one historic home.

1705 Hampton St., Columbia, South Carolina, USA
803-252–7742
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $10, Closed Mon., Tues.–Sat. tours at 11:30 and 2:30; Sun. tour at 2:30 only