Pee Dee
The Pee Dee is a geographic and cultural region in northeastern South Carolina, encompassing the lower watershed of the Pee Dee River and primarily comprising the seven counties of Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Lee, Marion, Marlboro, and Williamsburg.[1] Named after the indigenous Pee Dee people, a Siouan tribe inhabiting the area prior to European settlement, the region features a rural landscape dominated by agriculture, forestry, and manufacturing, with Florence serving as its largest urban center and economic hub.[2] The Pee Dee River, a blackwater waterway originating in North Carolina's Appalachian Mountains as the Yadkin River before flowing 232 miles southeast through swamps and bottomland forests into Winyah Bay, defines the area's hydrology and supports diverse ecosystems including cypress-tupelo swamps and migratory bird habitats.[3] Historically reliant on tobacco and cotton farming, the region has transitioned toward agritourism, outdoor recreation such as fishing and paddling on its scenic rivers, and events like stock car racing at Darlington Raceway, while contending with challenges like rural depopulation and economic stagnation in smaller communities.[4][5]Geography and Boundaries
Regional Definition and Variations
The Pee Dee region comprises the northeastern portion of South Carolina, centered on the lower watershed of the Pee Dee River, which drains approximately 17,400 square miles across parts of North and South Carolina before emptying into Winyah Bay.[6] This geographic core influences local hydrology, agriculture, and ecology, distinguishing the area from the state's Upstate, Midlands, and Lowcountry regions.[5] Administrative and promotional definitions often specify seven counties—Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Lee, Marion, Marlboro, and Williamsburg—as the Pee Dee's primary extent, aligning with the Pee Dee Council of Governments' boundaries, which extend westward to the Lynches River and southward to the Black River.[4][7] These counties, covering about 3,500 square miles and home to roughly 400,000 residents as of 2020 Census data, form the basis for regional economic development, tourism initiatives, and resource management.[1] Variations arise from differing emphases on hydrology, culture, or economics; broader delineations, used in some state tourism and planning contexts, incorporate up to twelve counties including Chesterfield, Clarendon, Georgetown, Horry, and Sumter to capture shared agricultural histories and coastal influences.[8][9] Historians sometimes restrict the term to counties directly abutting the Pee Dee River—such as Marlboro, which is legally bounded westward by the river—excluding inland areas like Lee or Clarendon to emphasize indigenous and early colonial ties to the waterway.[5][10] Such discrepancies reflect no single statutory definition but practical adaptations by entities like councils of government versus promotional boards.Physical Features and Environment
The Pee Dee region encompasses the northeastern Atlantic Coastal Plain of South Carolina, characterized by low-relief, flat to gently rolling topography with elevations generally ranging from sea level along coastal margins to 140–200 feet inland. This terrain includes subtle swells, broad drainage areas, and extensive floodplain features shaped by riverine deposition, with minimal elevation changes dominated by soil variations rather than dramatic landforms.[11][12][13] Central to the region's hydrology is the Great Pee Dee River, a slow-moving blackwater Coastal Plain river originating in the Appalachian foothills and winding through cypress swamps, bottomland hardwood forests, and wetlands before discharging into Winyah Bay; tributaries such as the Little Pee Dee and Lynches Rivers contribute to a basin overlaying wetlands, forests, and agricultural lands across seven fully encompassed counties. Soils vary from prime agricultural classes (1 and 2) abundant in Marlboro, Dillon, and Darlington counties—featuring loamy and sandy textures ideal for crops—to clayey types in lowlands and wet, sandy strips near wetlands, reflecting the Coastal Plain's sedimentary origins.[14][15][7][16] Vegetation includes bottomland hardwood forests, longleaf pine stands, mixed pine-hardwood uplands, and cypress-tupelo swamps in wetlands, interspersed with old fields and croplands; these habitats support diverse wildlife, including fish species like Atlantic and shortnose sturgeon, as well as birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians in protected areas such as the Pee Dee National Wildlife Refuge. The humid subtropical climate features hot summers with average highs of 91°F, mild winters with lows around 36°F, and annual precipitation of 46–52 inches, predominantly from thunderstorms and frontal systems, fostering the region's wetland-dominated environment while contributing to periodic flooding.[17][18][19][20][21]Historical Development
Indigenous and Pre-Colonial Periods
The indigenous inhabitants of the Pee Dee region in northeastern South Carolina belonged primarily to Siouan-speaking groups, with the Pee Dee (or Pedee) people occupying the central river valley watershed before European contact around 1500 AD. These societies practiced a mixed subsistence economy, relying on maize agriculture—introduced regionally around AD 1000—along with hunting deer and small game, fishing in the Pee Dee River, and gathering wild plants. Archaeological surveys indicate human occupation dating back to the Late Archaic period (ca. 3000–1000 BC), with evidence of seasonal camps and lithic tools, transitioning to more sedentary villages in the Woodland period (ca. 1000 BC–AD 1000) characterized by cord-marked pottery and bow-and-arrow technology.[22] The most prominent pre-colonial cultural expression in the Pee Dee area falls within the South Appalachian Mississippian tradition (ca. AD 1000–1500), a variant of broader Mississippian mound-building societies adapted to the Piedmont and coastal plain environments. The Pee Dee culture, as identified archaeologically, featured hierarchical chiefdoms with platform mounds for elite residences and ceremonies, though major mound complexes like Town Creek in southern North Carolina (spanning AD 1150–1400) represent the core of this tradition, with influences extending southward into South Carolina along the river. In the South Carolina portion, Mississippian-influenced sites are rarer and smaller, often limited to riverine villages without large earthworks, as seen in excavations at Florence County locations 38FL240 and 38FL249, which yielded domestic structures, shell-tempered pottery, and triangular projectile points indicative of maize-dependent communities.[23][24] These groups participated in extensive trade networks exchanging coastal shells, copper ornaments from the Great Lakes region, and local chert tools, linking the Pee Dee valley to areas from Georgia to Tennessee. Social organization included matrilineal clans, with evidence of status differentiation in burials featuring grave goods like gorgets and pipes. Adjacent Siouan tribes, such as the Waccamaw along the lower Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers and the Cheraw upstream, interacted through alliances and conflicts, but the Pee Dee maintained primary control over the mid-river territories. Pre-contact population densities were low, with chiefdoms likely comprising 500–2000 individuals per polity, sustained by floodplain farming and floodplain resources.[24][25]Colonial Era to Antebellum Agriculture
European settlement in the Pee Dee region commenced in the early 1730s, following the Yemassee War of 1715 that reduced indigenous resistance and opened interior lands. Welsh Calvinist Baptists, migrating from Pennsylvania and other colonies, established the Welsh Neck settlement along the upper Pee Dee River in present-day Darlington County around 1736–1737, acquiring tracts such as the 20,000-acre Welch Tract granted by the colonial government. Initial agriculture focused on subsistence and frontier crops, with settlers clearing riverine forests to cultivate flax, hemp, corn, cattle, and hogs on small family farms.[26][27][28] By the 1720s, rice emerged as the dominant cash crop in the lower Pee Dee's tidal river valleys, exploiting the region's flat, swampy lowlands suitable for flooded impoundments. Enslaved Africans, imported from West African rice-cultivating societies, provided critical expertise in seed selection, tidal irrigation, and threshing methods like scaffold drying, enabling rapid expansion. From 1700 to 1730, South Carolina rice exports surged over 2000 percent, positioning the Pee Dee—particularly areas like Mars Bluff in Florence County—as America's premier rice-producing zone, with plantations diking thousands of acres for controlled flooding.[29][30] Slavery underpinned this system; by 1740, Africans constituted two-thirds of the coastal and riverine population, performing grueling tasks in malarial swamps while owners profited from exports via Charleston.[29] Indigo complemented rice in the mid-18th century, introduced in the 1740s as a dye crop thriving on similar alluvial soils, but its production waned after the 1790s due to European competition and dye shortages. Antebellum diversification accelerated with Eli Whitney's 1793 cotton gin, shifting upland Pee Dee farms toward short-staple cotton; South Carolina's output escalated from 94,000 pounds in 1793 to 40 million pounds by 1811. In the Pee Dee, planters like the Gibsons amassed holdings—such as the 10,000-acre Gibson Plantation in Marion District by 1850, yielding 206 cotton bales annually alongside rice, wheat, and oats—supported by hundreds of enslaved laborers valued at over $119,000. Tobacco, especially high-value bright leaf varieties suited to sandy soils, gained traction in the upper Pee Dee by the 1830s, prompting organizations like the 1839 Planters Club to promote soil management and markets. River navigation facilitated exports, but soil exhaustion and reliance on coerced labor characterized the era's plantation economy.[29][28]Civil War, Reconstruction, and Sharecropping
During the American Civil War, the Pee Dee region contributed significantly to South Carolina's Confederate military efforts, with local units such as the Pee Dee Legion—also known as Harllee's Legion or the 9th Battalion South Carolina Infantry (Smith's)—organized in 1861 from counties including Florence, Darlington, and Marlboro, comprising seven companies that later merged into larger formations.[31][32] The 21st South Carolina Infantry Regiment also drew men primarily from the Pee Dee area, serving in coastal defenses and later inland campaigns until surrendering at Appomattox in April 1865.[33] Industrial activity included the construction of the CSS Pee Dee, a 170-foot steam-powered gunboat built near Florence starting in 1862 but launched only in February 1865 due to resource shortages; it was scuttled on February 25, 1865, in the Great Pee Dee River to avoid Union capture, with its three cannons recovered from the riverbed in 2015.[34][35] Florence served as a site for the Florence Stockade, a prison camp established in 1864 for over 2,800 Union captives, where harsh conditions led to approximately 2,300 deaths from disease and malnutrition by war's end, facilitated by the region's rail connections.[36] Northeastern South Carolina, including the Pee Dee, avoided major battles and Sherman's March devastation, but economic disruption from blockades and conscription strained the plantation-based cotton economy reliant on enslaved labor.[36] Reconstruction in the Pee Dee, beginning after South Carolina's readmission to the Union in 1868, focused on integrating freed African Americans—numbering tens of thousands in the region, formerly enslaved on rice, cotton, and tobacco plantations—into society amid planter resistance and federal oversight via the Freedmen's Bureau.[28] Educational initiatives targeted freedmen, with efforts by Northern missionaries and local advocates establishing schools despite opposition from white landowners who viewed literacy as a threat to labor control; by 1870, rudimentary schools operated in Florence and Darlington counties, though funding was inconsistent and enrollment limited by poverty and intimidation.[37] Political violence and the rise of groups like the Ku Klux Klan suppressed black voting and office-holding, contributing to the collapse of Radical Reconstruction by 1877, after which Democratic "Redeemers" regained control, enforcing segregationist policies that persisted into the Jim Crow era.[5][38] Sharecropping emerged as the dominant postbellum agricultural system in the Pee Dee by the late 1860s, where freedmen and poor whites rented land from former planters in exchange for a share of the crop—typically one-third to one-half—often advancing seeds, tools, and supplies at high interest rates that perpetuated debt cycles.[28][39] In tobacco-centric areas like Florence and Horry counties, the crop's revival from 1889 onward integrated sharecroppers into auction-based markets, but low yields and market fluctuations exacerbated tenancy, with many families trapped in subsistence farming; by 1900, over 60% of Pee Dee farms operated under sharecropping or tenancy arrangements.[40][41] Rice production at sites like Mars Bluff saw African American sharecroppers continue cultivation on subdivided lands, though flooding and labor shifts diminished its viability.[30] This system, while providing nominal autonomy over wage labor, effectively maintained economic dependence on landowners, hindering capital accumulation and contributing to persistent rural poverty through the early 20th century.[28][42]Industrialization and 20th-Century Shifts
The Pee Dee region, long dominated by agriculture, saw nascent industrialization in the early 20th century primarily through small-scale textile operations and processing facilities tied to cash crops like cotton and tobacco. In Darlington County, a cotton mill was established in 1883, marking one of the earliest manufacturing ventures, though it remained secondary to farming.[27] By 1925, Cheraw in Marlboro County hosted three cotton mills alongside operations like Pee Dee Knitting, which produced undergarments, reflecting modest expansion in yarn and fabric production fueled by local raw materials.[43] These efforts were constrained by the region's rural character, underdeveloped infrastructure, and reliance on rail hubs like Florence for commodity export rather than diversified production.[44] World War II catalyzed temporary economic surges, with increased agricultural demand sustaining tobacco and cotton output while military installations, such as the Florence Army Air Base, spurred logistics and support industries.[45] Postwar mechanization of farms displaced laborers, prompting deliberate industrial recruitment starting in the late 1940s; Marlboro County, for instance, targeted manufacturing to absorb surplus rural workers, attracting firms in textiles and light assembly during the 1950s and 1960s.[46] Marion County similarly transitioned partially from agrarian dependence, building on prewar cotton mills to incorporate broader manufacturing.[47] Florence's rail-centric economy expanded into timber processing and tobacco warehousing, with population and output growth averaging above state norms through the 1950s.[48] By the mid-20th century, textiles peaked as a pillar, employing thousands regionally amid South Carolina's statewide mill boom, but Pee Dee's share lagged behind the upstate's denser clusters due to flatter terrain and weaker water power.[49] The 1970s onward brought contraction as global imports eroded competitiveness, closing mills and displacing workers; South Carolina lost over 20% of textile jobs from 1982 to 1991, with Pee Dee facilities like those in Darlington facing similar attrition from automation and offshoring.[50] This shift underscored causal vulnerabilities in low-wage, labor-intensive sectors, prompting uneven diversification into services and distribution by century's end, though poverty metrics remained elevated compared to urbanized areas.[51]Post-2000 Economic and Social Changes
The Pee Dee region's economy faced significant challenges in the early 2000s, marked by substantial job losses in the textile manufacturing sector due to global competition from low-wage countries following China's 2001 entry into the World Trade Organization and ongoing offshoring trends. South Carolina's manufacturing employment, heavily concentrated in textiles within Pee Dee counties like Darlington and Florence, declined by over 21% statewide from 2000 onward, contributing to regional unemployment rates consistently 2-3 percentage points above state and national averages during the 2000s recession and the 2008 financial crisis. Median household income growth lagged, increasing only 10.73% from 2000 to 2010, exacerbating persistent poverty in four of the six counties (Chesterfield, Dillon, Marion, Marlboro), where rates remained more than double the state average.[52][53] Diversification efforts accelerated post-2010, with shifts toward healthcare, advanced manufacturing, and logistics; healthcare became the largest employer with over 22,000 workers by 2025, followed by manufacturing at around 20,000. The 2018 opening of the SC Inland Port in Dillon spurred distribution and logistics growth, attracting investments like Nan Ya Plastics expansions, while recent industrial projects in Florence County alone generated $164 million in capital and 490 jobs in 2024. Average annual wages rose 5.7% in the preceding four quarters to $51,436 by early 2025, though still below the national average of $74,181, reflecting lower cost of living but structural wage gaps. Median household income surged 31% from 2011 to 2022, supported by workforce training programs at technical colleges achieving over 90% job placement rates.[52][54][55] Socially, the region experienced net population decline of approximately 5% from 2017 to 2022 and 10% in the broader Pee Dee area from 2010 to 2020, driven by outmigration from rural counties seeking better opportunities elsewhere, with losses of 8-12% in Dillon, Marion, Darlington, and Marlboro. This outmigration compounded an aging demographic and contributed to labor shortages, though Florence County saw marginal growth of 0.13% over the decade due to urban pull factors. Poverty rates fell overall to 21% by the 2020s from higher levels earlier in the century, alongside improved high school graduation rates, yet 52% of residents hold high school diplomas or less, perpetuating socioeconomic challenges amid uneven recovery. Unemployment stood at 4.3% in May 2025, above the national 4.0%, highlighting ongoing vulnerabilities despite targeted economic initiatives.[52][56][54]Demographics and Society
Population Trends and Composition
The Pee Dee region, encompassing Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Marion, and Marlboro counties, recorded a population of 326,466 in the American Community Survey for 2018–2022.[54] Racial composition reflects a higher proportion of Black or African American residents at 42.8%, compared to the statewide figure of 25.3%; White residents constitute the plurality at approximately 52%, with smaller shares for Hispanic or Latino (around 4%), Asian (1%), and Native American or multiracial groups (under 2% combined).[54] The region features a higher percentage of residents of color and older individuals relative to South Carolina averages, with median age exceeding the state norm of 39.5 years in rural counties.[57] Population growth from 2010 to 2020 was minimal overall, at under 2%, driven by modest increases in Florence County (from 131,517 to 138,299) that offset declines in rural counties such as Darlington (from 67,966 to 62,788), Dillon (from 32,502 to 28,114), and Marion (from 33,062 to 29,039).[58] This pattern stems from out-migration tied to limited economic opportunities in agriculture-dependent areas, contrasting with statewide growth of 10.7%.[59] Rural Pee Dee counties have experienced sustained stagnation or shrinkage since the mid-20th century, exacerbated by the decline of sharecropping and textile industries, leading to net losses from younger workers seeking employment elsewhere.[60] Projections indicate further decline, with the state's demographers forecasting an average 17% drop in the most rural Pee Dee counties by 2042, attributed to persistent poverty, aging demographics, and low in-migration.[61] Urban centers like Florence show resilience, with population stabilizing around 140,000 in the county due to healthcare and retail sectors, but the region's overall density remains low at about 120 persons per square mile, underscoring rural depopulation risks.[52]Socioeconomic Metrics and Poverty Persistence
The Pee Dee region's poverty rate stood at 21.3% for all individuals from 2019 to 2023, exceeding the South Carolina state average of 14.2% and the national figure of 12.4%.[54] Median household income in the area was approximately $57,462 during the same period, trailing the state median of around $66,800 and the U.S. median of $78,500.[62] [54] Unemployment averaged 4.3% as of May 2025, slightly above the national rate of 4.0% but reflective of recent stabilization after higher historical levels.[62] Educational attainment remains a constraining factor, with only 23.1% of adults aged 25-64 holding a bachelor's degree or higher in recent estimates, compared to over 35% nationally; conversely, 10.6% lacked a high school diploma, and 34.1% held only a high school credential.[62]| Metric | Pee Dee Region | South Carolina | United States |
|---|---|---|---|
| Poverty Rate (2019-2023) | 21.3% | 14.2% | 12.4% |
| Median Household Income (2019-2023) | $57,462 | $66,818 | $78,538 |
| Unemployment Rate (May 2025) | 4.3% | N/A | 4.0% |
| Bachelor's or Higher (25-64, recent) | 23.1% | N/A | ~36.5% |
Economy and Industry
Agricultural Foundations and Transitions
The Pee Dee region's agricultural foundations rested on labor-intensive cash crops, particularly cotton in the antebellum era and bright leaf tobacco from the late 19th century onward, with the latter fueled by rising national demand for cigarette tobaccos.[29] Tobacco's value—an acre yielding the equivalent of ten acres of cotton—spurred economic expansion, transforming rural landscapes with curing barns and supporting market towns, though this prosperity was underpinned by enslaved labor on plantations.[29][63] By the early 20th century, Pee Dee farms integrated tobacco with cotton rotations, but wartime price corrections in the 1920s exposed vulnerabilities to commodity fluctuations.[64] Tobacco production, once a Pee Dee staple since its 1880s expansion, has undergone sharp decline amid reduced smoking rates, health regulations, and the 2004 federal buyout program, dropping South Carolina's output 81.7% to 11.5 million pounds by 2023.[65][66] Local farmers have observed this erosion firsthand, prompting diversification into row crops like corn, soybeans, cotton, peanuts, and wheat across over 1.3 million acres in the broader Pee Dee basin.[67][68] Contemporary transitions emphasize crop rotation and alternative enterprises for resilience, including agritourism linkages between farms and experiential tourism, alongside Clemson University's research into new plant-based systems and soil improvements for vegetables.[69][70] These strategies, informed by empirical enterprise budgets, address economic trade-offs from monoculture dependencies while leveraging the region's prime soils in counties like Darlington and Marlboro.[71][7] Diversification has historically mitigated risks, sustaining farm incomes amid mid-20th-century market shifts in traditional outputs.[69][72]Manufacturing, Services, and Modern Sectors
The manufacturing sector remains a cornerstone of the Pee Dee economy, with a location quotient of 1.91 relative to national averages, reflecting a higher concentration of activity.[54] Employment in manufacturing stood at 39,148 workers in recent assessments, projected to reach 42,345 by the late 2020s, driven by subsectors such as plastics, fibers, automotive parts, and assembly.[73] Notable facilities include Honda's plant in Timmonsville, Florence County, which produces all-terrain vehicles and side-by-sides, contributing to transportation equipment's prominence.[74] In Marion County, operations focus on plastic injection molding (e.g., PSI with 98 employees), brick pavers (Marion Ceramics, 70 employees), and automotive components (DMA Sales, 44 employees).[75] Florence County hosts advanced plastics and fibers production, alongside firms like Nan Ya Plastics and Clarios for batteries.[76][77] A proposed electric vehicle battery plant in the region, announced to create 1,600 jobs, halted construction in June 2025 amid market challenges.[78] Services dominate employment, with health care and social assistance as the largest sector, employing 50,799 workers currently and projected to grow to 59,742.[73] This includes major providers like McLeod Health in Florence, supporting regional medical clusters.[79] Logistics and distribution benefit from proximity to South Carolina ports, generating an 11.1% share of statewide port-related economic impacts, including $1.4 billion in wages across associated activities.[80] Retail and professional services also contribute, bolstered by infrastructure like Interstate 95 and industrial parks such as Pee Dee Commerce City.[81] Emerging modern sectors emphasize advanced manufacturing and targeted expansions in healthcare, pharmaceuticals, and tourism. Florence County attracted over $164 million in industrial investments in 2024, yielding 490 new jobs in distribution and automotive-related fields.[55] Local strategies promote pharmaceutical production and medical services as growth clusters, leveraging existing skills in metalworking and assembly from the region's industrial history.[79][82] Tourism initiatives focus on historical sites and natural assets, though it remains secondary to core industries amid persistent poverty in four of six counties.[72] Overall GDP in the Pee Dee workforce development area grew 4.5% nominally in 2023, following 8.9% in 2022, signaling modest diversification.[54]Economic Challenges, Policies, and Criticisms
The Pee Dee region faces entrenched economic challenges, including persistent poverty affecting four of its six counties, where rates exceed twice the national average of approximately 11.5% as of recent U.S. Census data.[52] Unemployment in the Pee Dee Workforce Development Area stood at 5.1% in September 2024, surpassing the national rate of 4.1% and reflecting structural issues like limited job diversity beyond agriculture and declining manufacturing. Average hourly wages across occupations averaged $23.97 in 2023, constraining household income amid rising costs, while rural population projections indicate a 17% decline in the most isolated counties by 2042, exacerbating a cycle of outmigration due to scarce high-skill employment.[83][61] Regional policies emphasize workforce training and infrastructure via the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), with the Greater Pee Dee Regional Plan (2024-2028) targeting skill gaps through partnerships like SC Works centers to reduce unemployment disparities. The Pee Dee Council of Governments' 2027 Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy promotes diversification into advanced manufacturing and broadband access, building on historical shifts from tobacco farming, while state-level incentives under the South Carolina Department of Commerce offer tax credits and grants to attract investments, such as the $936 million in capital announcements for 1,872 jobs in 2022.[52][84] Criticisms of these approaches highlight crony capitalist tendencies, as South Carolina's incentive programs lack systematic evaluation of job delivery against taxpayer subsidies, with failures like the AESC electric vehicle battery plant setback in 2025 underscoring risks of unfulfilled promises.[85][86] Local governance issues, including financial mismanagement in entities like the Marlboro County School District—prompting state intervention probes for fraud in July 2025—erode trust in resource allocation.[87] External pressures, such as Duke Energy's rate hikes in 2022 disproportionately burdening low-income households without offsetting regional aid, compound perceptions of policy shortsightedness.[88] Despite some poverty reductions since 1960 (from 58% to 21%), critics argue initiatives fail to address root causes like education quality and overreliance on volatile sectors, perpetuating dependency rather than fostering self-sustaining growth.[52]Politics and Governance
Political Landscape and Voting Patterns
The Pee Dee region's political landscape is marked by conservative dominance, driven by rural voters' priorities such as limited government intervention, Second Amendment rights, and traditional social values, though Democratic strength persists in counties with large African American populations comprising over 40% of residents, like Marion (47%), Williamsburg (64%), and Lee (53%). These demographic realities create a partisan divide, with whiter, coastal-influenced areas like Horry County leaning heavily Republican and inland black-belt counties providing reliable Democratic margins. South Carolina's lack of party registration means voters select affiliations at primaries, but election outcomes reveal consistent Republican advantages in aggregate, reflecting national realignments since the 1960s when the region transitioned from Democratic solidarity to GOP alignment amid civil rights shifts and economic conservatism.[89] In federal contests, the Pee Dee, spanning much of South Carolina's 7th Congressional District, supports Republicans reliably; in 2020, Tom Rice defeated Democrat Melissa Watson 61.8% to 38.2% district-wide, buoyed by strong rural turnout. Presidential voting patterns show similar splits: Donald Trump won statewide with 55.1% against Joe Biden's 44.1%, but Pee Dee counties varied sharply due to demographics. Trump carried Horry County 65.7%-32.7%, Georgetown 56.0%-43.0%, Darlington 50.8%-47.5%, Dillon 50.1%-48.9%, and Florence 50.6%-48.1%, while losing majority-Black counties like Williamsburg (34.5%-64.5%), Marion (39.2%-60.2%), Marlboro (44.2%-55.2%), and Lee (35.5%-63.5%).[90][91]| County | Trump % | Biden % |
|---|---|---|
| Darlington | 50.8 | 47.5 |
| Dillon | 50.1 | 48.9 |
| Florence | 50.6 | 48.1 |
| Horry | 65.7 | 32.7 |
| Lee | 35.5 | 63.5 |
| Marion | 39.2 | 60.2 |
| Marlboro | 44.2 | 55.2 |
| Williamsburg | 34.5 | 64.5 |
| Georgetown | 56.0 | 43.0 |
| County | McMaster % | Cunningham % |
|---|---|---|
| Darlington | 58 | 42 |
| Dillon | 55.5 | 44.5 |
| Florence | 55.5 | 44.5 |
| Horry | 70 | 30 |
| Lee | 41 | 59 |
| Marion | 46 | 54 |
| Marlboro | 49.7 | 50.3 |
| Williamsburg | 40 | 60 |
| Georgetown | 60 | 40 |
Local Issues and Policy Debates
The Pee Dee region's local policy debates often revolve around combating entrenched poverty and fostering economic growth amid rural depopulation and limited infrastructure. According to the Pee Dee Regional Council of Governments' 2023 Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy, four of the six core counties—Dillon, Marion, Marlboro, and Williamsburg—meet federal criteria for persistent poverty, with area-wide poverty rates surpassing 25% and more than double the U.S. average of 11.5% as of 2022 data.[52] Policymakers debate the balance between aggressive tax abatements to lure manufacturing plants, as pursued in Florence and Darlington counties, and bolstering agricultural supports like irrigation upgrades, with rural advocates criticizing state economic incentives for disproportionately favoring coastal or urban projects over Pee Dee's tobacco and poultry-dependent economy.[93] Marion County's 2025 strategic plan emphasizes removing investment barriers through targeted zoning reforms and workforce programs, yet local councils face pushback from residents wary of over-reliance on external grants that may not yield sustainable jobs.[94] Education governance sparks ongoing contention, particularly over state-mandated interventions in failing districts plagued by low graduation rates—averaging below 80% in counties like Marion and Dillon—and teacher shortages exacerbated by low pay relative to urban areas. Williamsburg County School District 1, encompassing Pee Dee communities, exited state receivership on October 23, 2024, after a 2018 takeover for fiscal mismanagement and sub-50% proficiency in core subjects, highlighting debates on whether centralized oversight improves outcomes or stifles local innovation in curriculum and hiring.[95] Local officials advocate for expanded school choice vouchers, as echoed in Governor McMaster's 2025 State of the State address prioritizing parental options for low-income families, against unions and district administrators who argue such measures drain public school resources without addressing root causes like family instability and limited broadband access.[96] Environmental policies center on the Pee Dee River's management, where flooding from hurricanes like Florence in 2018 caused over $1 billion in regional damages and debates persist over agricultural runoff contributing to downstream sedimentation. The South Carolina Department of Environmental Services convened Pee Dee Basin Council meetings starting in June 2022 to develop water planning frameworks, balancing farmers' needs for unrestricted pesticide use against calls for enhanced wetlands restoration funded by federal infrastructure bills.[97] Stakeholders in Florence and Georgetown counties debate stricter erosion controls, with agribusiness groups contending that overregulation hampers crop yields in an area where farming employs 15-20% of the workforce, while environmental advocates cite elevated nutrient levels threatening fisheries.[52] Governance and cultural debates reflect the region's conservative leanings, including efforts to curb perceived ideological excesses in public institutions. In September 2025, State Representative Lucas McDaniel, representing Pee Dee districts, proposed the "Remembering Charlie Kirk Act" to streamline dismissal of university staff for social media posts deemed disruptive, following backlash against Coastal Carolina University employees' online rhetoric amid national campus tensions.[98] This initiative underscores local frustrations with academic environments influenced by external progressive funding, prioritizing institutional neutrality over free speech absolutism, though opponents warn of chilling effects on faculty retention in understaffed regional colleges.[99]Culture and Institutions
Cultural Heritage and Traditions
The Pee Dee region's cultural heritage originates with the indigenous Pee Dee people, a Siouan-speaking tribe associated with the South Appalachian Mississippian tradition, who inhabited the area from at least the 14th century and constructed ceremonial mound complexes like Town Creek Indian Mound in present-day North Carolina, reflecting influences extending into South Carolina.[23] Their material culture featured copper tools, shell-tempered pottery, and conch shell artifacts including beads, gorgets, and pins, evidencing trade networks and craftsmanship adapted to riverine environments.[24] European contact began in the early 16th century, with Spanish explorer Francisco de Chicora noting Pee Dee villages in 1521, but sustained colonial settlement from the 1740s onward displaced native populations while introducing plantation agriculture reliant on enslaved Africans, whose labor and traditions profoundly shaped subsequent regional identity.[100] [28] African American traditions, forged under slavery and persisting post-emancipation, form a core of Pee Dee heritage, including soul food cuisine derived from available staples like rice, pork, and native plants, alongside herbal remedies such as snakeroot for snakebites and boneset for fevers.[101] Practices like "jumping the broom"—a symbolic marriage ritual bypassing denied legal unions—and intricate quilting by groups such as Bernice's Quilting Club, which embed storytelling patterns, preserve communal memory and resilience.[101] Gullah-influenced elements, though more pronounced coastally, appear inland through haint blue paint on doorways (a lime-indigo mixture warding off spirits) and Watch Night services on December 31, commemorating emancipation and religious continuity from enslavement eras.[101] Cemeteries like Foundry Hill in Chesterfield County serve as repositories of slave-era burials, underscoring demographic realities where enslaved Africans often outnumbered white settlers.[101] [28] Contemporary traditions emphasize agricultural and performative legacies through annual festivals, such as the South Carolina Pecan Festival in Florence—held since 2005 and drawing tens of thousands—which integrates music across nine stages, pecan-centric cuisine, and family activities tied to the region's historic nut production.[102] [103] The Harvesting Heritage: Pee Dee Palate, hosted by the South Carolina State Museum, spotlights Black foodways with live demonstrations of dishes like Chicken Bog (a rice-based stew) and tastings of local strawberries and pecans, linking culinary practices to antebellum agriculture in settlements like Jamestown.[104] Cheraw's status as the birthplace of jazz pioneer Dizzy Gillespie in 1917 underscores a musical thread, complemented by venues like the Francis Marion University Performing Arts Center hosting concerts and theater.[105] ArtFields, an annual event in Lake City since 2010, transforms downtown into a venue for over 40 international artists, promoting visual arts amid Pee Dee's rural context.[103] These events collectively sustain a heritage blending native, African, and European strands, often centered on communal gatherings rather than formalized rituals.Media, Arts, and Community Life
Local media in the Pee Dee region primarily consists of television stations affiliated with major networks, serving Florence and surrounding counties with news, weather, and sports coverage. WBTW News13, based in Myrtle Beach but extending to the Pee Dee, provides breaking news and local reporting for areas including Florence and Darlington counties.[106] Similarly, WMBF News offers live updates and First Alert Weather for Florence and the broader region.[107] Print and digital outlets include SCNow.com, which delivers daily news on crime, politics, and community events in Florence, and The Post and Courier's Pee Dee edition, focusing on regional business, sports, and local issues.[108][109] Arts and culture in the Pee Dee emphasize local heritage through museums, galleries, and festivals that highlight regional history and creativity. The Florence County Museum features exhibitions of Pee Dee artifacts, including works by native artist William H. Johnson, alongside educational programs and family workshops.[110] Annual events such as the South Carolina Pecan Festival in Florence integrate art displays, live music, and culinary traditions, drawing visitors to celebrate agricultural roots.[103] Other festivals, including the Florence Food Truck Festival and Pee Dee Farmers Market, foster community engagement with local vendors and performances.[111] Community life revolves around nonprofit organizations and events that address youth development, philanthropy, and social services across the region's counties. The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Pee Dee Area serve youth through after-school programs aimed at productivity and responsibility, particularly in underserved areas.[112] The Eastern Carolina Community Foundation supports grants and initiatives in Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Marlboro, and Marion counties to enhance quality of life via philanthropy.[113] Groups like the Pee Dee Coalition organize events to combat family violence and child abuse, while broader activities include agricultural festivals and extension programs from institutions like Clemson University.[114][115]Education and Research Facilities
The Pee Dee region of South Carolina features several higher education institutions emphasizing undergraduate degrees, technical training, and agricultural research tailored to local economic needs. Francis Marion University, a public four-year institution founded in 1970 and located in Florence, serves primarily students from the Pee Dee area with an enrollment of approximately 4,261 students across its 832-acre campus, offering programs in liberal arts, sciences, business, and education.[116] The university maintains a student-faculty ratio supporting personalized instruction, with about 95% of its students from South Carolina.[117] Technical colleges provide accessible two-year programs focused on workforce development. Florence-Darlington Technical College, established in 1964 and serving Florence, Darlington, and Marion counties through multiple campuses, delivers associate degrees, diplomas, and certificates in fields such as health sciences, industrial technologies, and business, with an emphasis on economic development and seamless transfer to four-year universities.[118] [119] Northeastern Technical College, based in Cheraw with additional sites in Pageland, Bennettsville, and Dillon, offers over 20 associate degrees and numerous certificates in areas like nursing, administrative support, and manufacturing, supporting rural Pee Dee communities through continuing education and online options.[120] Private institutions complement public offerings, including Coker University in Hartsville, a liberal arts college providing bachelor's degrees in disciplines such as psychology, business, and education, with initiatives like the Pee Dee Scholars program to bolster STEM access for low-income regional students.[121] The University of South Carolina School of Medicine's Florence Regional Campus trains third- and fourth-year medical students through clinical rotations, addressing healthcare education gaps in the area.[122] Research facilities center on agriculture, vital to the region's economy. The Clemson University Pee Dee Research and Education Center in Florence conducts applied research on crop systems, including peanuts, cotton, and alternative plants, to enhance yield, pest management, and sustainability, while delivering extension education to farmers for economic stability.[70]Infrastructure and Urban Areas
Major Cities and Population Centers
Florence is the largest city and primary population center in the Pee Dee region, situated in Florence County with an estimated population of 40,950 as of 2025.[123] It functions as the regional hub for commerce, healthcare, and transportation, encompassing the Florence Metropolitan Statistical Area, which had a population of approximately 205,581 in 2023.[124] Other significant population centers include smaller cities that primarily serve as county seats and local anchors, often with economies tied to agriculture, manufacturing, and retail. Hartsville, the largest city in Darlington County, has an estimated population of 7,378.[125] Georgetown, in Georgetown County along the coast, reports 8,926 residents.[126] The following table summarizes populations of key Pee Dee cities based on 2025 estimates:| City | County | Population |
|---|---|---|
| Florence | Florence | 40,950 |
| Georgetown | Georgetown | 8,926 |
| Hartsville | Darlington | 7,378 |
| Bennettsville | Marlboro | 6,312 |
| Dillon | Dillon | 6,172 |
| Marion | Marion | 6,047 |
| Darlington | Darlington | 5,967 |
| Mullins | Marion | 3,803 |