Laurens, JohnAfter the British shifted military operations to the South, Laurens proposed that South Carolina arm slaves and grant them freedom in return for their military service.
Lebby, Nathaniel HBy June 1858 Lebby’s suction pump had been used to remove some 145,000 cubic yards of material, an unprecedented dredging achievement.
LeConte, JohnDuring his years in Savannah, LeConte wrote several scholarly articles, and in 1846 the University of Georgia appointed him as professor of natural philosophy (chemistry and physics).
LeConte, JosephPleased with his situation in Columbia, LeConte endeared himself to his students, took an active part in the cultural affairs of the city, and published articles on topics in geology, religion, art, and education.
Lee CountyThroughout its existence Lee County has been an agricultural community and sometimes is referred to as the “Garden Spot of the Carolinas.”
Lee, Robert GreeneLee’s ideas would eventually return home to South Carolina in the form of the fundamentalist movement that controlled the South Carolina Baptist Convention by the 1990s.
Lee, Rudolph EdwardIn 1907, in association with W. M. Riggs, Lee took on his first design project at Clemson, an expansion of one of the college barracks.
Lee, Samuel J.After relocating to Charleston, Lee began to practice law and went on to become one of the state’s most successful black lawyers.
Lee, Stephen DillPromoted to brigadier general, Lee was sent west to command artillery as the Confederacy attempted to stop the Federals from seizing control of the Mississippi River.
Leevy, Carroll MotonBarred by his race from receiving advanced medical training in South Carolina, Leevy was admitted to the University of Michigan Medical School.
Leevy, Isaac SamuelAs a strong proponent of minority education in a state that underfunded segregated black schools, Leevy pushed for the creation of Waverly Elementary School, Leevy Graded School (now Carver Elementary), and Booker T. Washington High School in Columbia.
Legaré, Hugh SwintonAs literary critics, Charleston conservatives such as Legaré were slower in accepting romantic theory and practice than were those in New York and Boston.
Legaré, James MathewesLegaré focused considerable time and energy on mechanical invention, including the development of a new type of encaustic tile, an inexpensive glazier’s putty, and a material he called “lignine” or “plastic cotton” from which he fashioned shingles and furniture.
Leigh, Sir EgertonLeigh gave earnest and unquestioned support to the British government’s colonial policies.
LeJau, FrancisLeJau worked for the more humane treatment of slaves. He denounced the law that permitted the physical mutilation of runaway slaves and carried on a veritable crusade again brutality, immorality, and profaneness.
Lettered OliveThe lettered olive is prolific on the South Carolina coast. Dr. Edmund Ravenel, a Charleston physician who attained international renown as a pioneer conchologist, first recognized the lettered olive in 1834.
Lever, Asbury FrancisLever achieved his greatest success during World War I when he successfully pushed the Food and Fuel Control Act (also called the Lever Food Act) through Congress in 1917.
Lewisohn, LudwigLewisohn’s first novel, The Broken Snare, was published in 1908. Trumpeted by the naturalist writer Theodore Dreiser, it was condemned in Charleston for the author’s advocacy of “free love.”
LexingtonThe opening of the Lexington Textile Mill in 1890 brought some 150 manufacturing jobs to the area, but the commerce of Lexington remained in the shadow of Columbia to the east and the twin towns of Leesville and Batesburg to the west. In 1894 and 1918 disastrous fires gutted Main Street.
Lexington CountyThe rapid expansion of the Columbia metropolitan area in the final decades of the twentieth century made Lexington one of the fastest-growing counties in the state. The county’s population more than tripled between 1960 and 2000, with most of the growth taking place in the Columbia suburbs of West Columbia, Cayce, and Irmo.