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930 Laurel Street

Finlay Park

This 12-acre green space, first created in the late 1840s, reopened in 1991 as Sidney Park. The following year it was renamed Finlay Park for Mayor Kirkman Finlay, who had sought to restore the then-delapidated space in the late 1980s as part of an initiative to beautify downtown Columbia.The park featured a man-made waterfall and cascading stream that fed into a lake.  

  • Finlay Park

    View of Finlay Park and downtown Columbia, 1990s. Historic Columbia collection

  • Finlay Park

    View of Finlay Park, 1990s. Historic Columbia collection

  • Finlay Park

    Finlay Park Fountain and Community Center, 1990s. Historic Columbia collection

Site of Sidney Park

Algernon Sidney Johnson’s vision for the beautification of Columbia in the late 1840s was the impetus for a park on the twelve acres of land stretching from Laurel to Blanding streets and from Assembly to Gadsden streets.  Trees and shrubbery were planted, and paths and roads were laid.  For the next fifty years, the park, named Sidney Park in Johnson’s honor, was “a place of pleasant and healthful resort.”

  • Sidney Park 1859

    View of Sidney Park from the John Taylor House, painted by Augustus Grinevald, circa 1859. Image courtesy South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia

  • Sidney Park 1869

    Detail depicting Sidney Park from Alexander Y. Lee's Map of the City of Columbia, S. C., 1869. Image courtesy South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia

Site of Seaboard Park

Throughout much of the late nineteenth century, railroads dictated the prosperity of towns across the United States.  In 1899, the Columbia City Council agreed to sell the park to the Seaboard Air Line Railroad.  It wanted the land for terminal facilities and threatened to move the rail line to Swansea if the city did not comply.  For the next ninety years, the Seaboard Park was a municipal eyesore.  The entire green space of Sidney Park was destroyed to make way for rail lines and warehouses.

  • Seaboard Park

    Postcard depicting the Seaboard Freight Yards, 1920s. Historic Columbia collection

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Historic Columbia

© 2023 Historic Columbia

Administrative Offices
1601 Richland Street
Columbia, SC 29201

Tours
All historic house and garden tours start at the Gift Shop at Robert Mills.
1616 Blanding Street
Columbia, SC 29201

Questions? Call (803) 252-7742.

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