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Beaufort's 110 Years of Parris Island Marines/BCHS Annual Meeting

  • Beaufort Branch Library Meeting Room 311 Scott Street Beaufort, SC, 29902 United States (map)

Parris Island's rich history started long before the Lords Proprietors deeded the property to Alexander Parris in 1710.  Shell middens reflect human presence over 4000 years ago.  Europeans attempted colonization from 1562.  At its southern tip, the colony of Santa Elena was the capital of Spanish Florida 1566-1576.  During our Civil War, Parris Island plantations produced both white Confederate leaders and black Union soldiers.  In this presentation, retired Marine Stephen Price will focus upon the 110 year-old story of  Parris Island's most current residents; the Parris Island United States Marine Corps.

Join us to learn how Beaufort became the home of the USMC! 

In collaboration with the Beaufort District Collection, as part of our “Historically Speaking” series.

Stephen Price joined the Marine Corps from Oklahoma in 1982. He served in the infantry for four years and was a weapons instructor from 1986 to 1990 at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island. While stationed at Parris Island he started working and volunteering at museums in Savannah Georgia. He began volunteering at the Parris Island Museum in 2004 and in 2012 he was hired as a museum technician. Mr. Price has been a student of history for many years. His focus of study is the U.S. Marine Corps and its legacy of valor. Since volunteering and working at the Parris Island Museum he has given numerous talks on and off the Depot for military and civilian organizations. In addition to his duties at the museum he currently serves as an instructor at Drill Instructors school on Parris Island.