Cancel

Open app

Search

Millennium Pegasus

4.5 (2 reviews)

Millennium Pegasus Photos

Recommended Reviews - Millennium Pegasus

Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
Yelp app icon
Browse more easily on the app
Review Feed Illustration

11 days ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0
Photo of Bruce K.
2414
25891
75775

1 year ago

Helpful 6
Thanks 0
Love this 7
Oh no 0

Verify this business for free

Get access to customer & competitor insights.

Verify this business

William Church Whitner Statue - William Church Whitner Statue, Anderson

William Church Whitner Statue

4.0(1 review)
0.1 mi

Looking back to a time when we didn't have the utilities we have today and how we've come to take…read morethem for granted. This statue and the stone at it's feet point out some of how that history changed. The almost life-sized representation of the man is so accurate that you'd wonder why he's standing so still. The facial expression shows him perhaps looking at a lighted building that he owned. The marker reads, "Native son William Church Whitner developed the concept and spearheaded financing for the first hydroelectric plant to transmit power over a long distance in the South. On May 1, 1895, electricity travelled six miles from a generator at High Shoals on the Rocky River to downtown Anderson, S.C. "Whitner was born in 1864 and attended the University of South Carolina. After considering law, he chose a degree in Civil Engineering in 1885. He set out as a railroad engineer, but soon contracted typhoid fever. He was at home in Anderson recuperating when in 1889 the city hired him to build an electric plant and system for running water. He completed a steam engine in 1890, as a source for electricity, but his attention soon turned to hydropower as a more cost effective alternative. Whitner sought the advice of Nicola Tesla, famous for his work with (and later against) Thomas Edison and the invention of the alternating current motor. Whitner returned to Anderson in 1894 with designs for an AC-driven hydropower plant in hand. Less than a year later, the High Shoals Experiment succeeded and Whitner collected investors for the much larger Portman Shoals Hydroelectric Station on the Seneca River, completed in 1897. That plant transmitted electricity 11 miles, the longest line in the United States at that time. It was this harnessing of "white fire" and its delivery which caused Anderson to be called "The Electric City" -- applicable then, as applicable today! "Whitner would later marry Katherine Roddey of Rock Hill and partner with Dr. Gill Wylie to form the Catawba River Company, forerunner of Duke Power. This sculpture by artist Zan Wells was unveiled on October 12, 2004. Given to the citizens of Anderson to commemorate the centennial anniversary of Duke Power. A grant from the Duke Foundation, secured by the Anderson County Arts Center, made this sculpture the first in our community's Public Art Series. It depicts Whitner peering up, watch in hand, waiting for the street lights to illuminate with the power his plant supplied. "The Man Behind the Idea" lives on in the hearts of this community which now reaps the benefit of his lasting contribution." [Review 208 of 2025 - 1262 in South Carolina - 23772 overall]

Photos
William Church Whitner Statue - William Church Whitner Statue, Anderson

See all

William Church Whitner Statue, Anderson

Peg Leg Bates Statue - Peg Leg Bates Statue, Greenville

Peg Leg Bates Statue

4.0(1 review)
27.9 mi

Walking around downtown Greenville, you might spot this abstract sculpture with a small caption…read morebelow. It is at the corner of Spring Street and East Washington Avenue. The caption reads, "On his journey from The Liberty Theater in Greenville to the stages of New York City, 'Peg Leg' Bates danced around anything that dared get in his way." And it notes the sculptor is Joseph R. Thompson. The modernistic memorial was unveiled in 2013 and is near the historic Liberty Theater, where Bates was first discovered in 1926. Born in Fountain Inn, South Carolina, Bates lost his leg in a cotton mill accident at age 12 but refused to let his disability define him. His uncle crafted a wooden peg leg, allowing Bates to continue dancing and eventually rise to prominence in vaudeville, Broadway, and television, including multiple appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show. Bates not only broke racial barriers but also founded the Peg Leg Bates Country Club, a resort catering to African American clientele. This is a powerful reminder of Bates' legacy, inspiring future generations with his story of resilience and success. A must-see for those who appreciate history, dance, and the triumph of the human spirit. The statue was Greenville's 62nd piece of public art, further enriching the city's cultural landscape. [Review 251 of 2025 - 1271 in South Carolina - 23815 overall]

Photos
Peg Leg Bates Statue - Peg Leg Bates Statue, Greenville

Peg Leg Bates Statue, Greenville

Peg Leg Bates Statue - Peg Leg Bates Statue, Greenville

See all

Peg Leg Bates Statue, Greenville

Millennium Pegasus - publicart - Updated June 2026

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...