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Routes USA South CarolinaGreenville
SC Travelers Rest to Greenville and back to TR
Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Greenville, South Carolina, USA

SC Travelers Rest to Greenville and back to TR

Length18.8 mi
Elev. Gain288.6 ft
Est. Steps43000
Created by Gary

SC Travelers Rest to Greenville and back to TR Introduction

SC Travelers Rest to Greenville and back to TR is a 18.8 mile (43,000-step) route located near Greenville, South Carolina, USA. This route has an elevation gain of about 288.6 ft and is rated as hard. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.

Map of SC Travelers Rest to Greenville and back to TR

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Attractions Near SC Travelers Rest to Greenville and back to TR

© Wikipedia © OpenStreetMap

Cleveland Park (Greenville, South Carolina)

Park
Cleveland Park is the largest park in Greenville, South Carolina, much of its more than 120 acres being greenway along Richland Creek and the Reedy River near the city's "most elegant neighborhoods."On December 31, 1924, with encouragement from Greenville Park Commission chairman John Alexander McPherson, prominent Greenvillean William Choice Cleveland donated a crescent-shaped 110 acres on the southeast side of town to be used as a park and playground, a recreational area he hoped would complement his new housing development, Cleveland Forest, and would include an equestrian park and paddocks where residents could board their horses.

Greenville Zoo

Tourist Attraction
The Greenville Zoo is a zoo in Greenville, South Carolina, which opened in 1960.

Falls Park on the Reedy

Place
Falls Park on the Reedy is a 32-acre (130,000 m2) park adjacent to downtown Greenville, South Carolina, in the historic West End district. Considered the birthplace of Greenville, the park was founded in 1967 when the Carolina Foothills Garden Club reclaimed 26 acres (110,000 m2) of land that had been previously used by textile mills.

First National Bank (Greenville, South Carolina)

Place
First National Bank, also known as Carolina First Bank, is a historic bank building located at Greenville, South Carolina. Designed by architect Silas L. Trowbridge of Atlanta, Georgia, it was built in 1938, and is a 2 1/2-story, sandstone sheathed steel frame Art Deco building. The building was enlarged in 1952.

Carolina Supply Company

Place
Carolina Supply Company is a historic commercial building located at Greenville, South Carolina. It was built in 1914, and is a four-story, brick building in a utilitarian Renaissance Revival style. The building housed a textile and industrial supply company that supplied mills with equipment and supplies.

Centre Stage (theater)

Building
Centre Stage is a year-round, 285-seat theater in downtown Greenville, South Carolina. The theater maintains a full-time staff of seven and produces between six and eight mainstage productions each year, in addition to a wide variety of other entertainment and nightlife activities. Actors, directors and other theater artists are hired both locally and regionally on an as-needed basis.

Swamp Rabbit Trail

Building
The Prisma Health Swamp Rabbit Trail is a 19.9-mile (32.0 km) multi-use rail trail in Greenville County, South Carolina, that largely follows the bed of a former railroad that had been nicknamed after the indigenous swamp rabbit. South-to-north the current trail begins at Greenville Technical College, crosses the city of Greenville, proceeds through Falls Park and the campus of Furman University, and ends about a mile north of the Travelers Rest city limits.

Liberty Bridge at Falls Park on the Reedy

Place
The Liberty Bridge is a pedestrian bridge in Greenville, South Carolina. It is located at Falls Park on the Reedy, where it crosses the Reedy River above the Reedy River Falls.

Wyche Pavilion

Place
The Wyche Pavilion is the two-story, open-air shell of a historic building in downtown Greenville, South Carolina, used in the 21st century as an event venue. As part of the Reedy River Industrial District, the building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 14, 1979.The brick structure was built in 1904 by noted Greenville engineer and industrial architect Joseph Emory Sirrine (1872–1947) with large windows of the same size on both floors, a flat roof, and a cupola at its center.

Reedy River Falls Historic Park and Greenway

Place
Reedy River Falls Historic Park and Greenway, now known as Falls Park, runs along both banks of Reedy River from the falls to Church Street, in Greenville, South Carolina.
Last updated: Jun 1, 2026

Route Details

Length

18.8 mi

Elev. Gain

288.6 ft

Est. Steps

43000
Created by
Gary
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