Cheraw State Park
South Carolina

Cheraw State Park

Available Activities
  • Hiking
  • Camping
  • Swimming
  • Fishing
  • Golfing

South Carolina’s Oldest State Park — Where the CCC Built a Golf Course in the Longleaf Pines — Cheraw State Park in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, established 1934, oldest park in the SC system, 18-hole championship golf course, 360-acre Lake Juniper (built by CCC), swimming, camping, cabins, fishing, hiking Turkey Oak Trail, Sandhills region, longleaf pine habitat, endangered red-cockaded woodpecker — Chesterfield County, SC

In 1934, young men of the Civilian Conservation Corps — Depression-era workers paid $30 a month to build America’s parks — dammed a creek in the South Carolina Sandhills and created Lake Juniper. They built cabins from local timber. They laid trails through the longleaf pines. And they created the first state park in South Carolina.

Ninety years later, Cheraw State Park still operates on the bones the CCC built. The 360-acre lake is still there. The pines are taller. And an 18-hole championship golf course now winds through the same forest where endangered red-cockaded woodpeckers drill their nesting cavities.

What to Do

ActivityDetails
Golf18-hole championship course winding through longleaf pine and turkey oak forest. The course was designed to protect the surrounding habitat — you’re golfing through an endangered species habitat. Affordable green fees for a course of this quality. Pro shop and rental clubs available
Lake Juniper360 acres of cypress-lined water built by the CCC in the 1930s. Kayak, canoe, and paddleboat rentals. Non-motorized boats and motors up to 9.9 hp allowed. The cypress trees standing in the water — Spanish moss hanging from their branches — are quintessential South Carolina
FishingLargemouth bass, catfish, bream, and crappie in Lake Juniper. Bank fishing, dock fishing, and boat fishing. A boat-in primitive camping area lets you fish remote coves. Dawn and dusk are best — the lake mirrors the sky
Camping & CabinsLakefront campsites for tents and RVs. Group camping areas. Rental cabins in the pine woods — some CCC-era structures. The campground is shaded by the same longleaf pines the CCC planted
HikingTurkey Oak Trail — 4.5-mile loop through Sandhills habitat: longleaf pine, turkey oak, wiregrass. Mountain biking and equestrian trails also available. The Sandhills terrain is gently rolling — sandy soil, open forest, dappled light
SwimmingDesignated swimming area on Lake Juniper. Scenic boardwalk along the lake edge through cypress wetlands and over the spillway. The water is tea-colored from tannins — perfectly clean, just stained by cypress

The Sandhills & History

FeatureDetails
The SandhillsCheraw sits in the Carolina Sandhills — a band of sandy, well-drained soil running across the midlands. This ancient coastal plain (it was shoreline 65 million years ago) supports a unique ecosystem: longleaf pine savanna, maintained by periodic fire
Longleaf PineLongleaf pine forests once covered 90 million acres of the southeastern US. Today, less than 3% remain. Cheraw protects one of the best remaining stands in South Carolina. The trees grow 80–100 feet tall with an open, park-like canopy
Red-Cockaded WoodpeckerFederally endangered. These woodpeckers excavate nesting cavities in living longleaf pines — the only woodpecker species to do so. Cheraw’s old-growth pines provide critical habitat. Look for white resin streaks around cavity entrances
The CCCThe Civilian Conservation Corps built Cheraw State Park between 1934 and 1942. Their dam created Lake Juniper. Their stonework, timber cabins, and trail systems survive as testaments to Depression-era craftsmanship. The park is listed on the National Register of Historic Places

Best Time to Visit

SeasonBest For
Spring (Mar–May)🌸 Dogwood and azalea blooms. Golf in perfect weather. Bass spawning. Wildflowers in the wiregrass understory. The Sandhills at their most alive
Fall (Oct–Nov)🍂 Turkey oaks turning gold and rust. Cool golf weather. Fishing excellent. Fewer visitors. The longleaf pines stay green against autumn color
Summer (Jun–Aug)Swimming. Hot (90°F+) but the lake cools you. Camping. The pine forest provides shade. Evening thunderstorms are dramatic
Winter (Dec–Feb)Mild (40–55°F). Golf still possible. Woodpecker watching — easier without leaves. The lake quiet. Off-season cabin rates

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it really the oldest state park in South Carolina?

Yes — Cheraw was established in 1934, making it the first park in the South Carolina state park system. It’s part of the wave of state parks created by the CCC during the New Deal era.

Why is the lake water brown?

Tannins from cypress trees stain the water tea-colored — it’s perfectly natural and safe. This is characteristic of Southeastern blackwater lakes. The water is clean; the color is just dissolved organic compounds from the trees.

⛳ A Golf Course Through Endangered Habitat. A Lake the CCC Built. And Pines That Were Here Before the Colony.

South Carolina’s oldest state park. A 360-acre cypress lake stained tea-brown. An 18-hole course where woodpeckers nest in the fairway trees. And Depression-era craftsmanship still standing after 90 years.

🗺️ Official Park Page

Last updated: April 26, 2026

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