• HOME
  • BEST OF PARTY PHOTOS
  • FEATURES
    • Best Of Cover Shoot
    • Pet Owner’s Stories
    • People
    • Places
    • Issues
    • Remembering
    • Things
    • To Do
  • DEPARTMENTS
    • Finance / Real Estate
      • Financial Articles
      • Real Estate
        • Real Estate Experts
        • Top 10 Most Expensive Homes Sold
        • Articles
    • Around Town
    • Business
      • Belle Hall Shopping Center
      • Lowcountry Women in Business
      • MP Business
    • Dwellings
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion & Beauty
    • Food & Drink
    • Giving Back
    • Health & Wellness
    • Love & Marriage
    • Pets
    • Relax & Retire
    • Sports & Fitness
  • Read Magazine
  • MORE MAGS
    • Charleston Women 👩‍🏫🏢
    • Lowcountry Cuisine 🧀🍷
    • Best of Mt Pleasant Mag 🏆🏆
    • MP Business Mag 🏢
    • MP Pets 🐶🐱
    • Charleston Independent School Directory 🏫
    • MP Senior Living 👴👵
    • More Mags
      • IOP Mag
      • SI Mag
      • MP Town Hall Magazine
  • DIRECTORIES
    • Attorney Directory
    • 2025 Charleston Wedding Venues
    • Pool Builders/Services Directory
    • Financial Planners
    • Mount Pleasant Area Hotel Directory
    • East Cooper Worship Guide
    • East Cooper Fitness Directory
    • Senior Living Directory
    • 2023 Local CPA Tax Directory
    • Mount Pleasant Apartment Directory
  • SUBSCRIBE

Mount Pleasant Magazine

Mount Pleasant Magazine is the premier lifestyle magazine for Mount Pleasant, SC. Read about local news, events, businesses, people, and more. Subscribe today or read our digital magazine online.

  • Best of Mount Pleasant
    • 2025 Best of Mount Pleasant Including Previous Years
    • Best of Mount Pleasant Winner Articles
    • Best Of Party Photos
  • Podcasts
    • Mount Pleasant Podcast
    • Carolina Real Estate Podcast
    • Georgetown the Podcast
    • Coastal Home Podcast Video Tour
    • Best of Mount Pleasant Podcast
    • Hammock Coast Podcast
    • More Podcasts
      • Charleston Women Podcast
      • Isle of Palms Podcast
      • Charleston Pet Podcast
      • Charleston Wedding Podcast
  • Top Ten Homes Sold
  • Advertise
    • Advertise With Us
    • Media Kit
    • Video Testimonials
  • About Our Team
  • MORE
    • Real Estate Experts
    • MP Town Hall
    • Attorney Directory
    • News
    • MP Neighborhoods
    • East Cooper Online Network
    • Contact

Highway 41 and the Phillips Community: ‘This Area Fits the People Who Live Here’

Posted by MPM 1 Comment

Mount Pleasant, SC sign on Hwy 41 reads: This community, settled along Horlbeck Creek in the 1870s by freedmen, was named after the Phillips Plantation. Former slaves of the Laurel Hill, Parker Island, and Boone Hall Plantations purchased the land in ten acre parcels and younded the Phillips Community. The freedmen who settled here were middle class tradesmen and successful businessmen whose descendants still own the land. (Continued on the other side) Erected in 2002

Richard Habersham’s family has been a fixture in the Phillips Community for nearly a century-and-a-half, when former slaves who had served their masters on at least three area plantations bought land along what is now Highway 41 and set out to make a life as free men and women. The 64-year-old has always lived on the land his ancestors purchased in the mid-1870s.

And he’s concerned that the community that has been his home for his entire life could become a victim of Mount Pleasant’s meteoric growth.

Habersham, who has served as president of the Phillips Community Association for the past 19 years, remembers when the area now bounded roughly by Park West, Horlbeck Creek, Joe Rouse Road and the Mount Pleasant Waterworks storage tank was a collection of small farms. Traffic was virtually nonexistent; few motorists could be found passing through on Highway 41.

“You could lie out in the middle of the road if you wanted to,” he said. “After 7 or 7:30 at night, you might see one car an hour.”

That, of course, hasn’t been the case for quite some time. Residential communities have sprouted along the corridor in recent decades, including sprawling Park West, Dunes West, RiverTowne, Planter’s Pointe, The Colonnade, Brickyard Plantation and Horlbeck Creek. One lane each way simply isn’t enough to get all those people where they want to go in a reasonable amount of time. The town of Mount

John Wright (left) with Richard Habersham
John Wright (left), and Richard Habersham at the site of what eventually will be a two-building complex: a community center and a museum.

Pleasant, Charleston County, the state of South Carolina and the federal government have developed a possible solution to the problem: adding two lanes to the road all the way from Highway 17 to the bridge over the Wando River in Berkeley County. That plan, according to Habersham, could be the death knell for the Phillips Community.

He pointed out that the width of a four-lane road would force at least 20 homeowners to find a new place to live, adding that the government probably would not give them fair value for their property.

“It would be more a hindrance and a hardship than anything else. It would destroy the community,” he stated, citing other black communities whose demise he said can be chalked up to growth in the Mount Pleasant area. “Look at 4 Mile. That’s gone. 7 Mile is gone. 8 Mile is gone.”

Habersham has a plan he thinks will help alleviate the traffic issue on Highway 41 and at the same time keep the community intact. He would like to see the project, which isn’t scheduled for completion until 2025, consist of one lane each way and a turn lane for approximately a mile north of Joe Rouse Road. He has no problem with a four-lane road north and south of the Phillips Community.

“If we had a center lane, traffic wouldn’t be held up when people are turning,” he said. “We want to be able to use the road without destroying the community. Four and five generations have lived there, and now people will have to get out. The community will be destroyed if the town and county don’t do what’s right.”

Phillips, around 550 acres of land at one time but now smaller, consists of around 300 houses and is home to roughly 750 people, according to John Wright, who heads the African-American Settlement Community Historical Commission, an organization launched in 2016 to “protect and preserve the existing characteristics of African-American Settlement Communities and enhance the quality of life for current and future generations of residents of the African-American settlement communities.” Wright, whose ancestors arrived in Phillips in the 1890s, said the group he leads is “100 percent with the community.”

“I have family that will be affected. We all have a stake in this,” Wright pointed out. “We will raise so much hell. I’ll stand in front of the bulldozers if I have to. We’re going to fight tooth and nail. If I have to go to jail, I’ll go to jail.”

It will be a while before Wright must decide whether to risk his safety by blocking construction equipment with his body. Work isn’t expected to begin until 2022. Under the National Environmental Policy Act, an extensive review must be completed before any dirt can be turned. Among the issues that will be studied is the effect the project will have on the people who live in the Phillips Community. Some of them are residents of Mount Pleasant, while others are located in unincorporated areas of Charleston County.

State Sen. Larry Grooms, who represents parts of Charleston and Berkeley counties and chairs the Senate Transportation Committee, encouraged members of the Phillips Community to work with Mount Pleasant and Charleston County to come up with the best possible plan for Highway 41. He said, however, that he doesn’t think the three-lane option will fly.

“I can’t see any scenario under which that would happen,” said Grooms. “From what I know of traffic counts, that project would fail from day one. The Federal Highway Administration will not cough up any money for it.”

“If we’re going to spend scarce tax dollars to fix the problem, we need to fix the problem,” he added. “And the problem is congestion. You have to have lane capacity.”

Nevertheless, both Grooms and Mount Pleasant Mayor Will Haynie agreed that the project won’t be defined until the NEPA process is completed. Haynie said he would support “the most community-friendly design we can get that provides the capacity that actually makes it a true fix for the traffic volume.”

“The bottom line is that none of us have the final say in the design of the road,” he added. “The cultural and natural resources have to be evaluated in the NEPA process. It is my stated goal and the goal of the town to protect our cultural communities, whether it’s Scanlonville, 10 Mile or Phillips.”

Though Phillips is a mostly African-American community and, according to Habersham, 90 percent of its residents can trace their ancestry back to the post-Civil War era, he insisted that the final design of Highway 41 is not a black versus white issue.

“White families live in the Phillips Community, and they’re just as adamant as we are,” he said. “It’s not a racial thing. It’s a quality of life thing. This area fits the people who live here.”

By Brian Sherman

Sharing is Caring

Possibly Related:

Mansfield Plantation entranceVoices of Our Ancestors Guide to Lowcountry Plantations The sunrise as seen from Capers Island, South Carolina.Camping on Capers Island: Survival Guide for First-timers

Filed Under: Issues

Advertisement

Comments

  1. Stephen Kelly says

    June 29, 2023 at 3:31 pm

    With 3 lanes thru the Philips community you will have a bottleneck at both ends as most of the traffic will still be traveling from rte. #17 to the wando river or from the wando river direction to rte. #17. It would be better for the Phillips community to have 4 lanes to move traffic out because with 3 lanes which would be 1/2 of the capacity there will be a solid line of bumper to. bumper traffic which would make it difficult to walk across the road.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search The Site

We're on Facebook We're on X (formerly Twitter) Mount Pleasant Magazine Youtube Channel We're on Pinterest Mount Pleasant Magazine Facebook Community We're on Instagram
Ad: South Carolina Federal Credit Union, enjoy life banking on the best.
Ad: Visit Woof Gang today!
Mount Pleasant Magazine Sep/Oct 2023 magazine coverREAD DIGITALLY
Read the digital magazine
now.
GRAB A COPY
Where can I pick up a copy of Mount Pleasant Magazine?
SUBSCRIBE
Get Mount Pleasant Magazine Delivered.
Ad: Premier Health and Wellness in Mount Pleasant, SC. Let’s Redesign Your Health & Wellness.
Read about the History of the Bridge Run
Visit Palmetto Christian Academy.org
Ad: 1st Choice AC, Heating, Plumbing and Gas, for the best AC Service for your home in Mount Pleasant, SC.
Pleasant Family Dentistry in Mount Pleasant, SC. Experience the BEST, and find out why we've been awarded 7 times in the BEST of MOUNT PLEASANT!
Ad: Visit Front Beach IOP and SHOP, DINE and DRINK in the SUNSHINE.
Ad: Get Carried Away - Real Food, Real Southern, Really Good!
Click for Stores & Services
on Coleman Boulevard
Coleman Blvd Merchant Alliance
Best of Mount Pleasant logo is a registered trademark
Ad: Every Day is a Good Dog Day at Michael's Barkery

Most Recent Posts

Georgetown’s New Gem: The Making of The George Hotel

Get the inside story on The George Hotel, Georgetown's exciting new addition! Host Bill Macchio sits down for a compelling conversation with Christy Whitlock, a Realtor and developer with The … Continue Reading

Georgetown, SC Rising: A Look at the City’s Dramatic Growth & Downtown Revival

Join host Scott Richards and Main Street Director Al Joseph for an insightful look into the remarkable transformation sweeping across Georgetown, SC. This video dives deep into the revitalization of … Continue Reading

The Rotary’s Biggest Splash: 2025 Charleston Duck Race in the Wando!

The Charleston Duck Race is back on the Wando River! Tune in as Evan Murray, the 'Head Duck' Fundraising Chair, joins host Brian Cleary to reveal all the details about this highly anticipated … Continue Reading

Front Street Georgetown

Opening Batch: Georgetown Crafts First Brewery

A craft beer fan and teacher from Cincinnati, Chase Runyan started brewing in his house by tinkering with kits and learning how to bottle the beer after fermentation. After making five or six batches … Continue Reading

Revolutionized: Georgetown’s Downtown Makeover

When the port city of Georgetown was laid out in 1729, merchant-oriented businesses and homes lined the land side of Front Street, originally called Bay Street, overlooking the sparkling Sampit River, … Continue Reading

Gold Standard: Georgetown’s Own Crowned Olympic Champion

When 23-year-old Nike athlete and Georgetown native Melissa Jefferson arrived at Hayward Field at the University of Oregon for the U.S. Olympic Team Trials in June, she was determined to secure her … Continue Reading

More Front Street Georgetown

SEARCH

Get Our Free Newsletter!
Mount Pleasant Apartments
Pleasant Family Dentistry
Water's Edge Dentistry
34 Waterway Island Drive

Copyright © 2025 · Mount Pleasant Magazine, All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy

▲