Environment

Nearly 1,000 acres protected in South Carolina’s fastest growing county

The Meyer Lake area of Jasper County makes up nearly 1,000 acres. The property has been protected from development in the state’s fastest growing county.
The Meyer Lake area of Jasper County makes up nearly 1,000 acres. The property has been protected from development in the state’s fastest growing county. Photo courtesy LOWCOUNTRY LAND TRUST, May 2026

Conservation leaders are celebrating the protection of nearly 1,000 acres in rapidly growing Jasper County, once a rural backwater that today faces increasing development pressures.

The state has protected the 972-acre Meyer Lake area and is preparing to open the property for public use this summer, according to a news release from the Lowcountry Land Trust, a conservation group that helped save the land from development. Saving the Meyer Lake area near the South Carolina-Georgia border helps the environment of both states, officials said.

“Conserving places like Meyer Lake not only strengthens a growing corridor of protected lands, but also helps safeguard clean water for Beaufort, Jasper, Effingham and Chatham counties by protecting natural wetlands and Savannah River drinking water sources,’’ according to a news release quoting Matt Williams, president and chief executive at the Lowcountry Land Trust.

The land trust was to hold a dedication ceremony with the state Department of Natural Resources, Ducks Unlimited and the S.C. Conservation Bank on Friday, May 22, in Hardeeville.

Jasper County, just inland from high-end Hilton Head Island near the Savannah River, is the fastest growing county in the United States since 2020, rising in population from 29,000 to 38,000, according to a recent New York Times story.

The Meyer Lake property is next to the federally protected Savannah National Wildlife Refuge and is part of a broader network of about 38,000 acres of preserved land in the area, conservationists said. The property includes a freshwater lake, an oxbow lake, isolated wetlands, hardwood forests and more than three miles of frontage on the Savannah River.

According to plans, the land will become a wildlife management area, a designation that generally allows hunting and fishing. It also will be designated as a heritage preserve, an area of protected land overseen by the state Department of Natural Resources.

Sammy Fretwell
The State
Sammy Fretwell has covered the environment beat for The State since 1995. He writes about an array of issues, including wildlife, climate change, energy, state environmental policy, nuclear waste and coastal development. He has won numerous awards, including Journalist of the Year by the S.C. Press Association in 2017. Fretwell is a University of South Carolina graduate who grew up in Anderson County. Reach him at 803 771 8537. Support my work with a digital subscription
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW