Though Shivar Spring Company has gone, evidence of its heyday persists. The company’s pump house still exists at the spring site, and green bottles bearing its trademark survive. The photographers noted below have generously provided images of these reminders of Shivar Spring Company’s history.
Photographs of Shivar Spring Company site, 2011
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
Courtesy of Chris Wargo (Hydro-Geologist, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control) and Andrea L’Hommedieu
Photographs of Shivar Spring Company bottles, 2012
- Courtesy of Tom Taylor and Andrea L’Hommedieu
- Shivar Springs crate and bottles. Photograph courtesy of Tom Taylor
- Courtesy of Tom Taylor and Andrea L’Hommedieu
Courtesy of Tom Taylor and Andrea L’Hommedieu













