Welcome to Blocker White Choice Properties! Talk about initative, commitment, and results, and you're talking about Blocker White ChoiceProperties. We realize that buying and selling real estate are two of the biggest decisions that most of us will make in our lives. We also realize that good service demands time, patience, skills, and complete honesty.
I would love to assist you in every step of the way, whether buying or selling. I am an agent that will always be there for you.

 

Meet Karen...

My husband and I reside in Colleton County ,where I have been a resident my entire life. We share our life with our two sons, daughter in law, and beautiful grandchild. I could not imagine living or raising a family anywhere other than South Carolina's Lowcountry. I have a strong Christian faith which I incorporate in my personal and professional life daily.
 
I have been in the Real Estate industry for over eight years now and truly love every minute of it.When the opportunity arose for me to open my own company, I received the blessing of finding the most wonderful business partner any one could ask for, Sara White.    We opened Blocker and White in October of 2009 and we have been growing and thriving, with the Lord's Blessing, daily. We look forward to serving both our clients and community everyday. 

 

 

Our History :   

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The land that  was to become South Carolina was an early outpost of Spain, France, Spain again, and finally, England.    In 1670 King Charles II of England established a settlement at Charles Towne.

        The first settlement of Colleton County was Willtown settled on the Edisto River (near Jacksonboro) in 1682 at the time the county lines were drawn.   It was first named New London by the Lords Proprietors and was renamed by 1708.  There were at that time boat docks, small shops, and two churches.  It was at Willtown that a ferry operated across the south Edisto River, which in colonial days was called the Pon Pon (an Indian name given to the last twenty miles of the Edisto River).    A stagecoach was later built from Charleston to Savannah which went through Willtown.

        Willtown's plan called for 250  lots and 62 blocks with 17 streets laid in a grid pattern.  Four acres each were reserved for a school and an Episcopal church and parsonage.  An acre each were planned for a market town  and a town garden.   Willtown was an important regional trade center until the 1740s but it declined after epidemics of malaria during the summer months, afterward being plundered by the British soldiers during the Revolution.Although it never recovered as a merchant trade center, Willtown became a popular summer village, later becoming part of Charleston County.  The place where Willtown once stood is now Willtown Plantation.

~Originally the Indian settlement of Pon Pon, the town of Jacksonborough took its name for John Jackson who was granted land along the Edisto River in 1701.  Around 1735 it was recognized as a settlement, and a plan of the town drawn in 1780 shows 113 town lots.  Jacksonborough became the county seat with a courthouse and jail.      The first free school was established in Jacksonborough in 1744, and early Methodist and Episcopal churches were built.

         

Colleton County is also a cornucopia of wildlife and natural beauty ....

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