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Julian Bonham Shand

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Julian Bonham Shand

Birth
Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, USA
Death
17 Jan 1999 (aged 90)
Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, USA
Burial
Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Columbia - Graveside service for Julian Bonham Shand, 90, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday in Elmwood Memorial Gardens.

Memorials may be made to The Church of the Transfiguration, Saluda, N.C. 28773.
The family will be at 4412 Chicora St. Dunbar Funeral Home is in charge.

Mr. Shand died Sunday, Jan. 17, 1999. Born in Columbia, he was a son of the late Gadsden Edwards and Patience Bonham Shand, grandson of SC Governor Milledge Luke Bonham and a great-grandson of the Rev. Peter J. Shand, longtime rector of Trinity Church. Educated at the Bon Air School, Columbia High and Baylor School, he received A.B. and C.E. degrees from the University of South Carolina. He was a member of the SC Society of Engineers, a former president of the SC Chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa, ODK, The Columbia Cotillion Club and Trinity Cathedral where he was a former vestryman.

Mr. Shand was employed as a structural design engineer with the American Bridge Co., the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, the SC State Highway Department and Portland Cement Association. He was adjunct professor and associate professor of civil engineering at USC School of Engineering and had a consulting structural engineering practice in Columbia from 1946 until 1973. He worked on nine major buildings at USC including Capstone and the Energy Facility Building. He was involved with the erection of the old SC Archives Building, the science wing at Dreher High School, the Masonic Building, The Lorick parking garage all in Columbia, the First Baptist Church in Spartanburg, three buildings at Coker College, Technical Education Centers in Cheraw, Florence and Rock Hill and the Regional Manpower Center in Kingstree. He was also involved with major school projects in Chester County, Lancaster, Rock Hill, Hartsville, Orangeburg, Spartanburg, Augusta and Kingstree; church and Sunday School projects throughout South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia. His other projects included the Kershaw County Courthouse in Camden, Darlington County Agricultural Office Building, Clarendon County Hospital, Williamsburg County Hospital, Georgetown Hospital Addition and the Sumter County Courthouse Remodel and Addition. He was also associated with the structural design of Cornell Arms and Claire Towers in Columbia.

Surviving are his wife of 65 years, Lucy Pride McDonald Shand of the home; children, Dr. Julian Bonham Shand, Jr. of Rome, Ga. and Mrs. Thomas Bryant Edmunds of Columbia; grandchildren, Mrs. Timothy Brooks Owens, Peter Gregg Shand and Juliana Shand Edmunds, all of Columbia James Bonham Shand and Jonathan Heyward Shand, both of Atlanta and Dr. Thomas Bryant Edmunds, Jr. of Pt. Jefferson, N.Y.; and sister Mrs. Travis Chappell of Columbia.

He was predeceased by sister, Mrs. Charles L. Adams, and brother, Gadsden E. Shand, Jr. and Robert Wallace Shand.

Published in the State, Tuesday, January 19, 1999


Columbia - Graveside service for Julian Bonham Shand, 90, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday in Elmwood Memorial Gardens.

Memorials may be made to The Church of the Transfiguration, Saluda, N.C. 28773.
The family will be at 4412 Chicora St. Dunbar Funeral Home is in charge.

Mr. Shand died Sunday, Jan. 17, 1999. Born in Columbia, he was a son of the late Gadsden Edwards and Patience Bonham Shand, grandson of SC Governor Milledge Luke Bonham and a great-grandson of the Rev. Peter J. Shand, longtime rector of Trinity Church. Educated at the Bon Air School, Columbia High and Baylor School, he received A.B. and C.E. degrees from the University of South Carolina. He was a member of the SC Society of Engineers, a former president of the SC Chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa, ODK, The Columbia Cotillion Club and Trinity Cathedral where he was a former vestryman.

Mr. Shand was employed as a structural design engineer with the American Bridge Co., the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, the SC State Highway Department and Portland Cement Association. He was adjunct professor and associate professor of civil engineering at USC School of Engineering and had a consulting structural engineering practice in Columbia from 1946 until 1973. He worked on nine major buildings at USC including Capstone and the Energy Facility Building. He was involved with the erection of the old SC Archives Building, the science wing at Dreher High School, the Masonic Building, The Lorick parking garage all in Columbia, the First Baptist Church in Spartanburg, three buildings at Coker College, Technical Education Centers in Cheraw, Florence and Rock Hill and the Regional Manpower Center in Kingstree. He was also involved with major school projects in Chester County, Lancaster, Rock Hill, Hartsville, Orangeburg, Spartanburg, Augusta and Kingstree; church and Sunday School projects throughout South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia. His other projects included the Kershaw County Courthouse in Camden, Darlington County Agricultural Office Building, Clarendon County Hospital, Williamsburg County Hospital, Georgetown Hospital Addition and the Sumter County Courthouse Remodel and Addition. He was also associated with the structural design of Cornell Arms and Claire Towers in Columbia.

Surviving are his wife of 65 years, Lucy Pride McDonald Shand of the home; children, Dr. Julian Bonham Shand, Jr. of Rome, Ga. and Mrs. Thomas Bryant Edmunds of Columbia; grandchildren, Mrs. Timothy Brooks Owens, Peter Gregg Shand and Juliana Shand Edmunds, all of Columbia James Bonham Shand and Jonathan Heyward Shand, both of Atlanta and Dr. Thomas Bryant Edmunds, Jr. of Pt. Jefferson, N.Y.; and sister Mrs. Travis Chappell of Columbia.

He was predeceased by sister, Mrs. Charles L. Adams, and brother, Gadsden E. Shand, Jr. and Robert Wallace Shand.

Published in the State, Tuesday, January 19, 1999



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