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Sporting Clays Fundraiser at Broxton Bridge Benefits MUSC Children's Hospital

Broxton Bridge Plantation hosted a sporting clays shoot April 5 benefiting MUSC's Shaun Jenkins Children's Hospital, with individual entry at $125 and shells at $13 a box on-site.

Sarah Chen··2 min read
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Sporting Clays Fundraiser at Broxton Bridge Benefits MUSC Children's Hospital
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Broxton Bridge Plantation in Ehrhardt hosted the "Log A Load for Kids Sporting Clays" fundraiser on April 5, directing proceeds to the Shaun Jenkins Children's Hospital at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston through one of the state's longest-running forestry-community giving campaigns.

The event drew participants from South Carolina's timber and forest products industry, organizing 100 rounds across 15 stations with registration opening at 2:00 p.m. and a post-shoot meal to close the afternoon. Standard individual entry ran $125, with shells not included in that fee but available on-site at $13 per box. Organizers also offered two sponsorship tiers: $275 covered one shooter with shells included, and a gold-level sponsorship of $500 or more covered two shooters with shells.

Lin Houck of Collum's Lumber Products in Allendale coordinated registration, accepting mailed checks at PO Box 535, Allendale, SC 29810. Organizers set April 6 as the pre-registration deadline, and the reliance on advance checks pointed to a deliberate approach to managing field size ahead of the event.

Broxton Bridge Plantation, a major private sporting and events property outside Ehrhardt, gave the fundraiser a full clay course and hospitality infrastructure that few venues in the region can match. The 15-station, 100-round format runs several hours including safety briefings and scorekeeping, making it a full-day commitment suited to intermediate and advanced shooters. Sponsored teams and individual participants competed for prizes before sitting down to the included meal.

"Log A Load for Kids" has built its model around the forest products sector's capacity to organize giving around shared community priorities, pairing sporting events with pediatric causes across the state. MUSC's Shaun Jenkins Children's Hospital, based in Charleston, serves pediatric patients from across the Lowcountry and beyond, making it a natural beneficiary for a campaign rooted in small-town timber country. The event also generated modest local economic activity, pulling nonlocal participants into Ehrhardt and the surrounding area for lodging, fuel, and food.

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