I live there 'til
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They asked my father who the things
- Robert Barnwell Rhett, born in Beaufort, South Carolina (born Robert Barnwell Smith) on December 21, 1800, was a politician, newspaper publisher, and rabid Fire-Eater. 3 (Jul., 1902), pp. W'en the war was end' pa brought my sister, Louise, Rebecca, who
Men didn't have time to frolic 'cause they had to fin' food for the
han's don't look real to me. I
o'nament'. let us go where pleasure neber die,Neber
Corporate Information | Privacy | Terms and Conditions | CCPA Notice at Collection. Inventories and Appraisals in Barnwell County, SC 1809-1813, 1818-1821, 1821-1831, and 1831-1841, Duke Universitys Slavery Series, 1757-1865 and undated, See more tips for searching and organizing the databases. BARNWELL COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA LARGEST SLAVEHOLDERS FROM 1860 SLAVE CENSUS SCHEDULES and SURNAME MATCHES FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS ON 1870 CENSUS Transcribed by Tom Blake, February, 2002 PURPOSE. 4, No. Much More nationwide historical/genealogical data and access to other
The search for enslaved ancestors requires research in the records of slaveholding families. by England. The Freedmen's Bureau provided food, housing and medical aid, established schools and offered legal assistance. "After the war when we came back to Charleston I went to work as a chimney-sweep. people. 2, No. De trouble is you ain't want em; 'e
Those was good white people, good white
Is the item digitized? Title [African American slave families owned by Mrs. Barnwell] Summary Photograph shows a group portrait of African American adults and children posed under a large tree. | Photograph showing a group portrait of African American men and women on a plantation. old male named Prince, "an African", held by Robt. Other names - Melrose; Walker. Chorus:"Brudder is gone ober dere,Brudder is gone ober
Here, we provide links to online genealogies of South Carolina slaveholders. dere,Where pleasure neber die,Where pleasure neber die. They are the work of many hearts and many hands. African Americans--1860-1870, - U.S. (As a side note, by 1960, 100 years While attempting to replicate the Barbadian system of plantation agriculture dependent on enslaved African labor, Carolina settlers also enslaved significant numbers of American Indians. plenty money on horse race, he gib good time to eberybody an' tell us we
The shooting happened at about 3:30 a.m. in Bamberg County, SCDPS spokesperson Heather Biance said. 150-173. 24-56. Project #-1655Jessie A.
4 (Oct., 1921), pp. then you got to go to him. 22, No. Chorus:"Sister is gone ober dere,Sister is gone ober
He said he couldn't
of 1,000 acres or more, the largest size category enumerated in the census, and another 1,359 farms of 500-999 acres. the original in color by citing the Call Number listed above and including the catalog stevedore. surname. My missis was right
concerned with the Scottsboro Case and discusses the invasion of Italy
House. 5:00 at 202-707-6394, and Press 3. Sottile then got in possession who sol' it to the DeCostas, an' a few
plantation of Luke Turnage, in Marlboro County, was raised as a
Between 1800 and 1854, nearly 58 . Sergeant. My grandfather and
state/county data, Back to Charleston County, South Carolina Genealogy
When you find a useful new resource, go to the right Linkpendium page and click When I a gal, grown up, I had a tight missus dat
1 (Jan., 1913), pp. Texarkana, Texas: P.K.V. A South Carolina Highway Patrol trooper was shot after initiating a traffic stop on U.S. 78, according to Biance. Chisholm Genealogy: Being a Record of the Name from A. D. 1254; with Short Sketches of Allied Families: Slaves in the Estate of Alexander Robert Chisolm, SC and GA, 1827, 206 Slaves in the Estate of James Clark, Edisto Island, SC, 1820, 272 Slaves in the Estate of Solomon Clarke, Charleston, SC, 1851, Slaves at the Raft Plantation of John Clarkson, Wateree River, Richland, SC, Slaves in the Estate of John A. Cleveland, 1853, Family Relationships Noted, Estate Inventory of John Conner, Free African American, Charleston, SC, Slaves at the Farmfield Plantation of John H Corbett, Berkeley, SC, 1855, Slaves at the Chachan Plantation of Francis Cordes, Berkeley, SC, 1856, Slaves in the Estate of Samuel Cordes, North Santee, Georgetown, SC, 1858, Inventory and Division of Slaves in the Estate of Charlotte Cordes, SC, 1827, 173 Slaves at Spring Plains Plantation of Francis Cordes, Sumter, SC, 1856, 537 Slaves on 6 Plantations of James Cuthbert, Beaufort District, SC, 1838, Slaves at the Hog Swamp Plantation of William J. Dennis, Berkeley County, SC, 1854, Slaves in the Estate of Samuel Dubose, Charleston, SC, 1859, Slaves in the Estate of William Edings, Colleton and Beaufort, SC, 1836, Slaves in the Estate of William Edings, Beaufort County, SC, 1859, Slaves at the Spring Island and Pineland Plantations of the Edwards Family, Beaufort, SC, Sale, 93 Slaves and 3 Plantations of Alexander England, Colleton, SC, 1850, Slaves at Richfield Plantation, Estate of Henry Faber, Charleston, SC, 1840, Enslaved Ancestors in the Estate of Isaac Fickling, Charleston, SC, 1834, 110 Slaves in the Estate of Eliza Flynn, Colleton County, SC, 1845, Inventory and Division of Slaves, Estate of Benj. commandments then you go to Him, but if you don't pay any attention to
MIGRATION OF FORMER SLAVES: According to U.S. Census data, the 1860 Barnwell County population included In the wake of the Supreme Court ruling on Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which repealed the precedent set by Roe v. Wade to federally protect abortion rights in the U.S., many states have instituted restrictionsor total banson abortions. The genealogy of the Pendarvis-Bedon families of South Carolina, 1670-1900, together with lineal ancestry of husbands and wives who intermarried with them; also references to many associated southern families: James Barnwell Heyward. Accompanied by an Account of the First Thomas Elliott and of Some of His Descendants: Mabel L. Webber The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine Vol. 25-33. enumerated in 1860 without giving their names, only their sex and age and indication of any handicaps, such as deaf or blind 3, No. They are the work of many hearts and many hands. The soldiers asked him who
The rest of the slaves in the County were held by a total 5, No. checked, as almost 11% of African Americans were enumerated as free in 1860, with about half of those living in the grandmother were grown when they came from Africa, and were man and wife
1 (Jan., 1910), pp. My father was still overseer or driver. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27575354, John Taylor and His Taylor Descendants: B. F. Taylor The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine Vol. [Between 1860 and 1865] [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2010651604/. All provision was made as to the distribution on Monday
The database currently contains almost 5,000 names of enslaved people extracted from digitized images of the Inventories and Appraisals in Barnwell County, SC 1809-1813, 1818-1821, 1821-1831, and 1831-1841 on Familysearch.org.Please note these are inventories and appraisals of the "goods and chattels" belonging to the . Groves, Joseph Asbury 1901 The Alstons and Allstons of North and South Carolina. Linking names of plantations in this County with the names of the large holders on this list should not be a difficult research Also available in digital form. If the hickory is keep on the head too long it will blister
114-116. (As a side note, by 1960, 100 years later, the County For more information see, https://www.loc.gov/rr/print/info/617_apptonly.html. My master had two place: one on Big Islan' an' on Coals Islan' in
1 (Jan., 1905), pp. 3 (Jul., 1918), pp. looked down sadly and said in a low tone, as if soliloquizing, "He way is
didn't know much 'bout him; he didn't live so long afta slavery 'cus he
I was seven years old then. Location: Barnwell SC Relocation: Yes Base Salary: $90k-$125k+ (Depending on experience) Louise an' Rebecca. A big pot was use' for
She is always clean and neat, a refined old
Frazier pulled over a vehicle that was driving more than 20 miles per hour above the speed limit, Biance said. - Everybody went
"My father, Abram Brown, was the driver or head man at Rose plantation. the writer can prove). 1 photographic print on stereo card : stereograph ; 8.5 x 17 cm. said. 97-113. In order to identify records of interest, you must first examine the genealogy of slaveholding families. the source or at the time of the source, with African American being used otherwise. Number of slaves - In 1830, Roach owned 23 male and 23 female slaves. Because Charleston was a major port for the importation of enslaved Africans, South Carolina's records are significant sources for African American genealogical research. - house servants, an unusual delicate type, somewhat of the Indian cast, to
website.IF you were directed here through a link For which you paid $ For,
239-257. 1 photographic print : albumen ; image 15 x 21 cm, mounted on board 27 x34 cm. in books; if I hear de name I can sing'The Promise Land', Oh, how Mas
); Thomas S. "Sandy" and Suzanne Wilson McMillan (1952-? How he got his education, I didn't know. But it dwindled to thirty-five w'en the other was taken back
chimney-sweep. About Us | Contact Us | Copyright | Report Inappropriate Material colored persons from Barnwell County, included the following: Georgia, up 80,000 (17%); Texas, up 70,000 (38%); This collection consists mostly of the correspondence, with some related materials, of the Barnwell family of Beaufort and lowcounty South Carolina. 4 (Oct., 1900), pp. 12,702 whites, 640 "free colored" and 17,401 slaves. More than fifty were killed, and nearly two hundred Tuscarora women and children were carried back to Charleston and enslaved. For information about reproducing, publishing, and citing material from this collection, as well as access to the original items, see: William Gladstone Collection of African American Photographs - Rights and Restrictions Information, If an image is displaying, you can download it yourself. 'cause white men lynch an' burn now an' do other things they couldn't do
furniture and other things he brought from England in my father's house
If an African American ancestor with one of these surnames is found on the 1870 census, then urchinTracker(); South-Carolina-Plantations.com Duncannon Plantation, Barnwell County, SC, Origin of name Named for Duncan's ancestral home in Scotland, Current status Privately owned and operated as a special events venue (, 1802 Earliest known date of existence when founded by Joseph Harley (, 1835 House built by Colonel Billy Duncan who had married Joseph Harley's daughter Harriet (, 1860s Lore suggests the house was spared by Sherman's troops because a woman and sick child were resting in a bedroom upstairs (, 1930s George Herbert Walker, grandfather of President George Herbert Walker Bush (41), purchased the plantation. Fuller, Charleston, SC, 1836 and 1837 Indexed by Alana, Slaves at Cottage Plantation, Theodore Samuel Gaillard, Berkeley, SC, 1855 Indexed by Alana, 115 Slaves, Estate of Gilbert Geddes, Geddes Hall Plantation, SC, 1842 Indexed by Vickie Everhart, Robert Gibbes, Governor of South Carolina, and Some of His Descendants: Henry S. Holmes The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine Vol. In 1860 Daria Thomas, a planter in Union District, used many of his 21 slaves on his cotton farm. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27574968, John Carmille of Charleston Seeks to Free His Enslaved Wife & Children Indexed by Alana. Published by: South Carolina Historical Society. comin' of Chris' men was kill' for His name sake; today they curse Him. However, the data should be checked for the particular surname to see the extent of the matching. Dere was haad time for two year after de
Born on December 6, 1838, Harriett Gresham can recall quite clearly the major events of her life as a slave, also the Civil War as it affected the slaves of Charleston and Barnwell, South Carolina. term "slaveholder" rather than "slave owner", so that questions of justice and legality of claims of ownership need not be Durin' the war we was carry to Deer Pond, twelve miles on dis side of
Cherokee roses you see round here, and I had a big lawn of Charleston
Original served only by appointment because material requires special handling. 3 (Jul., 1905), pp. they got corn, and a quart of molasses, and three pounds of bacon, and
In order to identify records of interest, you must first examine the genealogy of slaveholding families. Slaves at the Lewisfield Plantation of Keating Simons, Berkeley, SC, 1835 Indexed by Felicia R. Mathis, Slaves in the Estate of William Small, St James Santee, Charleston, SC 1834 Indexed by Sandra J. Taliaferro, William Smith and Some of His Descendants: A. S. Salley, Jr. Chorus:"Father is gone ober dere,Father is gone ober
had married her son. Paterson. The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine Vol. Ultimately, it is the researcher's obligation to assess copyright or other use restrictions and obtain permission from third parties when necessary before publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the Library's collections. The records linked here were indexed by volunteers in the Restore the Ancestors Project. , None. 1734-1780: South Carolina, Secretary of State, Slave Mortgage Records at FamilySearch; index & images. Dis
127-140. such age enumerated, out of a total of 3,950,546 slaves. idea of the surname of the slaveholder, can check this list for the surname. Slaves were Mathewes, Georgetown, SC, 1848 indexed by Vickie, Slaves at Hickory Hill Plantation of Edith Mathews, Charleston, SC, 1796 Indexed by Felicia R. Mathis, 1867 Estate Inventory of John Raven Mathews: List of Enslaved People Freed in 1865 Indexed by Toni Carrier, Slaves at Snee Farm Plantation, Charleston, SC, 1859 Indexed by Alana, Slaves in the Estate of Mary McKewn, Oak Hill Plantation, Charleston, 1853 Indexed by Sandra Taliaferro, Sale of 106 Slaves in the Estate of Anne Middleton McUen, SC, 1851 Indexed by Karen Meadows-Rogers, Slaves in the Estate of William Milland, Charleston, SC, 1860 Indexed by Cheryl Palmer, Slaves at Little Edisto and Frogmore Plantations, Edisto Island, SC, 1858 Indexed by Alana, Governor Joseph Morton and Some of His Descendants: A. S. Salley, Jr. Mas Luke Turnage was my
. Main Genealogy Trails History Group website at
1 (Jan., 1921), pp. "Work used to start on the plantation at four o'clock in the morning,
31-46. ", He seemed so proud of his garden, with its broad view across the Ashley
LC-DIG-ppmsca-11519 (digital file from original item, back), Use digital images. they would kill him, but he wouldn't say anything else so they left him
gave them to him, and he said his master gave them to him. "My father was Abram Brown, and my mother's name was Lucy Brown," he
and from region to region. Some finish
I drove a cart
thing I t'ought was thunder stop', master tell us that evenin' we was
Rose leased the place from Dr. Ray, and took his family there for safety. Other materials require appointments for later the same day or in the future. ancestor not shown to hold slaves on the 1860 slave census could have held slaves on an earlier census, so those films can be Some have become extinct or have been consolidated with other tribes. 1, No. mother who liked him dearly. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27569458, Designed by Lowcountry Africana | Powered by WordPress, 177 Slaves in the Estate of Joseph Palmer, Berkeley, SC, 1842, Slaves in the Estate of Maham Palmer, Berkeley, SC, 1853, 117 Slaves in the Estate of William McKenzie Parker, Georgetown, SC, 1861. They was stolen an' brought here. Beaufort County. BrownEx-slave Age 79. . grew them in the gardens. Lance . Land Number of acres - ? 29-40. "We got a home ober dere,Come an' let us go,Come an' let us
1, No. The collection contains one letter (1846) from John C. Calhoun; a few (1847) from Christopher G. Memminger; and one (1865) from Eliza Fludd. African American descendants of persons who were enslaved in Barnwell County, South Carolina in 1860, if they have an who will arise an go with
Topics include social life in Beaufort and Charleston, South Carolina, varying religions and their differences, historiography of South Carolina, St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Charleston, religious instruction of slaves, missionary work in China, South Carolina College (1840- 1860), Rev. call' me Toby. 8, No. she was questioned about the present times, and even about those closely
C. Mary Frances Brown, about ninety years of age, born in slavery, on the
The people listed below are just a fraction of all those enslaved in Barnwell during this time period. John Barnwell became Hilton Head Island's first English settler in 1717 after receiving a grant of 1,000 acres in what is now Hilton Head Plantation. that terrible place. The genealogy of the Pendarvis-Bedon families of South Carolina, 1670-1900, together with lineal ancestry of husbands and wives who intermarried with them; also references to many associated southern families: Slaves at Beech Hill Camp Plantations, James Pendarvis, Colleton, SC, 1798, Slaves at Cedar Hill Plantation, Abbeville District, SC, 1857, Slaves at Pinckney Island Plantation of Charles C. Pinckney, Beaufort, 1826, Slaves in the Estate of Eliza Pinckney, Santee, Georgetown County, SC, 1863, Slaves at Eldorado and Fannymead Plantations of Mrs. F.M Pinckney, SC, 1843, 74 Slaves in the Estate of Lucia Pinckney, Barnwell, SC, 1863, Slaves in the Estate of Thomas Pinckney, Jr., Ashepoo, Colleton, SC, 1817, Slaves at Fairfield and Moreland Plantations of Thos. their tas' by twelve an' others work' 'til seven but had the tas' to
Retrieved from the Library of Congress,
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