The following articles are contributed by Louise Pettus, editor of The Quarterly, York County Genealogical & Historical Society.
Celebrating American independence from Great Britain was, from the end of
the Revolutionary War on, a time for South Carolinians to celebrate. The
state, as one of the original 13 colonies, had played a major role in the
war - with more battles fought on its soil than in any other colony. And,
the turning point of the Revolution had occurred in York County at the battle
of Kings Mountain.
By the 1850s the pattern of celebration was fixed. Rural communities everywhere
had a favorite picnic ground where the citizenry would meet. Usually, there
was a parade, often led by the local militia. Sometimes the local militia
demonstrated their skills and might blast away with their guns, but fireworks
as we know them today were not likely to be present. Always, orators would
hold forth. Most likely, a local sax-horn band would furnish music.
The Committee on Arrangements would have seen to it that stands were constructed
for the listeners and a platform for the orators. They would also have put
up rough-hewn picnic (pick-nick) tables ready for spreading with tasty dishes
brought in picnic baskets. Glazed with a savory hot sauce, hogs from local
plantations cooked all night over a fire fed by hickory chips.
The 4th of July 1858 celebration in the Bullocks Creek area of southwestern
York District was typical of many in this area. The day was a very hot one
but that did not keep a number of citizens from joining the procession that
began at White’s Store and marched to the picnic grounds. The orators of
the day, Colonel McCorkle and Major Burris, escorted by Bullocks Creek Band,
led the parade.
The crowd, described as a “large multitude,” was orderly and quiet in deference
to the importance of Independence Day. Ceremonies began with the invocation
given by Rev. R. Y. Russell. The traditional reading of the Declaration of
Independence was rendered by W. B. Russell, Esq. Many of the listeners knew
the Declaration by heart. The crowd was hushed and respectful. They might
become restless during some of the lengthy orations, but they never tired
of hearing Mr. Jefferson's masterpiece.
Next was the main speaker, B. H. Moore, the Orator of the Day. The Yorkville
Enquirer ported that Moore’s style was “easy and elegant.”
The Committee of Arrangements provided toasts in order of descending importance:
1. The Day We Celebrate; 2. The Heroes of Kings Mountain; 3. George Washington;
4. Soldiers of 1812; 5. The Palmetto Regiment (South Carolina troops in the
War with Mexico); 6. John C. Calhoun; 7. the Administration (James Buchanan
was president of the United States); 8. The Emerald Isle; 9. Women; 10. the
Orators of the Day.
The Kings Mountain toast: “Upon its summit was enacted the greatest scene
in the drama of the Revolution - the turning point of the noble struggle
for the right. Its towering crest is its own enduring monument.”
The Emerald Isle toast: “May her Harp be attuned anew to the rapturous song
of Liberty; and Emmet’s epitaph be written.” (Emmet was Thomas Addis Emmet,
an Irish nationalist who fought for Irish independence from England.)
After dinner the crowd reassembled to hear more oratory. The Fourth of July
celebration was interpreted to the Bullock's Creek crowd as a state holiday
and not as a national holiday. Each speaker was careful to point out that
the Fourth of July was the anniversary of South Carolina's independence as
a state.
This viewpoint was a reflection of South Carolina's increasing uneasiness
with the direction of national politics in mid-1858. Agitation over slavery
in the territories, abolitionist activities, and the knowledge that the
agricultural South was losing political power to the industrial North, weighed
heavily on the minds of the orators and their listeners.
Thirty months later South Carolina seceded from the Union. It was to be a
long time before the Fourth of July was again widely celebrated in York County.
When James Cansler of Tirzah announced in the winter of 1916 that he was
running for a six-year term on the South Carolina Railroad Commission no
one was surprised. Cansler had been running for that office "since the time
whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary," as one newspaper
expressed it. Cansler had a habit of running every two years for the state
post but had gotten so few votes in the past that few people foresaw Cansler's
victory.
In truth, there was nothing in Cansler's past that would have predicted he
had any chance of getting such a choice plum. Railroad commissioners had
one of the plushest political posts in the state. Their control of railroads
was complete down to the smallest detail. Railroads were quick to offer
commissioners private cars with unlimited travel. There was no state ethics
commission, either.
Cansler was a poor man and had never held a political office. A native of
North Carolina, he had arrived at Tirzah, a rural community between Rock
Hill and York, in 1877 to teach school. His father, though poor, had been
determined that his children receive an education and had boarded school
teachers for $3 a month in order to guarantee their instruction. Cansler
finished Catawba College. Cansler did manage, on the meager salary of a teacher,
to save enough money in 12 years to acquire a small farm. The work must have
been hard for him because he long suffered physical pain which had left him
crippled for life.
Ben Tillman was governor and his dispensary system was in full swing when
Cansler first got into politics. The dispensary system was an attempt to
control the sale of alcohol by having the state control the manufacture,
distribution and sale of alcoholic beverages. Cansler was an ardent
prohibitionist. In 1894 York County citizens went to the polls to decide
if their local communities would have state operated liquor stores. The idea
was rejected everywhere except in Tirzah which ended up selling the only
legal whiskey in York County.
James Cansler's house sat on the road to the dispensary shop. He was incensed
at the sight of "the thirsty" trudging the highway. He fumed for seven years.
Finally, in 1901 Cansler circulated a petition to remove the dispensary.
His petition first circulated in Tirzah, which had only 11 registered voters,
and then all over the county. He got over one thousand signatures.
Henry Massey of Rock Hill took Cansler to Columbia to present his petition
to the dispensary board. Cansler told the board that if they didn't act the
people of Tirzah would. The board ordered the dispensary closed within 60
days.
During his 1916 race for railroad commissioner, one of Cansler's former pupils
wrote about him: "There is nothing negative about him...He has a very high
sense of honor and his character is unimpeachable...not a lazy bone....He
has no friend to reward, and he is too manly to punish an enemy if he has
one. The letter-writer, who admittedly was not fond of Cansler, added that
Cansler was peculiar and eccentric and undaunted in adversity.
The governor's race in 1916 was between Richard I. Manning and a former governor,
Cole L. Blease. Blease was favored but in the second primary to everyone's
surprise, Manning won 71,463 votes to Blease's 66,785.
Cansler won, too, and by a far greater margin than Manning did over Blease.
Cansler defeated incumbent Albert S. Fant by a vote of 83,054 to 54,271.
It was hard to believe. The Greenville News commented: "Cansler probably
does not know anymore about railroads than we do about farming, but men are
not often elected to office in this State on the basis of what they know....may
he revel in the plush luxury of his private car and the good things of this
life...."
On September 12, 1917, the South Carolina Railroad Commission issued Order
#169 to the Southern Railway Company. In the order were these words: " ...to
construct, without further delay, a freight depot at Tirzah, S. C., said
depot to be in every way adequate for the demands of the patrons of Southern
Railway Company at that point....to be done in 60 days.”
James Cansler may not have gotten rich but he did get power.
A prized household possession a century and a half ago was a clock--the best
that once could afford. Fine homes had a hall clock with a gold or silver
dial ornately painted. Other rooms may have had shelf clocks. Lesser households
prized a shelf clock, some of them made completely of wood.
It is said that people would sit and look at their clock with its mesmerizing
pendulum in much the same fashion as later generations watched a record turn
on a Victrola or stared at the test pattern of the early television sets.
It is amazing how much clockmaking and clock selling activity went on in
this area.
The earliest clockmaker we know of was John McKee (1787-1871) of Chester
district. He was advertising as early as 1816. One of his clocks of that
time (now in the Museum of Southern Decorative Arts in Winston Salem, N.C.)
has a label inside the clock which reads: "At J. McKee's Clock Factory, Chester
Court House (S.C.) is made and sold all kinds of Clocks, with, or without,
cases, warranted for their quality and performance, also packed up and warranted
to go safe to any distance." This clock is 8 1/2 feet tall and has an iron
dial painted with a global map that has Australia labeled "New Holland,"
Australia's name prior to 1811.
McKee ran a general store of quality on "the Hill" in Chester where sold
plantation supplies, dry goods, household furniture and books. McKee started
as a watchmaker and continued to make watches and repair them. He also served
in the state legislature and was a delegate from Chester District to the
South Carolina Secession Convention.
Other clockmakers were members of George Suggs' family of Bethel community
in York District, who came by way of Virginia although originally of Waterbury,
Conn. Records of Bullocks Creek Church show that Thomas E. Suggs was in that
area in the 1840s. The Rev. R. Y. Russell, pastor of that church, purchased
a clock made at "Waterbury Clock Factory at Bullocks Creek".
At Pinckneyville, the old courthouse town on the Broad River, it is said
that Seth Thomas of Connecticut owned property and is thought to have done
some of his work there. And there was "Carolina Fashion Clocks of Bullocks
Creek District."
In Yorkville during the 1840s there was a firm doing business as a copartnership
under the name of McElwee and Sutton. Jonathan McElwee and Alexander C. Sutton
sold general merchandise but their trade was far broader than just the Yorkville
area.
McElwee and Sutton employed at least a half dozen men to work at the combination
trading of clocks, carryalls and slaves. Covering a geographical area that
extended from North Carolina to Alabama, the "peddlers" roamed the countryside
to show their wares.
The carryalls, most of them manufactured by McElwee and Hutchison, were wagons
especially made to carry slaves and their luggage or to carry clocks. There
is a record of 50 clocks picked up from a freight station in Cheraw, S. C.
which were peddled across Georgia.
There is an account by Thomas N. Pettus of his taking a caravan of mules
and carryalls (one carryall would pull two more with additional mules tied
to the end gate of the last carryall) for sale in Alabama in October 1846.
At Stewart City, Ga. on the Alabama line, Pettus said he met up with C. C.
Horn, a clock peddler for McElwee and Sutton. Horn told him that he sold
every clock he had.
From August 16 until October 8, 1780, which marked the time period between
the American defeat at Camden and the American victory at Kings Mountain,
York County's Whigs (most of the county were Whigs) were at the mercy of
British troops under the command of Lord Cornwallis.
The American army under General Horatio Gates had been practically destroyed
at Camden on August 16. Two days later, Colonel Tarleton of the British forces
on Fishing Creek surprised Gen. Thomas Sumter's South Carolina militiamen
near Beckhamville in Chester County. Sumter's army was badly defeated; Sumter
himself barely escaped capture. The British officers were soon writing letters
to their superiors in England reporting that they controlled the countryside
with only a few Americans hiding out.
For some years, local historians who have a special interest in upcountry
Revolutionary War battles have wrestled with the question as to whether or
not Lord Cornwallis camped at the plantation of Thomas Spratt in Fort Mill
and used the Nation Ford crossing of the Catawba River.
Those historians who believe that Cornwallis was at Spratt's Spring (at
present-day Fort Mill) when the battle of Kings Mountain took place say that
while it is possible that Cornwallis had left for Winnsboro before the battle
of Kings Mountain took place, they are convinced that Cornwallis had been
camped in Fort Mill and left there over the old Nation Ford Road. Others
maintain that all of this is only traditionary evidence and ask for proof.
Certainly, Cornwallis was somewhere in the countryside between Camden and
Charlotte (a regular hornet's nest, according to Cornwallis.) The best evidence
for Cornwallis being at Spratt's Spring comes from a book with the lengthy
title of Traditions and Reminiscences Chiefly of the American Revolution
in the South: including Biographical Sketches, Incidents and Anecdotes, Few
of Which Have Been Published, Particularly of Residents in the Upper Country.
The book, authored by Joseph Johnson, M.D. of Charleston, was published in
1851.
In his book Dr. Johnson included extracts of two letters written by Joseph
F. White of Fort Mill in 1848. White says that his mother, a daughter of
Thomas Spratt, told him some stories about Cornwallis' encampment. The story
was that Cornwallis and Colonel Tarleton, on their way from Charlotte to
link with Colonel Ferguson near the Broad River, were stopped by a flood
on the Catawba River.
Tarleton sought directions for crossing the river from an old Irishman who
either (it is not clear) misled the troops or was disobeyed by the troops,
but reported later that the British "plooted in any where." The troops quickly
found the water too deep for crossing and "Colonel Tarleton cursed him [the
Irishman] for a fool, and struck him with the flat of his sword."
If the incident reported by Joseph F. White is true, it leads to the conclusion
that the American Whigs were blessed (perhaps equally) by the flood waters
of the Catawba River and an old Irishman with no love in his heart for anything
English.
Another incident reported by Joseph F. White: "The day on which Lord Cornwallis
struck his camp at Spratt's, he caused to be hung one of his own men, who
had been taken as a deserter. He was executed some short distance above the
spring near the Charlotte Rail Road. The man was left hanging, and no person
was left on the premises to cut him down and bury him, but a small negro
boy."
Another British soldier died while camped at Spratt's and the "brutal officers
ordered his grave to be made in the yard and buried him there. My mother
told me that she recollected hearing the lamentations of the soldier's wife,
that she had no means of getting her husband out of purgatory, until she
could meet with the Catholic priest."
The Spratt family graveyard off Brick Yard Road in Fort Mill dates back at
least 230 years. It is surrounded by an 18 inch rock and concrete wall and
contains the grave of Thomas "Kanawha" Spratt on whose plantation Cornwallis
once camped. Or did he?
The story of the Banks family in this area is an interesting one. The first
to come was John Marjoriebanks (in the second generation the name was shortened
to Banks). John came without his family from Thornhill, Scotland right after
the Revolutionary War and died in Chester County not long after.
The Marjoriebanks family in Scotland received no word of John
Marjoriebank’s fate. His son Samuel came to America to search for him. While
in Chester Samuel fell in love with a Chester girl, Elizabeth Robinson. The
newlyweds were to sail back to Scotland but Elizabeth is said to have taken
one look at the Atlantic Ocean and refused to go.
The couple found land in Fairfield County, SC and raised ten children. The
ninth child, William Banks, an ambitious lad worked his way through a series
of schools before graduating second in his class from Franklin College (later
the Univ. of Georgia) in 1837.
In 1841 William Banks became the pastor of Catholic Presbyterian Church near
the town of Chester.
Rev. William Blackstock (1761-1831) had a rich and varied life. He was born
in Ireland, educated in Scotland and licensed to preach by the Associate
Presbytery of County Down, Ireland.
When 31 years of age he boarded a ship,“The Volunteer,” often referred to
as “Irish Volunteer” because it transported so many volunteer Irishmen to
fight American forces in the Revolutionary War.
Blackstock kept a journal of the voyage from North Ireland to Charleston,
S. C. The ship left the port of Larne carrying 400 passengers on October
6, 1792. There were a good many passengers who were 60, 70 or 80 years old.
No sooner than they were on the high seas, violent storms began. Blackstock
said the old people were most vexed for having left their comfortable homes
and exposing themselves to such dreadful conditions. There were 12 deaths
during the voyage, a number somewhat counteracted by 5 births.
Blackstock kept an account of “wind and weather, of birds and fishes, and
of ships that were seen or spoken to.” Several sharks were captured.
Every passenger was issued 8 pounds of biscuits, 4 pounds of beef, 1 pound
of molasses per week and 2 quarts of water daily. Because of the rough seas
it took 80 days to cross the ocean. Several days before they landed at Charleston
all provisions were cut in half. It was Christmas eve when Blackstock first
set foot on American soil.
Finding a church was no problem for Blackstock. He was ordained by the Presbytery
of the Carolinas and Georgia on June 8th, 1794 and became the pastor of two
York County churchesEbenezer and Neely’s Creekand of Steele Creek
in Mecklenburg county. He was to leave the three churches in 1803 or 1804
when the congregations split over, as one wit said, whether to sing David’s
Psalms or to the sing the Psalms of David. After several years he returned
to this area.
Blackstock had gotten a lease from the Catawba Indians as indicated by a
York County deed record in which he contracted with Alexander Faris, a
blacksmith, to “build a mill dam, grist mill and cotton gin” on land on
“Half Mile Creek, old Nation Ford, on west side of the Catawba River.” The
mill dam was to be 10 feet deep.
Not long after Blackstock arrived in this country, he met and married Sarah
Hutchison whose family had come first to the Waxhaws of Lancaster county
and them moved across the river settling near the Nation Ford between present-day
Rock Hill and Fort Mill. They had no children. She died in 1810 and he never
remarried. It is not known where Sarah was buried.
About 1811 Blackstock became pastor of Tirzah ARP in Mecklenburg, now Union
County, N. C. He served Tirzah until 1827.
Synod records indicate that Blackstock was very active. He was a regular
correspondent with the Synod and frequently traveled to their meetings. He
was a vigorous preacher but, very unusual for his time, not a long-winded
one. When most ministers were sermonizing for hours, Blackstock kept his
sermons at about 35 minutes in length. Described as “very short and his
complexion very dark,” Blackstock also had great endurance on horseback.
In 1821 he made a trip to the west and was gone for 14 weeks. In 1827 he
rode horseback to Obion County, Tennessee and preached the first sermon ever
delivered there. The congregation at Troy A. R. P. was made up mostly of
former York, Lancaster and Meckenburg folks who, in 1824 had moved by wagon
train to an area near present-day Memphis but was then only wilderness. Among
those present to hear Rev. Blackstock at Troy were many who bore the names
of Harper, Hutchison, Garrison, Hood, Stewart, Nisbet, Brice, Erwin and McCaw.
Reverend Blackstock preached his last sermon at Sardis Associate Reformed
Church in Mecklenburg County. He died October 7, 1831 and is buried at Tirzah
ARP in Union County, N. C.
In a recently purchased Rock Hill house, the buyer found a discarded letter
that was written July 25, 1862, headed "Camp Near Richmond, Va.
At a casual glance, the letter is of no significance other than it is
representative of the type of letter a young Confederate soldier might send
to a girl friend.
On the other hand, if we pursue all of the clues in this document and use
our powers of inference, we can "discover" a good bit about the young soldier.
In carefully-formed script, but minimal punctuation, the soldier begins:
"Dear Friend I seat myself again to rite you a few lines in order to inform
you that I am well and hope these few lines may find you well. I have nothing
new to rite." Nothing important there. The stiff beginning and misspelling
only indicate that the young man did not have a great deal of education.
He continued, "I landed safe at Richmond Va." Landed? Perhaps by ship from
Charleston?
"I like the Place tolerable well. The 5th Regt. of S.C.V. [ South Carolina
Volunteers] are camped in 4 miles of us." The 5th Regiment was commanded
by Micah Jenkins, one of the two officers (along with Asbury Coward) who
before the war, operated the Kings Mountain Military Academy at Yorkville
and many, perhaps most, of the regiment's members were from York County.
The soldier continues: "I saw Bony Campbell he looks tolerable well." A search
of Confederate Veterans Enrollment Book of York County, S. C.--1902 compiled
by Jo Roberts Owens and Ruth Dickson Thomas, 1983, does not turn up a Campbell
named "Bony." But there is N. B. Campbell of Bethel Township of Co. "H",
5th S.C.V., Jenkins Infantry, private, age 20. Guessing that "N. B." stands
for Napoleon Bonaparte, a not unusual name of the time, it is likely that
his nickname was "Bony." It is only a conjecture, but it makes sense. According
to the pension enrollment book, N. B. Campbell was still living in 1902.
"There is no prospect of a fight here soon. I expect we will be in Longstreets
Division." Civil War histories confirm that the reference is to Gen. James
Longstreet, not Gen. Austustus B. Longstreet.
The soldier further writes: "The 17th Regt. of S.C.V. came in last knight
they are Camped in 1/4 of a mile of us." The 17th Regt. was part of Evans
Infantry.
"We get tolerable good water to Drink." Finding clean water was always a
problem. Typhoid and other bacterial diseases killed more Confederates than
did enemy bullets.
For the first time the soldier calls his "friend" by name. He writes: "Mary
I hated to leave soon after you came that morning but I hope we will meet
again. I would have liked to have stayed a while longer, but we were Pushed
it was but little Pleasure to meet and Part so soon. I want you to rite to
me and let me know how Thomas is so nothing more only I remain your Friend
till death rite soon"
At the end of the one sheet of paper, used back and front, the soldier wrote:
"B. B. Currence to M. E. Boyd. Direct your letters to Richmond Va 18th Regiment
of S.C.V. Company H." Again, the Confederate Veterans Enrollment Book of
York County... is helpful. While there is no "B. B. Currence," there is a
"Bisop (Bishop?) Currence." "M. E. Boyd" is obviously Mary E. Boyd.
The unstamped letter may have been hand-delivered by a fellow soldier returning
to York County. Sometimes a civilian would voluntarily gather up a wagon-load
of goods and set forth to Virginia to deliver the supplies to York County
fighting men. Returning home, the wagoner would bring letters to the families.
Sometimes he would bring coffins, too.
What happened to B. B. Currence? If the writer of this letter was Bishop
Currence of Bethel Township, his fate is clear. Bishop Currence of Co. H.,
18th S. C. V., Evans Infantry, private, age 20, was killed at the second
battle of Manassas in Virginia in late August 1862, a little more than a
month after he wrote his letter to Mary E. Boyd.
From the 1750s until the American Revolution most of the settlers in this
area were Scotch-Irish Presbyterians who migrated down from older Scotch-Irish
settlements of Pennsylvania and western Virginia. A few Scotch-Irish came
directly from northern Ireland.
Newcomers from the north of Ireland continued to come after the Revolution.
The post-war immigrants tended to be single men hoping to make their fortunes.
Some started as peddlers with packs on their backs (a few like Robert Latta
of Yorkville became prosperous merchants). Some had learned the skill of
weaving in Ireland and continued to weave in America.
The Clendenens of York District fit the pattern well. Irish-born Thomas Clendenen
was a hard-working weaver of bedspreads. His son, Robert (1784-1830), had
few educational advantages but used his quick intelligence, sound judgment,
and amiable personality to advance in life.
Robert Clendenen learned the trade of merchant by clerking in a North Carolina
store. Then he set up a store of his own in the town of Union, S. C. By the
time he was 27 years of age Clendenen had acquired enough money to switch
careers. He wished to practice law. In this time period, apprenticeship with
a practicing lawyer was the general rule. Clendenen studied with a Mr. Hooker,
a Yorkville lawyer.
Next, Clendenen studied with Judge William Smith, a native of Lancaster’s
Waxhaws who practiced law in Yorkville before becoming a state judge and
later U. S. Senator. Clendenen passed the bar in Charleston January 11, 1813.
About this time, either before or after his bar examination, Clendenen and
Smith quarreled. No one knew the cause of the split. The two never reconciled
their differences.
Clendenen practiced law in Yorkville and was immensely successful financially.
In five years time he began buying land and from 1818 to 1827 purchased 2,147
acres in York District and sufficient slave labor to run the plantation.
(Clendenen’s estate inventory showed 44 slaves.)
Clendenen served as York District’s senator in Columbia from 1816 until 1829
where he served on numerous committees. He was also active in the state militia
and once (1826) was candidate for brigadier general of the state militia.
In 1819 Clendenen married Mary Ellen Myers, the oldest daughter of Col. David
Myers, a wealthy man. The Clendenens had five children, four daughters and
a son. Only two daughters, Nancy McNiece and Mary Elizabeth, survived to
adulthood.
Because Robert Clendenen was distinguished enough to be one of the state’s
best lawyers he merited an account in John Belton O’Neall’s Biographical
Sketches of the Bench and Bar of South Carolina, published in 1859.
Judge O’Neall described Clendenen’s person as “. . . inclined to be portly,
his face, round and florid, and his eyes intensely black.” In his style of
oratory, O’Neall said that Clendenen “had more care for ideas than for
words.” “O’Neall thought that Clendenen’s basis for success in life “was
his integrity and stability of character.” As for political skill, Clendenen
was “prudent and conservative.” As a lawyer, Clendenen was “cool, sagacious,
and scrupulously exact.”
O’Neall praised Clendenen as a “kind and indulgent protector of the younger
members of the Bar.” Clendenen expanded his practice of law to include Union,
Chester, Fairfield and Lancaster. He loved to ride the circuit, “more to
enjoy the conversation of his associates than for profit.”
Judge O’Neall found that Clendenen’s great flaw (the only one mentioned)
was being too “convivial.” Dr. Maurice Moore of Yorkville, who knew Clendenen
personally, wrote more specifically, saying that Clendenen died early, “.
. . his constitution worn out by his own abuse of it. How fatal has been
the allurements of the liquor fiend to many of our prominent men.”
Clendenen died in 1830 at the age of 46 and was buried in the graveyard of
Bethesda Presbyterian Church. Some years later his widow married Dr. Hemmingway
of Yorkville and moved to Mississippi.
Other than the courthouse towns of York, Lancaster and Chester, there were
no population centers before the laying of railway track in the three counties.
Beginning in 1851 with the arrival of the C. C. & A. (Charlotte, Columbia
and Augusta) Railroad which created the towns of Rock Hill and Fort Mill,
we can discern a pattern of town-building that lasts until this century.
First, the railroad came and a depot was built. For the Piedmont farmer that
ended long wagon trips carrying goods (chiefly cotton but including grains)
to seaports. Within the year storehouses were built and the first “town
houses” followed. Streets with lots large enough to have a barn, or stables,
in the back were laid out. Ten to 20 years later the town would incorporate
with a mayor and city council, a small police force and a volunteer fire
department.
Gradually, other businesses would be established. A cotton gin in town along
with a cotton warehouse was likely. If enough farmers were attracted there
would soon be a variety of small businesses that would include a lumber company,
a blacksmith shop, a hardware store, a drug store, etc. The first business
to employ more than 100 people was invariably a cotton mill.
Take the town of Clover in York County as a good example of 19th century
town-building. Before the Civil War the area was known as Bethel, named for
the Bethel Presbyterian Church which drew a congregation from an area up
to 10 miles in all directions. The plantations were large in area and the
population sparse.
In 1872 the Kings Mountain Railroad, which had a depot in Yorkville, merged
with a North Carolina railroad called the Carolina Narrow Guage. In 1874
tracks were laid through what is now the town of Clover by a man who brought
horses and mules from Kentucky to do the work. He called the place Bowling
Green, named for his Kentucky home.
The first train arrived two years after the track was laid. There was no
regular schedule for the train which went as far as Gastonia, N. C. There
was no way to turn the train around, so it came back to Clover in reverse.
There were three railroad cars. One carried white passengers. One was for
black passengers. The third car was for baggage. The people called the train
the “Short Bob,” named for the engineer, Bob Smyre.
A 5,000 gallon water tank furnished the steam locomotive. The story goes
that when the locomotive tanked up the water frequently spilled on to the
ground. At that spot grew a lush crop of clover. The train crew ignored the
Bowling Green name and called the village Clover Patch for the spot in which
they killed time by hunting for four-leaf clovers.
Every town has a notable personality. Clover’s was “Blind Sam” Campbell who
pumped the water into the tank for 15 years. When Campbell was in the Confederate
army he was shot through the head. The bullet passed just back of the eyes,
destroying his sight but leaving him otherwise healthy. He was a skilled
whittler and excellent conversationalist.
Clover got a one-room post office with a pot-bellied stove in 1884. The second
postmaster, Josiah I. Gwinn, endeared himself to children by adding a showcase
filled with candy, cookies and crackers. Three years later the town was
chartered.
Clover’s first cotton mill was built in 1890, three years later than Fort
Mill, but financed in much the same fashion. A local citizen, Capt. Beatty
Smith, headed a subscription drive. Captain Smith rode a horse from farm
to farm selling enough stock to finally set up the Clover Spinning Mill with
3,000 spindles. The cotton mill had come to the cotton fields. In 1899 a
mill village was added to accommodate workers making their transition from
an agricultural economy to an industrial economy.
A century and a half ago, Ebenezer was one of York County’s largest settlements.
Now, what was once the village of Ebenezer has been absorbed into the city
of Rock Hill.
Fortunately for the natives of Ebenezer, the name is still identified by
Ebenezer Road, which still has a few old homes left among the medical offices
and commercial establishments. There is also Ebenezer Presbyterian Church,
which dates back to shortly after the end of the Revolutionary War and is
now a part of the Associate Reformed Synod.
The small brick building facing the historic cemetery on Ebenezer Road is
the remainder of the Ebenezer Academy, often called “the Athens of York.”
Here upcountry boys were once prepared for the South Carolina College, Davidson
and other strongholds for Presbyterians.
The date of the establishment of the academy is uncertain. Typically, early
ministers served the dual roles of pastors and schoolmasters, so there was
probably instruction in reading, writing and arithmetic from the beginning
of the church.
An academy at the church offered upper grades and a college preparatory course.
The academy dates to at least 1819 when Job Nelson became the principal.
A year later, the Rev. Eleazar Harris, a York District native, was principal
and minister of the church. Harris was such a scholar that the faculty of
Washington College conferred on him the honorary degree of master of arts
in 1823.
In 1826, Albert Gallatin, who had been Thomas Jefferson’s secretary of the
treasury, influenced Congress to pass a measure that would support a national
work that would result in the published “Etymology” on the vocabulary of
the Catawba Indians. The study was designed to collect and interpret the
grammar and structure of the various Catawba languages and dialects.
Both Gallatin and Secretary of War James Barbour asked Harris to assist in
the work. He consented only if he had enough hours to spend beyond that required
by his duties as principal.
Apparently he did not follow through because there is no record of the project
ever being completed.
In 1828 Harris was assigned to preach in Tennessee. In 1854, when he was
65, Harris wrote from Obion, Tenn., to A. Eugene Hutchison begging a favor
for an old man who was “in the deepest poverty.”
Harris wanted to sell property on Steel Creek (that cost him $275) for $100
and offered to sell his 35-volume edition of the Edinburgh Encyclopaedia
for which which he paid $4 a volume for $2 each, saying that the plates in
the books alone were worth $1 a piece.
Ministers of the time were notoriously underpaid, but Harris must have been
worse off than most. He concluded his letter to Hutchison with the statement:
“I am very much pushed for money for the very necessities of life.”
The third principal of Ebenezer Academy was Capt. Peter Campbell of Harrisburg,
who like his predecessors, was known as a stern disciplinarian.
Not much is known about Peter Campbell, including how he got the rank of
captain. He came to Ebenezer from his previous teaching post at Harrisburg,
a settlement of a few houses and a grist mill at the confluence of Steel
and Sugar creeks, northeast of the present town of Fort Mill.
Within 10 years, Campbell had married 14-year-old Mariah Pettus, had three
sons and ended the stormy marriage by disappearing to the West.
Because divorces were not permitted in South Carolina, Mariah got a divorce
from Campbell in Obion County, Tenn.where she had a brother in the same area
to which Rev. Eleazer Harris had migrated. Obion County was on the Mississippi
River near Memphis and attracted a large number of settlers from upcountry
South Carolina during the 1820s and 1830s.
The first three principals at Ebenezer Job Nelson, Eleazar Harris
and Peter Campbell actually presided over an elementary school, not
an academy. Ebenezer Academy’s heyday would really come during the two decades
preceding the Civil War.
Archibald Barron, son of John and Jane Duncan Barron, was born on a farm
in 1800 in the Tirzah community of York District. His early life was typical
of the times.
Archibald had a “common country education” (meaning that he attended a local
one-room school, probably taught by a young unmarried man who had not yet
settled upon what he wanted to do with the rest of his life). The school
session was likely 2 or 3 months in the dead of winter because the
youngsters’ were expected to prepare themselves to become farmers and therefore
would participate in the planting, laying-by and harvesting of crops. Archibald
was a good student in both school and work.
When he was 24 he married Margaret Watson and bought a small farm between
Tirzah church and the Catawba river. For 12 years he worked hard and saved
his money for a larger farm.
Archibald Barron had 8 brothers and sisters. By the mid-1830s they had all
moved from York County to either Tennessee or Alabama. Barron heard that
Alabama soil was mighty rich and knew that Alabama had granted 2 of his brothers
and his sister’s family 640 acres each.
He went to Alabama to see what his siblings had gotten. He came back with
the decision to stay where he was. Even though he never achieved the wealth
of his brothers in Alabama he never regretted his decision to stay in York
county.
In 1836 Barron bought a Catawba lease for 318 acres from John McCaw. He moved
his wife and 4 children to a farm next to Thorns Ferry, the present-day site
of the bridge over the Catawba river on Highway 49, at River Hills. He built
a comfortable two-story house and he and Margaret had 4 more children there.
To each child, Barron promised either a farm or a college education. Three
sons and Jane, the only daughter, chose a farm. Jane kept her father’s books.
The others chose college and showed a particular interest in studying medicine.
Barron devised his own plan for farming. The best one-third of his acreage
was planted in corn (the staple for man and beast). One-third was planted
in cotton (the money crop). On the other one-third he put in grain. Along
with the field crops he raised hogs and a few cattleenough to feed
his family and have some extra for profit.
A descendant has written that at the outbreak of the Civil War, and after
36 years of farming, that Archibald Barron was the “largest real estate owner
in his section of the country” and that he had loaned out $20,000 in cash.
The 1850 census shows Barron owning 19 slaves, a goodly number although far
from approaching Cadwallader Jones’ 91 or John Springs’ 86 slaves and a half
million dollar estate. Still, Archibald Barron had prospered much beyond
the norm and was respected by his neighbors for his accomplishments.
When the Civil War came along, every one of the seven sons fought. Two of
them, Samuel and Alexander, did not return.
After the Civil War Barron found himself a much poorer man, for not only
did he lose the monetary value of his slaves, his neighbors paid their debts
to him in Confederate moneya now useless currency.
The war did not deter Barron of take away his customary cheerfulness. He
“spent most of his time riding around the neighborhood seeing that no one
of the aged or very young needed for food, shoes, cotton to make cloth or
land needing cultivation.”
Archibald Barron died September 15, 1879 at the age of 80, 15 months after
his wife Margaret. Margaret had been as strict an A.R.P. church member as
her husband. It was remembered that in her married life she only once cooked
a meal on the Sabbath and that exception only because travelers had stopped
and needed to be fed.
Bethesda Presbyterian Church, located 8 miles southwest of Rock Hill on Highway
322, was founded in 1769. It was the second church in York County (Bethel
is 5 years older)
Originally Bethesda was a "meeting house." To be called a church, the
congregation had to be served by an ordained minister. Presbyterian ministers
were few and far between on the frontier. Old Waxhaw Presbyterian Church
(founded in upper Lancaster County in 1755 and the oldest church in the South
Carolina upcountry) was served by the Rev. William Richardson.
The original site was about a mile east of the present building. The first
building was of logs. The log building burned in 1780 and was replaced by
a wooden frame structure.. About 1820 the present brick building was constructed.
It is now the oldest church structure and the oldest brick building in York
County.
In 1785 the first meeting of the South Carolina Presbytery was held at Old
Waxhaw. Assignments were made for supply pastors. Rev. John Simpson preached
at Bethesda once a month.
Robert E. Walker became the first full-time pastor in 1795, serving the church
for 40 years. For 25 of those years Walker also was pastor of Ebenezer
Presbyterian Church. At other times he supplied various smaller churches.
In 1835 Walker was succeeded by the Rev. Cyrus Johnston who served for five
years. Johnston, like so many of his parishioners, went "West." In Mississippi,
Johnston established a Presbyterian church also called Bethesda Presbyterian..
As the years passed, cotton culture attached itself to the area. Slave labor
was an element of the cotton culture. Blacks attended the same churches as
their masters. In 1854 Bethesda's rolls listed 73 black members.
Records show remodeling from time to time. The original church floor had
been made of brick. In 1857 the brick floor was replaced by a wood floor.
In 1880 the present-day altar was installed. In 1979 the church received
a $24,200 grant to apply new mortar to the old brick and to restore the pews.
The women of the church played a major role in improvements. The Ladies Aid
Society of Bethesda was organized in 1887. They raised money for a handsome
chandelier (there was no electricity before the 1930s so kerosene was used
for lighting.) The Ladies Aid Society carpeted the church several times,
bought various items of church furniture, purchased a silver communion set,
all of which contributed to the general attractiveness of the church.
An education building was completed in 1954. The first floor has 8 classrooms
and there is an assembly room and kitchen upstairs.
Any time of the year, but especially in the summer, passersby can see visitors
amidst the cemetery's ancient tombstones. The oldest known tombstone can
no longer be read but in 1937 was transcribed as, "William Neely, Dec. 8,
1776. 42 years old." Also, still legible in 1937 were two others: "Elizabeth
Neely, Oct. 25, 1785. 91 years old" and "Mary Neely, Oct. 16, 1815. 73 years
old." The oldest tombstone still legible is for Peggy Black who died Nov.
5, 1777, aged 28 years.
The names most frequently found that date before this century are: Adams,
Ash/Ashe, Black, Bratton, Burris, Byers, Clinton, Crawford, Davison, Erwin,
Gordon, Hanna, Johnson, Lindsay, Love, Lowry, Mendenhall, Moore (the most
frequent of all), McConnell, Sadler, Sandifer, Wallace, Williams, and Williamson.
Bethesda is on the National Register of Historic Places.
In 1828 about five miles northeast of York on what was once called the
“Great Road from Yorkville to Charlotte,” and is now called Highway 49,
Beth-Shiloh Church was organized.
There was no building to start with, just a “stand,” or wooden platform on
which the minister would stand, was erected in a grove of trees.
The church-goers of the community had previously attended Bethel Presbyterian
Church about 7 miles distant. The new congregation persuaded the Rev. William
Cummins Davis to visit them about once a month, if the weather permitted.
After a year of preaching in the grove, Davis persuaded the people to construct
a church. The walls were hewn logs.
Reverend Davis was then 67 years of age and nearing the end of a long and
colorful career. He had been ordained in 1789 and from the beginning was
considered a trouble-maker by the Presbyterian church.
In the 1790s Davis insisted upon his congregations singing Watts’ Psalms
and hymns accompanied by musical instruments. His conservative congregations
resisted. By 1803 he was in York District as missionary to the Catawba Indians.
Davis had no more success with the Catawbas than earlier Presbyterians,
Methodists and Baptists had had.
In 1805 Davis began ministering to the Bullocks Creek congregation in York
District. For at least two years he had been condemning slavery from the
pulpit. Davis preached that slave-holding was a sin and for the masters to
withhold religious instruction was the “unforgivable sin.”
Davis was called to Phildelphia by the Presbyterian church and was officially
reprimanded for his “transgressions against accepted practices of worship”.
Davis replied to the church officials: “Against government I have never preached.
. . . Against slavery I will always preach!”
Davis was tried for heresy in 1811. He resigned from the Presbyterian Church
and established his own church, the Independent Presbyterian Church. Bullocks
Creek remained loyal to Davis and by 1835 Davis had 11 churches, all of whom
were opposed to slavery. Six of the 11 were in York District. Two were in
Union County, SC, two in Lincoln County, NC and one was in Lowndes County,
Mississipi. The last was ministered by Silas Feemster, Davis’s son-in-law.
When Davis died in September 1831, the membership of the Independent Presbyterian
Church was about 1,000. In 1831 and 1832 York District was the center of
a Great Revival (the last Great Revival had been in 1802).
Many people were converted but at the same time the migration to the west
(Mississippi and Alabama, especially) was in full swing so that the membership
of Carolina churches did not appear to increase. Families by the names of
Jamison, Kolb, Robinson, Love, Randall and Davis left York District and
transferred their membership to Salem Church in Lowndes County, Mississippi.
After Davis’s death, his son-in-law, Rev. Silas J. Feemster served as pastor
of Beth-Shiloh for five years before removing to Mississippi. Feemster was
succeeded by Rev. George W. Davis, a nephew of William Cummins Davis. He
stayed at Beth-Shiloh for 10 years and then west.
In December 1863, in the midst of the Civil War. The Independent Presbyterians
dissolved and united with the Bethel Presbyterian, Synod of South Carolina.
That is, the Carolina Presbyterians united. In Mississippi, the Independents
of Salem Church merged with Congregationalists.
Thirteen young men who were members of Salem Church were scheduled to be
drafted in the Confederate army. All escaped to Ohio; several attended Wheaton
College, a Congregationalist school and all returned to Mississippi after
the war but the Ku Klux Klan soon scattered them to neighboring states.
Bethesda Presbyterian Church, located about 8 miles southwest of Rock Hill
on S. C. 322, has the oldest church building in York County, dating back
to 1822.
A dozen years before the construction of the Bethesda meetinghouse, the Bethesda
Circulating Library Society was organized along the lines of the
pre-Revolutionary circulating library established by Ben Franklin in
Philadelphia. Penn. Philadelphia was America's most cosmopolitan city (chiefly
because Franklin made it so). Bethesda was completely rural, not even a
crossroads village. The only town in York County in 1810 was Yorkville and
it had probably no more than 20 houses. This alone makes a circulating library
most unusual for the time and place.
The constitution of the Bethesda Circulating Library stated that their object
was "...to promote and facilitate the acquisition of great advantages resulting
both to individuals and to the community at large, from a general diffusion
of divine and natural knowledge."
The membership was made up of 50 men (no women and children were listed)
from all over York District. Subscriber's surnames represented were Black,
Simpson, Walker, Sadler, Givans, Love, Starr, Hanna, Moore, Hope, Davidson,
Rainey, Martin, Grier, Cooper, Daugherty, Aiken, Wallace, Clendennan, Ross,
Anderson, Douglass, Robertson, Mitchel, Miller, Crockett, Beattie, Watson,
Roberson, Williamson Sandifer, Davis, Powell and Ardrey.
The money needed to establish the library was acquired by charging an initiation
fee and an annual installment payment. The books were purchased in Philadelphia,
Pa. and in Charleston, S.C. Quarterly, the men met to exchange the books
which were bundled in lots of from one to four.
Since there were 50 members and 50 lots, over time,each man had access to
all the library's holdings ( or would have if the society, which disbanded
by mutual consent in 1816, had lasted longer). A list of the books shows
that they were mostly histories, religious and philosophical books. There
was a scattering of books of essays and travel books. The Works of Benjamin
Franklin and David Ramsay's History of South Carolina were probably among
the most popular.
A Yorkville Enquirer correspondent who signed himself "Juvenis," wrote in
1860 about the men of the Bethesda Circulating Library Society of a half
century before that they had read uplifting literature of substance. He applauded
the concept of the circulating library and thought it worthy of imitation
by villages, churches and communities.
Juvenis bemoaned the fact (in his view) that the "modern passion" was for
"the sickly, trashy nauseating stuff of which so many novels are made." He
was especially appalled to observe people racing after the "wishy-washy,
namby-pamby, demoralizing matter that floats through so many of the periodicals
of the present age."
Juvenis' viewpoint was probably too harsh. At the time of his writing Yorkville
had two academies and the Yorkville Lyceum. The Lyceum, underwritten by
Yorkville's merchant and professional class, sponsored visiting lecturers
and concert artists. It also subscribed to New York, Philadelphia, Washington
and London newspapers and magazines.
In one week in 1860, Yorkville, the "Athens of the Upcountry," could boast
of having two lectures on astronomy by Maj..P. R. Stevens of Charleston ("
a lucid and highly satisfactory lecture on the Ptolemaic and Copernican
theories"), Bailey's Varieties (comic and sentimental songs, music and dancing
by the "genteel and clever" 11-member Bailey family), a parade of the Jasper
Light Infantry with the cadets from the Kings Mountain Military Academy and
a "Streamers of Light" show displaying the aurora borealis.
Lectures and concerts were generally held in the auditorium of the Yorkville
Female Collegiate Institute at the site now occupied by the McCelvey Center
in York. The college, the military academy and the Lyceum all suspended
activities when the Civil War broke out. Concerts, lectures and public libraries
had to wait until the tumult of the Reconstruction Era subsided.
October 8, 1999 marks the 219th anniversary of the battle of Kings Mountain.
Most textbooks call the battle the "turning point of the Revolution." From
that point on the British were on the run.
It was a remarkable battle in many ways. For one thing, there was only one
Englishman involved--Major Patrick Ferguson. The battle was fought between
two sets of Americans, one favoring independence and the other loyal to the
mother country.
It was also a battle of weapons--the frontier rifle vs. the musket. Frontier
warfare won out over the traditional fighting style of Europeans. The Redcoat
had been trained to be an automaton, to not question an officer's judgment.
Once in battle the Tories were permitted to only move forward or backward.
In contrast, the Patriot leader Col. Isaac Shelby told his men, "When we
encounter the enemy don't wait for the word of command. Let each of you be
your own officer and do the very best you can."
Kings Mountain sits like a raised diagonal across the state boundary of the
Carolinas. The low range runs from North Carolina in a southeasterly direction
forming a ridge on the South Carolina side for about a mile and a half. The
crest of the ridge is around 600 yards long. Its width varies from 60 to
120 yards. The ridge's summit rises about 60 feet.
In 1780 the crest was described as treeless but the slopes were heavily forested.
The slopes were not gentle. There were deep ravines and boulders large enough
to impede an invading army.
The Patriots marched to Kings Mountain from Cowpens on a moonless night on
rough roads in a steady drizzle of rain. To add to their problems the soldiers
had to keep their rifles and powder dry. They wrapped their blankets and
jackets around their weapons and shivered.
All night and all morning of the following day they marched. At noon on October
8 they stopped at the base of Kings Mountain and checked their weapons. The
countersign "Buford" was passed along--in honor of the general whose men
were given no quarter in an earlier Lancaster County battle.
Their were 8 columns of Patriots, about 900 men. The Tories had an equal
number. The Tories had the natural advantage of being on top of the mountain.
The Patriots would have to carry the battle to them and climb the rugged
slopes to get to them.
Looking back, military analysts now say the Tories were over-confident and
lax. The Patriots had a simple plan and moved quickly. The men under Colonels
William Campbell and Isaac Shelby were in the center on each side of the
mountain and when ready to fire gave an Indian yell and rushed the enemy.
The others were to follow.
The plan worked. The Tories were on top but in the open. The frontiersman
fired from cover. Realizing that he was in trouble, Major Ferguson ordered
a bayonet charge against Campbell's men and seemed to be winning. But Colonel
Campbell rallied the men who recharged their rifles and drove the Tories
back.
Three times the Tories charged with bayonets. Each time they were thrown
back. The frontier riflemen were more accurate. As the Patriots neared the
top they gained the advantage of facing soldiers who were silhouetted against
the sky.
Major Ferguson, who had fought desperately well, fell with a half-dozen bullets
in him. His death broke the spirit of the Tories.
The Patriots tallied 28 men killed and 64 wounded. The Tories had 157 killed
and 64 wounded and 698 taken prisoner. The battle that turned the war around
lasted for just one hour.
From 1785 until July 1, 1911 South Carolina did not require a marriage license.
On the other hand, North Carolina had strict requirements which included
putting up a bond to guarantee that neither party had been previously married.
In 1897, Willard O. Bailes, who lived north of Fort Mill on the North Carolina
border (close to the present-day Carowinds location), saw an opportunity
to take advantage of the situation. Bailes, then 27 years, advertised himself
at the “Greatest Marrying Man” in the world.
Bailes had a card printed that listed the marriage fees “to those who
can’t pay more, $1.00; common fee, $2.00; secret service, $5.00; advertising
price, $3.00; rich man’s price, $10.00.” He also offered marriage certificates
in different styles and sizes for free.
Within three years Bailes boasted that he had married 395 couples. In 1900
a news article in the Atlanta Constitution noted that Bailes was marrying
couples who lived as far as 700 miles away. The Constitution said that Bailes
guaranteed that “his services will be short, intelligent, very binding and
hard to break.” (Indeed the marriage would be hard to breakprior to
1950, South Carolina forbade divorce.)
By summer of 1903, Bailes’ Flint Hill neighbors were petitioning the governor
to take away Bailes’ notary public commission. When they didn’t hear from
the governor they hired a lawyer who maintained that a notary public license
did not give authority to perform marriagesthat Bailes had committed
a fraud.
Meantime, as word spread, Bailes married more and more couples. On weekends
couples waited in line. His advertising expanded to attract more couples.
He didn’t charge for the marriages of ministers or couples over 50 years
of age. And he promised that if the couple had no money he would marry them
anyway. Even at that, people began to say that he was becoming wealthy.
Governor Heyward finally responded to Fort Mill’s objections to Bailes. He
said that although he highly disapproved of Bailes’ advertising, it was not
enough to take away his commission in the absence of proof of wrongdoing.
His neighbors then got busy gathering the proofs that Bailes had a racket
going. They submitted his price lists, which by 1904 ranged from $1.00 to
$100.00 (the last for “Regular Millionaires”). Bailes promised “No hard
questions. No license.”
Fort Mill citizens overwhelmingly voted against Heyward in the 1904 election.
This time Governor Heyward paid heed and canceled Squire Bailes’ notary public
commission but that action made absolutely no difference. Bailes continued
in his marriage business.
In April 1905, Willard O. Bailes and a cousin, Ed Bailes, got into an argument.
W. O shot Ed Bailes and was arrested on a charge of assault and battery with
intent to kill. It was termed “a family row” in the newspapers. The circuit
court found Bailes guilty of assault and battery and imposed a fine of $20
or 20 days. Bailes paid the fine.
Two years later Bailes was charged with bigamy and adultery. Before the S.
C. law enforcement officers could catch up with him he was out-of-state.
One report was that he was in New York and suffering from malaria. Another
said that he had gone to Oklahoma.
By November 1910 Bailes had managed to persuade the solicitor to drop charges
and was back at his old stand on the N. C. line. He was as popular as ever
as couples lined up to be married by him.
But it wasn’t long before the S. C. legislature passed a law requiring that
marriage licenses be issued by the county probate judge. Willard Bailes’
salad days were over. Out-of-state customers went to the courthouse for the
license and stayed there to be married by the probate judge.
On August 1957, Maj. William C. Coleman, a Rock Hill native and a 1935 Winthrop
Training School graduate, was back in the area to carry out an unusual Air
Force assignment. It was his task to locate anything related to early aviation
that could be placed on display at the Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio.
It was a fruitful trip.
One of the first people Major Coleman sought out was Bob Bryant of Rock Hill.
Coleman had two very good reasons to go to Bryant. One was Bryant's own
outstanding aviation record; the other reason was that Bryant knew everybody
connected to aviation in the area and would enthusiastically aid Coleman
in his search.
In various interviews over the years, Bryant has stated that his love affair
with the sky began when he was two years old and saw Halley's Comet. In 1913
he saw his first airplane on the Winthrop College campus when a pilot in
a small open plane was the star attraction of the first York County fair.
In 1918 Bryant was a spectator at a Liberty Bond Drive in Columbia where
7 Jennies flew over while Fort Jackson soldiers marched. One of the Jennies
stalled and crashed at a spot on Assembly Street near the state capital
(precisely where the Market Restaurant was later located.) Even though he
witnessed two pilots killed, Bryant decided that day that he would learn
to fly.
Bob's older brother ran a motion picture house in Rock Hill. Whenever a new
movie came in for showing on Monday there was a standing order to deliver
it to Capt. Elliott Springs in Fort Mill for a Sunday night showing. Capt.
Springs was a genuine World War I air ace who had been decorated by four
governments.
Springs had his own projector and always sent a car for the film and returned
it after the showing. One night he didn't have a car to spare and phoned
to ask if someone could bring the film to Fort Mill. Bob Bryant had read
everything he could get his hands on that was written about or by Springs.
He jumped at the chance to see his hero.
That night Springs told Bryant he would teach him how to fly. Springs had
three planes and said he would start Bryant in a Waco. Bryant's first lesson
was simple. Using a broomstick, Springs showed Bryant how to maneuver the
plane. Springs did all of his own mechanic work and taught Bryant how to
repair engines. Bryant taught Springs how to ride a motorcycle.
Fifteen years after Springs taught Bryant how to fly, Bryant set the first
of two world records for the longest non-stop flights. In 1936 the distance
was 700 miles; in 1938 Bryant flew 1,050 miles non-stop. He later said, "I
set records to show Col. Springs that I could. He had a great influence on
my life."
Bryant flew some of the first mail routes. In World War II he flew anti-submarine
missions. One of the items he gave Coleman for the museum was a World War
II German pilot's summer uniform.
Bryant took Coleman over to Springs Park in Lancaster County. The recreation
center for Springs employees had opened at the end of World War II. In a
rustic setting on the backwaters of the Catawba River, Colonel Springs had
gathered together a fascinating collection of "toys" for kids of all ages
(including the Colonel.) There were three miniature railroad locomotives
to carry passengers around the park, a genuine working merry-go-round, a
war surplus amphibious vehicle called a "Duck," two B-24 bombers, an A-20
attack plane, a T-6 trainer, and the prize, the only King Cobra Fighter Plane,
P-63, known to be in the United States.
The King Cobra was a tracer and fighter bomber with a 1200 hp Allison engine
situated behind the pilot which had been built for the Russians. Thousands
had been delivered through Alaska.
Springs generously donated the King Cobra to the Air Force Museum along with
the original manuscripts of four books on the exploits of aviators in World
War I: "War Birds and Lady Birds," "Contact," "Above the Black-Blue Sky,"
and "Nocturne Militaire."
It is an ancient Roman holiday. Later it was called All Fool’s Day. We call
it April Fool’s. From ancient Rome to the present, it is the day for pranks
played on the unsuspecting.
Dr. Maurice Moore in his book, Reminiscences of York, was born in the village
of Yorkville (now York) in 1795. In his old age he remembered some pranks
that occurred on All Fool’s Day when he was young.
Jack Kuykendal, a hatter, was a victim of a Fool’s Day joke. Jack was
industrious, sober and well-liked. Still, his friends couldn’t resist bedeviling
him for his great affection for an uncle. “Uncle Jonathan Kuykendal said
this, or did that, was the burden of his song; and from his acts or ideas
in the devoted nephew’s mind, there was no appeal.”
A fellow with an unfamiliar voice was hired to go to Jack’s place and tell
him that his uncle was dying of colic. Jack was told to take Dr. William
Moore with him and go immediately to his uncle’s house. Jack immediately
threw down his work and began to seek a horse he could ride.
Since all of Jack’s friends were in on the joke, each had an excuse when
Jack approached him and asked to borrow a horse---the horse was lame, someone
else had asked for the horse, etc. Everyone knew that Jack’s landlord, Mr.
Jimmy Ross, never lent out his horse but Jack’s desperation took him to Mr.
Ross. The jokers were shocked that Ross lent his horse to Jack.
Knowing they mustn’t let the good doctor ride the long distance to Uncle
Jonathan’s house, the pranksters rushed to stop the two with the question,
“Isn’t it the first of April?” Dr. Moore “took the alarm, came to a full
stop and wanted to know how Jack got the news of Uncle Jonathan’s illness.”
The doctor was annoyed with the funmakers but Jack was elated to know that
his Uncle Jonathan was well after all and gave “not one picayune” for the
joke that was played on him.
Dr. Moore’s tales of practical jokes and jokers generally reveal that the
jokes played on friends were never vicious or mean. They were intended to
scare or confound but not to hurt the victim. Joe Martin was so popular in
York that he was elected captain of the militia. “He had studied law but
did not practice it. Most of Joe Martin’s friends in Yorkville were business
men. After discovery of gold in the late 1820s at Haile Gold Mine in Lancaster
District and lesser amounts around Kings Mountain in York District, a joint
stock company was formed in York for the purpose of speculating on gold sites.
A Mr. Leach became the company agent to take leases and sell them.
Dr. Moore said the gold fever was so powerful that if a flint rock was found
on a plantation, Leach would be there to lease all of the farm’s minerals
for 20 years.
Martin decided that he would teach his friends a lesson. He wrote a letter
in his own handwriting (well known by his friends) with no attempt to disguise
it, saying that he was from Richmond District and would exchange 10 likely
Negroes for a mine. He creased and crumpled the letter so as to appear that
it had been handled carelessly.
Martin found Leach, the agent, on the court house steps and casually handed
him the letter saying that he had been given the letter a week ago but had
forgotten about it. Leach fell for it and excitedly took off to see his partners.
In no time his horse was ready, a bag of rocks collected and Leach was mounting
for Columbia.
At that point Dr. Moore, who was in on Martin’s joke, stepped up to ask if
they had read the letter. The men said it was fine. “Did you notice the writing,
you better read the letter again.” They yelled for Leach to stop. He heard
them and returned. They all reread the letter and recognized that once again
Joe Martin had played a practical joke on them. Dr. Moore called the joke
effective for “the gold mine speculations seemed to die out like the extinguished
smoldering wick of a candle.”
For many years, at least from 1920 through the 1950s, there were gatherings
of singers who brought with them their often tattered copies of an 1856 edition
of the American Tune Book by Dr. Lowell Mason. The singers, most of them
men and few of them young, would gather at a country church or school for
a day of singing and picnicking.
The roots of the event were in what old-timers called a “singing school.”
There are references to groups meeting for “all-day singing” as far back
as the early 1800s. The first song book that was appropriate for such singings
was Southern Harmony by William Walker, published in 1835. In 1844 Walker’s
brother-in-law, B. F. White, published Sacred Harp. These books, alongside
the later American Tune Book, were used for as long as the bindings held
together.
In 1919 singers formed the York County Tune Book Association. There was a
similar organization in Gaston County, N. C. and another in Mecklenburg County.
Members of any one county group were likely to show up in the neighboring
counties. The singers came from all over - Columbia and Charlotte always
had good representation at the annual events. E. Meek Dickson directed York
County’s singing for many years. LL. Henderson of Union Church in Gaston
County, N. C. and R. C. Freeman of Steele Creek in Mecklenburg County were
other noted leaders.
There were others who never missed an annual meeting and not just annual
meetings. Often groups got together to practice before the major event. I.
P. Boyd of Mount Holly near Rock Hill had perfect attendance. The usual time
to meet was “lay-by” time, or “slack time,” for the farmerthe period
in late August when the cotton had been chopped and was not yet ready to
be picked.
In 1934 the American Tune Book Sing was at Kings Mountain Chapel. About 150
joined in the singing. The audience came from four or five counties and often
totaled 3-400. Candidates for political office were usually present. They
didn’t sing but but they did “work” the crowd.
Typically, the singing began at 10 a.m. Soup simmered in giant kettles ready
for a break around noon when the picnic baskets were opened and people got
ready for “dinner on the grounds.” After lunch, singing continued until five
p.m. when people departed in an assortment of vehicles including wagons,
buggies and Model-T cars.
Elizabeth Reed, writing about the 1950 Tune Book Sing at Beth-Shiloh Presbyterian
Church near York, described the singing in this fashion: “Many of the songs
are in a strange and unusual minor key. Often the director dispenses with
the piano and the voices of the singers rise and fall in a slow cadence of
unusual beauty. . . . Above the song is the meter, S. M. for short meter;
C. M. for common meter, L. M. for long meter and P. M. for peculiar meter.”
Ms. Reed added that the songs didn’t really have titles, or at least didn’t
have titles with any meaning. At the head of the page were terms such as
“Beloath,” “Perez,” “Otto” and “Ovio.” Some people called it “round-note
music.”
About 350 people attended the 1950 meeting. The major event was the distribution
of a newly published reprint of the 1856 songbook. Kelly Robinson of Gastonia
had found that J. E. Lindsay, a York County native then living in Gastonia,
had a perfect copy of the old book. Robinson was instrumental in getting
the reprint published in Charlotte.
Frances Glenn wrote of the 1952 annual meeting at Allison Creek Presbyterian
Church: “Just as in the old-time singing school, the tenors, altos, basses,
and sopranos, sat in sections to provide harmony to the singing. Differing
from modern-day singing, the congregation sang “do-re-mi’s” for the length
of the tune, substituting the words on the second stanza.”
In 1953 the Annual York County Tune Book Association singing was held at
Olivet Presbyterian Church at McConnells. Several hundred were present. N.
Blair Dulin of Bowling Green was the leader of the 1953 group.
In 1958 the 38th annual all-day singing meeting was held at Beersheba
Presbyterian Church. It was a joint meeting with the singing led by York
County’s N. Blair Dulin of Bowling Green, Gastonia County’s Roy Lineberger
and Claude Davis and Eddie Meek Williams of Columbia.
We don’t know when the last meeting of the York County Tune Book Association
occurred but we suspect it died out along with some of the old-time leaders.
One factor undoubtedly would have been the vanishing of old patterns of rural
life, particularly the disappearance of cotton farming (now being revived
but along different lines).
A visitor to downtown Yorkville in 1858 who picked up a copy of the Yorkville
Enquirer and examined the newspaper's advertisements would have to conclude
that Yorkville was a thriving town.
Most impressive was the number of manufacturers of carriages, buggies and
harness. Wheeler's Carriage Emporium, owned by B. T. Wheeler, built carriages,
buggies, and harness using the brand name "Excelsior.". Wheeler also repaired
carriages and buggies. He assured the reader that he had on hand enameled
and patent leathers, fringes, tassels, carpets, mats, ivory, brass, silverhead
nails and varnishes of all kinds.
Wickert & McCants Coach Co., formerly Wickert & Walker, turned out
carriages and buggies while J. Ed Jeffreys specialized in making and repairing
wagons in his shop near the Masonic Hall.
The Railroad Hotel kept rental conveyances for the convenience of their guests.
The hotel also accommodated stock drivers (cattle were brought from the
countryside and shipped by train.)
The business house of Allison and Bratton, one of the largest, had available
40 gallons of "Burning Fluid" manufactured from 95% alcohol. The smokeless
substance was guaranteed to furnish a "clear and brilliant light."
Allison and Bratton also boasted of its York District franchise on Dayton's
Imperial Sealing Cans with air exhausters for "canning vegetables, fruits,
fresh and sweet for winter use."
There were other dry goods stores. L. Bloomberg & Brother simply advertised
the best quality goods without a hint of what they might be, but "Fancy Dry
Goods," which was apparently the name of the shop, offered silks, linens,
hosiery and embroideries.
Yorkville Grocery Market offered more than groceries. They advertised bagging,
bale rope, candles, nails and yarn as well as coffee, mackerel (salted in
barrels), rice, sugar,and salt.
There was also the Yorkville Produce Market which advertised "wagon prices"
on apples, bacon, butter, beef, beeswax, cotton corn, chickens, eggs, feathers,
flour, fodder, lard, meal, oats, pork, peaches, peas, potatoes, turnips,
tallow, wheat and wool.
Dr. Alfred Craven, Yorkville's "resident surgeon dentist," was also a skilled
goldsmith and silversmith. Another dentist-surgeon, Dr. J. T. Walker of Chester,
came to Yorkville's Cornwell House on Monday and Saturday. He announced that
he mounted teeth "on the cheoplastic process--the perfection of mechanical
Dentistry for the mounting of partial or full sets of teeth."
John R.Schorb, an instructor in the Female Academy, advertised that he took
pictures next door to the Presbyterian Church on Saturday between half-past
eleven to two o'clock.
M. Johnson advertised for "green and dry hides". Mrs. L. D. Owens' ad only
needed one word: "Dressmaking." Richard Hare advertised tombstones and Louis
Smith, boot and shoemaking.
Evidence that Yorkville was in a pre-industrial stage is found in Adams,
McCorkle & Co.'s ad: "WANTED 50,000 yds of cloth--woolen janes and linsey
cloth." Obviously, Adams, McCorkle & Co. factored cloth that was woven
in households spread over a rather large area. Sheep and flax were still
commonly grown.
Yorkville, a county seat, had its share of lawyers: Col. I. D. Witherspoon,
G. W. Williams, Col. William C. Beatty, Walter B. Metts, John L. Miller and
Samuel Youngblood , let the public know of their services. Today's citizens
would immediately cry "conflict of interest!" John L. Miller was the Commissioner
of Equity, an elective office, and Samuel Youngblood was also the sheriff
of York District. Both carried on a private law practice from their courthouse
offices. Lancasterville and Charleston lawyers also advertised.
The paper regularly ran notices on stray horses, unfenced cattle, partnerships
being formed and dissolved, and the notices of candidates for tax collector,
sheriff and the legislature. There were even lists of names of people who
had undelivered letters at the post office.
Lindsey & Gordon purchased all the clean cotton and linen rags
available--probably for paper making.
An 1811 act of the S. C. legislature establishing “certain Roads, Bridges
and Ferries” included the following:
That the ferry on the Catawba river, in York district, commonly called
Bigger’s ferry, and lately, by law, vested in Dr. John Allison, be, and the
same is hereby, re-established; and vested in James Mason, his heirs and
assigns, for the term of fourteen years. And that the following rates of
ferriage, and no more, be received at the same, to wit: for every
foot passenger, four cents; for every led horse, four cents; for every rider
and horse, six and a quarter cents; for every carriage with two wheels, horse
and driver, twenty-five cents; for every four wheeled carriage, driver and
horses, seventy-five cents; for every hogshead of tobacco, horse and driver,
twenty-five cents; for every head of black cattle, sheep, goats or hogs,
two cents.
In 1827, following the death of Daniel Mason, the ferry was vested in his
widow, Nancy Mason. Nancy Mason was allowed to keep it for 7 years at the
same terms except that “she be allowed the sum of 12 12 cents for every man
and horse.
In 1841 the above ferry was rechartered. James Mason and his heirs sold their
right to operate to James L. Wright and William Wright for 7 years. The road
that led to and from the ferry was now termed the “great road leading from
Yorkville, South Carolina, to Charlotte, North Carolina.” In this century
the “great road” received a number Hwy. 49, a part of the national
road network.
Sometime around the turn of the 20th century, perhaps as a result of the
Great Flood of 1904, ferry service across the Catawba River was dropped at
the site of Wright’s Ferry. People from the town of York and northern York
County found that, if they wanted to go to Charlotte, N. C., they had to
go through Gastonia, N. C., an addition of about thirty-five miles. After
much debate and political maneuvering, Mecklenburg County, N. C. and York
County, S. C. agreed to build a bridge over the site of the old Wright’s
ferry route. W. M. Boyd, a Mecklenburg citizen, the access land on both sides
of the river and agreed to sell.
Mecklenburg County paid for two-thirds of the cost of construction of the
projected $120,000 needed to build the bridge which would have concrete supports
and a plank flooring covered with asphalt. Mecklenburg also hard-surfaced
the road from its side of the bridge into Charlotte. York County, which
customarily built all of its roads and bridges with convict labor, ran into
all sorts of problems from bad weather to quicksand and had only three miles
of paved road by the date of the bridge opening on August 17, 1923.
The governors of both Carolinas and numerous county officials were present
that hot day in August, along with a crowd estimated at over 10,000. There
were community bands and scout bands. Local farmers contributed free barbecue.
Cold drink stands and picnic tables were spotted over the landscape. There
was a forty-acre parking lot but it was not large enough for all the cars
which lined the roadsides for two miles. The Pathe and International motion
picture companies filmed the celebration for distribution through the nation.
Following the speeches by the two governors, a highlight of the celebration
was the appearance of stunt pilots who flew under the bridge to the awe of
the crowd. First, two young men from Charlotte, P. R. Redfern and B. F. Withers,
Jr. swooped a Curtis plane under the bridge. Later, Capt. Elliott White Springs
of Fort Mill, a World War I flying ace and local hero, made a perfect flight
under Buster Boyd bridge.
The following spring York County asphalted the road from York to the North
Carolina line.
Samuel Campbell of York District was a master blacksmith who worked from
a shop on John Springs’ large Fort Mill plantation. Campbell’s ledger, with
entries from 1823 to 1826 covering 118 neatly written pages, is a fascinating
glimpse into the plantation world of that time.
Campbell made new or repaired every iron or steel object to be found. Most
often his entries show him shoeing horses and making plow points of every
description. With each entry he showed the method he used. “Founded” meant
that he made the object by pouring molten metal into a mold. “Laid” meant
that he twisted metal strands together and “upset” occur when he improved
a metal tool by making it shorter or thicker by hammering on the end.
Campbell mentioned three kinds of iron - “ware iron,” Rag iron,” and “rold
(rolled) iron.” He also wrote “Casteel (cast steel),” and “Blistered steel”
beside some of the objects worked on.
Fortunately, Campbell wrote in a clear handwriting with each letter carefully
formed. His spelling was atrocious, however, sometimes making it impossible,
even with a dictionary, to understand what he meant. What was “kee for a
forked dog”? “Ottering cranes for bells”? “Gudgers upset”? And, “Elettric
iron bradd skeins band hurders”? The last item is mentioned only once, gotten
by James Spratt on 18 August 1824.
The variety of items that Campbell worked on is amazing. For William Goodrich,
in one year’s time, Campbell repaired the big wheel and the tub of his grist
mill, shod his horses, and made for him horse shoes, plow points, a spring
for a lock, weeding hoes, dressing hoes, iron wedges, harrow teeth, and laid
an axe with iron and steel. He mended pot hooks and two bread trays for Goodrich
who was a fairly typical customer.
In some cases Campbell traded services. Susan Sembler brought in her hand-woven
cloth valued at $1.50 in exchange for “2 new Clappers put in Bell - .25:
Mending tongues (tongs) & fire Shovel - .25; 1 foot put on pot - .25;
spout put on tea pot - .75.” Sarah Auton also traded weaving for blacksmithing
services. Dr. Joseph R. Darnell’s medical bill was canceled by Campbell’s
frequent shoeing of the doctor’s horses.
John McCoy was a butcher whose entries showed his trade: “To Fleshing nife
made - .75; 3 tanner’s nives upset - .75”, etc.
“House hanging made frison welded” shows that Samuel Campbell could do fancy
designs. Did Widow Mary Guyer, or her son Isaac Guyer, happen to see some
fancy wrought iron in Yorkville, or perhaps Charleston, that led them to
add an ornamental ironwork to their house?
Widow Nancy F. Potts paid Campbell for “Ironing Waggon complete with sand
boxes - $65.00.” Campbell in turn paid a “Hammerman” (carpenter?) $57.50
for doing the “woodwork of waggon banding hubs and boxes” and $1.25 for making
a “feed troft and side box.”
Other interesting items made or repaired in the blacksmith shop: plating
leather shoes, gate hinges, window hinges, nails, locks, keys, loom collars,
harness rings, stilards (steelyards used to weigh bulky items like cotton
in the field), and stone augers.
Campbell worked for John Springs in an arrangement in which Springs furnished
the shop and equipment but the ledger book does not show what Springs may
have paid him for his labor. Campbell died in 1830. His estate papers do
show that in 1825 he purchased a lease on 223 acres of Catawba Indian Land
from John Springs. Campbell’s widow, Elizabeth R. Campbell sold the lease
after his death to Samuel K. Pettus.
On May 15, 1856 the Yorkville Enquirer reported that on the previous Saturday
there had been what they called the “Kansas meeting,” in which nearly $1400
had been raised to send “in aid of Kansas.” More accurately, the aid was
for southern slaveholders who had moved to Kansas in anticipation that it
would become a slave state as a result of a special election to be held in
the summer of 1856. State-wide the aim was for each of the six Congressional
Districts of South Carolina to raise enough funds to send 100 men each to
Kansas for the purpose of declaring their citizenship in order to vote in
a scheduled election later in the summer.
Back in 1820, after fierce debate over slavery in the territories, the U.
S. Congress had passed a bill known as the Missouri Compromise in which it
was legislated that there would be no slavery north of the line of 36°
30’. The land in question had been a part of the Louisiana territory which
was purchased from France in 1803. Missouri met the requirements for statehood
in 1817 and was admitted to the Union as a slave state while, at the same
time, Maine, which also met the requirements of statehood, was admitted as
a free state.
In 1850, slavery in the territories was a hard-fought issue that ended in
compromise but in 1854 Stephen A. Douglas, a native of Illinois, anxious
to have Southern support for his bid for the presidency, shepherded a bill
through the Congress, the Kansas-Nebraska Act which would allow the people
of the territories to decide if they wished slavery or not. “Popular
Sovereignty,” a term borrowed from Sen. Lewis Cass of Michigan, became
Douglas’s slogan.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 effectively set aside the Missouri Compromise
of 1820. At first, Southerners had assumed that Kansas would be slave and
Nebraska would be free but when slaves were brought into Kansas, abolitionists
got busy. The Republican party was formed as an anti-slavery party. The New
England Emigrant Aid Company sent over 2,000 settlers to Kansas. A race was
on between Southern slave-holders and Northern abolitionists to gain a majority
of the vote to determine the status of slavery. Two legislatures were elected,
one by the pro-slavery group, the other by the anti-slavery people and their
Free-State Party. Pres. Franklin Pierce’s State of the Union address in January
1856 left no doubt that he was pro-slavery.
Henry Ward Beecher, a very popular New York preacher, endorsed the use of
violence and there followed a large number of Sharp’s rifles shipped to Kansas
in boxes labeled “Beecher’s Bibles.” Men of the Southern secret societies
were preparing to strike at the Free-State Party headquarters in Lawrence,
Kansas. John Brown was organizing and arming his own irregular army.
Meantime back in York County, eighteen men applied for funds from the $1,400
raised at the Kansas meeting. Seven were chosen: Dr. Thomas B. Whitesides,
Meek Whitesides, John Whitesides, Ross Bird, C. A. Connor, R. H. McClain
and Isaac B. Dunlap. Daniel J. Young, Robert P. White, Jr. and J. C. McClain
became alternates. Dr. Whitesides was chosen to take charge and gave bond
for the proper expenditure of the funds.
Civil War (actually guerilla warfare) in Kansas lasted from May
21September 15, 1856. At least 200 men were killed and over $2 million
in property was destroyed. The territorial governor, John W. Geary, called
for federal troops and managed to restore peace (shaky though it was) to
Kansas.
The major outcome of Bleeding Kansas was the escalation of tension between
the sections. There was even bloodshed on the floor of Congress as Representative
Preston Brooks of South Carolina attacked Senator Charles Sumner of Maine
following Sumner’s inflammatory “Crime Against Kansas” speech.
The fanatic, John Brown, became a popular hero in the north. York County,
which had opposed the idea of secession in 1830 and 1850, in 1856 began to
talk of the possibility of seceding from the Union.
In the fall of 1987, Scarecrow Press published Bibliography of the
Catawba compiled and annotated by Thomas J. Blumer.
The 502-page book is the 10th volume of the "Native American Bibliography
Series" and will, no doubt, be invaluable to anyone interested in locating
information about the Catawba Indians. It is of special local interest because
of the tremendous number of references to people and events associated with
York County
In combination, the entries (arranged chronologically) and the lengthy index
serve to point out the major events of Catawba history
There are 4,271 references that cover 305 years of Catawba history. Of these
references, 612 deal with events before the American Revolution and 640 more
cover the period between the Revolution and the Civil War. The bulk are in
recent times. More than 500 references are cited for the Catawba land claim
as it has moved through the U. S. court system during the past ten years.
Blumer found these references in many places. Newspapers were a valuable
resource. Blumer cites 75 newspapers, many of which are no longer published.
In the colonial period, the South Carolina Gazette carried all of the official
news and its accounts reveal the significant role played by Catawbas in serving
as a go-between for other Indian tribes and the Royal government.
In modern times the major suppliers of articles on the Catawbas were the
Rock Hill Herald, the Fort Mill Times, and the Yorkville Enquirer. Blumer's
position (senior editor of the law library) enabled him to take advantage
of the tremendous capabilities of the Library of Congress to locate materials
and articles that can only be labeled as obscure.
Among the sources, as would be expected, are the official archives of the
state of South Carolina and the National Archives in Washington.
The South Carolina Archives houses a large number of the extant Catawba Indian
land leases--some 128 leases. Blumer lists each of the leases, the date of
the lease, the number of acres involved, and the names of the leaseholders
and the Indian officers who granted the lease.
The National Archives' holdings begin in the 1880s and include all of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs files on the Catawbas.
Besides the land leasing system, and references to cultural artifacts (chiefly
pottery), there are numerous references to Catawbas and warfare.
The entries reveal Catawba involvement in all of the wars. Catawba warriors
fought in the Revolution while their women and children stayed in Virginia
with the Pamunkey Indians. North Carolina Moravian records showed that more
than 100 Catawbas passed through Salem, N. C. on their way from Virginia
to South Carolina on June 13, 1781.
During the Civil War, the Lancaster Ledger, November 12, 1862, reported "The
Catawba Indian population is estimated between 80-100. Most of the men are
serving in the army, and their families are destitute."
The Rock Hill Record, September 2, 1918, under the heading "Indian Women
Showing Their Loyalty," stated that "Catawba Indian women are knitting for
the Red Cross, and the Mormon Relief Society has donated $8 to the cause.
Four Catawba Indians are in the service and one is serving in France. Nettie
Owl's daughter, Lula Owl, is a Red Cross Army Nurse."
The Evening Herald, May 27, 1944, in an article headed, "Catawbas have 28
Braves in Armed Services,"listed the names of the men. By March of the following
year there were 34 Catawba men in the military.
Catawba pottery is the subject of many of the bibliographic entries. There
are 33 articles cited on the pottery tradition alone. Many more entries fall
under such topics as demonstrations, exhibits, manufacture, peddling, sales,
etc.
The Journal of Southern History recommended the bibliography saying, "The
book is a must for historians, ethnologists, genealogists, folklorists,
economists, local historians, and students of the American Indian.
When the Civil War began in April of 1861 there were 55 Catawba men, women
and children living on 630 acres in York County. Nineteen Catawba men enlisted
in the Confederate Armyalmost every adult male.
The Catawba Confederate enlistees were: Jeff Ayres, John Brown, Frank Canty,
William Canty, Bob Crawford, Billy George, Gilbert George, Nelson George,
Allen Harris, Epps Harris, Jim Harris, John Harris, Peter Harris, Jr., Bob
Head, James Kegg, Robert Marsh, John Sanders, John Scott, and Alexander Timms.
These men enlisted in three different units, more of them members of Co.
H, 12th SC Volunteers, headed by Captain, later Colonel, Cadwallader Jones,
than in any other unit. Co. H, which was attached to the First Corps of the
Army of Northern Virginia, is believed to have seen more military action
than any other company of the war.
Other Catawbas served with the Lacy Guards, Co. K of the 17th SC Volunteers
and still others with Co. G of the Fifth S. C. Infantry. In all cases the
Catawbas served with units which were largely recruited out of York County.
Laurence M. Hauptman, author of Between Two Fires, a book published
in 1995 about American Indians in the Civil War, wrote a chapter on the Catawba
soldiers. In his concluding paragraph, Hauptman wrote: “The Catawba were
not the largest Indian group to join the Confederates, nor were they the
most significant in military terms. But they were far and away the most committed
to the Confederate cause. Brave and loyal to the bitter end, they were exposed
to the very worst of the war, and though nearly utterly destroyed, they fought
as a matter of course, with deep commitment and as a matter of pride.”
Among the examples Hauptman used to make his point about Catawba bravery
was that of two brothers, John and James Harris. both in Co. H, 12th Infantry.
The Harris brothers had enlisted as cooks but were also foot soldiers. In
the Battle of Antietam they were both wounded and both taken as prisoners
of war.
John Harris had a musket ball in his leg when he was sent to Fort Monroe.
He was freed in a prisoner exchange in May 1863 and immediately rejoined
his company. In September 1864 Harris was discharged because his leg had
not properly healed. (After the war he was elected chief of the Catawa tribe.)
James Harris, John’s brother, remained a prisoner of war until the war’s
end.
William Canty, who served in both the 17th SC and the 12th Inf, was wounded
3 timesin the Second Battle of Bull Run, Antietam and Boonesboro. Again
there were medical problems. Canty suffered from jaundice, a condition believed
caused by infection of his wounds.
Jefferson Ayers was wounded at Boonesboro and reenlisted only to be shot
in the head at Hatcher’s Run, near Petersburg. He was captured and taken
to a Union hospital in Maryland where he died in July 1865.
Alexander Timms was wounded in the Second Battle of Bull Run. Robert Head
died of wounds or disease (the record is not clear). Peter Harris was captured
after the fall of Petersburg and imprisoned at Hart’s Island in New York
harbor.
In fact, Hauptman found that almost all of the Catawbas were casualties of
war. He only found one, John Scott, who was later chief of the tribe, to
have survived the war without being wounded, killed or captured.
There was a great deal of sentiment after the war among white neighbors that
something should be done to give tribute to the brave Catawbas. The tribute
finally came on August 3, 1900. A 10 and 1/2 foot statue was unveiled in
Fort Mill’s Confederate park that was dedicated to the Catawba soldiers.
The statue was erected by Samuel Elliott White and John McKee Spratt. The
main speaker at the unveiling was Ben Harris, son of John Harris, one of
the brave Catawbas who fought with the Army of Northern Virginia.
The late 1840s and the decade of the 1850s witnessed a great railroad boom
in South Carolina. The state legislature was in the hands of men who believed
that cotton was king and were willing to finance the railroads that would
haul cotton to the port of Charleston.
Camden was the upcountry market town for Lancaster, Chester and York.
Transporting cotton to Camden meant putting bales on wagons and then struggling
through the mire or dust of unpaved and nearly impassable roads. In spite
of attempts to build canals, the Catawba River was not navigable except for
short distances.
Because of the difficulties in shipment, any railroad construction was eagerly
anticipated. The first railroad to contemplate building in the area was the
Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad, which in 1849 became the Charlotte,
Columbia & Augusta Railroad.
The exact route that the Charlotte & South Carolina Railroad should take
was the subject of much debate. The most western route proposed would have
taken the railroad through the village of Ebenezer (now a Rock Hill suburb),
but people objected. They considered a railroad too noisy, too dirty and
a despoiler of fine cotton land.
Ebenezer residents proposed that the line should run through the
“blackjack” land poor land for growing cotton because it lacked potash.
The move away from Ebenezer created Rock Hill, which was destined to outgrow
its older neighbor.
About six years passed before the first wood-fueled locomotive reached Rock
Hill in 1852. While there is no record of how many cars comprised the train
that day, it is known that the total rolling stock of the railroad in 1851
was four engines, two passenger cars and 12 boxcars.
The Rock Hill site was the highest point on the railroad between Charlotte
and Augusta (Withers-WTS Building on the Winthrop College campus sits on
the highest hill in Rock Hill). The story is that the crew laying the track
encountered so much rock that the supervisor, J. Lawrence Moore, gave the
place the name “Rock Hill.” At any rate, the village got a post office by
the name on April 17, 1852. Two months later, the first train came to Rock
Hill.
A trestle was built across the Catawba River not far south of the present
location of the Hoescht-Celanese plant. The first train arrived in Fort Mill
on July 4, 1852. Fort Mill, like Rock Hill, had less than half a dozen homes
before the arrival of the railroad, and most of those homes were scattered.
Rail traffic provided a great stimulus for the growth of both towns.
At Fort Mill, the railroad crews ran into quicksand that turned out to be
harder to handle than Rock Hill’s roack. It took a tremendous amount of gravel,
sand and rock before the track could be laid. Most of the labor came from
slaves. Local slave owners would contract labor for the laying of the roadbed
by their property. Between the river and Fort MIll a majority of the earth
movers were slave women who carried the dirt in their aprons, according to
old accounts.
Fort Mill celebrated the arrival of the train and the Fourth of July with
a picnic and all-day festivities. Col. A. Baxter Springs, forefather of Springs
textile leaders, hosted his neighbors with a barbecue. His father, John Springs,
was one of the major investors in the railroad. A. B. Springs was awarded
the Fort Mill contract to furnish the wood that was stacked in wood racks
along the railroad.
One of the early locomotives of the C&SC was “The John Springs.” Col.
Elliott White Springs, a descendant of John Springs, had a 4-foot replica
of that locomotive cast into the weather vane that adorns the Williamsburg-style
depot of the Lancaster and Chester Railway in Lancaster. It is an interesting
reminder of the days when water tanks and wood racks were essential to the
transport of goods in this area.
After the withdrawal of Federal troops from the state of South Carolina in
1877 Civil War veterans began planning reunions. At first the reunions were
generally small in scale but as the state began recovering economically and
railroads began offering special rates, the reunion groups became larger
and met more frequently.
In August 1889 the Seventeenth South Carolina Volunteers met in their 25th
reunion in what was described as “the biggest entertainment of the kind ever
held in the upcountry”. The Seventeenth had a considerable number of York
County soldiers (4 companies) along with Chester (2 companies). Lancaster
and Barnwell counties had present one company each.
The reunion was held in a park called Overlook Place on Whitaker Mountain
near the town of Blacksburg, now in Cherokee County but in 1889 in York County
(Cherokee County was created in 1897 from York and Spartanburg counties).
The town of Blacksburg was created in 1872 by the arrival of the Chicago,
Cincinnati and Charleston railroad. Sally Whitaker had once lived with her
family in the gap of a nearby mountain. One day Sally took her little brother
with her to search for the family’s cows. The boy was attacked by a large
panther. Sally carried a rifle and managed to kill the panther. The mountain
was named Whitaker Mountain in Sally’s honor.
The old soldiers arrived in every way possible: by train, wagon, horse or
mule back, even on foot. Blacksburg had several hotels which quickly filled
and a number of citizens invited veterans to their homes. Some camped in
wagons or tents on the outskirts of the town.
Col. F. W. McMaster met the veterans at the depot to shake their hands and
distribute badges to 109 of his old comrades. McMaster then mounted a white
horse and led a parade through the main street of Blacksburg and headed to
Overlook Mountain where the special events would take place. An observer
noted that some marchers were vigorous while others were “weak and
tottering.” He also noted empty sleeves and here and there a wooden leg.
Originally the Seventeenth had 1,035 enlistees with 230 of that number either
transferred or dismissed. Of the remainder, 393, or 49 per cent, were killed
or died of disease. The casualties were 67 per cent at Second Manassas. At
the end of the war the regiment had 410 survivors.
At Overlook Place there were present some 2-3,000 people to cheer the veterans.
A “sumptuous feast” was laid out on tables. The band played “Dixie” and
“Yankee Doodle”.
The Orator of the Day was Col. William Blackburn Wilson, captain of company
F and now a distinguished Yorkville lawyer. Wilson was followed by Colonel
McMaster who opened with a resounding “Comrades!,” followed by a long pause.
“Visibly affected,” the colonel added “friends of my might!” He spoke in
glowing terms of those soldiers who had sacrificed their lives.
When the speeches were over a resolution was presented to have the next
year’s reunion at the Columbia fair grounds. Within a few years most state
reunions would be held at the State Fair on the same grounds. The State Fair
was generally held in late October when farmers were likely to have sold
enough of their crops to have money to spend.
Later, a huge tent was erected yearly on the fair grounds to house the
Confederate veteran groups. United Daughters of the Confederacy would serve
the old veterans food and drink contributed by various businesses. This practice,
along with free admission, lasted as long as their were veterans who could
manage to travel to Columbia.
Following the fall of Fort Sumter in April 1861, York County men began to
take up arms. A majority of the York Countians joined one of four companies:
Company H, 12th South Carolina Volunteers of McGowan's Brigade; "The Whyte
Guards," South Battalion, 46th Regiment; Company H of the First Battalion
of S. C. Cavalry; or, "The Indian Land Tigers," Company E, 17th Regiment
of S. C. Volunteers.
Company H of the 12th S.C. Volunteers probably saw as much hard fighting
as any company that served in the Confederate Army. An excellent account
of Company H's service can be found in the regimental history,Gregg's-McGowan's
Brigade by J. F. J. Caldwell, an officer in the brigade. Dr. Douglas Southall
Freeman, an eminent Civil War historian, considered Caldwell's account to
be the best brigade history of the Army of Northern Virginia and one of the
best of the early books on the Confederacy.
From Caldwell's history we learn that the 12th S.C. Volunteers responded
to the 1st of July, 1861 appeal of Jefferson Davis by rendezvousing with
other companies from all over South Carolina at Camp Lightwoodknot Springs
about five miles from Columbia. It was the first regiment formed.
The first commanding officer was Col. R. G. M. Dunnovant, who was soon replaced
by Lt. Col. Dixon Barnes of Lancaster District. After the death of Barnes
at Sharpsburg, Maj. Cadwallader Jones of Mount Gallant plantation near Rock
Hill) took command of the company.
In November 1861, the regiment was sent to the defense of Hilton Head. They
were briefly engaged at Port Royal, and then at Green Pond the 12th, along
with the 13th and 14th regiments, came under the command of Brig. Gen. Maxey
Gregg, a Columbia lawyer. They went to Virginia in April 1862 and fought
23 battles on Virginia soil.
A roster of the company was brought home by Col. Cadwallader Jones and is
now in the York County Library. The list shows 8 commissioned officers, 18
non-commissioned officers and 111 privates. Of that number, 59 were wounded,
22 killed in battle, one killed accidentally, 22 died of wounds and disease,
and 16 were discharged for sickness. The total was 120 casualties among 137
men.
On a separate list, Col. Jones named 16 men who were taken prisoner in the
course of war. J. McRainey was twice prisoner, taken at Gettysburg and at
Spottsylvania. Private McRainey died of disease in 1864.
Notes besides the names reveal various things about the men. Four of the
privates--Nelson George, A. Tims, W. Canty, and James Harris--were marked
as Indian. Canty and Harris (who was the company cook) were wounded.
Many of the men were brothers and cousins. Cadwallader Jones had a son, Cad
Jr., who was a junior officer.
A father of 12 children, John R. Rodgers, died of typhoid fever. Rodgers
enlisted with his two oldest sons, Marion DeKalb and John Blair. The sons,
luckier than most, were not on the casualty list, but their cousins, William
Ashley Sparks and John Calvin Sparks, were both wounded. John Calvin Sparks
was crippled for life and brought home in a wagon.
Private J. F. Wherry was killed accidentally; no details were given. W. J.
Kimbrell, the Color Sergeant of the Regiment, proved how dangerous his post
was by being wounded four times--in '62, '63, '64, and '65. Sgt. D. F. Simpson
was also four-times wounded. Cpl. W. J. Boyd was wounded in three different
battles and died in 1864 after his arm was amputated.
Caldwell's description of the soldiers after only six months of the four-year
long war was vivid: "They were sun-burnt, gaunt, ragged, scarcely at all
shod, spectres and caricatures of their former selves....they had fed on
half-cooked dough, often raw bacon as well as raw beef, had devoured green
corn and green apples; they had contracted diarrhoea and dysentery of the
most malignant type, and lastly, they were covered with vermin. They now
stood, an emaciated, limping, ragged, filthy mass, who no stranger to their
valiant exploits could have believed capable of anything the least worthy."
Having fought on the losing side, York County veterans of the Civil War were
not eligible for the benefits that were offered to Union veterans. Before
1889, South Carolina provided no disability benefits or pensions for military
service.
On the other hand, the veterans of the lost cause were held in the highest
esteem. Parades, pulpits, political platforms, holidays, songs and plays
were used to honor the living and eulogize the dead Confederate soldiers.
Finally, the state began to recover financially from the war and the obvious
plight of many old men and their widows resulted in legislation that established
classes of disability. Much of the pressure on the legislature came from
veterans and their children.
There are three major sets of war records on individual soldiers, each set
duplicating each other in the basic information but also offering information
that cannot be found in other records. The three sets of records are federal,
state and county of origin.
Confederate records of individual soldiers are located in the National Archives
of the United States. The United States Army and Navy kept records of the
Confederates who were captured during the war and surrendered when the war
ended in 1865.
From the official Confederate records, one can discover much about the individual
soldier and his company as well. For instance, the record of Marion DeKalb
Rodgers, Catawba Township, York County, shows that he enlisted as a 20-year-old
private in August 1861, in Capt. Cadwallader Jones Company of Dunovant’s
Regiment, South Carolina Volunteers (the company subsequently became Co.
H, 12th Regt, SC Infantry).
Rodgers reported to Lightwood Knot Spring, near Columbia. He enlisted for
the duration. The company muster rolls show when he was paid (every two months).
The notation was made that he was in the hospital in November and December
of 1862.
The last two sheets of Rodgers’ records were filled in by Union officers.
One is headed “Prisoner of War at Hart’s Island, New York Harbor.” Rodgers,
still a private, was captured at Southernland Station, Va. The last record
states that Rodgers signed the Oath of Allegiance to the United States on
June 16, 1865. It gave his place of residence as York District, S. C., and
the officer filled in the description: “Complexion fair; hair dark; eyes
blue; height 5 ft. 8 in.”
York County has a more complete record of identifying its veterans by branch
of service, time in service and residence after the war than most South Carolina
counties. In 1902, in response to the state association of Confederate veterans,
York County made a concerted effort to enroll veterans by township.
The Confederate Enrollment Book of York County includes the dead as well
as the living. An entry example: “Bethesda Township. Page 1. Abshear, Joseph
K., 17th S.C.V. Evans Infantry Private, 30, killed at Petersburg 1864.”
The state of South Carolina published the names, addresses and amounts of
payment to the veterans and their widows who collected pensions beginning
in 1889. These are included in the yearly “Reports and Resolutions of the
South Carolina House of Representatives.” A 1910 example, “Class B. Perry,
W. C., Fort Mill (Co. B, 6th S.C.T.), lost left hand; wounded right hand;
entered payroll 1901.”
In 1901 there were 287 York County pensioners on the state rolls. The total
of all their pensions was $1,205.40. For all but the blind and limbless,
the amount of the pension was $3 per month. The number of York County widows
who collected the pittance outnumbered the Confederate veterans 2-1.
Official historical markers were first authorized by the state of South Carolina
in 1905. The responsibility for authenticity was given to the S. C. Historical
Commission (now the Department of Archives and History). Because of a lack
of funds very few markers were erected before the mid-1930s. In 1936 a Historical
Survey was authorized and Dr. Nora M. Davis was given the authority to identify
potential sites and encourage local historical societies to finance the markers.
One of the prime sites for a marker was the White Homestead at Fort Mill
which was the scene of the last official meeting of the Confederate Cabinet.
Correspondence between Dr. Nora M. Davis and Elliott White Springs, who had
inherited the White Homestead, began in 1939. There were 32 letters between
the two from April 26, 1939 to March 18, 1940.
The letters, now preserved in the SC Archives, are instructive to read, partly
because they show how a historian (Dr. Davis) seeks to get the true facts
about an event with undoubted historical importance but without complete
documentation.
In the first letter (mistakenly addressed to Col. Leroy Springs), Dr. Davis
wished to know if Elliott Springs (son of Colonel Leroy) would be interested
in erecting a standard historical marker at the home of his grandparents.
The price for a marker was $65.
Springs replied the next day and was happy to defray the expense. He also
wrote, “My great-grandfather’s name was William Elliott White, and he owned
the house at Fort Mill where President Jefferson Davis and his cabinet spent
the night on April 26, 1865. I have always understood that a meeting of the
cabinet was held in the front yard of this house under an oak tree on the
morning of April 27th, and that Secretary Trenholm handed in his resignation,
due to ill health, and proceeded to his home. My grandfather, Andrew Baxter
Springs, was present at this meeting, and strongly advised the Confederate
cabinet to split up and take different routes to their destinations.”
Davis and Springs both knew that various accounts of the event disagreed
about details. Some historians contended that the gathering of cabinet members
with Jefferson Davis was not official. They said there had not been an official
meeting since the fall of Richmond to Union troops. Others said that the
last full meeting of the cabinet was in Charlotte at the home of Col. William
F. Phifer and his wife, Mary Martha (who was the daughter of Col. William
Elliott White). The Abbeville, SC claim to be the last was not taken seriously
by the state archives because it was not a full cabinet meeting.
Elliott Springs stated that, “We of Fort Mill have always considered that
this was the last full meeting of the Confederate cabinet, though the newspapers
of Charlotte each year publish the fact that the last full meeting took place
in Charlotte.”
Dr. Davis was already convinced that the Fort Mill meeting was official.
Her problem was with the wording of the marker. Her first letter offered
“three suggested inscriptions.” A major source of information was the diary
of the wife of George Trenholm, the Secretary of the Treasury. Another major
source was the “Official Records of the Confederacy.” Most of the correspondence
dealt with the actual wording of the marker and finally stated, in part,
“. . . the cabinet held its last meeting at which the resignation of G. A.
Trenholm, Secretary of the Treasury, was accepted and Postmaster General
John H. Reagan was appointed his successor ad interim.”
Springs helped by sending pictures and biographical data on the Whites and
Springses who were involved. He found something that said that the meeting
was under a pine tree in the front yard. Then he was told by his cousin,
Harvey White of Graham, N. C., that the meeting was held under a cedar tree.
An 1890s account said that the meeting was under a sassafras tree. Wisely,
no specific tree was mentioned in the final wording.
Finally, the marker was ready and on March 11. 1940, Elliott Springs had
the monument erected at its present location on North White Street in Fort
Mill.
The traditional date for Confederate memorial services is May 10 - Thomas
J. "Stonewall" Jackson's birthday. The custom began in Charleston in 1866
after a group of ladies led by Mary Amarintha Snowden met in the parlor of
Mills House and organized the Ladies' Memorial Association.
The idea spread until practically every town in South Carolina that was any
size at all had at least one organization dedicated to keeping alive the
memory of Confederate gallantry.
Money was raised to build statues, place markers or hang plaques in connection
with public buildings or cemeteries. In an age that saw few women working
outside the home, avenues for raising money were limited. Somehow, the proceeds
of bazaars, cake sales, surplus garden produce and "egg money" gradually
built up. Sometimes it took two decades or more from the initial plans until
the unveiling of a statue.
The monument in front of the Ebenezer A. R. P. Church, 2132 Ebenezer Rd.,
Rock Hill, was built in just such a manner by the S. D. Barron Chapter of
the United Daughters of the Confederacy. The obelisk was unveiled on Sept.
3, 1908.
The ceremonies were typical of the times. There was an "orator of the day."
A quartet and a chorus furnished musical accompaniment.
Special guests at the Ebenezer unveiling were members of the local "Catawba
Camp," a group of Confederate veterans led by Iredell Jones. It was 43 years
after the surrender at Appomattox.
The chapter's name honored Samuel DeKalb Barron, who first enlisted in the
army at the age of 15. Local men persuaded him to come home and enter Erskine
College. Determined to reenlist, Barron convinced his mother to equip him
for service when he reached his 16th birthday.
Barron enlisted in Lafayette's Artillery, which had the task of protecting
the S. C. coastline from Union invasion. He quickly proved his bravery by
being the first to volunteer for the dangerous assignments. Several times
he distinguished himself before he was captured by Kilpatrick's cavalry during
Sherman's march. Barron spent 11 months in prison at Point Lookout, Md. When
he got out, he was described as "a physical wreck."
Barefoot, emaciated and dirty, Barron walked from Richmond, Va. to York County.
Though not as robust as he had been before his army service, Barron was not
ready to settle down. He went west. After one year teaching school in Missouri,
he was in Texas working for a newspaper. After that he was a farmer in Louisiana.
In Louisiana, Barron received word that he was needed in York County. It
was the time of Merrill's Raiders and the Ku Klux Klan. Barron's brother
had had to flee for his life; his father was not able to operate the farm
alone. Barron returned to York County.
In 1874 Barron married. Farming turned out to be too demanding on his health
and he returned to teaching. He began writing letters to the newspapers in
which he pleaded for assistance for disabled Confederate veterans. In 1885,
two years before his death, Barron and his Bethesda Academy students organized
memorial services for the Confederate dead. It is the first known Confederate
memorial service in York County.
During the early 1900s, the S. C. Barron Chapter would join with Rock Hill's
Ann White Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the Winthrop
Chapter of the UDC, the Sons of Veterans, ministers of the city, family and
friends, for a memorial service at Laurelwood Cemetery in Rock Hill.
This would be followed by a picnic in Hutchison's grove. After dinner the
old veterans would deliver reminiscent talks. What tales they must have told!
On July 3, 1825 a laborer, John P. Countryman, "entered the dwelling house
of Robert Love" and stole "one Spanish milled dollar of the value of one
dollar, one quarter valued at twenty five cents, one seven pence in silver
of the value of twelve and a half cents and one three pence half penny in
Reverend Oliver Johnson
Enoch Gilmer, King's Mountain Spy
Gold Mining in York County
Contention Over the Estate of Eleanor Grier
Buster Boyd Bridge
"Beautiful Mary" of Ebenezer
Early York County Will
Early Methodism in York District
Erwin Family Research Errors
Estates' Inventories
Elias Newton Faris
Fiddles and Fiddlers
History of Flint Hill Baptist Church
The Fort in Fort Mill
Fourth of July Over Time
Counties Created in Order to Provide Courts
Asbury Coward, Soldier-Educator
Rev. William Cummins Davis
John P. Countryman---Warrant For Felony
Confederate Memorial Day
Last Confederate Cabinet Meeting Historical Marker
Records Tell A Lot About County's Confederate Soldiers
Company H, 12th SC Volunteers
17th SC Regiment Reunion--1889
Early Railroads of the Area
Catawba Indians in the Civil War
Bibliography of the Catawba
York County Men in Bloody Kansas
Blacksmithing in the 1830's
Bigger's-Mason's-Wright's Ferry
Downtown Yorkville, 1858
American Tune Book Sing
April Fool's Day
York County Aviators---Coleman, Bryant, & Springs
Squire Bailes---The Marriage Man
Kings Mountain
The Bethesda Circulating Library Society
Richard Gillespie's Civil War Experiences
Fourth of July at Bullocks Creek
James Cansler of Tirzah
Early Clockmakers of This Area
Lord Cornwallis in York County
Banks Family--Educators & Ministers
Rev. William Blackstock
Confederate Soldier's Letter
Robert Clendenin - Lawyer & Planter
Town of Clover
Ebenezer Academy
Archibald Barron
Bethesda Presbyterian Church
Beth-Shiloh Church & Rev. W.C. Davis
Fourth of July at Bullocks Creek
by Louise Pettus
James Cansler of Tirzah
by Louise Pettus
Early Clockmakers of This Area
by Louise Pettus
Lord Cornwallis in York County
by Louise Pettus
Banks Family--Educators & Ministers
by Louise Pettus
Rev. William Blackstock
by Louise Pettus
Confederate Soldier's Letter
by Louise Pettus
Robert Clendenin - Lawyer & Planter
by Louise Pettus
Town of Clover
by Louise Pettus
Ebenezer Academy
by Louise Pettus
Archibald Barron
by Louise Pettus
Bethesda Presbyterian Church
by Louise Pettus
Beth-Shiloh Church & Rev. W.C. Davis
by Louise Pettus
The Bethesda Circulating Library Society
by Louise Pettus
Kings Mountain
by Louise Pettus
Squire Bailes---The Marriage Man
by Louise Pettus
York County Aviators---Coleman, Bryant, & Springs
by Louise Pettus
April Fool's Day
by Louise Pettus
American Tune Book Sing
by Louise Pettus
AMERICAN TUNE BOOK SING by Louise Pettus
Downtown Yorkville, 1858
by Louise Pettus
Bigger's-Mason's-Wright's Ferry
by Louise Pettus
Blacksmithing in the 1830's
by Louise Pettus
York County Men in Bloody Kansas
by Louise Pettus
Bibliography of the Catawba
by Louise Pettus
Catawba Indians in the Civil War
by Louise Pettus
Early Railroads of the Area
by Louise Pettus
17th SC Regiment Reunion--1889
by Louise Pettus
Company H, 12th SC Volunteers
by Louise Pettus
Records Tell A Lot About County's Confederate
Soldiers
by Louise Pettus
Last Confederate Cabinet Meeting Historical Marker
by Louise Pettus
Confederate Memorial Day
by Louise Pettus
John P. Countryman---Warrant For Felony
by Louise Pettus