Skip to main content

Full text of "The South Carolina historical and genealogical magazine"

See other formats


Google 


This  is  a  digital  copy  of  a  book  that  was  preserved  for  generations  on  library  shelves  before  it  was  carefully  scanned  by  Google  as  part  of  a  project 

to  make  the  world's  books  discoverable  online. 

It  has  survived  long  enough  for  the  copyright  to  expire  and  the  book  to  enter  the  public  domain.  A  public  domain  book  is  one  that  was  never  subject 

to  copyright  or  whose  legal  copyright  term  has  expired.  Whether  a  book  is  in  the  public  domain  may  vary  country  to  country.  Public  domain  books 

are  our  gateways  to  the  past,  representing  a  wealth  of  history,  culture  and  knowledge  that's  often  difficult  to  discover. 

Marks,  notations  and  other  maiginalia  present  in  the  original  volume  will  appear  in  this  file  -  a  reminder  of  this  book's  long  journey  from  the 

publisher  to  a  library  and  finally  to  you. 

Usage  guidelines 

Google  is  proud  to  partner  with  libraries  to  digitize  public  domain  materials  and  make  them  widely  accessible.  Public  domain  books  belong  to  the 
public  and  we  are  merely  their  custodians.  Nevertheless,  this  work  is  expensive,  so  in  order  to  keep  providing  tliis  resource,  we  liave  taken  steps  to 
prevent  abuse  by  commercial  parties,  including  placing  technical  restrictions  on  automated  querying. 
We  also  ask  that  you: 

+  Make  non-commercial  use  of  the  files  We  designed  Google  Book  Search  for  use  by  individuals,  and  we  request  that  you  use  these  files  for 
personal,  non-commercial  purposes. 

+  Refrain  fivm  automated  querying  Do  not  send  automated  queries  of  any  sort  to  Google's  system:  If  you  are  conducting  research  on  machine 
translation,  optical  character  recognition  or  other  areas  where  access  to  a  large  amount  of  text  is  helpful,  please  contact  us.  We  encourage  the 
use  of  public  domain  materials  for  these  purposes  and  may  be  able  to  help. 

+  Maintain  attributionTht  GoogXt  "watermark"  you  see  on  each  file  is  essential  for  in  forming  people  about  this  project  and  helping  them  find 
additional  materials  through  Google  Book  Search.  Please  do  not  remove  it. 

+  Keep  it  legal  Whatever  your  use,  remember  that  you  are  responsible  for  ensuring  that  what  you  are  doing  is  legal.  Do  not  assume  that  just 
because  we  believe  a  book  is  in  the  public  domain  for  users  in  the  United  States,  that  the  work  is  also  in  the  public  domain  for  users  in  other 
countries.  Whether  a  book  is  still  in  copyright  varies  from  country  to  country,  and  we  can't  offer  guidance  on  whether  any  specific  use  of 
any  specific  book  is  allowed.  Please  do  not  assume  that  a  book's  appearance  in  Google  Book  Search  means  it  can  be  used  in  any  manner 
anywhere  in  the  world.  Copyright  infringement  liabili^  can  be  quite  severe. 

About  Google  Book  Search 

Google's  mission  is  to  organize  the  world's  information  and  to  make  it  universally  accessible  and  useful.   Google  Book  Search  helps  readers 
discover  the  world's  books  while  helping  authors  and  publishers  reach  new  audiences.  You  can  search  through  the  full  text  of  this  book  on  the  web 

at|http: //books  .google  .com/I 


t 


J 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
CHARLESTON,  S.  C. 


VOLUME  XXI,  No.  I  JANUARY,  1920 


PUBUCATION  COMMITTEE 

Basnwbll^  Henky  a.  M.  Smtes, 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr, 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webber. 


CONTENTS 

Early  Letters  from  South  Carolina  iq)on  Natural  History. .  3 

Extracts  from  the  Journal  of  Mrs.  Ann  Manigault 10 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  the  Charleston  Morning 
Post;  and  Daily  Advertiser,  and  its  Successor  The  City 

Gazette 24 

A  Letter  of  1783 30 

The  Register  of  Christ  Church  Parish 31 

Historical  Notes 36 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
Vol.  I,  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  Historical  Society.  Members  of  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Membership  fee  is  S4.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January),  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Society,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

South  Carolina  Historical  Society, 

Charleston,  S.  C. 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 


EDITED  BT 
MABEL  LOUISe  WeSBER 


AUG  iei920 


OFFICERS 

OF  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINAHISTORICALSOCIETY 

January,  1920— January,  1921. 

President^ 
Hon.  Joseph  W.  Baknwkll. 

Isi  Vice-Presidentj 
Hon.  Henry  A.  M.  Smith. 

2nd  Vice-PresidefU, 

Hon.  Theodore  D.  Jervey. 

3d  Vice-President, 

Hon.  F.  H.  Weston. 

4ik  Vice-President, 

Hon.  John  B.  Cleveland. 

Secretary  and  Treasurer  and  Librarian, 

Miss  Mabel  Louise  Webber. 

Curators: 

Langdon  Cheves,  Esq.,  D.  E.  Huger  Smith,  Esq., 

Charles  W.  Kollock,  M.  D., 
Prof.  Yates  Snowden,  M.  Alston  Read,  Esq., 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  Esq.,  Frank  R.  Frost,  Esq., 

John  Bennett,  Esq.,  C.  Bissell  Jenkins,  Esq., 

Board  of  Managers, 

ALL  OF  the  foregoing  OFFICERS. 

Publication  Committee, 
Henry  A.  M.  Smith,  Joseph  W.  Barnwell, 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXI  JANUARY,  1920  No.  1 


EARLY  LETTERS  FROM  SOUTH  CAROLINA  UPON 

NATURAL  fflSTORY 

The  letters  printed  below  are  from  the  Sloane  Manuscripts,  in. 
the  British  Museum.  There  is  some  doubt  as  to  whom  they 
were  written;  Prof.  Charles  M.  Andrews,  in  the  Guide  io  Manu- 
script Materials  for  the  History  of  the  United  States  to  178 3 ^  pp.  51, 
69,  lists  them  as  letters  to  Sir  Hans  Sloane;  but  Mr.  J.  A.  Herbert, 
assistant  keeper  of  Mss.,  British  Museum,  writes  that  the  Sloane 
Mss.  contains  besides  the  letters  to  Sir  Hans  Sloane,  "some  to 
Dr.  Browne  and  Mr.  Petiver;"  The  letters  of  Hannah  Williams 
and  Joseph  Lord,  have  been  indexed  in  Index  to  the  Sloane  Mss., 
E.  J.  L.  Scott,  as  letters  to  James  Petiver.  An  account  of  Petiver 
can  be  found  in  the  Dictionary  of  National  Biography. 

Hannah  Williams  who  writes  the  first  letter  given  here,  was 
in  South  Carolina  before  1692,  for  as  Hannah  English  widow,  she 
gets  a  warrant,  dated  October  25,  1692,  for  500  acres  of  land  near 
Stony  Point^  and  in  May,  1695,  she  had  another  warrant  under 
the  name  of  "Hannah  English,  alias  Williams."  She  may  have 
been  the  widow  of  Mathew  English,  who  arrived  here  in  February 
1670,  and  had  a  warrant  for  a  town  lot  as  late  as  1689.*  She  was 
certainly  the  mother  of  Henroyda  English,*  and  married  William 
Williams  between  1692  and  1694  Williams  arrived  with  his  wife 
and  child  24  December,  1683.    He  made  his  will  2d  November, 

^  This  Magadne,  voL  zix,  50,  51, 

*  Warrants  for  Lands  in  South  Carolina. 

•  This  Magazine,  vol.  xix,  49,  74. 

3 


4  SO.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

1710,  proved  26th  Octqber,  1711,  as  William  Williams  of  Carolina 
planter,  and  gives  to  his  son-in-law  Henroyda  English,  all  of  his 
estate,  real  and  personal.  Hannah  Williams,  widow  to  William 
\^lliams,  declares  the  above  will  to  have  been  made  with  her 
consent.* 

The  will  of  Charles  Clarke,  of  Berkley  County,  dated  November 
2,  1694,  mentions  Mrs.  Mary  Spragg,  daughter  of  Mrs.  Hannah 
Williams,  to  whom  he  leaves  a  house  and  lot,  bounding  on  late 
belonging  to  Gov.  Thomas  Smith.  Mentions  also  William 
Williams,  gentleman,  of  Carolina,  and  leaves  the  remainder  of  his 
property  to  William  Williams  and  Mrs.  Mary  Spragg.* 

Mrs.  Hannah  WUliams  was  buried  December  16,  1722.* 

Joseph  Lord,  who  writes  the  other  letters,  was  the  pastor  imder 
whom  the  settlers  from  Dorchester  Mass.  immigrated  to  the  place 
in  South  Carolina,  which  they  afterwards  named  Dorchester  also, 
"ocktober  ye  20-95  was  m**'  Joseph  Lord  and  Increase  Sunmer 
and  William  pratt  were  dismissed  for  ye  gathering  of  A  church 
for  ye  South  corelina."^ 

Joseph  Lord  was  of  Charlestown,  Mass.  He  had  graduated  at 
Harvard  in  the  class  of  1691,  and  at  the  time  of  his  removal  to 
Carolina,  was  teaching  school,  and  stud3dng  theology  in  Dor- 
chester. He  remained  in  South  Carolina  for  twenty-five  years, 
returning  to  Massachusetts  in  1720,  and  on  the  15th  of  June  of 
that  year  was  installed  over  the  church  at  Chatham,  where  he 
remained  until  his  death,  June  6th.  1748.* 

His  sister,  Abigail,  married  John  Stevens,  who  was  one  of  the 
leading  men  in  the  Dorchester  settlement,  and  the  ancestor  of  the 
present  Stevens  family  in  lower  South  Carolina.  John  Stevens 
probably  came  from  New  England  also,  since  in  his  will,  dated 
December  24,  1717,  he  directs  that  his  sons  Samuel  and  John 
''be  brought  up  at  the  college  in  New  England  to  good  leming 
•  .  .  .  and  my  brother  Will  Titcomb  have  care  of  them 
.  •  .  .;"  he  also  leaves  a  legacy  to  Joseph  Lord  Jr.,  upon  con- 
dition that  he  also  be  sent  to  college. 

«  Probate  Court,  book  1711-'18,  p.  16. 

*  Tbii  Mag(mn§^  voL  z,  p.  16. 

*  St  Philip's  Register. 

^  Records  of  the  Fk$t  Church  <U  Dorchester . 

*  Howe,  History  of  the  Presbyterian  Church  in  South  Carotina. 


J 
t 


EABLY  LETTERS  FROM  SOUTH  CAROLINA  5 

Abigail  Stevens,  in  her  will  dated  30th  March,  1735,  mentions, 
among  others,  her  nephew  Joseph  Lord,  son  of  her  brother  Rev. 
Joseph  Lord  in  New  England. 

PROM   HANNAH    WILLIAMS 

"Feb^^  y.  6^\  1704/y' 
"flfrom  Charles  Town  in  South  Carolina" 
[Noted  below  the  date:]  "Rec<*.  May  1,  1705." 
S'. 

These  may  Informe  y6u  thatt  I  have  sent  you  some  of  Our 
Vipers  &  several  sorts  of  Snakes  Scorpions  &  Lizzards  in  a  Bottle 
&  of  the  Other  Insex  &  I  would  have  sent  you  a  Very  good  Collec- 
tion to  y®  plants  if  I  had  any  Vollums  of  brown  paper — butt 
haveing  none  Could  nott  if  you  are  Willing  to  have  any  more 
If  you  will  send  paper  Vollums  to  putt  them  in  against  this  spring 
I  will  provide  you  a  Good  Collection  thatt  shall  be  worth  your 
Excepting  &  send  you  an  ace*,  of  their  Virtues  to  y«  best  of  my 
Knowledge  I  am  Very  much  Troubled  with  y«  splene  &  Praye 
you  to  send  me  word  whatt  is  good  for  the  Cure  therof  &  if  you 
pleas  send  me  something  thatt  is  proper  for  y*  Cure  thereof. 
I  have  sent  you  a  Box  with  y«  Different  shells  thatt  this  Contry 
doth  produce  &  Likewise  a  Nest  that  is  made  by  a  Wild  Bee  & 
itt  is  made  of  Wood. 

I  Desire  you  would  send  me  the  newspapers  thatt  is  made 
between  Vessell  &  Vessells  comeing  to  &  Returning  from  this 
place  if  you  think  fitt  to  send  me  any  medidons  I  will  dispose  of 
them  &  send  you  the  Valine  in  Returns  by  y®  first  Vessells.  I 
have  Likewise  presented  you  with  y*'  Westo  Kings  Tobacco  pipe 
&  a  Queens  Petticoatt  made  oflF  Moss/ 

No  more  att  present  I  Rest  yo'  flfrend  &  Serv*. 

Hannah  Williams" 

Next  Spring  I  will  send  you  some  Mocking  birds  &  Red  birds 
if  I  should  send  you  any  Now  the  Could  would  Kill  them." 

[In  a  different  hand  and  possibly  the  same  hand  and  ink  as  the 
date  of  the  letter's  receipt  at  the  head: — 

"M'.  Leigh  Husband  in  Aldermanbury"  There  is  no  address 
on  the  back  of  the  letter,  but  Andrews  &  Davenport  say  it  is  to 


6  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

"Sloane,"  D'.  Scott,  Late  Head  of  the  MSS.  Dep*.  of  the  British 
Museum,  said  it  was  to  "James  Pettiver"  to  whom  the  next  letter 
in  the  MS.  Sloane,  4064  is  addressed,  and  at  the  bottom  of  the 
letter  itself  though  not  in  Hannah  Williams'  hand,  is  "M'.  Leigh 
Husband."] 

LETTER  FROM  JOSEPH  LORD 

"5.    "Sir, 

Since  that  w*  came  by  Pensylvania,  Dated,  Nov.  17,  1706. 
I  have  rec^.  no  Lett'  from  you.  I  sent  a  Lett'  &  a  Box  of  Collec- 
tions by  Capt.  Gill  Belcher,  y^  last  year  (y«  Lett',  dated,  Jan.  2, 
170},  w**  I  hope  are  come  to  hand.  In  yo'  last  y*  I  rec^.,  you 
mention  a  Bill  of  a  Bird  w®  was  sent  either  by  Mad"^  Williams  or 
me,  concerning  w*  I  have  since  written  you  word,  y*.  I  did  not 
rememb'  y*  I  sent  you  any  such:  but  I  call  to  mind  y*  I  sent  you 
y*  Bill  of  a  Garr-fish,  w°  has  sharp  teeth  set  all  along  both  sides: 
of  w^  I  have  also  one  now  ready  to  send  you,  as  I  have  also  Divers 
oth'  things  w*  I  have  collected.  Anoth'  sort  of  Tortoise,  y" 
that  w"  you  sent  me  y«  figure  of  marked  76.4.  I  have  y«  shell  of, 
w*  I  intend  to  send  you  e'er  long.  Here  are  divers  sorts  of  y°*., 
tho'  I  don't  often  meet  w*^  y".  The  shell  71.8  &  71.9  is,  I  sup- 
pose, y*  w**  y*  wood-snafl  carries  on  his  back,  &  houses  himself 
in.  I  have  sent  divers  of  y™,  if  I  forget  not,  but  perhaps  they 
might  be  broken  before  they  came  at  you,  for  I  find  y"*  very 
brittle.  The  Centipes,  74.3  is  very  like  a  worm  w*^  us,  w',  w° 
it  dies,  gathers  almost  into  a  circle  as  yo'  figure  represents:  but 
^n  y«  ^orm  is  Uveing,  as  it  crawls,  that  side  w'«  y*  feet  are  seems 
flat.  You  figure  a  Cowry,  80.9.  w*  I  don't  know  w*  distinguishes 
from  oth'  shells:  but  yo'  figure  puts  me  in  mind  of  a  sort  of  Insect 
here,  y*  is  covered  w*^  hair,  between  chestnut  &  ash  colour;  y* 
belly  w'*  of  is  flat,  &  y*  two  sides  run  up  to  a  ridge,  w'*  is  long' 
hair  y"  on  y*  rest  of  y*  body,  &  carries  some  resemblance  of  hog's 
bristles.  The  insect  is  ab*  an  inch  long,  &  ab*.  half  an  inch  broad 
at  y®  belly;  &  ab*.  as  deep  from  y^  ridge  to  y*  belly.  The  year 
before  last  came  a  neighbo'  to  me  in  great  pain,  &  heart-sick,  by 
being  bitten  by  one  of  y"  in  y*  neck;  &  woidd  (for  ought  I  know) 
have  died,  if  suitable  remedies  both  inward  &  outward,  had  not 
been  appUed.  I  had  observed  y*  insect  before,  &  would  have 
sent  it  to  you,  if  I  had  known  how.    Yo'  desire  thereof  prevailed 


« 
EASLY  LETTERS  FROM  SOUTH  CAROLINA  7 

w^^  me  to  make  some  remarks,  in  my  last,  on  yo'  Natural  History 
of  Brasile;  w®  (tho'  I  know  my  unskilfulness)  I  shall  now  proceed, 
as  well  as  I  can,  a  little  farth'  in  Ch.  2.  87.  The  Partridge]  That 
w*  is  here  called  a  Partridge,  we  called  a  Quail  in  N.  EngH.,  w* 
seems  to  be  of  y^  colo'  spoken  of  in  this  place:  but  we  had  a  Par- 
tridge in  N.  Engl^.  speckled  w***  white  specks  (if  I  forget  not) 
w"  was  twice  as  big  as  this  here  in  Carolina.  88.  The  Great  Par- 
tridge]  There  was,  in  N.  Engl^.  another  Fowl  y*  resembled  y* 
Partridge,  but  larger  (yet  not  so  large  as  this  great  Partridge  is 
Described)  w*  was  called  an  Heath-hen.  93.  American  Sparrow] 
I  suppose  o'  Red-bird  to  be  a  Sparrow;  w*  is  y*  same  w***  y^  Vir- 
ginia Red-bird;  &  y'*fore  I  need  not  describe  it.  Also  w"  I  was  a 
boy  I  caught  another  sort  of  red  Sparrow;  but  have  forgot  wherein 
it  differed  from  other  sparrows,  except  in  being  Red.  They  were 
rare  there.  I  have  some  notion  y*.  I  then  reckoned  it  of  y* 
same  species  w***  that  w***.  a  red  head:  divers  whereof  had  reddish 
Breasts  too:  whether  it  were  those  y*.  were  old'  y"*  others,  I  can- 
not tell.  94.  The  Blaqk  Sparrow]  we  had  in  N.  Engl^.  a  sparrow 
w***.  a  red  spot  on  y*  head;  but  y*  body  was  of  a  greyish  brown 
colo'.  There  is  also  a  Sparrow  here  y\  is  like  that  of  N.  England; 
only  y*  spot  on  y^  head  is  not  so  red.  I  have  heard  them  in  N. 
Engl<*.  called  Tom  Tits.  95.  The  Blewish  Sparrow]  We  have 
here  a  Sparrow  y*  is  between  blew  &  ash-colo',  whose  bill  is  white, 
&  his  belly  &  y*  outermost  feath'  on  each  side  of  his  tail.  96-101. 
Divers  Starlings  are  mentioned,  &  described.  We  have  here  two 
or  three  sorts  of  Back  birds  w**  flock  togeth'  y*  male  of  one  sort 
has  a  scarlet  spot  on  each  wing;  &  y*  female  is  a  dark  grey  almost 
black.  103.  The  Swallow]  The  male,  here,  is  shineing  black  on 
his  back,  head,  &  breast;  y*  female  more  muddy,  &  on  y«  breast 
of  a  yellowish  brown  colo'.  108.  The  Throstle]  That  w«  was  called, 
in  N.  Engl<*.,  a  Robin  (but  at  Dorchest'  in  New  England,  a  Field- 
fare) I  have  heard  a  Lancashire  man  call  a  Throstle:  It  comes 
hither  in  y  Wint',  but  is  not  seen  here  in  y  summ'.  110.111. 
We  have  a  Turtle  dove  here,  but  wheth'  y«  leggs  be  red  or  white  or 
eith'  I  can't  now  say;  but  I  think  y^^  are  red.  The  New-England 
wild  Pidgeon,  is  also  a  large  sort  of  Turtle,  w***  red  leggs:  they 
come  hith'  sometimes  in  y  Wint'.  114-116.  Woodpeck'*] 
We  have  three  or  four  sorts;  some  as  large  as  Teal.  Thus  I  end 
y*  2^  Chapt'  of  Birds,  I  cannot  now  proceed  to  any  oth**:  only 


8  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Ch,  9. 158.  The  DysetUerick  Vatnii]  concerning  this  I  w^  enquire, 
is  it  not  Ipecacuanha  y\  you  here  intend?  If  it  be,  please  to  let 
me  know  wbeth'  you  have  had  any  of  it  from  hence,  &  at  what 
it's  flow^  &  berries  may  likliest  be  sought.  I  put  a  small  plant 
in  y^  Lett',  w*  in  y«  Wint'  had  5  or  6  Leaves  together  at  y*  top: 
please  to  let  me  know,  by  y*  next  opportunity,  what  is.  Which 
is  all,  at  present,  from  Sir, 

Yo'  humble  servant 
"Joseph  Lord.'*    S" 
pbidorsed.] 

"Dorchesf  in  Carolina.    Mar.  7,  170f." 

"Rec^.  Aug*.  19,  1709.   p  Post." 

LETTER  FROM  JOSEPH  LOIUD 

"6.    "Worthy  Sir, 

Yo*"  of  Mar.  15,  17xJ  I  received  Jun.  30:  wrapped  up  in  a 
Monthly  Mercury  for  January  last,  w*^.  some  oth'  Prints,  w°  is 
y*  first  News  book  or  Pap'  I  ev'  received,  of  all  y*  ev'  you  sent. 
You  write  you  are  glad  to  understand  I  received  y*  things  y*. 
you  sent  last  year,  &  I  sh**  have  been  glad  I  c**  have  given  you  to 
understand  y*  you  were  rightly  informed;  for  I  much  regret  y* 
loss  of  y*  box  &  w*  was  in  it.  But  not  going  to  Charlestown  my- 
self, I  wrote  to  desire  my  friend,  M'  Samuel  Evdeigh,  to  enquire 
of  him  ab*  it;  who  sent  me  word  y*.  Capt.  Belch'  s**,  there  was 
indeed  such  a  Box,  but  he  had  delivered  it  to  some  body,  he  c** 
not  tell  who;  so  I  nev'  saw  it.  I  thought  (as  I  had  written  to  you) 
y*.  he  w**.  have  been  more  carefuU  than  so.  I  received,  indeed, 
y«  lett'  y*.  gave  an  account  of  it,  &  w*  was  enclosed  therein:  & 
delivered  to  M'.  Henchman's  widow,  y*  lett'  directed  to  him,  but 
what  you  sent  to  him  being  put  into  my  box,  she  came  short  as 
well  as  I.  I  don't  know  weth'  yo'  directing  to  me  near  stony 
point  (from  w°  my  habitation  is  14  or  15  miles  distant)mayn't 
be  some  disadvantage  to  me.  M'  Henchman  (as  Capt.  Belch' 
informed  you)  died  suddenly  of  an  Apoplexy  last  Novemb'  was 
twelve  month.  I  have  spoken  w*^  his  wife  ab*  what  he  left  in 
writeing,  w®  I  had  looked  ov'  while  he  was  alive;  &  she  promises 
to  lend  3^  me  to  take  copies  of,  w?  I  think  to  do,  &  send  to  you, 
when  I  can  find  opportunity:  but  multiplicity  of  business  hind'* 


EASLY  LETTERS  FROM  SOXTTH  CAROLINA  9 

much  y*.  I  w**  of  this  nature.  Before  y*  comemg  of  yo'  form^ 
by  Capt.  Belch',  w«  I  rec^.  not  till  Jun.  16,  1709.  tho'  it  were 
dated  Nov.  30, 1708.  I  wrote  a  lett'  to  you,  wherein  I  proceeded 
w***.  my  observations  (such  as  they  were)  on  yo'  Natural  History 
of  Brasile,  as  far  as  3^®  end  of  y^  second  chapt'  w*  speaks  of  Birds: 
wherein  also  I  informed  you,  y^.  I  sent  no  bill  of  a  bird,  yet  I 
had  sent  y^  bill  of  a  Garr-fish,  w^,  perhaps,  you  might  take  for  y* 
bill  of  a  fowl;  w*  I  mention  here,  because  yo**  mentions  nothing 
of  that  lett',  w^  makes  me  suspect  it's  miscarriage.  I  have  a 
small  Box  of  Collections  ready,  &  sh<*  have  had  more,  but  partly 
y^  inconvenience  of  doing  it  w*^out  collecting-books,  partly  my 
much  oth'  necessary  business,  &  partly  y'  confusions  &  distrac- 
tions of  y*  countrey,  especially  at  this  time,  w®,  tho'  I  would, 
I  cannot  altogeth'  avoid  all  concern  in,  have  been  an  hindrance 
to  me;  &  w*^  all  being  at  a  great  distance  from  Charlestown,  I 
find  great  difficulty  in  getting  thith'  what  I  have  to  send,  &  many 
times  lose  y*  opportunity  of  y*  Ship,  before  I  can  obtain  a  con- 
veyance from  hence  to  Charlstown.  In  that  Box  I  have  put  such 
anoth'  bill,  besides  many  oth'  things,  w®  I  cannot  now  particularly 
enumerate.  I  w**  have  sent  y*  box  now,  but  I  have  no  oppor- 
tunity to  send  it  to  Charlstown.  I  w**.  also  have  proceeded 
farth'  in  my  observations  upon  yo'  Natural  History  of  Brasile, 
but  time  &  oth'  occasions,  will  not  give  leave.  With  thanks  for 
w*  you  have  sent,  both  w*  I  have  received,  &  w*  I  have  not,  I 
take  y*  boldness  to  request  you,  if  you  can  obtain  y*  seed  of  Sena 
of  Alexandria,  y*  you  will  please  to  send  me  a  little.  I  have 
Italian  Sena  growing;  but  whether  it  be  y*  it  contains  more  lixivi- 
ous  salt  than  y*  oth',  or  y*  y^  Air  of  y*  countrey  is  more  moist 
y"  of  oth'  countrys  w'*  Oriental  Sena  is  kept  or  first  dried,  I 
cannot,  w*^  all  y*  care  I  can  use,  prevent  it's  turning  black  in  a 
little  time.  Here  is  a  sort  of  bindweed  w°  I  am  apt  to  conceit 
may  be  Scammony;  w®  I  believe  I  may  formerly  have  sent  you 
y^  branches  of.  If  I  sh**.  send  you  that,  or  any  oth'  usefuU  drugg, 
if  you  will  please  to  let  me  know  it,  you  will  much  oblige.  Sir, 

Yo'  humble  Serv*. 
"Joseph  Lord.''    6 
Dorchest',  in  Carolina, 
"Aug.  9,  1710." 


EXTRACTS  FROM  THE  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN 

MANIGAULT 

1754-1781 

^th  notes  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from    October,    1919) 
1768.    Jan.  2.    My  grandson  G.  had  the  mumps.    8.  I  dined  at 

the  widow  Izard's.  17.  Lady  Anne  died.^ 
26.  Old  St.  Martin  died.«  Also  Mr.  Nichs. 
Harleston.* 
Feb.  5.  Mrs.  T.  L.  Smith  1.*  12.  Mrs.  R.  Lsard  l.» 
IS.  Miss  Pinckney  married.*  18.  Maj.  Whit- 
more,  Mr.  Izard,  Mr.  DeLancey,  Capt.  Fuser 
at  dinner.^  27.  Mr.  Shinner  died.* 
Mar.  8.  My  daughter  had  a  sore  throat  and  fever.  12.  I 
rode  out  with  Mrs.  Witter.  IS.  A  visit  from 
Mrs.  R.  Izard  and  her  sister.  23.  Mrs.  Daw- 
son 1.*  27.  Miss  Welchusen  married.**  31. 
Miss  Pury  married." 

>  Wife  of  Dr.  John  Murray.    (5.  C.  Ga%,  and  Country  Jour.^  January  P,  1768.) 

>  Buried,  Henry  St  Martin.    (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

*  Nicholas  Harleston,  Esq;  of  St  John's  Parish. 

^  Mary,  daughter  of  Thos.  Loughton  and  Elizabeth  Smith  baptized  April 
27,1770.    (St  Philip's  Register.) 

*The  child  was  Margaret  Izard,  who  married  Gabriel  Manigault,  the 
''Grandson  G."  of  this  diary. 

*  Daniel  Horry  and  Harriott  Pinckney,  spinster  married.  (St  Philip's 
Register.) 

'  Thomas  Whitmore,  of  the  9th  Regiment  of  Foot,  who  arrived  from  London 
in  February,  1768.  (5.  C.  Com,  and  Country  Jour,,  February  9, 1768),  and  Lewis 
Valentine  Fuser,  of  60th  (Royal  Americans)  Regiment.  He  was  a  Major  in 
August,  1771,  and  Lieutenant  Colonel  in  1778;  conducted  the  detachment  w\Ach 
Prevost  sent  against  Sunbury  in  1778.  {lAst  of  British  Officers  in  America, 
N.  E.  H.  and  G.  Register,  vols.  48-49.) 

*  Charles  Shinner,  Esq;  Chief  Justice  (St.  Philip's  Register). 

*  Mary,  daughter  of  John  Dawson  and  his  wife  Joanna,  bom;  she  married 
^^lliam  Postell.    (Dawson  Family,  p.  346.) 

^^  Amy,  daughter  of  Daniel  Welchuysen  deceased,  to  Mr.  John  Richardson, 
of  St.  Augustine,  merchant  (5.  C.  and  American  General  Gaiette,  March  29, 
1768.) 

11  Eleanor,  daughter  of  Charles  Puny  deceased,  to  John  Bull,  Esq. 

10 


EXTRACTS  PSOM  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT  11 

April  7.  Mr!  Roger  Smith  married.^*  My  grandson  G. 
had  a  sore  throat.  13.  Old  Mrs.  Stoutenburg 
died.i»  21.  Mr.  Craling  went  off."  22.  Mrs. 
Troup  1."  [erased],  27.  A.  fire  at  the  Orange 
garden. 

May  2.  My  sons  family  went  to  Goosecreek.  7.  My 
grandson  G.  not  well.  8.  He  had  a  fever.  10. 
Took  an  emetic.  10.  Mrs.  Milligan  em- 
barked.1*  12.  Char.  Motte  married."  17. 
Mrs.  I.  Huger  1.^*  21.  My  Grandson  G. 
went  to  Goosecreek.  22.  Mrs.  Smith  em- 
barked." 23.  They  sailed.  25.  Mr.  Brewton 
sailed.2<>  26.  Mr.  M.  to  Silkhope.  31.  He  re- 
turned. 

June  5.  My  son  and  daughter  came  from  the  country. 
12.  Mrs.  Wragg  came  to  Town  sick.    15.  A 

^  Roger  Smith  and  Mary  Rutledge  married.    (St.  Phflip's  R^jster.) 

^  Mrs.  Sarah  Stoutenburgh,  aged  79  years,  relict  of  the  late  Luke  Stouten- 
burg, Esq.    (5.  C.  Gas.  and  Country  Jour,,  April  19,  1768.) 

^*  Last  Friday,  the  Rev.  James  Crallan  ....  embarked  for  London. 
{Ibid,,  April  26,  1768.)  The  Rev.  James  Crallan,  late  assistant  lecturer  of 
St.  Philip's,  died  about  eight  days  after  his  arrival  in  London.  (Ibid,,  August 
23.) 

^*  Birth  of  a  child  of  John  Troup  and  Frances  his  wife;  who  was  the  daugh- 
ter of  Alexander  Gorden,  Esq;  clerk  of  Council.  Alexander  Gordon  was  bom 
in  Aberdeen  about  1693,  and  died  in  Charleston,  S.  C,  August  26,  1754;  he 
was  a  Scottish  antiquary,  the  ''Sandy  Gordon '^  mentioned  in  the  first  chapters 
of  Sir  Walter  Scott's  AnUquary,  He  wrote  Ilinerarium  Septentrionale,  and 
the  Danish  Invasions  on  Scotland,  A  very  good  account  of  him  is  to  be  found 
in  the  Dictionary  of  National  Biography,  His  will,  made  in  CharlesTown, 
August  22,  1754,  mentions  his  son  Alexander  and  daughter  Frances  Charlotte 
Gordon;  he  also  mentions  a  number  of  pictures  painted  by  himself,  among  them 
being  the  portraits  of  Hector  Berranger  De  Beaufain  and  Rev.  John  Heyward. 

^*  Dr.  George  Milligan  and  Lady,  sailed  for  England.  (5.  C.  Gaz,  and  Coun- 
try Jour,,  May  17, 1768.)  Ibid,,  October  25,  George  Mflligan,  Esq;  appointed 
Surgeon  to  all  his  Majesty's  troops  serving  in  this  Province. 

1^  Chariotte,  daughter  of  Jacob  Motte,  Esq;  married  to  John  Huger. 

1*  Daniel,  son  of  Isaac  and  Elizabeth  Huger  bom.    (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

"  Rev.  Robert  Smith  and  Mrs.  Smith,  sailed  for  London,  for  the  recovery 
of  their  healths.    (Ibid,,  May  24,  1768.) 

*•  In  the  ship  Nancy,  for  London,  Miles  Brewton,  Esq.,  and  Mrs.  Brewton. 
(Ibid.) 


12  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

great  storm.  My  daughter  had  a  fever.  16. 
She    took   an   emetic.    18.  She    was   better. 

17.  Mrs.  Howarth  1.  18.  Mrs.  Isaac  Huger  1. 
21.  Mrs.  Trezevant*!  1.  Mrs.  Bacot«  1.  24. 
Mrs.  Harleston  had  a  son. 

July  29.    My  son  had  a  fever. 

Aug.  13.  My  Grandson  G.  had  a  little  sore  throat.  19. 
Was  taken  with  the  Gout  in  my  knees.  21.  A 
little  better. 

Sept.  17.  Mrs.  Isaac  Motte  1.  My  son  and  daughter 
came  from  the  country.  22.  My  Grand- 
daughter A  began  to  learn  to  dance.  30.  Mrs. 
William  Drayton  1. 

Oct.  12.  Mrs.  Fraser  1.  26.  Mr.  M.  and  my  Grandson 
G.,  to  Silkhope,  returned  29th.  27.  Mrs., 
Godinl»8 

Dec.  3.    Mrs.  Roger  Smith  1.    5.  Mrs.  Docter  Garden  1.** 

18.  Mrs.  Pinckney  l.»    29.  Old  LeGrand  died. 
1769.    Jan.  1.    Mrs.  Vignolle  at  dinner.    7.  Mrs.  Jacob  Motte  1. 

10.  I  was  taken  with  the  Gout  in  my  hand. 
14.  Better  but  not  able  to  use  it.  17.  Not  so 
well.  19.  Better.  27.  Mrs.  Gadsden  died.** 
29.  Buried  from  our  House. 
Feb.  1.  Mrs.  Seamen  died.*^  5.  Miss  Henrietta  Wragg 
married.28    8.  The  Races.^s* 

**  Peter,  son  of  Theodore  and  Elizabeth  Trezevant. 

°  Elizabeth  Henrietta,  daughter  of  Peter  and  Elizabeth  Bacot,  baptized 
August  24,  1768.    (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

**  Elizabeth  Sarah,  daughter  of  Isaac  and Godin,  baptized  March 

1, 1769. 

'^  A  child  of  Dr.  Alexander  Garden,  the  naturalist,  and  his  wife  Elizabeth 
Peronneau. 

*  Miles  Brewton,  son  of  Charles  and  Frances  Pinckney,  baptized  October 
25,  1769.    (St.  PhiUp's  Register.) 

»•  Bur.  Mary,  wife  of  Christopher  Gadsden  January  27,  1769  (St.  Philip's 
Register). 

*^  Buried,  the  wife  of  George  Seaman,  February  2,  1769.    {Ibid.) 

"  William  Wragg  to  Henrietta  Wragg.    {Ibid,) 

**l  Tuesday  last  the  Annual  Subscription  Plate  was  run  for  at  New  Market, 
and  won  by  William  Allston,  Esq's  Chesnut  Horse  Tryall,  beating  Mr.  Roger's 


EXTRACTS  FROM  J0X7RNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  liANIGAXTLT  13 

Mar.  1.  Mrs.  J.  Rutledge  1.  4.  Mrs.  Edwards  1.  Capt. 
Higgins  and  2  others  drowned.**  7.  Mrs.  Fen- 
wick  1.  9.  Was  taken  with  a  blindnes  in  one 
eye.  14.  Better.  30.  Not  so  well.  16.  Mr. 
Skirving  married.*®  26.  Mr.  Pinckney  and  Mr. 
Walter  married'^    30.  Mr.  Panting  came  in." 

April.  1.  Lady  Charles  1."  3.  Miss  SaDy  Smith  mar- 
ried.** 6.  Miss  Betsy  Izard  married.**  19. 
My  son  had  a  fever.  21.  He  had  it  again. 
21.  My  daughter  lay  in  of  a  Girl  after  ten  at 
night.    22.  Charlotte  was  married.    MyGrand- 

Chesnut  Gelding  and  Morton  Wilkinson  Esq's  Bay  Horse  Noble.  Great  Odds 
were  laid  before  and  at  starting  on  Noble,  but  it  seems  he  was  rendered  incapable 
of  running  owing  to  some  foul  means  made  use  of  by  the  Person  who  was  his 
Keeper  and  Rider,  for  a  Bribe  of  £500  Currency. 

And  on  Wednesday  the  Colts  Plate  was  run  for  at  the  same  place,  and  won 
by  Mr.  John  Wright's  Bay  Colt  Cade,  beating  Daniel  Horry,  Esqr's  Roan 
Colt  Raffle,  William  Moultrie  Esqr's  Chesnut  Colt  Favourite,  and  Col.  How- 
arth's  Roan  Filly. 

'*  Last  Saturday  night,  between  seven  and  eight  o'clock  as  CapL  George 
Higgins,  of  the  Snow  Portland,  in  the  London  Trade,  with  Mr.  John  HiH,  Mr. 
Thomas  Coleman,  Dr.  Edward  Gunter,  a  young  lad  belonging  to  the  Snow, 
and  two  Negro  Men,  were  coming  to  Town  from  Hobcaw,  in  a  Sailing  Boat, 
she  was  over  set  by  a  sudden  Squall  of  wind  and  sunk  nearly  opposite  to  Mrs. 
Wraggs  wharf;  by  which  melancholy  Accident  Captain  Higgins,  Mr.  Hill,  Mr. 
Coleman,  and  one  of  the  Negroes,  were  unfortunately  drowned;  their  Bodies 
are  not  yet  found.  Dr.  Gunter,  the  young  Lad,  and  the  other  negro  were 
happily  saved.  (5.  C.  Gas,  and  Country  Jour.,  March  7,  1769.)  An  earlier 
paper,  for  February  24,  1769,  records  the  marriage  of  Capt.  George  Higgins 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Collis. 

'^  James  Skirving  to  Charlotte,  widow  of  James  Mathewes;  she  was  Char- 
lotte Godin. 

'^  Roger  Pinckney,  Esq;  provost-marshal,  to  Susannah,  widow  of  Robert 
Hume,  Esq.,  and  Thomas  Walter,  merchant,  to  Anne  Lesesne,  daughter  of 
Isaac  Lesesne,  of  Daniels  Island.    (Salley's  Marriage  Notices,) 

**  Rev.  Thomas  Panting,  in  ship  HopeweU,  from  Dover. 

"  Saturday  last  the  Lady  of  the  Right  Honourable  Lord  Charles  GrevUle 
Montague,  our  Governor,  was  safely  delivered  of  a  daughter.  (5.  C  Gat.  and 
Country  Jour,,  April  4,  1769.) 

>*  John  Mackenzie,  Esq;  to  Sarah,  daughter  of  Thomas  Smith,  of  Broad 
St.  (Salley's  Marriage  Notices,) 

^  Alexander  Wright,  son  of  the  Governor  of  Georgia,  to  Elizabeth,  daughter 
of  the  late  John  Izard,  Esq. 


14  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

son  G.  went  to  a  Launch.'*  29.  The  chUd  very 
ill.    May  3.    A  little  better. 

May.  6.  Mrs.  Channing  embarked.'^  15.  Sailed.  14. 
The  child  had  the  Thrush.  15.  Dr.  F.  came 
in."  19.  Mr.  M,  Dr.  F,  and  my  Grandson  G. 
to  Silk  Hope.  23.  Returned.  28.  Mr.  Trapier 
married.^'  Yoimg  Messrs.  Laurens  and  Haber- 
sham at  dinner.  Also  Mr.  Eusebues  and  Mr. 
Gervais,*®  and  my  Son  and  Daughter.  31. 
Dined  at  my  Son's.    The  Child  baptized. 

June  4.  My  son,  Daughter  and  Dr.  F.  to  Goosecreek. 
7.  Mr.  Corbett  married.^  14.  My  Son  and 
Dr.  F.  dined  here.  Betsy  H.  to  Goose  Creek. 
15.  Miss  Powell  married.^  18.  Mrs.  Ma  tin 
and  an  assistant  arrives.**    23.  My  Grandson 

"  A  fine  new  Ship,  for  the  London  Trade,  was  launched  at  Captain  Lem- 
prier's,  at  Hobcaw,  on  Saturday  Se'nnight,  and  is  esteemed  as  compleat  a  Ves- 
sel as  has  been  built  in  this  Province;  she  is  called  the  Betsy  and  Eify^  and  to 
be  commanded  by  Capt.  John  Harrison.  (5.  C  Gaz,  and  Country  Jour,^  May 
2,  1769.) 

'^  John  Channing,  Esq;  and  Lady,  for  London.  (5.  C.  and  Am,  Gen,  Gat,, 
May  22,  1769.) 

••  Yesterday  the  Ship  Carolina-Packet,  Capt.  William  White,  arrived  here 
from  London,  in  whom  came  passengers.  Miles  Brewton,  Esq;  Charles  Pinck- 
ney,  Esq;  John  Bowman,  Esq;  Dr.  John  Farquharson,  and  others.  {Ibid,, 
May  16,  1769.) 

••  Paul  Trapier,  Esq;  of  Georgetown,  to  Mrs.  Waties,  Widow  of  John  Waties. 
{Ibid.,  May  29,  1769.) 

*•  John  Lewis  Gervais,  who  came  to  South  Carolina  June  29,  1764,  with 
letters  from  Richard  Oswald  to  Henry  Laurens;  Gervais  was  bom  in  1741, 
either  in  France,  or  Germany,  married  here  and  died  in  Charleston,  August, 
1798;  he  held  various  offices  in  South  Carolina,  and  represented  her  at  the 
Continental  Congress,  1782-3. 

^  Thomas  Corbett,  to  Margaret  Harleston,  youngest  daughter  of  John 
Harleston. 

^  Charles  August  Stewart,  Esq;  Captain  21st  Regiment,  married  to  Sally, 
daughter  of  Col.  George  Gabriel  Powell,  of  St.  George's  Parish.  (Salley's 
Marriage  Notices,) 

^  Sunday  last  the  Ship  Beaufain,  Daniel  Curling,  master,  arrived  here  from 
London,  in  which  came  the  Rev.  Mr.  Charles  Martyn,  Rector  of  St.  Andrew's 
Parish,  who  lately  went  to  England  for  his  Health  and  which,  we  hear,  he  has 
happily  recovered;  the  Rev.  Mr.  Purcell,  Assbtant  to  the  Rector  of  St.  Philip's, 
and  some  other  Passengers.    (5.  C.  Gas,  and  Country  Jour,,  June  20,  1769.) 


EXTRACTS  FROM  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT  IS 

G.  to  Goosecreek.  26.  My  son  and  Betsy  H. 
came  to  Town. 

July  1.  Mrs.  Poaug  1.^  2.  Mr.  Purcell,  Mr.  Ben.  Smith 
and  Col**.  Powell  at  dinner.  17.  My  sons 
family  came  to  Town  and  dined  here.  19.  A 
fine  rain  after  4  weeks  very  dry  weather  and 
hot.  22.  Mrs.  Godwin's  Hannah  came  to 
nurse  my  Grand-daughter.  30.  Lord  and  Lady 
Charles  and  Miss  Wragg  went  over  the  Bar.^ 

August  3.  Mrs.  Sands  died.^  13.  Mrs.  Horry  1.  20. 
The  past  week  extremely  hot.  25.  Mrs.  Clith- 
eral  died.*^ 

Sept.  6.  I  had  the  Gout.  7.  Mary  married.  8.  Mrs. 
Beale  l.^»  12.  Mr.  Rolle  at  dinner.^'  20.  To 
Mrs.  A.  Wright's.  22.  My  Daughter  had  a 
sore-throat.  28.  A  great  Storm.  30.  Mrs. 
John  Huger  1. 

**  John,  Son  of  John  and  Charlotte  Poaug,  bom  July  1st;  baptized  July  23, 
1769.    (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

^  Sunday,  the  Ship  Beaufain  sailed  for  London,  in  whom  went  his  Excel- 
lency Lord  Charles  Greville  Montagu,  Governor  and  Commander  in  Chief  of 
this  Province,  with  his  Lady  and  Family:  His  Excellency,  on  his  Departure 
was  saluted  by  the  Forts  in  this  Town,  and  by  Fort  Johnson.  {Ibid.,  August 
1.  1769.) 

*  James  Sands,  merchant. 

*'  Elizabeth,  wife  of  Dr.  James  Clitheral. 

*•  Othinel,  son  of  John  and  Mary  Beale  baptized.  (St.  Philip's  Register, 
October  4,  1769.)  John  Beale  was  the  son  of  Hon.  Othniel  Beale  and  his  wife 
Catherine  Gale  (Dalcho,  p.  124),  and  Hannah  Beale,  his  sister,  married  the 
Hon.  William  Bull;  she  died  in  England  about  1795,  when  she  made  her  will. 
Othniel  Beale,  was  the  son  of  Capt.  John  Beale  and  Martha  his  wife,  of  Marble- 
head,  New  England;  this  is  so  stated  on  the  tombstone  of  Capt.  William  Beale, 
late  master  of  the  Ship  Prince  of  Wales;  who  died  December  5,  1736,  aged  38 
years.  The  stone  was  erected  in  the  Circular  (Congregational)  Churchyard, 
by  Capt.  William  Beale's  brother,  Othniel  Beale. 

^  Evidently  the  account  of  the  death  of  Dennis  Rolle  (this  Magasine,  vol. 
XX,  p.  207)  was  an  error,  for  he  is  mentioned  as  dining  with  Mrs.  Manigault, 
November  29,  1767,  and  again  here.  Henry  Laurens  (Letter  Bk.  1767-71, 
p.  77)  mentions  Rollers  coming  from  his  village  on  St.  John's  River,  to  White 
Point  on  Ashley  River,  in  a  canoe,  with  one  other  person.  The  5.  C.  Gom. 
and  Country  Jour,  for  January  16, 1770,  mentions  his  arrival  from  East  Florida, 
and  his  taking  passage  for  London. 


16  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Oct.  5.    My    Grandson    G.    not   well.     Took    ffippo.*® 

6.  He   continues   not   well.    Took   Rhubarb. 

7.  Better.  8.  Not  so  well.  9.  Took  physick 
again.  11.  Still  not  well.  8.  Mrs.  Bum  1.*^ 
9.  Mrs.  Gordon  1.  23.  Mrs.  Colcock  1.  24. 
Mrs.  T.  L.  Smith  l.«  26.  Went  to  Dr.  Milli- 
gan's  who  had  been  very  sick. 

Nov.  4.  Mr.  Nightingale  died."  6.  Mrs.  Wragg  very 
ill.  18.  Charlotte  1.  26.  Mrs.  William  Dray- 
ton 1.  27.  Went  to  see  Mrs.  Wragg.  28. 
Lady  Mary,  Mrs.  Brewton,  and  Mr.  Beresford's 
family  came  in.^  29.  Miss  Moncriefe  mar- 
ried."   30.  Mr.  Whitfield  came  in." 

Dec.  4.  I  went  to  hear  him  preacl^.  12.  Went  to  my 
sons  to  enquire  about  Mrs.  Wragg.  Mrs. 
William  Wragg  had  a  son.  16.  Mrs.  Wragg 
died."  Buried  the  20th.  19.  My  Grandson 
G.  has  had  a  Flux  for  a  week  past.  21.  My 
daughter  came  to  see  him.  22.  He  is  a  little 
better.  26.  Took  a  purge  of  roses.  27.  A 
little  better.  28th.  I  rode  out  with  him  and 
carried  him  to  see  his  mother.  Jan.  1.  Very 
much  indisposed.  5th.  Worse  7th.  Better. 
9th.  Rode  out  with  him.    Dec.  24.  I  had  a 

*^  Hippo  b  a  local  term  for  Ipecac,  and  is  still  in  use;  probably  from  Hype- 
cacuana  or  H3rpocochona,  obsolete  and  corrupt  forms  (rf  Ipecacuanha.  (See 
Oxford  Dictionary.) 

tt  Wife  of  the  Hon.  John  Bum. 

**  Mary,  daughter  of  Thos.  Loughton  and  Elic:  Smith  baptized.  (St.  Phil- 
ip's Register,  April  27,  1770.) 

*i  Thomas  Nightingale,  aged  53.  (5.  C.  Gm,  and  Country  Jotir,,  November 
7, 1769.) 

^  Ship  CaroHna-Packet,  from  London,  in  which  came  passengers,  John  Ains- 
lie.  Esq;  and  Lady,  Mrs.  Brewton,  wife  of  Miles  Brewton,  Esq;  (5.  C  Gat, 
and  Country  Jour,^  November,  28,  1769.) 

**  John  Brailsford,  to  Polly,  daughter  of  Richard  Moncrief  (Salley's  Marriage 
Notices;  her  name  is  given  as  Elizabeth  in  another  newspaper). 

**  Rev.  George  Whitfield  arrived  from  London  Tuesday-last.  (5.  C.  Gat. 
and  Country  J  our  4  ^  December  5, 1769.) 

•7  Judith  Wragg  Senr.  buried.    (St  Philip's  Register,  December  20,  1769.) 


4 

i 


EXTRACTS  FROM  J0X7RNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT  17 

little  Gout    29.  Parson  Smith  and  his  wife 
arrived.** 
1770.    Jan.  5.    Old  Mrs.  Austen  died.'*    10.  I  was  taken  with 

the  Gout  at  night.  11.  No  better.  11.  M.  T. 
Gadsden  came  in.**^  16.  Mrs.  Downes  1.  18. 
Waldron's  boat  lost  and  2  men  drowned.** 
22.  Mrs.  Nowell  l.«*  30.  My  grandson  G. 
not  well.  31.  My  leg  broke  out.  Feb.  14. 
Not  better.  18.  No  better.  20.  A  little  bet- 
ter. 28.  Sent  for  Dr.  Moultrie.  Mar.  9.  Still 
the  same. 

Feb.  4.  Mrs.  John  Harlestonl.    8.  Mrs.  Roger  Pinckneyl. 

Mar.  24.  My  son  broke  his  Thumb.  25.  Doctors,  Mr. 
Eusebuis  and  Mrs.  Gervais  at  dinner.  30.  To 
Mr.  Pike's  Ball.    31.  Mary  lay  in. 

April  9.  To  Mrs.  Arthur  Middleton's.  20.  Mrs.  Bacot  I.** 
26.  Miss  Nancy  Sinclair  married.**  30.  My 
Son  and  Daughter  went  to  Goose-creek.  I 
brought  my  Grandson  J.  home  sick.  He  was 
better  the  2d.  May. 

••  From  London,  Rev.  Robert  Smith,  Rector  of  St.  Philip's  and  his  Lady; 
the  Rev.  Mr.  Pearce  of  Beaufort,  Port  Royal  and  other  passengers.  (5.  C. 
Gm.  and  Country  Jour,,  January  2,  1770.) 

^  St  Philip's  Register,  January  6,  1770.  Buried  Mary  Austin;  5.  C.  Gom. 
and  Country  Jour.,  January  16,  1770.  Died,  Mrs.  Ann  Austin,  Relict  of  the 
late  Col.  Robert  Austin,  aged  84  years. 

*^  In  Ship  Beaufain,  from  London,  Mr.  James  Gadsden,  merchant;  Thomas 
Gadsden,  Esq;  of  this  Town;  James  Wright,  Esq;  eldest  son  of  the  Governor 
of  Georgia;  Charles  Fyffe  of  Georgetown  and  other  passengers.  (5.  C.  Com. 
and  Country  Jour.,  January  2, 1770.) 

^  The  large  new  Pilot  Boat  called  the  Rachel  and  Mary  belonging  to  Messrs 
Isaac  and  Jacob  Waldron,  of  this  Town,  was  discovered  on  Thursday  last  to 
be  ashore  among  the  Breakers  on  the  back  of  Coffin-Land,  but  by  what  Acci- 
dent she  was  drove  ashore  no  Person  can  tell,  as  the  People  on  board  being 
four,  were  aU  drowned;  three  of  whom  were  found,  viz.,  Mr.  William  Baker, 
a  Branch  pOot,  Mr.  Samuel  Miller,  and  a  Negro  man.  (5.  C.  Gas.  and  Country 
Jour,,  January  23,  1770.) 

^  Elizabeth,  wife  of  John  Nowell;  child's  name  not  found. 

*>  Mary  daughter  of  Peter  and  Eliz:  Bacot  baptized  May  18,  1770.  (St 
Phmp's  Register.) 

M  Thomas  Heyward  and  Ann  Sinclair  (St.  Philip's  Regbter.) 


18  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

May  5.  Mrs.  Ben:  Huger  1.  Mr.  M.  was  taken  very  ill 
with  his  old  disorder,  and  was  obliged  to  have 
Dr.  Moultrie.  6th.  A  little  better.  7th.  Bet- 
ter but  not  well.  13.  Better.  12th  May. 
My  Sons  house  was  raised.  16.  Heard  of  Mr. 
Doyley's  death.'^  17.  My  Son  and  Daughter 
and  Betsey  H.  came  down.  18.  Betsy  H.  not 
well.  23.  Mrs.  Laurens  died.**  29.  Dillon's 
V  House  on  fire.*^    My  Grandson  had  a  fever. 

Mr.  M.  to  Silkhope  by  water.  Returned  1st. 
June.    31.  Mrs.  Harleston  went  off.** 

June  2.  My  son  took  my  two  Grandsons  to  Goose  creek. 
Mrs.  Ben.  Smith  went  off.*'  6.  Peter  Timothy 
died.^®  7.  A  great  Storm  at  night.  8.  Mrs. 
Branford's  son  died.^  16.  Very  hot  weather. 
18.  Mrs.  Motte  died.*^  19.  A  good  many 
children  die  of  the  Hooping-cough.  23.  Very 
hot  weather.  24.  Betsy  H.  not  well.  27. 
Went  to  James  Isld.  returned  16th.  July  not 
much  better.    28.  Mrs.  A.  Wright  1.    30.     I 

•  Daniel  Doyley,  Esq;  Assistant  Judge  and  Justice,  died  in  R.  I.  (5.  C, 
and  Am.  Gen,  Gas.,  May  18,  1770.) 

••  Buried,  Eleanor,  wife  of  Henry  Laurens.  May  23,  1770.  (St.  Philip's 
Register.) 

•^  Fire  broke  out  in  the  roof  of  Messrs.  Dillon  and  Gray's  Tavern,  but  by 
"  the  timely  Assistance  of  the  Engins  ....  it  was  happily  extinguished." 
(S.  C,  and  Am.  Gen.  Gas.,  June  5,  1770.) 

**  Since  our  last  Benj.  Smith,  Esq;  with  his  Lady  and  Family,  Mrs.  Farr, 
Mrs.  Harleston,  Mr.  Robert  Smyth  and  Family,  Mr.  John  Gaillard  and  others, 
went  by  water  to  Rhode  Island;  and  Mr.  Paul  Townsend,  Mr.  Thomas  Hart- 
ley, and  others,  to  New  York.  These  annual  Migrations  drain  this  province 
of  a  great  deal  of  Money.     (Ibid.,  June  8,  1770.) 

**  Saturday  last  the  brig  WiUiam  and  John  for  Rhode  Island  in  whom  went 
passengers  Benjamin  Smith,  Esq;  for  many  years  Speaker  of  the  Commons 
House  of  Assembly,  of  this  Province,  with  his  whole  Family.  (5.  C.  and  Am. 
Gen.  Gaz.,  June  5,  1770.) 

'0  Peter,  son  of  Peter  and  Ann  Tunothy  buried  June  6,  1770.  (St.  Philip's 
Register.) 

^  Died  in  England,  Master  William  Branford,  only  son  of  William  Bran- 
ford,  Esq.    {Ibid.,  June  15,  1770.) 

^  Jacob  Motte,  Senr.,  Public  treasurer,  aged  70  years.  (Ibid.,  June  19, 
1770.) 


EXTRACTS  FROM  J0X7RNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT  19 

J         went  to  Goosecreek,    Came  down  3d.    July 
very  hot  weather. 

July  5.    Mr.  Pitte  statue  raised."^    10.  Heard  from  Mrs. 

Harleston,  and  that  the  Vessel  Mr.  Ben:  Smith  V 
went  in  was  lost.  11.  Very  hot  weather.  22. 
Mr.  Sarazin  married  to  Mrs.  Prioleau.^^  25. 
The  Collector,"  Mr.  Thos,  Smith  and  Dr. 
Keith  dined  here.  Mr.  Maz  yck  died." 
Mr.  Ben:  Smith  died.*" 

August  1.  Betsy  H.  to  Goosecreek.  12.  My  daughter 
had  a  fever.  19.  My  Grandsons  to  Goose 
creek.    25.  Mrs.  Ancrum  1. 

Sept.  7.  My  Daughter  had  a  return  of  her  fever.  Dr.  F. 
went  up.  8.  Penelope  had  a  son.  14.  My 
Son's  FamUy  came  down  and  Betsy  H.  sick. 
The  child  stayed  here  and  returned  home  the 
28th.  17.  Betsy  H.  not  well.  30.  My  Daugh- 
ter had  the  fever  and  the  child  not  well.  2d. 
Oct.    It  was  very  ill.    3d.  better. 

Oct.  1.  Mr.  DeLancy  married.^*  8.  Sprained  my  knee 
going  to  my  Daughters.  9th  and  10th.  Very 
lame  and  cannot  walk.  Uth.  and  12th.  Bet- 
ter. 13th.  Not  so  well.  21.  Mrs.  Lowndes 
l.^>  25.  Mr.  M.  to  Silkhope.  Returned  29th. 
26.  Not  well. 

^  See  this  Magazine,  vol.  xv,  p.  18,  for  an  account  of  this  statue. 

^*  Mr.  Jonathan  Sarrazin  married  to  Mrs.  Sarah  Prioleau  widow  of  the  late 
Elijah  Prioleau. 

^  Tuesday  last  John  Hughes,  Esq;  who  superceeded  Daniel  Moore,  Esq; 

late  Collector  of  His  Majesty's  Customs  for  this  Port,  landed  here 

and  the  next  day  took  the  usual  oaths  and  entered  upon  the  Duties  of  his 
Office.     (5.  C.  Ga%.  and  Country  Jour,,  July  17,  1770.) 

^  Isaac  Mazyck,  Esq;  aged  71  years;  37  years  a  member  of  the  Commons 
House  of  Assembly. 

"  Died  at  Newport,  R.  I.,  in  his  53d  year,  for  many  years  speaker  of  the     ^ 
Commons  House  of  Assembly.    (5.  C.  and  Gen,  Gaz.,  August  13,  1770.) 

'•  Peter  DeLancey,  Esq;  his  Majesty's  deputy  Post-m&ster  General  for  the 
Southern  district  of  North  America,  married  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Beresford, 
daughter  of  Richard  Beresford,  lEsq.  (Salley's  Marriage  Notices,  aso  St. 
Philip's  Register.) 

'•  Child  of  Rawlins  &  Maiy  Lowndes. 


20  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Nov.  6.    Mrs.  Telfair  !.»<>    IS.  Mrs.  Gordon  !.»    Miss 
Branford  married." 
Dec.  3.    The  Sorethroat  still  very  bad  in  town.    9.  Mrs. 

Harleston  arrived  and  dined  here."  11.  Mr. 
Izard's  family  came  in.**  16.  Mrs.  Lowndes 
died.^  21.  My  Daughter  had  an  ague  and  a 
great  cold.  25.  Christmas,^  tuesday,  a  fine 
day,  a  fire  on  the  wharf,  and  many  Stores 
burnt.  28.  A  good  many  people  died  of  the 
sore-throat.  29.  My  sons  people  got  the  sore- 
throat. 
1771.    Jan.  28.    Mr.  Colker  died.» 

Feb.  3.  My  Grandson  G.  Had  a  little  sorethroat.  8.  Mr. 
Mlawhenny  lost  2  children  by  the  sorethroat. 
9.  A  very  wet  winter. 

Mar.  8.  Betsy  H.  had  a  sorethroat.  29.  I  had  the  gout 
in  my  knee  very  severely  at  night. 

April  7.  Miss  Fanny  Brown  married.*^  15.  My  Son 
left  town.  He  went  to  Camden  and  returned 
the  28th. 

*•  St.  Philip's  Regbter,  October  24,  1770  [sic],  Mary  Luda,  dau^ter  of 
William  and  Eliazbeth  Telfair  was  bom. 

*^  Ibid.,  October  7,  1771.  John  Alexander,  son  of  John  and  Elizabeth  Gor- 
don, baptized. 

^Elizabeth  Branford,  daughter  of  William  Branford  deceased,  to  Ellas 
Horry,  Esq.    (Salley's  Marriage  Notices,) 

**....  Mrs.  Harleston  and  daughter  ....  returned  here  on 
Sunday  from  Rhode  Island.  (5.  C.  Gom.  and  Country  Jour.,  December  11 
1770.) 

•«  From  New  York,  Ralph  Izard,  Esq;  Lady,  and  Family.    (Ibid.) 

*  Mary  (bom  Cartwright),  second  wife  of  the  Hon.  Rawlins  Lowndes,  Esq; 
one  of  his  Majesty's  Assistant  Judges.    (Ibid.,  December  IS,  1770.) 

*iThe  fire  was  on  the  wharf  next  to  the  Exchange;  broke  out  in  some 
wooden  buildings,  bumt  a  number  of  stores,  and  at  one  time  the  cornice  of 
the  Exchange  caught  on  fire;  The  5.  C.  and  Am.  Gen.  Com.  for  January  7, 1771, 
gives  a  long  account  of  the  fire,  comments  on  the  extreme  danger  of  wooden 
buildings,  and  states  that  the  stores  are  to  be  rebuilt  of  brick. 

"  In  his  75th  Year,  Mr.  Thomas  Corker,  merchant.  (5.  C  and  Am.  Gen. 
Gas.,  February  5,  1771.) 

"  Peter  Spence,  of  PonPon,  to  Fanny,  eldest  daughter  of  Joseph  Brown  of 
Georgetown.    (Salle/s  Marriage  Notices.) 


EXTRACTS  FROM  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  ICANIGAULT  21 

May  5.  Ruth  Rivers  died.  9.  My  Son  and  Daughter 
went  to  Goose  Creek.  9.  My  Grandsons  went 
to  Goosecreek.  23.  My  Son  and  his  Daughter 
A.  came  to  Town  and  Mrs.  Campbell.  24.  Mr. 
M.  went  to  Silkhope. 

June  8.  Mrs.  Parson  Smith  died.*'  10.  Buried  from  our 
house  in  the  morning.  11.  I  had  a  little  of  the 
Gout.  15.  My  Grandson  J.  had  a  little  of  the 
Flux.  Took  Physick  a  second  time  the  18th. 
A  little  better  the  19th.  17.  Betsy  H.  and 
Judith  B.  to  Goosecreek. 

July  1.    My  Soil  and  Daughter  came  to  town.    2.  They 
went  up  again.    4.  Mrs.   Boimetheau   1.    9. 
Parson  Downes  and  his  wife  came  in.    11. 
Called   to   see   them.    13.  They   dined   here. 

14.  They  drank  tea  here  and  rode  out.  17. 
My  Son's  family  came  to  Town.  20.  Parson 
Downes  and  his  wife  went  off.*' 

Aug.  2.  My  Grandson  G.  had  a  fever.  3d.  Took  an 
emetic.  6th.  Had  a  fever  and  ague.  7th.  Very 
bad.    8th.  better.    4.  Betsy  H.  to  Georgetown. 

15.  A  fire  in  Mr.  Keith's  shoemaker's  shop 
which  burnt  two  children  to  death.'®  Mr. 
Delancy  killed  by  Dr.  Haley.'^    19.  My  Sons 

••  Elizabeth,  wife  of  the  Rev.  Robert  Smith,  rector  of  St.  Hiilip's  church. 

''Sailed  for  Philadelphia,  Rev.  Mr.  Downes,  Mrs.  Downes  and  others. 
(5.  C.  Gas.  and  Country  Jour.,  July  23,  1771.) 

•"  The  fire  was  in  William  Davy's  Shoemakers  shop  in  Dennis's  Alley;  caused 
by  the  explosion  of  a  hogshead  of  rum  which  caught  from  a  candle  being  held 
too  near  the  open  bung  hole.     (Ibid.,  August  19,  1771.) 

•*  On  Tuesday  Evening  last,  a  Duel  was  fought  with  Pistols  in  a  Room  in 
Mr.  Holliday's  Tavern  on  the  Bay,  between  Dr.  John  Haly  and  Peter  De- 
Lancy  Esq;  Postmaster  General  of  the  Southern  Disrict  of  North  America, 
which  imhappily  ended  in  the  immediate  death  of  Mr.  Delancy.  The  Distress 
of  the  Families  of  Both  Parties  may  be  more  easily  imagined  than  Described. 
(5.  C.  and  Am.  Gen.  Gaz.,  August  19,  1771.) 

On  Wednesday  last,  Dr.  Haly  surrendered  himself  volui^tarily,  in  order  to 
take  his  Trial  at  the  Court  of  Sessions,  which  begins  here  on  Wednesday  next. 
(Ibid.,  October  14,  1771.) 

John  Hayly,  being  convicted  of  Manslaughter,  pleaded  his  Majesty's  Par- 
don, and  was  discharged.    (Ibid.,  November  4,  1771.) 


22  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

child  had  the  fever.  20.  My  Grandson  G. 
laid  up  all  the  week  with  a  crick  in  his  neck, 
26.  Mrs.  Bum  1. 

Sept.  3.  Very  Hot  weather.  8.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  Middle- 
ton  arrived  in  Ball^  9.  Mrs.  Pinckney  called 
with  her  Son.  13.  Betsy  H.  came  to  Town. 
17.  Mrs.  T.  L.  Smith  1."  24.  Mr.  Pantmg 
buried.**    25.  Mrs.  C.  Pinckney  1. 

Oct.  17.  My  Son  moved  to  his  new  House.  24.  Mr.  M. 
to  Silkhope — ^returned  28th. 

Nov.  1.  Mrs.  Butler  1.  5.  Mrs.  Ben  Huger  died.** 
6.  I  had  the  Gout.  *  12.  Betsy  H.  and  my 
Grandson  G.  went  to  a  Launch.**  My  Son 
returned  from  his  journey.  23.  Mrs.  Himili 
died.*^  24.  Mrs.  Beale  1.  and  died  the  29th.*» 

**  Sunday  last,  Returned  here  from  Great  Britain,  in  Ship  liermaid,  Samuel 
BaU  Senr.  Master,  Arthur  Middleton  Esq;  with  his  Lady  and  Family,  Charles 
Drayton  M.D.  and  Mr.  Thomas  Pinckney.    (Ibid.,  September  10,  1771.) 

"  Possibly  Kitty,  daughter  of  T.  L.  and  Elizabeth  Smith. 

**  Rev.  Thomas  Panting,  A.M.,  rector  of  St.  Andrew's  Parish. 

**  Mary,  wife  of  Benjamin  Huger,  in  the  bloom  of  Life.  (Gazette.) 

**  On  Tuesday  last  a  fine  Ship  for  the  London  Trade,  to  be  conmianded  by 
CapL  William  White,  built  by  Messrs  Begbie  and  Manson,  was  launched  at 
Hobcaw,  and  named  the  Carolina  Packet.  (5.  C,  and  Am,  Gen,  Gat,,  Novem- 
ber 18, 1771.) 

Ibid,,  August  8,  1771.  There  have  been  lately  built  and  Launched  here,  a 
fine  Brigintine  at  Mr.  Cornelius  Dewies*s  Island  for  Capt.  William  Thompson, 
and  another  Brigantine,  by  Mr.  Wallis,  for  Capt.  John  Wright,  both  designed 
for  the  West-India  Trade,  and  now  near  ready  for  Sea.  Three  fine  large  Sh^>8 
are  also  in  such  Forwardness  on  the  Stocks,  that  they  wiU  be  launched  early 
this  Fall;  one  of  them,  building  by  Messrs.  Begie  and  Manson,  for  Capt.  Wil- 
laim  White,  in  the  London  Trade,  reckoned  a  very  complete  vessel;  the  second, 
building  by  Mr.  James  Black,  for  Capt.  James  Bailey  also  for  the  London 
Trade  full  as  complete,  and  the  third,  building  by  Mr.  Robert  Watts,  for  Capt. 
William  Carter  of  the  Bristol  Trade,  not  less  complete  than  the  others.  Be- 
sides these,  a  fine  Brigantine  building  by  Mr.  James  Vance;  and  Orders  are 
come  from  England  for  building  several  other  large  Ships  in  this  Province: — 
A  Proof  that  the  Goodness  of  Vessells  buUt  here,  and  the  superior  Quality  of 
our  Live  Oak  Timber  to  any  wood  in  America  for  Ship-Building  is  at  length 
acknowledged. 

•7  Rachel,  wife  of  Rev.  B.  B.  Himili. 

**  Mary,  wife  of  John  Beale,  Esq.  (St.  Philip's  Register.,  November  24, 
1771.)    Baptized,  Mary  Hannah,  daughter  of  John  and  Mary  Beale. 


EXntACTS  FROM  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAXTLT  23 

Dec.  3.  A  great  storm.  4.  Very  cold.  5.  Mrs.  John 
Huger  1.  10.  Dr.  Moultrie  died.**  16.  Capt 
McAlpin  drowned.^"®  My  daughter  sick  with 
a  cold  and  fever.  24.  Capt.  Keeler  &c.  at 
dmner.    31.  Mrs.  T.  Bee  died.^^^ 

(To  be  continued) 

**  Dr.  John  Moultrie,  aged  72. 
>••  CapUm  Coll  M'Alpin,  of  the  Ship  St.  Geori^ 
i«  Sasannah,  wife  of  Thomas  Bee. 


MARRIAGE    AND    DEATH    NOTICES    FROM    THE 

CHARLESTON  MORNING  POST;  AND  DAILY 

ADVERTISER,  AND  ITS  SUCCESSOR 

THE  CITY  GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

Continued  from  October 

On  Thursday,  the  3d  inst.  was  married  on  John's  Island  Mr. 
Thomson,  of  this  City,  to  Miss  Rebecca  Freer,  second  dan^ter 
of  John  Freer,  Esq;  of  John's  Island.    (Friday,  May  4,  1787.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening.  Field  Farrar,  Esq.,  of 
Winnsborough,  Esq;  to  Mrs.  Eliza  Hext,  widow  of  the  deceased 

Capt.  John  Hext.    On  Friday  evening,  Mr. Archibald,  to 

Miss  Nancy  Hair,  daughter  of  Mr.  Edward  Hair,  of  this  City. 
(Monday,  May,  14,  1787.) 

***The  marriage  of  Mr,  Archibald,  as  mentioned  yesterday ,  was 
inserted  from  erroneous  in  formation.    (Tuedsay,  May  15,  1787 

Married.  Dr.  Thomas  Waring,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Mitchell, 
daughter  of  Mr.  Thomas  Mitchell,  deceased,  of  Georgetown. 
(Wednesday,  May  16,  1787.) 

Lately  died  at  Santee,  John  Barnett,  Esq;  of  this  City.  (Satur- 
day, May  19, 1787.) 

Married.  Mr.  John  Kerr,  of  this  City,  to  Miss  Mary  Stone. 
(Friday,  May  25,  1787.) 

Died.  Mr.  Henry  Butler,  of  this  City.  (Wednesday,  May  20, 
1787.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  at  the  Round  O,  in  the  Blocnn  of  life 
after  a  few  days  illness,  Mr.  Charles  Saunders.  .  .  .  (Satur- 
day, June  2,  1787.) 

Married.  In  St.  John's  Parish,  Berkley  county,  Edward 
Harleston,  Esq;  to  Miss  Annabella  Moultrie,  niece  of  the  Hon. 
Major  Gen.  Moultrie. — Yesterday,  Mrs.  Joseph  Pippin,  to  Miss 
Betsy  Trenhohn.    (Tuesday,  Jime  7, 1787.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  10th,  instant,  at  his  plantation  on  Cheraw, 
Charles  Skirving,  Esq (Tuesday,  June  12,  1787.) 

24 


MASBIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOnCES  25 

Died.  This  morning,  of  a  short  iUness,  Mr.  Yamold,  organist 
to  the  new  Church. — also,  Mr.  Harry  Saunders,  cabinet-maker. 
(Saturday,  June  16,  1787.) 

Married.  At  Beach  Hill,  near  Cambridge,  in  Ninety-Six  dis- 
trict, Mr.  James  Mayson,  son  of  Col.  James  Mayson,  to  the  ami- 
able Miss  Conwajr,  of  the  state  of  Virginia. 

Died. — On  Saturday  last,  Mrs.  Rutledge,  Wife  of  the  Hon. 
Hugh  Rutledge,  Esq. — On  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  John  Heame,  of 
James  Island.     (Monday,  June  18,  1787.) 

Died.  Last  month  in  the  city  of  New  York,  Isaac  Cox,  Esq; 
merchant.    .    .    .     (Wednesday,  June  20,  1787.) 

Married.  Robert  Pringle,  Esq;  to  Miss  Garden,  daughter  of 
Col.  Garden.     (Monday,  July  2,  1787.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  John  Reynolds,  of  St.  Helena 
to  Miss  Mary  Tray,  the  accomplished  daughter  of  Mr.  George 
Tray,  deceased. — A  few  days  ago,  Mr.  Paul  Grimball,  to  the 
amiable  Miss  Sally  Chaplin. 

Died.  After  a  short  illness  Capt.  Urquart,  of  the  ship  Briton. 
(Wednesday,  July  4,  1787.) 

Married.  Mr.  Christopher  Rogers,  to  Miss  Shrewsbury. 
(Monday,  July  9, 1787.) 

Died.  In  Chester  County,  State  of  Pennsylvania,  on  the  30th 
of  May  last,  Mr.  William  Kennedy,  brother  of  James  Kennedy, 
Esq;  of  this  place    ....    (Tuesday,  July  10,  1787.) 

Married.  A  few  days  ago,  Mr.  Pritchard,  to  the  agreeable 
Miss  Nancy  Relang,  if  this  City.     (Wednesday,  July  11,  1787.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mr.  Joshua  Hart,  of  this  City. 
(Ibid) 

Married.  Yesterday  evening,  Mr.  Rivers,  of  James  Island,  to 
the  amiable  Miss  Croskey,  of  the  same  place.  (Friday,  July 
13, 1787.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Richard  Wyatt,  to  Miss 
Elizabeth  Libby,  an  acomplished  and  amiable  young  lady. 
(Saturday,  July  14, 1787.) 

[There  is  no  file  of  this  paper  in  the  Charleston  Library  Society, 
from  July  16,  1787,  to  September,  1788;  in  the  interval  the  name 
has  been  changed  from  The  Charleston  Morning  Post  and  Daily 
Advertiser,  to  The  City  Gazette,  or  the  Daily  Advertiser.] 


26  so.  CA.  mSTOltlCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  Mr.  Thomas  Ball,  to  Miss 
Elizabeth  Massey,  of  this  City.  (City  Gazette,  or  Daily  Advertiser, 
Thursday,  September  18,  1788.) 

Thursday  evening  was  marred  Mr.  Thomas  Lockwood,  of  this 
City,  to  Miss  Amarenthia  L.  Perkins,  daughter  of  Mr.  John 
Perkins,  late  of  Pocotaligo.    (Saturday,  Sept.  27,  1788.) 

Died.  Mr.  William  Eales,  merchant,  of  this  city. — Mr.  James 
Witter,  of  James  Island.    (Wednesday,  Oct.  1, 1788.) 

Died.  Wednesday,  after  a  short  illness,  Mr.  Daniel  Tharin,  of 
this  city — he  was  an  affectionate  husband,  a  tender  father,  a 
sincere  friend    ....    (Friday,  October  3,  1788.) 

Died.  Mrs.  Pritchard,  wife  of  Mr.  Paul  Pritchard,  of  Hobcaw. 
(Thurdsay,  Oct.  9,  1788.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Morton  Brailford,  mer- 
chant, to  Miss  Mary  Cormack,  both  of  this  city. 

Died  on  Thursday  last,  Mr.  A.  Merrick.  .  .  .  (Satur- 
day, Oct.  11,1788.) 

[There  b  a  break  in  this  file  from  October  13, 1788,  to  February 
12,  1789.] 

Died.  Mrs.  White,  wife  of  Mr.  Sims  White,  of  this  city.  (Feb. 
12,  1789.) 

Married,  the  hon.  Alexander  Gillon,  Esq;  to  Miss  Nancy 
Purcell,  daughter  of  the  rev.  Dr.  Purcell,  of  this  city. — ^John 
Dawson  jun.  Esq;  to  Miss  Mary  Huger,  daughter  of  the  hon. 
John  Huger,  Esq.    (Friday,  Feb.  13, 1789.) 

Died.  On  the  15th  instant.  Miss  Rebecca  Coke,  aged  75 
years.    (Thurdsay,  Feb.  19,  1789.) 

Died.  William  Gibbes,  Esq;  in  the  67th  years  of  his  age. 
.  .  .  .  His  disinterested  patriotism  was  conspicuous  in  the 
share  he  took  during  the  late  revolution,  in  the  earliest  part  of 
which  he  acted  as  one  of  the  treasurers  of  the  state  and  the  con- 
tinental loan  office;  ....  In  the  various  stations  of  hus- 
band, father,  and  friend,  his  conduct  afforded  examples  worthy  of 
imitation.    (Tuesday,  February  24,  1789.) 

Married.  On  Monday,  Mr.  James  Gregorie,  merchant,  to 
Miss  Hopton,  daughter  of  William  Hopton,  Esq;  deceased. 

Died.  On  Sunday  morning,  in  the  bloom  of  life,  in  Christ 
Church  parish,  Mr.  Edward  Crofts,  of  Prince  George's  parish. 
(Wednesday,  Feb.  25,  1789.) 


MAKRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  27 

Died.  Mr.  Joseph  Sealy,  of  the  river  May.  (Saturday,  Man 
28,  1789.) 

Married.  On  the  2d  instant.  Richard  Withers,  Esq;  of 
Santee,  to  Mrs.  Frances  Wells,  of  St.  Thomas's  parish.  (Thurs- 
day April  16,  1789.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  the  18th  instant,  Mr.  John  Minott,  a 
respectable  good  citizen;  upwards  of  30  years  in  the  coasting 
trade,  and  ever  conducted  himself  with  the  greatest  uprightness 
and  integrity;  he  was  the  chief  pilot  to  the  Count  Estaing's  fleet 
on  the  coast  of  Georgia  in  1779,  and  was  very  instrumental  in  the 
capture  of  the  Experiment  of  50  gims,  conmianded  by  Sir  James 
Wallace.    (Monday,  April  20,  1789.) 

[File  broken  from  April  30,  1789  to  January  3,  1790.] 

Died.  Mrs.  Mills,  wife  of  Mr.  William  Mills,  of  this  dty. 
(Thursday,  Jan.  14,  1790.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last  in  the  33d  year  of  his  age,  Mr.  John 
Collins,  carpenter,  a  worthy,  honest  and  industrious  man;  he  was 
one  of  the  Charleston  Artillery,  who  was  woimded  at  the  battle 
of  Beaufort  in  1778.  His  remains  were  interred  in  the  Independ- 
ent Church  yard  Monday  evening,  attended  by  the  battalion 
of  artiUery,  who  performed  the  honors  of  war  on  the  occasion. 
....  Mr.  Joseph  Rivers,  of  this  city.  (Wednesday,  Jan. 
20,  1790.) 

Married.  Mr.  Lachlan  M'Intosh,  to  Miss  Procter.  Mr. 
Alexander  Ogilvie,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Mann,  daughter  of  Mr. 
Spencer  Mann,  of  this  dty. 

Died.  In  Savannah  Baron  de  Glaubeck,  from  the  bruises  he 
received  from  falling  from  a  horse.    (Thursday,  Jan.  21,  1790.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  James  Boone,  Esq;  of  Prince 
William's  parish,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Miles  Perry,  daughter  of 
Edward  Perry,  esq;  of  St.  Paul's  parish.  (Thursday,  January 
28,  1790.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Alexander  Jones,  to 
Miss  Mary  Farquhar,  both  of  this  city.  (Saturday,  Jan.  30, 
1790.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  9th  inst.  Mr.  John  Burkmyer, 
to  Miss  Mary  Cobia,  both  of  this  city  (Tuesday  Feb.  9,  1790.) 

Last  Thursday  evening  was  married,  in  the  parish  of  St.  Thomas, 
Isaac  Edwards,  Esq;  to  Miss  Arm  Bowen.  (Tuesday,  Feb.  16, 
1790) 


28  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Thursday  11th  instant,  William  Calder,  M.D., 
to  Miss  Martha  Calder,  of  Edisto  Island.  (Thursday,  Feb. 
18,  1790.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  the  11th  instant.  Dr.  Joseph  Rush,  to 
Miss  Massey,  of  John's  Island.    (Friday,  Feb.  19,  1790.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  at  his  plantation  near  Georgetown, 
captain  Thomas  Dunbar,  of  the  late  south  Carolina  line  of  Con- 
tinental troops.     (Tuesday,  Feb.  23,  1790.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  at  Ashepoo,  Henry  H)rme,  Esq; 
to  Miss  Ann  Pinckney  Webb,  daughter  of  Dr.  William  Webb. 

Died.  On  Thurdsay  last,  Mr.  Robert  Bruce  of  this  city. 
(Monday,  Mar.  1,  1790.) 

Married.  Mr.  Archibald  Saltus,  to  Miss  Mary  Dupont,  daugh- 
ter of  Charles  Dupont,  Esq;  of  the  Euhaws. — On  Thursday  last, 
Mr.  Daniel  Milner,  to  Miss  Martha  Wood,  both  of  this  city. 
(Tuesday,  Mar.  2,  1790.) 

Death.  Job  M'Pherson,  Esq;  of  Prince  William's  parish. 
(Thursday,  Mar.  4,  1790.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  in  this  city,  Mr.  Potts  Shaw.  (Tuesday 
Mar.  16,  1790.) 

Died.  On  Wensday  evening,  Mr.  Chambers  Russell,  lately 
arrived  here  from  Boston.     (Friday,  Mar.  19,  1790.) 

Married.  Last  evening  Mr.  William  Hort,  of  Charleston,  to 
Miss  Catherine  Simons,  daughter  of  Benjamin  Simons,  Esq;  of 
St.  Thomas's  parish. 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  in  this  city,  Mr.  Robert  Bridey.  (Wed- 
nesday, Mar.  24,  1790.) 

Married.  Samuel  Elliott,  Esq;  of  Combahee,  to  Miss  Ann 
Furse,  of  Savannah.    (March  29,  1790.) 

About  six  weeks  ago  a  son  of  Mr.  Isaac  Da  Costa  was  bit  by  a 
mad  dog;  and  on  Sunday  last  was  seized  with  the  symptoms  of 
the  hydrophobia,  and  expired  in  all  the  agonies  attendant  on  that 
dreadful  disorder.  He  was  a  youth  of  most  promising  talents, 
and  not  quite  arrived  at  the  age  of  fourteen.  (Tuesday,  Mar.  30, 
1790.) 

Died.  In  this  city,  on  Wednesday  1st,  Mr.  James  Clark,  sen. 
of  Edisto  Island.    (Saturday  April  10,  1790.) 

Died.  In  Georgetown,  a  few  days  past,  Mrs.  Rebecca  Marion, 
of  that  place,  aged  sixty-seven  years  and  eleven  months.  .  .  • 
(Thursday,  April  15, 1790.) 


MASBIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOnCES  29 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  Abraham  Newton,  of  this  city, 
(Tuesday,  April  20,  1790) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  at  Willtown,  Chandler  Dinwiddle 
Fowks,  Esq;  of  this  city,  to  Mrs.  Fraser.  (Wednesday,  April, 
21,  1790.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  William  Valentine,  of  this  city. 
(Wednesday,  May  12,  1790.) 

Married.  On  the  15th  of  April,  at  Middleton  Point,  in  Mon- 
mouth, East  New  Jersey,  capt.  Philip  Freneau,  to  Miss  Elenora 
Forman,  daughter  of  Mr.  Samuel  Forman  of  that  place. 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  William  Drayton,  Esq;  L.L.D., 
dktrict  judge  of  South  Carolina,  and  Grand  Master  of  the  Fra- 
ternity of  South  Carolina  Ancient  York  Masons,  in  the  58th  year 
of  his  age.    (Wednesday,  May  19,  1790.) 

Married.  At  Edisto,  on  Monday  evening  last,  Mr.  Charles 
Isaac  Grimball,  to  Miss  Martha  Clarke,  daughter  of  Mr.  James 
Clarke  of  Edisto,  deceased.    (Thursday,  May  27,  1790.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Drake  Villepontoux, 
to  Miss  Mary  Lockwood,  and  Mr.  Peter  Villepontoux  to  Miss 
Sarah  Lockwood,  both  daughters  of  Mr.  Joshua  Lockwood,  of 
this  city.     (Saturday,  May  29, 1790.) 

Died.  On  Sxmday  last,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Fardo,  wife  of  Mr. 
George  Fardo,  of  this  city. 

Last  Saturday  evening  died,  in  the  63d  year  of  her  age,  Mrs. 
Susannah  Hall  a  native  of  this  city;  she  was  a  fond  parent,  tender 
and  affectionate  mother,  friendly,  himiane  and  a  good  chrbtian. 
(Wednesday,  June  2,  1790.) 

Married.  In  Boston,  Mr.  Samuel  Hunt,  to  Mrs.  Shepard  of 
this  state.    (Tuesday  June  8, 1790.) 

(To  be  continued.) 


A  LETTER  OF  1783 

The  following  letter,  written  by  Joseph  Koger,  a  former  oflScer 
in  the  militia  of  South  Carolina  during  the  Revolution,  and  a 
resident  of  that  part  of  the  former  Charleston  District  now  em- 
braced in  Colleton  County,  to  two  cousins  in  Virginia  is  the  prop- 
erty of  Mrs.  B.  F.  Stome,  of  Blackville,  and  was  loaned  by  her  to 
A.  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  to  copy  for  pubUcation  here: 

Addressed:  M'— 

John:  Or:  Henry  Koger — 
Living  In  Henry  County  Virginia 
On  Smiths  River 

South  Carolina  Scull  Swamp  October  4th  1783— 
D*  Cousins 

I  have  once  more  taken  this  Oppertunity  of  riting  to  You,  It  has  bin  som 
time  since  I  attempted  to  rite  to  any  of  you  for  want  of  a  good  chance  I  do 
therefore  Inform  you  all,  that  I  and  family  are  in  good  health  at  present  hoping 
one  and  all  Injoy  the  same  I  have  three  Children  two  sons  &  a  daughter  M' 
Bridge's  family  Is  well  there  has  bin  Very  great  ups  and  Downs  since  you  left 
this  plase  I  mean  Henry,  as  I  Derict  to  boath  of  you  m".  Batty  that  was  Is 
Dead  and  Docter  Hoof  also  and  your  Cosem  is  not  yet  settled  nor  the  note 
from  m*^*-  Murphey  has  not  bin,  your  things  left  me  and  M'^  Koger  is  all 
saf t  tho'  much  Damaged  by  hiding  out  and  often  Moving  I  lost  old  peter  went 
to  the  British  Tirah  is  Dead  and  four  Others  since  you  Came  from  hear  three 
Children  and  a  young  wench  [word  obliterated]  hatchett  is  kild  by  Charles 
Sanders  a  axident  John  &  Joshua  Williams  is  Dead  Died  with  the  smallpox 
very  great  Toreys,  M'  Ackermans  family  is  well  Salley  is  married  to  John  Gru- 
ber  and  has  one  child  Sbter  Moly,  is  mari,d  to  James  Cavanau  and  lives  In 
town  your  Case  with  St  John  and  Benlingall  went  in  your  favour  the  latter 
has  gone  with  the  British  and  many  Others  we  have  had  a  sene  of  Bloodsheed 
in  our  State  and  many  of  our  Dear  friends  Is  among  the  slain — 

I  have  heard  of  your  Manage  by  By  Major  John  Hampton  and  of  the 

unhappyness  wich  attend  you  in  it  I  am  Very  Sorey  it  has  bin  so  with  you 

but  hope  you  have  got  over  it  By  this  PoUey  Bridge  is  Married  and  lives  Very 

well  gordin  has  bin  a  Very  great  Torey  and  so  has  James  Thompson  tho  they 

Boath  Remane  with  ous  Charles  Sheppard  is  kild  at  the  seige  of  Savana  and 

number  of  others  I  should  think  it  a  happ}mess  if  I  could  once  more  see  you 

all  to  have  a  full  Acount  of  our  past  life  since  I  saw  Either  of  you  M",,  Cook 

has  not  give  me  the  least  Except  the  young  wench  wich  I  mentioned  Died — 

I  do  Conclude  with  my  Best  wishes  to  you  one  and  all  my  uncle  and  all  other 

Relations  and  Freinds  and  am  your  Afictionate 

Cousen  &  freind 

Joseph  Koger 

M«- 

Koger  gives  her  kind  love 

to  you  all 

30 


THE  REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH 

Copied  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
{Continued  from  October,  1919) 

BURIALS  AND  CHRISTNINGS 

Mary  Little  Departed  this  life  June  11,  1761;  was  En***  the  14 
Ann  M'Gaw  the  wife  of  James  M'Gaw  Departed  this  life  July  16: 

1751  andwasEnt'd  17:1751 
Jane  the  daughter  of  Jas.  M'Gaw  and  Ann  his  wife,  Departed 

this  Life  Aug*:  17: 1751  and  was  Ent.  the  21st. 
John  Gibbins  the  son  of  John  Gibbins  and  Eliz^  his  wife  Departed 

this  Life  17th:  Septr:  1751 
Thomas  McDowel  the  son  of  John  McDowell  and  Marth':  his  wife 

departed  this  Life  ye:  23d:  Sepr:  1751 
Widow  Levinck  Departed  this  life  ye  5th.    October  1751 
William  Jones  the  son  of  Wm.  Jones  Deprt.  this  life  Oct.  5:  1751 
Robert  Gibbs  Departed  this  life  Nov:  25:  1751  and  was  Buried 

27th:  aforesd. 
Sarah  the  Daughter  of  Edw:  Morain  and  Sarah  his  wife  w* 

Bom  Apl:  23:  1750  and  baptized  the  14  June  1752,  the  Surts: 

were  Mrs.  Haddrd,  Mrs.  Winrite  and  Jno:  Metheringham  Jur, 
William  son  of  Peter  Royer  and  Rebecca  his  Wife  was  bom  the 

12:  March  1752  and    ....    the  14th  June  175- 
William  Evans  Departed  this  lif e    .    .    .    .13  Day  of  May  1753. 
Sarah  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  and  Sarah  Whitesides  was  bom 

.    .    .    .    and  Baptized  13  May  1753. 
James  the  son  of  William  and    ....    Pring  was  bora  the  11 

of  Dec.  1751  and  Baptized  13  May  1753 
Sarah  the  daughter  of  Charles  Barksdale  and  Mary  his  wife  was 

bom  ye  6th.  July,  1753. 
Thomas  the  son  of  Saml.  Bennett  and  Hannah  his  wife  was  bom 

10th  December  1753  and  baptized  20    ...    • 
John  Metheringham  the  son  of  Jno.  Metheringham  and  Ann  his 

wife  was  buryed  July  16,  1753. 

31 


32  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

George  Gibbs  the  son  of  Robert  Gibbs  and  Elizabeth  his  wife 

was  Buryed  July  17th.  1758 
Thomas  Jones  Dyed  Janry.  22,  1758  and  Buried  Jan.  23  1758 
John  Holmes  senr.  was  Buryed  the  3d  June  1759 
Susanah  Hadrell  Departed   this  Life   November  9,   and   was 

buryed  the  11  Novem:  1759. 

[With  the  above  item,  ends  the  earliest  register.  The  second 
begins  in  1762,  and  was  evidently  lost  for  a  number  of  years,  for 
in  the  Journal  of  the  vestry,  February  17,  1811,  we  find  recorded 
that  a  number  of  the  Record  books  are  missing,  especially  the 
registers  of  births  and  baptisms,  marriages  and  deaths  between 
1759, 1760,  and  April  1790;  the  minutes  of  the  vestry  from  August 
6,  1759,  to  May  1790  were  also  missing.  The  journal  of  the 
vestry  seems  to  have  never  been  foimd,  but  the  register,  from  1762 
to  1788,  is  still  in  existence,  and  also  a  later  one  which  seems  to 
begin  about  1817.] 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISMS 

Moses  son  Of  Thomas  Whitesides  and  Sarah  his  wife  was  baptized 

January  ye  1st.  1762  by  the  Reverend  Mr.  Garden. 
Elizabeth  Daughter  of  John  Bennett  and  Elizabeth  His  wife  was 

bom  January  26,  1756. 
Sarah  Daughter  of  John  and  Elizabeth  Bennett  was  Bom  October 

30th  1758 
Mary  Daughter  of  John  and  Elizabeth  Bennett  was  born  January 

30th,  1762  and  Baptized  April  25,  1762  by  the  Reverend  Mr. 

Samuel  Fenner  Warren. 
A  free  Mullatoe  Chlid  Bron'd  on  Wednesday  the  Second  October 

1758  in  the  plantation  of  Thos.  Phillips  Planter  Deceased,  and 

was  Baptized  By  the  Revd.  Samuel  Fenner  Warren.    Rector 

of  St.  James  Santee  by  the  Name  of  Wm.  Phillips  on  Sond. 

28th  of  February  1762.    The  Surites  wer  Messrs.  James  Allen 

and  William  Drakeford  and  Elizabeth  Phillips. 
John  Giles  son  of  John  and  Elizabeth  Raner  Giles  Was  bom 

October  14th  1760 
Jeremiah  Son  of  Jeremiah  and  Sarah  Eden  was  Bom  January 

31st  1762  and  baptized  on  Suanday  June  27th  by  the  Reverand 

Mr.  Samuel  Fenner  Warren. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  33 

Mary  White  Daughter  of  Sims  White  and  Mary  His  wife  was  bom 

January  1,  1762  and  Baptized  by  the  Reverand  Mr.  Samuel 

Fenner  Warren  April  25th.  1762 
William  Son  of  Danid  and  Mary  Lewis  was  Baptized  April  25th 

1762  By  the  Reverand  Mr.  Samud  Warren.    The  said  Child 

bom  December  13,  1760 
Susannah  Daughter  of  John  Hartman  and  Sarah  his  Wife  was 

bom  April  16th  1758 
John  Son  of  John  Hartman  and  Sarah  his  wife  was  Bom  January 

12th  1760 
Wm.  Son  of  John  Hartman  and  Sarah  his  wife  Was  Bom  Febm- 

ary  10th.  1762  and  was  baptized  on  June  17th  1762. 
Elijah  Son  of  James  Eden  and  Mary  Christian  his  Wife  was  bom 

April  29th  1762  and  Baptized  By  the  Reverend  Mr.  Samud 

Fenner  Warren  on  June  27th  1762. 
James  Son  of  John  Rose  and  Hester  his  wife  was  Baptized  on 

Sunday  the  12th  of  September  1762  by  the  Reverand  Mr. 
'  Drake  Surityes  were  G.  Padon  Bond,  Jobe  Milner  and  Susannah 

Ions. 
Ridiard  Son  of  William  Rowser  and  Mary  his  wife  was  bom 

November  4, 1762. 
Elizabeth  the  Daughter  of  William  Cook  and  Ann  His  wife  was 

bom  the  16th  Jan'ry  1756  and  Baptized  the  16th  May  1756 
William  Son  of  William  Cook  and  Ann  his  wife  was  Bom  the 

30th  December  1758  and  Baptized  by  the  Reverend  Mr.  Sarjent. 
Robert  Son  of  Danid  Lewis  and  Mary  his  Wde  was  Baptized  on 

Simday  the  19th  Day  of  December  1762  by  the  Revd.  Samud 

Drake. 
Samud  son  of  Ephriam  l^^good  and  Ann  his  wife  Was  bom  May 

22,  1760  and  baptized  by  Reverend  Mr.  Warren 
Danid  Son  of  Wm.  Joy  and  Jean  his  wife  was  Bom  December  27, 

1762  and  Baptized  by  the  Reverend  Samuel  Drake  on  April 

ye  4: 1763 
Konorod  Kaghley  Departed  this  Life  the  12th  November  in  the 

Year  of  Our  Lord  1763  and  Buried  on  14th  Instant. 
A  Child  of  Danid  Evans  Departed  this  Life  and  was  Buried 

March  27  1773 
Charles  Lewis  son  of  Danid  Lewis  was  Bom  August  the  6  1751 


34  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

David  the  Son  of  John  West  and  Alice  his  Wife  was  Bom  Feb* 

ruary  22d.  1763  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  29  May  1763 

by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Wilton  of  Charlestown. 
Charlotte  the  Daughter  of  Jothan  and  Catherine  Gibbins  was 

bom  10th  May  1763  and  Baptized  June  26  1763  by  the  Reved 

Samud  Drake. 
Henry  the  Son  of  Konorod  Kaghley  and  Barbery  his  Wife  was 

bom  24th  Dec.  1763  and  Baptized  June  26  1763  by  the  Revd 

Samud  Drake 
Mary  the  Daughter  of  Jonathan  Giles  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was 

bom — 1763  and  Baptized  July  3d.  1763,  by  the  Revd.  Samud 

Drake. 
Sarah  the  Daughter  of  John  West  and  Alice  his  wife  was  bom  the 

22d.  of  January  1749 
John  the  Son  of  John  West  and  Alice  his  wife  was  bom  25th 

August  1752 
Ridiard  the  Son  of  John  West  and  Alice  his  wife  was  bom  3d 

Novr.  1754 
Jonathan  the  Son  of  John  West  and  Alice  his  Wife  was  bom  the 

9th  of  June  1756 
Anna  the  Daughter  of  John  West  and  Alice  his  Wife  was  bom 

nth  of  June  1758. 

Certified  Per 

Allen  Meeker,  Clrk  and  R^. 

DEATHS  AND  BURIALS 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  Williams  Departed  this  Life  August  14,  1760  and 

was  buryed  August  15, 1760 
Anne  Bennett  wife  of  Thomas  Bennett  Senr.  Departed  this  Life 

7  Day  of  September  1761  and  was  buried  the  9th  of  same  inst. 
Thos.  Phillips  Departed  this  Life  14  Sept  1764 
Thomas  Whitesides  Departed  this  Life  May  ye  12th  1762  and  was 

Buryed  May  13th  1762. 
William  Croftes  Departed  Uus  Life  22d  June  1762  and  was  Buryed 

the  24th  of  the  same  Inst. 
John  Wainwright  Departed  this  Life  July  4: 1762  and  was  Buryed 

July  5*  1762 


REGISTER  OF  CHSIST  CHURCH  PARISH  35 

Sarah  Daughter  of  Joseph  Cook  and  Hannah  his  wife  was  Bi^ 
tized  Sunday  24th  of  October  1762  by  the  Reverand  Mr.  Drake. 

Mary  the  Daughter  of  John  Prigg  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was 
bom  August  6th.  1754,  and  Baptized  the  26th  of  January  1755 
By  the  Revd  Alexander  Garden  of  St.  Thomas's  Parish 

Mary  the  Daughter  of  John  and  Mary  Metheringham  was  Bom 
the  24th  Day  of  August  in  the  Year  of  our  Lord  1744. 

Certified  Per  Allen  Meeker,  Clk. 

Rebekah  Spencer  the  wife  of  Oliver  Spencer  Departed  this  Life 
December  22  1761,  and  was  Buried  in  the  family  Burying 
Ground  in  this  Parish 

MARRIAGES 

William  Bennett  was  married  to  Mary  Bennett  Jany.  15th  1761 

by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Smith  in  Chas  Town. 
Jc^  Gibbes  was  maryed  to  Mary  Metheringham  December  2, 

1760  by  the  Reverend  Mr.  Garden. 
Jeremiah  Eden  was  Maried  to  Sarah  Rowser  March  26th  1761  by 

the  Reverand  Mr.  Garden. 
Richard  Son  of  William  Rowser  and  Mary  his  Wife  was  bom 

November  4: 1761 
William  Young  and  Mary  Bachler  were  marryed  by  Banns,  the 

fourteenth  day  of  October  (me  thousand  seven  hundred  and 

sixty  two,  were  published  and  married  by  me 

Saml.  Drake,  Clerk 
John  Norman  and  Elizabeth  Bealer  were  Duly  Married  the  twenty 

fifth  day  of  Febmary  1763  by,  Saml.  Drake,  in  the  presence  of 

Paul  Villepountoux  and  Sarah  Edmonds. 
Robert  Dorrill  was  Married  to  Elizabeth  Cook  on  the  22d.  Day 

of  January  1736  by  the  Revd  Mr.  Merritt. 
William  Wrand  was  married  to  Ann  Spenc^  Daughter  of  (Miver 

Spencer  spinster  on  the  29  of  January  1758  by  the  Revd.  Samuel 

Clark  of  CharlesTown. 

(To  be  continued) 


fflSTORICAL  NOTES 

BUSIAL  PLACE  OF  MRS.  HOWORTH 

The  following  inscription  from  a  tablet  in  Wimbome  Minster, 
was  copied  by  Mr.  Albert  Matthews,  of  Boston,  about  1898;  he 
states  that  the  tablet  was  on  a  pillar  between  the  nave  and  lectern, 
facing  the  nave.    It  reads  as  follows: 

Near  this  place  /  is  Interred  the  /  Body  of  Mr*  /  Martha  Ho- 
worth  /  Wife  of  /  Henry  Howorth  /  of  the  County  of  Radnor^ 
/  Gent:  &  daughter  of  the  /  Hon'*^*.  James  Michie  Esq'  /  of 
Charles  Town  South  /  Carolina  /  She  died  !•*.  Aug.  •*.  1772  / 
Aged  32  Years. 

Martha  Michie  was  the  eldest  daughter  of  James  Michie,  Esq; 
member  of  Council,  chief  justice,  judge  of  court  of  vice-admiralty, 
etc.  James  Michie  married  in  1737,  Martha,  the  daughter  of 
Col.  Arthur  Hall  and  his  wife  Martha  Seabrook;  James  Michie 
died  July  16,  1760,  in  London.  His  will  mentions  his  daughter 
Martha  Mayne,  his  wife  Martha,  his  daughter  Mary,  under  age; 
his  sister  Elizabeth  Michie,  spinster,  in  London,  his  friend  Dr. 
David  Caw,  and  his  kinsman  William  Michie  of  Charlestown, 
merchant.    It  was  made  6  May  1758,  proved  14  November,  1760. 

Martha  Michie,  bom  1738,  married  in  October  1755,  Charles 
Ma3^e,  merchant,  who  died  September  30, 1759.  Henry  Laurens 
in  a  letter  to  Richard  Oswald,  dated  26  May,  1756,  states: 

"  Mr.  Mayne  we  are  told  designs  for  England  very  soon,  he  seems 
very  unhappily  married  to  Miss  Michie,  but  whether  of  the  two 
is  the  agresser  we  can't  pretend  to  say." 

Mr.  Ma3^e  and  his  wife  separated,  and  after  his  death  she 
married  Henry  Howarth,  or  Howorth.  [Clerk  of  Court's  unfiled 
papers,  case  reciting  above  separation,  dated  May  6, 1761] 

Henry  Howarth  was  a  lieutenant  in  the  15th  Regiment  in  1758 
(Mr.  Ford's  list  of  British  Officers  in  America)  and  owned  a  tract 
of  1650  acres  on  the  Altamaha  river,  which  he  sold  to  James 
Parsons,  May  8,  1764.  He  then  describes  himself  as  Henry 
Howorth,  gentleman,  of  Charlestown.  (M.  C.  O.  book  B  No.  3, 
p.  386.) 

Mary,  the  other  daughter  of  James  Michie,  married  Charies 
Ogilvie,  merchant,  of  London.    (Jbid.  C,  No.  3,  p.  11.0.) 

36 


mSTOXICAL  NOTES  37 

WHERE  SIR  JOHN  YEAICANS  DIED 

To  the  July,  1918  issue  of  this  Magasine  Judge  Henry  A.  M. 
Smith  contributed  a  "Note"  entitled  "Sir  John  Yeamans,  An 
Historical  Error/'  wherein  he  presented  records  proving  that  Sir 
John  Yeamans  did  not  vacate  the  governorship  of  South  Caro- 
lina, retire  to  Barbadoes  and  die  there,  as  stated  by  five  historians 
of  South  Carolina  from  Hewat  to  McCrady,  but  died  in  South 
Carolina,  while  still  holding  the  office  of  governor,  between  the 
3rd  and  13th  of  August,  1674. 

The  will  of  Col.  John  Godfrey,  which  is  recorded  in  a  volume  of 
records  of  the  Coiul  of  Ordinary  of  South  Carolina,  1672-1692,  in 
the  office  of  the  BSstorical  Commission  in  Colimabia  furnishes 
additional  evidence  of  the  correctness  of  the  conclusions  presented 
by  Judge  Smith.  Col.  Godfrey  bequeathed  to  his  son  Richard 
"my  gould  ring  w*"*  I  had  at  ye  funerall  of  S'.  Jn*.  Yeamans". 
Col.  Godfrey  was  present  at  the  meeting  of  cotmdl  August  3, 1674, 
presided  over  by  Governor  Yeamans  and  he  was  present  at  the 
meeting  of  August  13,  1674,  whereat  a  successor  to  Sir  John  was 
chosen,  so  that  he  was  necessarily  in  South  Carolina  for  the  funeral 
and  the  funeral  was  on  the  other  hand,  necessarily  held  in  South 
Carolina. 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 
HIS"  ^  .OGICAL 


HE 

SOU  .SOCIETY 


APRIL,  1920 


I 

I   I 

i 


PUBUCATION  COMMITTER 

Joseph  W.  Basmweli^  Henky  A.  M.  Smteh, 

A.  S.  Saixey,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OF  TEE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webber. 


CONTENTS 

Letters  Concerning  Peter  Manigault,  1773 39 

Letter  from  Joseph  Lord SO 

The  Register  of  Christ  Church  Parish 52 

Extracts  from  the  Journal  of  Mrs.  Ann  Manigault.. 59 

Cemetery  Inscriptions  from  Christ  Church  Parish 73 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  the  City  Gazette 77 

Historical  Notes 88 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  ly  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  ESstorical  Society.  Members  of  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January),  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent,  on  aU  other  publications  of  the  Society,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

South  Carolina  ESstorka]  Sodcty, 

Cbarlegtoii,  S.  C. 


HOV  26  «20 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXI  APRIL,  1920  No.  2 


LETTERS    CONCERNING   PETER    MANIGAULT,    1773 

The  Letters  here  printed  are  the  property  of  Miss  Elizabeth 
Hejrward  Jervey,  who  has  kindly  allowed  them  to  be  published. 

They  chiefly  are  concerned  with  the  last  illness  of  the  Hon. 
Peter  Manigault,  son  of  Gabriel  Manigault  and  the  Mrs.  Ann 
Manigault  whose  journal  has  been  appearing  in  this  Magazine. 
Some  account  of  Peter  Manigault  will  be  found  on  pages  66-67  of 
this  issue. 

[peter  liANIGAULT  TO  HIS  MOTHER] 

Addressed: 

Mrs  Anne  Manigault 

To  the  Care  of 

Benjamin  Stead  Esq 

Bemers  Street 

Oxford  Road 

London 

Exeter  21st  July  1773 
Hond  Madam 

In  my  letter  to  my  Father  of  the  10th  Instant  I  informed  him 
of  my  having  been  very  ill,  &  that  I  then  intended  to  set  out  for 
Bristol  in  a  few  Days.  But  finding  myself  very  weak,  &  being 
satisfied  that  I  was  as  well  off  here,  as  in  any  Part  of  England  in 
Point  of  air  Climate,  and  good  Assistance,  I  altered  my  Intention, 
and  determined  to  remain  at  this  place,  until  I  should  be  per- 
fectly recruited  and  though  these  English  Fevers  are  exceedingly 

39 


40  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

severe  yet  I  have  the  satisfaction  to  inform  you  that  I  have, 
mended  exceedingly,  And  though  it  was  with  difficulty  I  could 
walk  across  the  Room  Ten  Days  ago,  I  can  now  march  a  mile 
without  Inconvenience. — I  have  met  with  great  Attention  and 
civility  from  several  Persons  here,  particularly  from  Mr.  Binford 
and  Capt.  Hale  who  carried  Governor  Lyttleton  to  Carolina: 
Otherwise,  single  and  unknown  as  I  was,  when  I  first  came  here, 
I  should  have  passed  my  Time  very  indifferently,  considering  how 
very  ill  I  have  been.  Indeed  to  be  sick  in  a  strange  Land,  at  a 
great  Distance  from  one's  Friends  and  Relations,  is  no  desirable 
Situation;  But  by  the  assistance  of  Providence  I  have  been  en- 
abled to  bear  these  Misfortunes  with  Patience  and  Resignation. — 
I  am  undetermined  when  I  shall  go  to  London.  I  have  no  very 
particular  Call  there,  And  it  is  the  universal  Opinion  that  a  Re- 
establishment  of  my  Health  which  is  what  I  want,  is  not  to  be 
looked  for  there.  Be  not  Surprised  that  I  did  not  Write  to  you 
before;  my  Health  would  not  permit. — ^As  I  recover,  you  may 
depend  upon  hearing  of tener  from. 

Your  ever  dutiful  Son, 

P.    Manigault. 

(21 

Addressed: 

Mrs  Anne  Manigault 
Charles  Town 
South  Carolina. 

To  the  Care  of  George  Bell  Esq; 
at  Falmouth. 

Exeter  Sth  August,  1773. 
Hond.  Madam. 

I  was  in  Hopes  before  this  Time  to  have  written  to  you,  upon  a 
Subject  more  agreeable  to  myself,  at  the  same  Time  that  it  might 
give  Pleasuer  to  you.  But  since  I  wrote  last,  I  have  not  improved 
in  my  Health  so  fast  as  I  expected.  However,  I  thank  God,  I  am 
so  much  mended,  that  I  intend  to  set  out  for  Bristol  Wells  this 
Afternoon,  from  whence  I  flatter  myself  I  shall  soon  be  able  to 
give  you  better  Accounts.  You  may  depend  upon  it  that  I  shall 
omit  no  opportunity  that  I  know  of,  to  mention  my  Situation  to 
you  or  my  Father.    I  therefore  desire  you  will  not  be  frited  with 


LETTERS  CONCEIVING  PETER  MANIGAULT  41 

any  Reports,  which  upon  these  Occasions  are  generaUy  magnified, 
As  I  grow  better  you  will  find  my  Letters  grow  longer.  But  for 
the  Present,  you  must  be  contented  with  a  short  one,  from 

Your  dutiful  Son 

P.    Manigault. 

[31 
Addressed: 

Mrs.  Anne  Manigault 
Charlestown 

So.  Caroling 
By  Capt.  White, 

2D.  C. 

Bristol  Wells  26th  August  1773 
Hond  Madam 

To  receive  at  the  same  Time  Letters  from  my  Father,  my 
Mother  and  three  of  my  Children,  was  too  much  for  my  weak 
nerves.  I  sunk  down  upon  the  Couch,  and  was  the  whole  Day 
before  I  could  read  them  all.  My  whole  Thoughts  are  so  wrapped 
up  in  my  Friends  in  Carolina  that  there  is  no  pleasure,  no  Satis- 
faction for  me  in  England.  And  I  am  continually  making  Com- 
parisons, which  right  or  wrong,  always  and  in  Favour  of  my  own 
Country.  Indeed  I  have  had  little  to  please  me  since  my  arrival. 
Sickness  and  melancholy  Thoughts,  having  been  my  only  Portion. 
But  by  the  Blessing  of  Providence  I  think  I  recover,  though  but 
slowly.  I  now  am  able  to  take  a  Walk  Morning  and  Evening, 
besides  a  Ride  betwixt  Dinner  and  Breakfast,  and  have  a  good 
Appetite,  which  however  am  obliged  to  restrain,  by  a  very  strict 
Regimen.  My  Acquaintances  all  say  I  look  better.  But  perhaps 
they  flatter  me.  I  do  not  think  I  shall  be  able  to  return  to  Caro- 
lina, this  Winter,  though  it  is  my  most  ardent  Wish  so  to  do. 
The  Physicians  tell  me  I  must  not  return  so  soon,  and  at  the  same 
Time  say,  that  this  Climate  will  by  no  means  do  for  me  during 
the  Winter;  so  that  I  think  of  going  to  France,  I  mean  the  South 
Part  of  it,  or  Italy. — It  is  a  most  sensible  Mortification  to  me  to 
be  absent  from  you  so  long.  But  my  Health  requires  it  and  the 
Duty  I  owe  to  my  Family  makes  it  indispensably  necessary.  I 
would  take  this  Opportunity  of  Writing  to  my  little  ones,  but 
writing  is  at  present  a  DifiScult  Thing  to  me.    Assure  them  of  my 


42  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

taiderest  Affection,  and  tell  them,  that  I  have  not  forgot  what  I 
promised  them,  But  that  my  Sickness  and  absence  from  London, 
has  prevented  me  from  sending  them  some  little  Token  of  my 
R^ard.  I  have  ordered  six  pounds  of  the  best  Hyson  Tea  from 
London  to  be  sent  to  you,  I  beg  you  will  sent  Two  pounds  of  it  to 
Miss  Nancy  Wragg,  I  make  an  Apology  to  her  for  my  not  writing 
to  her.  Another  Poimd  is  intended  for  Mrs.  Poaug;'  who  Poor 
Woman,  ought  to  have  these  Things,  though  her  hard  Fortune 
has  put  it  out  of  her  Power  to  buy  them. 

My  Stay  at  this  Place  is  uncertain,  But  I  believe  it  may  be 
about  three  Weeks  longer. — ^Wherever  I  am.  It  ^hall  ever  be  my 
greatest  Satisfaction,  to  be 

Your  most  dutiful  and  affectionate  Son 

P.    Manigault. 
I  believe  Mr.  Stead  will  send  the  Half  Moiuning  for  Nancy  and 
Harriett  by  this  Opportunity. 

[4] 

Bristol  Wells  11th  September  1773 
Hond  Madam 

I  write  this  with  some  Expectation  of  its  reaching  Captn  White 
before  he  leaves  London  as  I  would  not  miss  an  Opportunity  of 
letting  you  know  that  I  received  your  letter  by  the  Eagle  Packet. 
I  should  have  been  in  London  before  now,  but  Mr.  Stead  having 
wrote  me  word  that  he  and  his  Daughters  would  be  here  in  a  day 
or  two,  I  wait  for  them  and  suppose,  I  shaU  go  to  London  with 
them  in  a  week  or  ten  Days. 

I  have  no  Opinion  either  of  the  Physician's,  or  the  Waters  of 
this  Place.  I  am  dear  Goose  Creek  Water  is  full  as  good,  and  the 
Reputation  of  Bristol  Wells,  is  cryed  up  by  the  Faculty  in  order 
to  Draw  Patients.  I  hold  my  Recovery  so  far,  to  be  owing  to 
the  Goodness  of  the  Air,  a  strict  Regimen,  and  constant  Exercise. 
I  have  lived  Principally  upon  Milk  for  Eight  Weeks  past,  and  a 
little  Fruit,  allowing  myself  a  little  Broth  once  a  Day  for  the 
first  Month,  and  since  that  a  Bit  of  White  Meat.    My  Drink  has 

'She  was  Charlotte  Wragg,  married  1752  to  John  Poaug,  a  sister  of 
Elizabeth  Wragg,  who  was  the  wife  to  Peter  Manigault. 


LETTERS  CONCERNING  PETER  MANIGAULT         43 

r 

been  common  Water,  not  the  Hot  Well  Water,  For  I  soon  found, 
that  the  only  Purpose  that  served,  was  to  make  me  drowsy.  In 
all  this  Time,  I  have  not  drank  half  a  pint  of  Wine,  or  any  other 
Spirits,  not  even  small  Beer,  which  in  this  Part  of  England  is 
almost  as  Weak  as  Water.  I  am  grown  so  |f ond  of  this  manner 
of  Life,  and  find  such  good  Effects  from  it,  tibat  I  beUeve  I  never 
shall  quit  it  as  long  as  I  Uve. 

I  leave  you  to  imagine  from  your  own  Feelings,  how  happy  I  am 
to  hear  that  my  Children  are  well,  and  how  that  Hairiness  is 
increased,  upon  being  informed  that  they  behave  well.  I  should 
have  no  Rest  during  my  absence  from  them,  were  I  not  thoroughly 
satisfied  with  their  Situation,  that  indeed,  makes  me  easy,  and 
yet  I  some  times  am  apprehensive,  that  Nancy  or  Henney  wear 
Stays,  or  some  Thing  Hke  them.  If  they  do,  I  shall  look  upon 
m3rself  and  them  too,  to  be  most  unkindly  treated,  when  I  see  the 
Bristol  Women,  as  crooked  as  Cow's  Horns,  I  cannot  but  lament 
that  man,  or  rather  Woman,  should  attempt  to  mend  the  works 
of  God;  But  am  not  surprised  that  they  should  faU  in  the  attempt, 
This  is  sufficient  to  shew  my  opinion  about  this  Matter,  and  I 
hope  you  will  not  take  it  amis,  for  I  have  it  so  much  to  Heart, 
that  I  could  not  help  mentioning  it.  I  have  been  wanting  to  send 
the  Children  some  little  Present,  But  I  find  everything  so  ordinary 
at  Bristol,  that  they  must  wait  till  I  get  to  London.  I  went  to  a 
Fair  two  or  three  Days  ago,  on  purpose  to  try  to  get  some  Trifles 
for  them.    But  could  not  please  m3rself. 

Your  Niece  Downes^  has  had  her  child  inoculated,  and  it  is 
recovered.    I  hear  she  is  expected  soon  at  Bath,  and  that  Frank 

*  She  was  Mary  Lejau,  daughter  of  Col.  Francis  Lejau  and  Mary  Ashby  his 
wife,  sister  to  Mrs.  Anne  Manigault.  Mary  Lejau  married  September  3, 1760, 
Richard  Downes,  an  English  Merchant,  who  had  settled  in  South  Carolina 
(this  Maganne,  vol.  xx,  p.  135). 

Richard  Downes  and  his  family  went  to  England  in  May,  1773  (p.  64), 
and  seem  to  have  not  returned.  He  died  in  England  late  in  1776.  In  his  will 
dated  July  3, 1776,  proved  January  3, 1777,  he  describes  himself  as  being  of  the 
town  of  Ludlow,  County  of  Salop  (Shropshire)  gentleman;  mentions  hb  wife 
Mary,  his  daughters  Elizabeth  and  Ann,  both  under  age;  his  nephew  Richard, 
son  of  his  brother  Thomas  Downes,  late  of  Newton,  county  of  Montgomery; 
nephews  William,  Edward,  and  Josiah,  sons  of  his  brother  John  Downes,  late 
of  Bishops  Castle  in  County  of  Salop;  nephew  Richard  f)ownes,  of  Wapping, 


44  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Huger*  who  is  lately  returned  from  France,  is  to  be  with  her. 
I  fancy  he  wont  much  like  the  Company  of  such  old-fashioned 
People  as  his  Uncle  and  Aimt. 

We  have  had  an  extreme  fine  Summer  in  England,  though  I 
have  not  had  Health  to  enjoy  it.  But  the  Weather  begins  now  to 
be  raw  and  windy.  With  all  their  Brags  of  the  Healthiness  of 
the  Climate,  I  never  saw  so  much  sickness  in  my  life.  Whilst  I 
was  in  Devonshire,  People  of  all  ages  and  Ranks,  were  dying  every 
day  of  the  Putrid  sore  Throat,  the  People  looked  as  if  they  had 
all  been  at  Ponpon,  Fevers  and  Agues  were  so  plenty,  that  in  some 
Parishes  not  a  Family  escaped,  and  in  Others  not  one  of  the 
Family.  At  Bristol,  a  Gentleman  his  Wife  two  Sons  and  a  Maid 
Servant  were  buried  in  one  Day:  and  the  People  as  much  frighted, 
as  if  there  were  no  Mercy  in  Heaven.  In  the  mean  Time  the 
Physicians,  of  which  there  are  great  Plenty,  seemed  to  thrive 
upon  the  Spoil,  and  enjoy  the  Harvest. 

I  have  met  with  more  of  my  Acquaintance  here  than  I  expected. 
Collo.  Laurens  staid  with  me  three  weeks.  Mr.  Izard  came 
from  London  on  Purpose  to  see  me  and  staid  here  as  many  Days. 
Mrs.  Beresford  and  her  Daughters  and  Son  were  here  for  some 
Time,  upon  a  Pretence  to  recover  Mrs.  Delancy^  of  a  Cough,  But 
in  Fact  to  enjoy  the  Diversions  of  the  Place.  I  have  received  the 
greatest  Civilties  from  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Brailsford,  and  indeed,  to  do 
Justice  to  the  Inhabitants  of  the  West  of  England,  I  must  say 
that  I  have  been  treated  with  great  Kindness,  by  all  Ranks  of 
People,  especially  during  my  Sickness. 

London;  nephews  John,  William  and  Thomas  Taylor,  sons  of  his  sister  Sarah 
Taylor  of  the  Brake,  parish  of ,  cotmty  of  Herefore. 

Plantation  and  slaves  at  Stono,  St.  Paul's  Parish,  Province  of  South  Caro- 
lina, to  be  sold  if  necessary. 

Wife  Mary,  and  friends  Humphrey  Sommers,  John  Sommers,  William 
Roper,  Robert  Williams  Jr.,  Plowden  Weston,  and  Francis  Huger,  all  of  Charles 
Town,  in  South  Carolina,  to  be  his  executors. 

His  daughter  Elizabeth  married  in  1787,  Rev.  Thomas  Frost,  of  St.  Philip's 
Church. 

*  Frank  Huger  bom  1751,  was  the  son  of  Daniel  Huger  and  his  fourth  wife 
Ann  Lejau,  a  sister  of  the  above  mentioned  Mrs.  Mary  Downes. 

^Elizabeth,  daughter  of  Richard  Beresford,  Esq.,  and  widow  of  Peter 
DeLancey,  Esq.  (January  issue,  pp.  19,  21.) 


LETTERS  CONCERNING  PETER  MANIGAULT  45 

I  have  lately  written  to  my  Father  by  a  Ship  which  is  now  wind 
bound  at  Bristol,  and  by  her  I  have  sent  him  two  Chaise.  I  find 
there  are  like  to  be  frequent  Opportunities  for  Carolina,  so  that 
you  may  depend  upon  Hearing  often  from 

Your  dutiful  Son 

P.    Manigault. 

[5] 

Addressed: 
For 

Mrs.  Anne  Manigault 
Charles  Town 
South  Carolina 
By  the  Eagle  Packet 
Capt.  Nicholls. 

London  6th  October  1773. 
Hond  Madam 

After  being  three  Months  in  England,  you  find  that  I  am  at 
last  in  London,  where  I  expect  very  little  Pleasure,  as  my  Health 
is  far  from  being  reestablished,  though  mended,  and  the  Season 
so  far  advanced  that  I  must  necessarily  go  into  warmer  Quarters. 
I  am  at  present  with  Mr.  Stead  by  his  Invitation,  and  the  Ease 
and  Freedom  I  enjoy  at  his  House,  would  make  me  happy  if  any- 
thing on  the  Side  of  the  Water  could  do  so.  His  Daughters  are 
well  bred  young  Women,  especially  Polly,  who  is  not  so  reserved 
as  her  Sister,  and  of  Course  pleases  more.  His  Son  Ben  is  just 
taken  from  school,  he  is  a  great  awkward  young  Fellow,  and  will 
take  a  Great  Deal  of  polishing.  In  about  a  Fortnight  I  intend 
to  quit  England,  and  either  go  to  Lisbome  and  Spain  or  to  the 
South  of  France.  I  wait  to  hear  from  Blake  who  is  at  Paris 
before  I  determine.  I  could  not  resist  the  Temptation  of  going 
to  a  Play  last  Night:  But  I,  did  wrong,  for  the  Trouble  I  had  in 
getting  in,  occasioned  by  Weakness,  more  then  coimter-balanced, 
the  Pleasure  of  the  Play.  I  who  know  the  want  of  Health,  most 
ardently  wish  it  may  be  granted  to  you,  in  greater  Abundance 
than  it  has  been,  to 

Your  ever  dutiful  Son, 

P.    Manigault. 


46  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

HENRY  LAURENS  TO  GABRIEL  MANIGAULT 

[IJ 

Addressed: 

Gabriel  Manigault  Esquire 
at  Charles  Town 
in  South  Carolina 
By  the 

Packet 
Capt.  Copeland, 
From  Falmouth 

Westminster  3d.  November  1773. 
Dear  Sir: 

Three  days  ago  I  put  our  Sick  friend  in  mind,  that  a  Mail  for 
Carolina  was  to  be  made  up  this  Evening  and  desired  him  to  write 
to  you  which,  I  observed  to  him,  would  give  more  satisfaction 
to  his  friends  than  intelligence  from  any  other  person — ^He  prom- 
ised to  have  a  Letter  ready,  therefore  I  had  no  thought  of  writing 
by  this  Conveyance,  before  I  made  the  Visit  to  him,  from  which 
1  am  just  now  returned,  when  Mr.  Stead  informed  me  that  neither 
Mr.  Manigault  nor  himself  had  wrote — I  think  it  would  be  unkind 
to  let  the  opportunity  pass  without  a  Line  to  you  especially  as 
there  has  happened  a  considerable  alteration  within  the  last  36 
Hours. 

About  8  or  9  days  ago  there  was  a  most  favourable  appearance 
in  Mr.  Manigaults  Case,  as  if  the  grand  Cause  of  his  Complaint 
was  removed — Dr.  Fothergill*  was  so  pleased  and  surprised  that 
he  could  not  forbear  expressing  hopes  of  his  perfect  Recovery 
contrary  to  his  former  opinion — We  all  rejoiced  at  the  prospect — 
but  our  pleasure  received  a  sudden  Check  by  a  fainting  fit  and 
slight  Convulsion  which  happened  this  night  and  left  an  Inflama- 
tion  in  the  left  Eye — the  effect  of  which  however  was  trifling  and 
soon  passed  over. 

The  day  before  yesterday  I  rode  abroad  with  him,  he  was 
chearful  and  stronger  than  I  could  have  expected,  we  alighted 

•John  Fothergill,  M.D.,  1712-1780;  a  well  known  English  physician  of  the 
eighteenth  century;  he  had  family  connections  in  America,  and  codperated  with 
Benjamin  Franklin  in  1774  in  drawing  up  a  scheme  of  reconciliation  between 
Great  Britain  and  the  colonies  which  was  never  considered.  (See  Dictionary  of 
National  Biography), 


LETTERS  CONCERNING  PETER  UANIGAULT  47 

under  the  Wall  of  Kensington  Park  on  a  Dry,  smooth  spot  where 
he  walked  a  good  while  to  and  fro  in  the  Sunshine,  then  returned 
home  amazingly  weU — ^in  our  Ride  he  told  me  of  a  troublesome;^ 
boil  of  the  Fistula  class — ^which  gave  me  some  anxiety,  but  upon 
q>eaking  to  a  very  Skilful  Suigeon  of  my  acquaintance  as  a  friend, 
he  assured  me  that  it  was  a  most  fortunate  Circumstance  and 
probably  would  prove  the  Drain  through  which  other  Complaints 
would  be  carried  ofF  and  the  patient  Restored  to  health — this  good 
Account  was  Confirmed  in  the  same  words  by  his  Apothecary  in 
my  presence  yesterday  Morning — after  this  Doctor  had  left  him. 
Mr.  Manigault  Eat  and  Drank  heartily  and  not  being  able  to 
Ride  he  desired  me  to  walk  with  him — he  leaned  on  my  Arm  and 
walked  at  least  half  a  mile  on  the  pavement — ^I  left  him  very 
Chearf ul  and  disix)sed  to  a  further  Walk  if  the  Soreness  of  the 
Boil  would  have  permitted — 

This  Morning  proved  Rainy  which  I  knew  would  confine  him 
to  the  House  therefore  I  delayed  my  customary  visit  till  Evening, 
when  to  my  great  sorrow,  I  found  him  in  Bed  in  consequence  of  a 
second  attack  a  few  hours  after  I  left  him  yesterday,  by  a  Con- 
vulsion fit  much  stronger  and  more  alarming  than  the  former; 
He  had  been  insensible  several  Hours,  passed  a  painful  Night  and 
kept  the  Bed  all  this  Day.  doctor  Fothergill  was  sent  for  while 
the  Fit  was  on,  ordered  him  a  Vomit,  which  was  forced  down  and 
by  its  operation  relieved  him — 

Miss  Stead  informed  me,  that  the  Doctor  said,  he  would  get 
the  better  of  this  attack  and  be  as  well  he  was  before  it  happened — 
I  must  confess  there  is  an  ambiguity  in  this  Speech  which  makes 
me  uneasy. — ^This  my  Dear  Sir  is  a  plain  Account  of  our  friends 
case  as  it  stood  two  hours  ago — ^if  Mr.  Stead  can  write  by  Candle 
Light  perhaps  he  may  add  some  particulars  which  may  have 
escaped  me. 

We  must  wait  with  Patience  for  the  Event,  I  still  hope  he  will 
do  weU,  in  the  mean  tinie  all  your  friends  are  exceedingly  anxious 
on  accoimt  of  Mrs.  Manigault  and  your  self  and  everything  in 
their  power  is  done  for  the  services  of  the  poor  Patient. 

I  remain  with  the  most  affectionate  regard 

Dear  Sir  Your  much  obliged  humb.  Servt. 

Henry  Laurens. 
Gabriel  Manigault,  Esquire. 
Endorsed:  Mr.  Peter  Manigault's  Sickness 


48  so.   CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINfE 

[2] 

Addressed:  Gabriel  Manigault,  Esquire 

at  ChariesTown 
South  Carolina 
Per  Oapt.  Gunn. 

Westminster  12th  November  1773 
Dear  Sir, 

Two  or  three  days  after  I  had  wrote  you  an  unfavorable  account 
under  the  3d  Inst,  of  our  Dear  Friend  your  Son,  he  recovered  so 
fast  as  to  amaze  every  body  about  him  and  we  held  it  as  certain 
that  the  great  Cause  of  his  Complaint  was  removed  and  that  he 
would  every  day  gain  strength,  and  tho  he  wrote  to  you  with 
some  diffidence  and  Caution,  he  was  sensible  of  the  amendment 
and  acknowledged  that  he  was  better  than  he  had  been  since  his 
arrival  in  England.  Doctors  and  every  one  conceived  in  the 
same  opinion — but  alas!  our  Sunshine  was  soon  overcast  again — 
the  day  before  yesterday  he  was  seized  by  a  Chilly  fit  which 
carried  him  to  Bed — Yesterday  he  suffered  a  more  violent  shiver- 
ing than  the  former  and  to  Day  he  has  been  extremely  ill,  much 
pain  in  his  right  side  accompanied  by  Fever  and  difficulty  of 
breathing — and  at  a  certain  short  interval  of  Ease  he  intimated 
to  me  his  apprehensions  of  approaching  dissolution — ^The  con- 
tinuance of  Life  he  said  was  very  uncertain  therefore  desired  me 
to  write  a  Codicil  to  his  Will  I  replied  I  was  not  acquainted  with 
the  form  for  such  an  Instrument  and  would  have  delayed  it  till  a 
proper  hand  could  have  been  sent  for,  but  he  smiled  and  beconed 
me  to  do  it — then  added,  "it  would  vex  me  to  have  it  delayed" — 
as  soon  as  it  was  wrote  he  executed  and  desired  me  to  seal  it  up — 

This  Codicil  consists  only  of  two  Clauses,  ordering  that  the 
Negro  Woman  Moll  and  her  children  shall  be  freed  from  Slavery 
immediately  after  his  death;  and  his  Man  July,  at  the  end  of 
three  Years  from  that  period. — 

It  is  now  nine  o'Clock  in  the  Evening  I  am  just  returned  from 
Mr.  Manigault's  Bed  side,  he  has  been  delirious  for  some  hours 
and  the  Prognosties  of  Death  were  so  strong  when  I  left  him  that 
I  have  little  hopes  of  finding  him  alive  to  Morrow — I  was  ex- 
tremely loth  to  quit  him  but  the  Customs  of  this  Country  differ 
from  those  of  our  own. — 


LETTERS  CONCERNING  PETER  MANIGAXJLT  49 

As  I  may  yet  overtake  Capt.  Gunn,  I  thought  it  my  Duty  to 
devote  a  few  minutes  to  apprize  you  of  this  unexpected  change  of 
Circumstances — I  feel  for  Mrs.  Manigault,  for  you  and  for  the 
Dear  Children,  but  My  Dear  Sir,  as  I  know  well  your  fortitude,  I 
trouble  you  not  with  Consolatory  arguments  on  this  melancholy 
occasion  such  are  unnecessary  to  the  Man  whose  trust  is  in  God — 
who  has  habituated  himself  to  a  Patient  submission  to  all  dis- 
pensations of  our  Wise  and  Merciful  Creator;  therefore  I  have 
only  to  add  that  I  continue  with  the  most  affectionate  regard. 
Your  much  obliged  and  obedt.  Servant 

Henry  Laurens. 
Dr.  Fothergill  supposes  that  Mr.  Manigault 
took  fresh  Cold  but  I  believe  the  expense 
through  that  Channel  which  they  hoped 
would  carry  off  his  disorder  has  been  too 
great  for  his  weak  frame. 
Gabriel  Manigault  Esquire. 


LETTER  FROM  JOSEPH  LORD 

The  letter  given  below  should  have  preceded  those  appearing 
in  the  last  number  of  this  Magazine;  it  was  not  available  when 
that  issue  was  printed. 

Being  addressed  to  James  Petiver,  it  settles  the  question  as 
to  whom  the  other  letters  were  addressed.  Petiver  contributed 
to  Philosophical  Transactions,  May,  1705  (no.  299,  vol.  24,  p. 
1951)  "An  Account  of  Animals  and  Shells  sent  from  Carolina  to 
Mr.  James  Petiver,  F.  R.  S.;"  most  of  the  sheUs,  he  states,  were 
received  from  "Madam  Williams,  a  Gentlewoman."  He  also 
mentions  several  other  pec^le,  either  Carolinians,  or  having  touch 
with  that  Province,  such  as  Major  Halstead;  Mrs.  Danson, 
daughter  of  Mr.  John  Archdale;  Mr.  Edmund  Bohun,  and  "my 
curious  Friend  Mr.  Job  [sic]  Lord;"  but  Madam  Williams  was  the 
most  frequent  donor,  and  mention  is  made  of  reptils,  lizards  and 
insects  lately  sent  by  her.  (See  the  January  issue  of  this  Magazine.) 

Letter  from  Joseph  Lord  to  James  Petiver. 

1705 

[Sloane  MSS.  4046,  f.  69] 
"Worthy  Sir, 

Altho  I  have  received  no  line  from  yo'  self,  since  you  sent  y^ 
first  &  sec.**  Decads  of  yo'.  Gazophylacium^  &c.  yet  there  being  a 
vessel  bound  for  London,  I  send  a  Box  of  Collections,  most  of 
w*  are  of  last  year.  As  to  y  Plants,  I  have,  as  I  use,  wrapped 
papers  about  jr";  but  there  are  some  things  w*  have  no  papers; 
as  a  piece  of  red  earth,  often  found  w"  trees  have  been  turned  up 
by  y^  roots;  two  arrow-heads,  made  by  y*  Indians,  of  a  sort  of 
Flint,  to  make  their  arrows  do  more  execution;  a  shell  or  two 
w*  I  found  upon  y*  Land;  such  a  case-worm  as  that  of  M'.  Bohun,* 
on  y*  twig  of  a  Percimmon  tree  (w*  I  have  found  also  upon  Oak, 
Apple,  &  (I  think)  Chinquepine  trees):  &  perhaps  there  may  be 

» James  Petiver,  died  1718.  Gazophylacii  Naturae  et  Artis.  London,  1702- 
1709.    folio,  in  ten  decades.    (Dkl,  Nat,  Biog.) 

*  Edmund  Bohun,  eldest  son  of  Edmund  Bohun,  the  chief  justice  of  South 
Carolina.  He  was  in  StM  as  late  as  April,  1701.  (Diary  and  Autobiography 
of  Edmund  Bohun,  Esq/  privately  printed,  1853,  pp.  xxv-xxvii.) 


LETTER  FROM  JOSEPH  LORD  51 

more  w*N>ut  Papers  w*  I  have  forgot.  My  friend  M'.  Pinkney,' 
to  whom  I  desired  you  to  direct  yo'  letters  y*  you  sent  to  me  is 
dead,  by  w®  means  I  am  at  some  loss,  at  present,  how  to  get  any 
thing  sent  to  you,  liveing  my  self  at  so  great  a  distance  from 
Charlstown,  &  haveing  little  or  no  acquaintance  w^  any  Sea 
fareing  men  y*  use  to  go  to  London.  I  have  but  little  skill  in 
natural  Production,  &  have  very  few  advantages  to  increase  my 
skill  (Books  of  that  nature  not  being  here  to  be  bought,  &  Ger- 
rards^  Herbal,  w*  I  had  borrowed,  &  was  y**  only  considerable  help 
I  had  to  get  such  skiU  by  being  called  for  by  y^  owner)  &  by  that 
means  I  am  not  capable  of  ranking  them  tmd'  their  Proper  Heads; 
w*  make  me  so  often  desire  Information  from  yo*  self  w*  such  & 
such  plants  be,  &  of  w^  nature  (tho',  perhaps,  sometimes  such  as 
are  commonly  known  w***  you)  &  whether  it  be  such  a  Plant. 
There  is  a  book,  w**  w*  I  have  read  concerning  it  makes  me  greatly 
to  desire,  tho'  I  know  not  of  what  bulk  it  is;  &  that  is  Butler  of 
Bees;*  w**  if  you  can  get  for  me  you  will  greatly  oblige 

Yo'  Serv*  to  Command 

Joseph    Lord." 
Endorsed  at  side:  "Dorches*'  in  Carolina 
"Rec*.  July  30,  1705."    Ap'.  10,  1705" 

"I  set  [sic]  a  letter  &  a  box  of  collections  last  year,  ab*  y*  end  of 
April  or  b^inning  of  May." 
Addressed  "To 

M'.  James  Petiver,  Apothecary  to  y*  Chartreux,  & 
fellow  of  y  Royal  Society,  in  Alders-gate-Street, 
London, 

Deliver  &c." 
[a  postmark  "?i"]. 

•  Thomas  Pinckney,  father  of  Charles,  the  chief  justice,  and  of  Major  Wil- 
liam Pinckney. 

*  John  Gerard,  surgeon  and  famous  herbalist;  bom  in  Cheshire,  1545,  died 
1612.  The  Herbal,  or  General  History  of  Plants,  ....  with  cuts. 
London,  1597  folio;  second  edition  published  by  Dr.  Thomas  Johnson,  London, 
1633f,  with  corrections  and  additions;  reprinted  London  1636.  {Diet,  Nat. 
Biog.) 

'Charles  Butler,  vicar  of  Wotton,  in  Hampshire,  1559-1647.  Peminie 
Monarchy;  The  History  of  Bees,  and  the  due  ordering  of  them,  Oxon.  1609, 
octavo.  London,  1625.  Oxon.  1634.  quarto.  In  Latin,  by  Richardson, 
under  the  title  of  Monorchia  Peminina,  siva  Apuim  Historia.  Lond.  1673,  8** 
1690, 12\ 


THE  REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH 

Copied  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
(Continued  from  January) 

HA&RIAGES 

Peter  Lequieu  Bachellor  and  Amelia  Capers  widow  were  Duely 
Married  by  Lidence  in  Christ  Church  Parish  According  to  the 
Rites  and  Ceremonies  of  the  Church  of  England  on  the  third 
Day  of  July  1763  by  the  Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 

Charles  Prince,  Lieutenant  of  His  Majestys  Ship  the  Mercury 
Bachellor  was  Married  to  Ann  Lemprier  Spinster  of  the  Parish 
of  Christ  Church  According  to  the  Rites  and  Ceremonies  of  the 
Church  of  England  on  thursday  Evening  the  17  th  of  November 
1763  by  the  Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 

Alexander  Wiley,  Marriner  was  Duely  Married  to  Ann  Gibbins 
spinster  of  the  Parish  of  Christ  Church  According  to  the  Rites 
and  Ceremonies  of  the  Church  of  England  on  the  13th  Day  of 
January  1764  by  the  Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 

John  Dorrill  Son  of  Robt.  Dorrill  Senr.  was  married  to  Elizabeth 
Murrell  on  Thursday  the  13th  of  January  1765,  According  to 
the  Rites  and  Ceremonies  of  the  Church  of  England  by  the 
Reverend  Samuel  Drake  Rector  of  the  Parish  Church  of  Christ 
Church. 

Robert  Dorrill  Son  of  Robert  Dorrill  Senr.,  was  Dudy  Married 
to  Sarah  Jones  on  Sunday  the  Seventh  of  April  1765  According 
to  the  Rites  and  Ceremonies  of  the  Church  of  England  by  the 
Reverend  Samuel  Drake  Rector  of  the  Parish  Church  of  Christ 
Church  Parish. 

Timothy  Breed  was  Married  to  Ann  Withers  widow  on  Sunday 
the  21st  of  April  1765  According  to  the  Rites  and  Ceremonies 
of  the  Church  of  England  by  the  Reverend  Samuel  Drake 
Rector  of  the  Church  Of  Christ  Church  Parish. 

George  Hamlin  was  married  to  Mary  the  Daughter  of  John  and 
Mary  Metheringham  the  31  Day  Decemr:  1765. 

52 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  S3 

Andrew  Hibben  was  Married  to  Elizabeth  Wingood  widow  Relect 
of  John  Wingood  on  Monday  the  12th.  Day  of  Jan:  1766  Ac- 
cording to  the  Ceremonies  of  the  Church  of  England  by  the 
Revd.  Mr.  Smith  Rector  of  St.  Philips,  CharlesTown. 

Francis  Jones  and  Mary  Lewis  were  Married  on  Sunday  the  8th 
October  1765,  According  to  the  Rites  and  Ceremonies  of  the 
Church  of  England  by  Revd.  Mr.  Willton. 

Robert  Dorrill  Senr.  was  duely  Married  to  Martha  McDowell, 
relict  of  John  McDowell  on  Sunday  the  6th  June  1767  Accord- 
ing to  the  Rites  and  Ceremonies  of  the  Church  of  England  by 
the  Reverend  Mr.  Crellan. 

John  Sandiford  Dart  was  married  to  Miss  Mary  Motte  Daughter 
of  Jacob  Motte  Esq;  Public  Treasurer  in  CharlesTown  on  Tues- 
day Evening  January  ye  22d.  1765  by  the  Revd  Mr.  Robert 
Smith  Rector  of  St.  Philips  Parish  CharlesTown  South  Carolina. 

Jafnes  Durand  was  married  to  Miss  Martha  Croft  (Daughter  of 
the  Late  Edward  Croft  and  Lydia  his  wife,  both  of  this  Parish 
on  Thursday  February  ye  20th  1772,  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Henry 
Purcell  A.  B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Joseph  Wamock,  was  Married  to  Ann  Metheringham  spinster  of 
this  Parish,  on  Tuesday  September  ye  8th.  1772  by  the  Revd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

BURIALS    AND   DEATHS 

The  Daughter  of  Ezekial  Bachler  Departed  this  Life  the  7th 
October  1763  and  Buried  According  to  the  form  of  the  Church 
of  England  on  the  9th  By  the  Revd.  Mr.  Drake. 

Judith  BurdeU  Departed  this  Life  the  13th  of  October  and  was 
buried  the  15th:  1763  at  the  Parish  Church  by  the  Revd.  Saml. 
Drake. 

John  the  Son  of  Paul  Villepontoux  Departed  this  life  on  13th  of 
Novr.  1763  and  was  Buried  on  Tuesday  the  15th  by  the  Revd. 
Samuel  Drake. 

Jonah  Eden  Senr.  Departed  this  Life  on  thursday  Night  the  15th 
of  December  1763  and  was  Buried  Saturday  Evening  the  17th. 

James  Allen  Departed  this  life  on  Sunday  Night  the  18th  of 
December  1763  and  was  buried  on  tuesday  Evening  the  20th 
According  to  the  form  of  the  Church  of  England  by  the  Rever- 
end Samuel  Drake  Rector  of  the  Church  of  XsCh. 


54  so.  CA.  mSTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

WiUiam  Whitesides  Departed  this  Life  on  Sunday  Night  the  20th 
of  May  1764  and  was  Buried  at  the  Church  on  Tuesday  the 
22d  by  the  Reverend  Samuel  Drake  Rector  of  Xst  Church 

Elizabeth  Joy  the  wife  of  Benjamin  Joy  Dq>arted  this  Life  on  the 
12th  of  October  1764  and  was  buried  at  the  Parish  Church  on 
Sunday  the  14th  by  the  Revd.  Samud  Drake. 

Sarah  HoUibush  Departed  this  Life  on  Saturday  the  20th  October 
1764  and  was  buried  on  Sunday  the  21st  in  the  Evening  By  the 
Revd.  Samuel  Drake  Rector  of  Christ  Church  Parish. 

Jonah  Eden  Son  of  Jonah  Eden  and  Sarah  his  wife  Departed  this 
Life  on  the  8th  of  November  1764  and  was  Buried  Saturday 
the  10th  According  to  the  form  of  the  Church  of  England. 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISMS 

John  the  son  of  Thomas  Bennett  and  Mary  his  wife  was  bom  the 

5th  of  December  1763  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  8th 

of  January  1764  by  the  Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 
Ann  the  Daughter  of  John  Hartman  and  Sarah  his  wife  who  was 

bom  on  Deer.  29, 1763  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  11th  of 

March  1764  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Samuel  Drake. 
Samuel  the  Son  of  Samuel  Vamor  and  Suasannah  his  wife  was 

Bom  on  Friday  the  9th  Day  of  march,  at  12  o  Clock  in  the 

forenoon  1764  imder  the  Planett  Jupiter,  and  was  Baptized  on 

Sunday  27th  of  May  1764  By  the  Revd.  Mr.  Samuel  Drake. 
Thomas  the  son  of  WDliam  Rowser  and  Mary  his  Wife  was  born 

on  January  22d.  1764  and  Baptized  the  2Sth  of  March  1764 

by  the  Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 
Isaiah  the  Son  of  James  Eden  and  Mary  Christian  his  wife  was 

Bom  Feb'y  2d.  1764  and  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  22d  day  of 

April  1764  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Samuel  Drake. 
Sarah  A  Mollattoe  woman  Belonging  to  Mrs.  Mary  Boone  was 

Baptized  on  Simday  Morning  the  3d  Day  of  June,  Anno'd 

1764  According  to  the  form  of  the  Church  of  England  by  the 

Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 
EUinor  the  Daughter  of  James  Hale  and — ^his  wife  was  bom  the 

29th  Day  of  July  1764  and  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  2d  Day  of 

September  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Drake. 

Certified  Per  Allen  Meeckee  Clk  &  Reg. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  55 

Robert  the  son  of  Robert  Dorrill  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was  bom 

the  29th  of  Sept.  1737  and  was  baptized  the  aprill  following 

by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Merritt. 
James  the  son  of  Robert  Dorrill  and  Elizabeth  his  \Wfe  was  bom 

the  28th  of  May  1740 
John  the  Son  of  Robert  Dorrill  and  Elizth,  his  Wife  was  bom — 

and  Baptized  13th  June  1742. 
Jonathan  the  son  of  Robert  Dorill  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was 

bom  on  the  13th  day  of  May  1745. 
Elizabeth  the  Daughter  of  Robert  Dorill  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife 

was  bom  the  12th  of  March  1747/8. 
Joseph  the  Son  of  Robert  Dorill  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was  bom 

the  22d  of  January  1761 
Andrew  the  son  of  William  Young  and  Mary  his  wife  was  bom 

on  the — 1764  and  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  8th  July  at  the 

Parish  Church  in  Xs  Church  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Cooper. 
Mary  the  daughter  of  Jonathan  Enmiett  and  Sarah  his  wife  was 

bom  on  the — 1764  and  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  16th  Septr. 

1764  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Drake. 
John  the  son  of  John  Remington  Junr  and  Jane  his  wife  was  bom 

on  the  19th  of  April  1764  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the 

21st  October  by  the  Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 

Certified  Per  Allen  Meecker  Clk  and  Regr. 
Peter  the  son  of  Peter  Ryar  Junr  and  Sarah  his  Wife  was  born 

on  Sepr.  14  1764  and  Baptized  the  29th  of  November  1754 
William  the  son  of  Wm.  Neyle  and  Ann  his  Wife  was  bom  on  the 

14th  of  October  1764  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  16th  of 

December  1764  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Drake. 
Elias  the  son  of  Elias  Evans  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was  Bom  on 

the — 1764  and  Baptized  on  Sunday  Ihe  27th  of  January  1765 

by  the  Revd  Mr.  Drake. 
Ann  the  Daughter  of  Green  Murrell  and  Mary  his  Wife  was  Born 

on  the —  day  of — 1764  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  27  of 

January  1765  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Drake. 
William  the  son  of  William  Joy  and  Jean  his  wife  was  bom  on  the 

27  Day  of  January  1765  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  24 

of  March  1765  by  the  Revd.  Samuel  Drake. 
John  the  son  of  Daniel  Lewis,  and  Mary  his  wife  was  Bom  the 

28th  Dec.  1765  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday  the  16th  Jime  1765 

by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Drake. 


56  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Jos.  Tomkins  the  son  of  Josph  Cook  and  Hannah  Elizabeth  his 
Wife  was  Bom  the  17  th  Febry  1765  and  was  Baptized  on 
Sunday  the  30th  June  1765  by  the  Rcvd.  Samuel  Dn^. 

Azabd  the  son  of  Henry  and  Mary  Bennett  was  bom  the  30th  of 
April  in  the  year  of  our  Lord  1764 

DEATHS   AND   BURIALS 

Thomas  Bennett  Jimr  Departed  this  Life  on  Monday  Night  the 
31st  of  December  1764  And  was  Buried  on  Thursday  the  3d  of 
January  1765  by  the  Revd  Samuel  Drake 

John  the  Son  of  Thomas  and  Mary  Bennett  Departed  this  Life 
on  Sunday  morning  the  13th  October  1765  and  was  Buried  on 
the  14th  Instant  at  the  Parish  Church. 

Daniel  Wingood  Departed  this  Life  Saturday  Night  the  26th 
October  1765  and  was  Buried  on  Monday  28  Instant. 

Elizth:  Dorrill  Wife  of  Robert  DorriU  Senr  Departed  this  life  on 
Sunday  22d  Deer  and  was  buried  on  Tuesday  24th  Instant. 

James  White  Son  of  Sims  White  and  Mary  his  Wife  Departed  this 
Life  on  Saturday  28th  Deer.  1765  and  was  Buried  at  the  Parish 
Church  of  Xst  Church  Parish  on  the  29th  Instant  by  the  Revd. 
Mr.  Crellin. 

Capt.  Jacob  Bond  Departed  this  Life  on  Sunday  the  20th  Day 
of  April  1766;  and  was  buried  on  Tuesday  Evening  the  22d  at 
the  family  Burying  Place,  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Willton  of  Charles- 
Town. 

Robert  Dorrill  Junr.  Departed  this  Life  on  the  23d.  day  of  No- 
vember and  was  Buried  on  the  25th  Instant  1766 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISMS 

Sarah  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  Barton  and  Precilla  his  wife  was 

Bom  the  — ^Day  of — 1765  and  was  Baptized  at  the  Parish 

Church  on  Sunday  20th  October  1765 
Samuel  the  son  of  Robert  Dorrill  Junr  and  Sarah  his  wife  was 

bom  Sept.  12th  1765 
Mary  the  Daughter  of  Robert  Dorrill  Junr  and  Sarah  his  wife 

was  bora  Sept.  12:  1765 
Samuel  and  Mary  Twins  of  Robert  Dorrill  Junr  and  Sarah  his 

wife  was  Baptized  13th  Aprill  1766  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Willton 

of  Chas.  Town. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  57 

James  the  Son  of  John  Dorrill  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was  bom 

23  August  1765  and  Baptized  on  the  13th  April!  1766  by  the 

Revd.  Mr.  Willton  of  Chas:  Town. 
Elizabeth  the  daughter  of  John  and  Sarah  Hartman  was  Bom 

Deer.  22d  and  Baptized  the  3d  of  August  1766  by  the  Rev.  Mr. 

Crellin 
Sukey  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  and  Susannah  Soverance  was 

Bom  on  the  15th  of  July  1766  and  was  Baptized  on  Sunday 

31  August  following  by  the  Revd  Mr.  Crellin 
Ann  the  Daughter  of  Jonathan  and  Elizabeth  Giles  was  Bom  the 

— Day  of — and  was  Baptized  the  13th  Day  of  December  1766 

by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Crellon 
Elizabeth  The  Daughter  of  Samuel  and  Susannah  Vamon  was 

Bom  on  Wednesday  the  4th  of  May  and  was  Baptized  on 

Sonday  the  5th  of  Aprill  1767  at  the  Parish  Churdi  by  the 

Rev.  Mr.  Crellon 
Jane  The  Daughter  of  William  and  Jane  Joy  Was  bom  on  the 

29th  Day  of  December,  and  was  Baptized  at  the  Parish  Church 

on  Sunday  the  26  of  April  foUowing  1767  by  the  Revd.  Mr. 

Crellan. 
Mary  the  Daughter  of  George  and  Mary  Hamlin  was  bom  the 

12th  Day  of  October  and  Baptized  the  14th  Day  of  Deer. 

following 
James  The  Son  of  Andrew  Hibben  and  Elizabeth  his  wife  was 

Bom  in  October  ye  29-1766  and  Baptized  on  the  15  Day  of 

November  following  by  the  Revd  Mr.  Crallan 
Andrew  the  son  of  Andrew  and  Elizabeth  Hibben  was  Bom  June 

ye  7-1769  And  Baptized  on  the  30th  Day  of  July  foDowing 

By  the  Rev.  Mr.  Panting 
Mary  the  Daughter  of  William  and  Jane  Joy  was  bom  May  the 

29th  1770. 

DEATHS  AND  BURIALS 

Benjamin  Joy  Senr  Departed  this  Life  on  the  2d  Day  of  Decmr. 

and  was  Buried  the  3d  at  the  Parish  Church  1766. 
Henry  Bennett  Senr.  Departed  this  Life  on  the  10th  December 

and  was  Buried  the  12  Instant  at  the  Parish  Church  1766 
William  Rowser  Departed  this  Life  Tuesday  Night  the  23  June 

and  was  Buried  on  thursday  the  25th  1767 


58  so.  CA.  mSTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Elizabeth  the  Dauter  of  Saml,  and  Susanah  Vamor  Departed  this 
Life  on  the  28  Day  of  October  and  was  Buried  29th  Instant  at 
the  Parish  Church  aged  2  eares  and  9  months. 

Nancy  The  Daughter  of  Charaville  and  Elizabeth  Wingood  Died 
August  the  6  1770 

Johnston  the  Son  of  Robert  Rainey,  Died  at  the  Distillery,  of  a 
Fever  the  10th  Novr.  1770 — ^he  had  managed  the  Business 
there  for  Some  Years  much  Esteem'd  by  his  Employers  and 
acquamtance,  for  his  Modesty  and  Fidelity,  &  the  Loss  of  so 
Virtious  a  Youth  much  Lamented  by  Every  One  who  knew 
Him. 

Jacob  Motte  Dart  the  Son  of  John  Sandford  and  Martha  Dart 
Died  in  Charles  Town  May  ye  3d  1769  and  was  buried  in  St. 
Philips  Church  Yard  May  ye  4th  1769  Aged  20  Days. 

{To  be  continued) 


EXTRACTS  FROM  THE  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN 

MANIGAULT 

1754-^1781 

With  notes  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

1772.    Jan.  1.  Mr.  Deas's  family  came  in.^    9.  Mr.  Blake  came 

in.«    24.  Mrs.  Wragg  1. 
Feb.   5.  The  Races.»    16.  Mr.   Roper   died.*    22.  Ci^t. 

Keeler  at  tea.    28.  Mrs.  Middleton  died.^ 
Mar.    4.  Mr.    Dempsey    died.*    7.  Very   cold   weather. 

17.  A  visit  from  Mrs.  Pinckney. 
April  1.  Mr.  Quash  died.**    3.  Went  to  see  the  children 

dance.    8.  To  the  Ball.^    24.  Mr.  M.  and  my 

^  John  Deas,  Esq.;  and  family  from  London,  in  ship  BriUania,  Saml.  Bali 
master.     (5.  C  Gaz.  and  Country  Jourmd,  January  7,  1772.) 

*  Daniel  Blake  and  family  arrived  in  the  Packet  boat  Swallow,  seven  weeks 
from  Fabnouth.    (Ibid.,  January  24.) 

'  Tuesday  last  the  annual  Races  began  at  New  Market  Course  near  this 
Town,  When  the  following  Horses  started  for  the  Plate  and  came  in  as  follows, 
viz: 

Mr.  Adam  McDaniel's  bay  Horse  David,  carrying  9st.  41b.  1/1. 

Mr.  Benjamin  Waring's  bay  Horse  Homespun,  carrying  7st.  31b.  2/2. 

The  Estate  of  Mr.  Thomas  Gadsden's  Horse  Moro,  aged;  carrying  10s 1 3/3. 

Mr.  William  Williamson's  Filly,  carrying  6st.  11  lb.  dist. 

And  on  Wednesday  the  colts  Plate  was  run  for  and  came  in  as  follows,  viz: 

Mr.  Singleton's  Filly  carrying  6st.  11  lb.  1/1.  Mr.  Barnwell's  Colt  carrying 
7st.  2/dist.  Mr.  Gibbes  Filly  Carrying  6st.  11  lb.  3/2.  Mr.  Johnston's  colt 
carrying  7st.  5/4.  Mr.  Williamson's  Colt  carrying  7st  dist.  (ibid.y  February 
11, 1772). 

^Died,  in  an  advanced  age  William  Roper,  Esq;  ....  who  had 
served  many  years  as  a  member  of  the  Commons  House  of  Assemble  of  Uus 
Province.    (Ilnd.,  February  18,  1772.) 

*  Mary,  wife  of  Henry  Middleton,  Esq;    (Ibid.,  March  3.) 

*  Edward  Dempsey,  aged  70  years.    (Ibid,,  March  10.) 

^  Died.    Robert  Quash  Esq;  of  St.  Thomas  Parish,  aged  72  years. 

^  '*  Pike's  annual  Ball  for  the  Young  Ladies  and  Gentlemen  under  his  Tui- 
tion, will  be  on  Wednesday,  April  8, 1773,  at  his  New  Suit  of  Rooms  in  Church 
Street.  The  Ball  begins  precisely  at  five  o'Clock.  The  doors  will  be  open  at 
Four.  Tickets  to  be  had  at  his  House  adjoining  the  Assembly  rooms.  There 
will  be  an  Assembly  for  the  Company  the  Minute  the  Ball  b  over,  with  Tea, 
Coffee,  &c."    (/Wrf.,  March  31.    Advertisement.) 

59 


60  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Grandson    went    upon    the    water.    30.  Mr. 
Simons  died.' 

May  3.  A  very  great  Storm  with  hail.*  4, 5, 6,  Still  bad 
weather.  8.  My  daughter  went  into  the  country. 
14.  Miss  Shubrick  married.^®  15.  Mr.  Thomas 
died.^i  17.  Const.  Hasell  married."  23.  Mr. 
M.  Silkhope;  returned  28th.  28.  Miss  Lenox 
married."  30.  Betsy  H.  and  Judith  B.  to 
Goose  creek.** 

June  6.  My  Grandsons  went  to  Goose  creek.  13.  My 
Son  and  Grandson  G.  came  to  Town.  Miss 
Branford  married."  16.  Thomas  Ashby  mar- 
ried." 19.  My  two  Grandsons  came  to  Town. 
23.  Mrs.  Harris  1.    30.  Mrs.  Fraser  1. 

July  3.  Betsy  H.  and  Judith  B.  returned  to  Town.  9.  To 
my  Sons.  They  came  from  Goose  creek. 
26.  Mrs.  Purcell  1.*^    28.  Mrs.  Prioleau  1. 

Aug.  2.  My  Grandson  J.  taken  with  the  measles.  5.  Mr. 
Beresford  died."  28.  Mr.  M.  not  well  with  a 
great  cAd. 

'Benjamin  Simons,  Esq;  aged  60  years — ^late  Commissary  Gen.  of  this 
Province.    (Ibid.,  May  5,  1773.) 

'About  Five  O'clock  Sunday  afternoon,  we  had  here  a  severe  storm  of 
Hiunder  and  Lightning,  attended  with  heavy  Rain  and  very  large  Hail,  but 
we  have  not  heard  of  any  Damage  done.    (Ibid.) 

^'  Betsy,  daughter  of  Thomas  Shubrick  Esq;  to  Thomas  Lynch  Jr.  (Salley's 
Marriage  Notices,) 

"  Samuel  Thomas,  Esq. 

^  Constantia  Hasell  to  Robert  Quash,  Jr.  (Register  of  St,  Thomas  and  St, 
Dennis.) 

>'  Catherine,  daughter  of  James  Lennox,  to  Alexander  Moultrie. 

^*  Elizabeth  Hasell  and  Judith  Banbury. 

^  Thos.  Horry,  Esq;  to  Ann,  daughter  of  William  Branford,  Esq;  deced. 

>•  Thomas  Ashby  and  Ann  Pcyre,  July,    (sic,  15,  1772.) 

>^  John  Purcell  and  Margaret  Meredith  widow  were  married  June  7, 1769. 
(5/.  PkiUip's  Reg,) 

''Yesterday  died  ....  Richard  Beresford  Esq; — a  Gentleman 
possessed  of  great  landed  Property  in  this  Town  ....  (SoiUh  Car. 
Gas.  Aug.  6,  1772)  Last  Friday  died  ....  Miss  Harnott  Beresford, 
eldest  daughter  of  Richard  Beresford,  Esq;  Her  death  was  occasioned  by  a 
Consumption,  a  Disorder  hardly  known  in  this  Province  Thirty  Years  ago,  but 
now  so  common  that  three  Persons  were  buried  here  last  Friday  and  Saturday 
who  died  of  it.    (Ibid,,  July  2.) 


EXllEtACTS  FROM  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT  61 

Sept.  2.  My  Grandson  J.  not  very  welL  6.  I  had  a  little 
of  the  Gout.  From  7th.  to  11th.  very  bad. 
12th.  A  little  better— 13th.  Went  mto  the 
front  room.  14th  Very  bad  again.  16th.  a 
Little  better.  17th  a  very  bad  night,  a  little 
better  in  the  day^ 19th  a  little  better— 20th 
and  21st  not  so  well— 22d.  Better  23d.  not 
so  well — 24th.  The  cold  made  my  foot  very 
painful  at  night — 28th  a  little  better.  30th. 
My  foot  mends  slowly — Oct.  4th — a  little 
better.     13th.   Better.     17th.     Better.     18th, 

t 

I  went  to  church. 
Oct.  4.  My  son  set  off  for  Beaufort.  13th.  He  returned.** 
Sept.  18.  Mrs.  Dawson  1.^  Oct.  1.  Mr.  Rich- 
ard Shubrick  married.^  15.  Mr.  Tidyman 
married."  Nov.  30.  Mr.  Hatley  died.*  Dec. 
1.  Miss  Kinloch  married.^ 

'*  The  Governor,  Lord  Charles  Montagu,  who  had  returned  to  this  Province, 
thoroughly  out  of  humor  with  it  and  the  governing  bodies,  (they  being  in  sym- 
pathy with  the  men  of  the  ''liberty  Tree''  movements  J  to  show  his  further 
di^leasure,  struck  upon  the  rather  unfortunate  plan  of  removing  the  seat  of 
government  from  Charlestown  to  Beaufort,  75  miles  distant.  He  possibly 
hoped  that  the  inconvenience  would  keep  some  of  the  leading  and  troublesome 
members  of  the  Commons  away,  but  on  the  opening  date,  Thursday,  October 
8, 37  of  the  representatives  were  assembled,  only  19  being  required  to  constitute 
a  quorum  of  the  Commons.  Peter  Manigault  was  rechosen  to  be  their  Speaker; 
every  member  but  five  were  present,  and  none  of  them  in  a  complying  humor. 
(See  the  several  news  papers  of  this  date,  and  McCrady,  voL  2,  p.  696.) 

M  Elizabeth,  daughter  of  John  and  Joanna  Dawson  bom;  she  died  unmar- 
ried.   (Dawson  Family f  p.  346.) 

^  To  Susannah  Bullien,  daughter  of  the  late  Thomas  Bullien,  Esq;  deceased. 
(5.  C.  Gag.  and  Country  Journal,  October  3,  1772.) 

^Philq>  Tidyman  to  Hetty  Rose,  daughter  of  Mr.  John  Rose.  {Ihid^ 
October  20.) 

^  Died  at  Camden,  Roger  Peter  Handsyde  Hatley,  Esq;  Sheriff  of  that  Dis- 
trict, and  late  temporary  Collector  of  Customs  for  this  Port.  {Ibid.,  November  3.) 

^  Benj.  Huger  to  Polly,  only  daughter  of  the  late  Francis  Kinlock.  (Ihii., 
December  15,  1772.) 


62  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Dec.  12.  Mrs.  Roger  Smith  1.***    17.  Miss  A.  Grimke  married.^ 

31.  Miss  Cleeland  do." 

Oct.  25.  Mr.  Leigh  came  in.*^  Mr.  M.  and  my  Grandson 
to  Silkhope.  28.  My  daughter  set  off  for 
Santee,  returned  the  20th  Nov.  she  is  no  better. 

Nov.  S.  Some  French  Gentleman  at  dinner.**  6.  My 
Grand-<laughter  Henrietta  has  the  Ho(^ing 
cough — 30.  Mr.    Clarkson   came. 

Dec.    22.  My   Daughter's   health   bad.    24.  Charlottes' 
Son  Jacob  died.    29.  My  Grandson  J.  had  a 
fever.    Mr.    M.    not    weD.    31.  My    Grand- 
daughter H  went  home. 
1773.    Jan.  4.  My  Son  and  Grandsons  to  Goosecreek.    10.  My 

Daughter's  health  still  bad.    28.  Very  much 
so  to  day. 

Feb.  4.  Very  ill.  7.  She  was  carried  on  the  water.  8th 
and  9th.  She  was  very  ill — 10th  She  had  a 
little  better  night— 11th  Very  ill.  12th.  a 
little  easier—  13th  Extremely  ill— 14th  The 
same.  15th.  No  hopes.  16th,  17th;  18th., 
The  same — 19th.  She  died  at  J  past  4  in  the 
afternoon,  on  Friday,  23d.  Such  deep  snow 
that  we  could  not  bury  her  until  the  24th.** 

**  Mary,  daughter  of  Roger  and  Mary  Smith  bapt.  December  30,  1773. 
(St.  P.  Reg.) 

**  Hon.  Charles  Mathews  Cosslett,  Esq;  one  of  his  Majestys  assistant  Judges 
of  this  Province,  to  Miss  Anne  Grimke,  daughter  of  John  Paul  Grimke,  Esq. 
(Ibid,,  December  22.) 

^  Dr.  Alexander  Baron,  to  Sally,  daughter  of  the  late  Dr.  John  Cleiland. 

*'  Hon.  Egerton  Leigh,  Esq;  his  Lady,  and  family,  arrived  from  London  on 
the  sh^  New  Carolina  Packet,  William  White  master.  (5.  C.  G.  and  C.  7. 
October  27,  1772.) 

^  Pos^ble  the  following  bears  on  these  French  gentlemen,  who  have  not 
otherwise  been  indentified. 

"A  ship  with  Mr.  St.  Peirre  and  near  100  People  for  his  Settlement  at  New 
Bourdeau  in  this  Province,  are  daily  expected."    (Ibid.) 

**  ''On  Friday  last  died,  in  the  Prime  of  Life,  Mrs.  Manigault,  wife  of  the 
Hon.  Peter  Manigault,  late  Speaker  of  the  Commons  House  of  Assembly  of  this 
Province — ^much  regretted  by  all  who  knew  her  amiable  Disposition  and 
Accomplishments  in  neither  of  which  was  she  excelled."    (5.  C.  Gaz.,  February 


EXTRACTS  FROM  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAXTLT  63 

21.  A  very  bad  day,  sleet  and  a  little  snow. 

22.  A  deal  of  snow  all  day,  high  wind  and 
extremely  cold.  23d.  A  very  cold  day.  24th.  A 
very  bad  day.  25th  and  26th.  Bad  days.  27th. 
A  fine  day.^  24.  My  son  came  home  with  us. 
2Sth.  He  dined  with  us — 26th.  He  does  so  every 
day.    28th.  Mrs.  Gough  1.*^ 

Mar.  17.  Mrs.  Wragg  1.    23.  Col.  Beale  died." 

24,  1773.)    Peter  Manigault  had  resigned  as  Speaker  October  27,  1772,  on 

account  of  iU  health. 

Henry  Laurens  to  George  Austin,  Sr.,  Shefnal. 

19  April,  1773. 

.  .  .  /'The  Death  of  Mrs.  Manigault  will  probably  put  a  stop  to  Mr. 
Manigaults  voyage — ^no  doubt  it  has  thrown  our  good  friends  the  old  folks  into 
the  deepest  afEliction — they  could  not  support  themselves  under  the  sudden 
stroke  of  parting  with  their  son  and  Grandson — ^What  is  human  Life?  Where 
is  Earthly  happiness  to  be  found?  no  where  but  in  the  present  Moment,  doing 
aU  the  Good  we  can  enjoying  the  Gifts  of  God  with  thankfulness — and  hokiing 
ourselves  ready  to  submit  to  the  dispensations  of  Providence — ^AlasI  Poor  Mr. 
Manigault — ^He  loved  that  Daughter  dearly  and  she  merited  his  dearest  Love 
— ^He  can  bear  misfortunes  with  Equanimity — ^but  this  stroke  must  have  put 
his  PhOofiophy  and  fortitude  to  the  severest  TriaL"     .... 

(Laurens  Letter  Book,  1772-1774,  p.  113)  Mr.  Laurens  was  in  England  at 
this  date. 

Mrs.  Peter  Manigault  was  Elizabeth,  daughter  of  Joseph  Wragg  and  Judith 
Du  Bo6c;  she  was  bom  in  1736. 

*o  On  Sunday  and  Monday  the  21st  and  22d  past  we  have  had  the  greatest 
Fall  of  Snow  here  that  has  been  known  by  any  Person  living.  The  Mercury 
in  Farenheit's  Thermometer  fell  so  low  as  to  19  degrees.  We  had  some  warm 
weather  since,  and  yesterday  was  like  a  May  Day.    (7^.,  March  1.) 

'^  Sf.  PkiUp's  Reg.,  March  17,  1773.  Mary  Ann  daughter  of  Richard  and 
Goff  bapt. 

**  ''Last  Monday  died,  in  the  85th  Year  of  his  Age,  ....  the  Hon. 
Othniel  Beale,  President  of  his  Majesty's  Council,  at  which  Board  he  had  a 
Seat  for  upwards  of  seventeen  years  past.  He  was  bom  at  Marblehead  in  New 
England  and  had  his  Residence  here  upwards  of  Fifty-two  years;  during  which 
period,  he  served  his  Country,  with  Reputation,  in  many  Public  stations,  was 
an  useful  Member  of  the  Commtmity,  and  acquired  a  very  considerable  for- 
tune."   (5.  C.  Cos.,  March  29,  1773). 

According  to  the  monument  erected  in  St.  Philip's  church,  (Dalcho,  p.  124) 
Colonel  Beale  was  in  his  84th  not  85th  year  at  the  time  of  his  death.  He  was 
originally  a  sea  captain.  {Pub,  of  the  Colonial  Soc.  of  Mass,  vol.  xiii.)  Hewatt, 
in  his  History,  gives  a  very  interesting  experience  of  his  with  an  Algerian  Rover, 
about  1724.    He  was  in  command  of  the  Charlestown  militia  in  May  1772,  when 


64  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Apr.  4.  I  dined  at  my  Sons.  7.  Mrs.  J.  Rutledge  1." 
IS.  Mrs.  A.  Wright  1.  16.  Mr.  T.  L.  Smith 
died.^  24.  My  Son  and  Grandson  came  from 
Santee.    30.  Old  Capt.  Mace  died.* 

May  1.  Mrs.  T.  L.  Smith  1.*  6.  Mrs.  Downes  called  to 
take  leave  of  me.  7.  She  sailed  over  the  bar.*^ 
13.  Mr.  Bampfield  died."  16.  My  Son  went 
over  the  Bar  at  1  oClock  on  Sunday.'*  A 
visit  from  Mrs.  Blakeway  and  Mrs.  Logan^^ 
22.  Mrs.  Beresford's  Family  sail^.'*^  27. 
Mrs.  A.  Moultrie  1.*^  29.  My  Grandson  G. 
to  the  Quarter-house  and  was  sick  there.  30. 
My  Grandson  J.  had  a  fever. 

he  resigned  on  account  of  his  age  and  indifferent  health,  and  it  is  then  stated 
that  he  was  "allowed  to  be  one  of  the  best  Militia  Officers  in  America.''  In 
1742  he  drew  up  plans  for  fortifying  Charlestown  against  the  expected  attack 
by  the  Spaniards.  He  married  Katherine  Gale  in  1722,  March  25.  She  died 
January  4,  1774,  aged  73.  His  daughter  Hannah  married  William  Bull,  later 
the  Lt.  Gov.    (See  note,  p.  15,  for  his  parents  &c.) 

"  SL  P,  Reg,,  July  22,  1774.  Thomas  son  of  John  and  Elizabeth  Rutledge 
baptized. 

**  Thomas  Loughton  Smith,  in  his  33d  year,  from  the  fall  from  a  horse, 
native  of  this  Province,  a  merchant,  and  one  of  the  representatives  of  the 
parish  of  St.  Michael's  in  the  present  Assembly.    (5.  C.  Gds.,  April  19, 1773.) 

"  Capt.  Thomas  Mace,  aged  75  years,  Gunner  of  Cravens  Bastion.  (Ibid., 
May  3.) 

**  Hie  child  was  probably  Harriet  Smith,  who  married  1st  John  Poaug  and 
2d  Wm.  Crafts. 

'^  In  the  Portland  for  London,  Mr.  Richard  Downes,  Mrs.  Downes,  and  fam- 
fly.    (Ibid,,  May  10,  1773.) 

''Last  Thursday,  after  a  lingering  Indisposition,  Mr.  William  Bamfield, 
Merchant;  he  was  treasurer  of  the  St.  Cecelia  Society.  (Ibid,,  May  17  and  24, 
1773.) 

**  Yesterday  embarked  for  England,  in  the  Sandwich  Packet  Boat,  com- 
manded by  Capt.  Richard  Nottingham,  for  the  Recovery  of  his  Health,  the 
Hon.  Peter  Manigault,  Esq;  late  Speaker  of  several  successive  Commons 
Houses  of  Assembly.    (Ibid,) 

^  Sarah  Daniel,  daughter  of  Dep.  Gov.  Robt.  Daniel,  married  Maj.  Wm. 
Blakeway;  Mrs.  Logan  was  probably  Martha  Daniel,  who  married  George 
Logan,    (See  voL  xx,  p.  205.) 

^Last  Saturday  embarked  for  England,  ....  Mrs.  Blakeway, 
Mrs.  Beresford  and  family,  Mrs.  Delancy  ....  Rev.  Mr.  Walker, 
and  Mr.  Himfli.    (S,  C,  Gas.,  May  24,  1773.) 

^  Katherine,  daughter  of  Alexander  Moultrie  and  his  wife  Judith  Lennox, 
was  bom. 


EXTRACTS  FROM  JOUKNAL  OF  IfSS.  ANN  ICANIGAULT  65 

June  3.  He  had  a  bad  fall.    10.  I  had  a  little  fever.    11. 

Old  Mrs.  Fmley  died.    14.  Mr.  Campbell  the 

Schoolmaster  died.     20.  Mrs.  T.  Horry  1.** 
July  5.  Mrs.  Sommers  1.^    4.  Betsy  H.  had  a  fever — 

she  came  down  from  \Wnyaw  the  28th.    Jime. 

10.  Very   hot    weather    and    dry.     29.  A  fine 

rain  after  very  dry  weather  for  2  months. 
August  4.  Mrs.  J.  Harleston  1.     18th.  Mrs.  Harris  1. 

19th.    Mrs.  Tidyman  1. 
Sqpt.  9.  I  heard  of  my  Son's  arrival  in  England.    7.  Mr. 

Gervais  married.^    17.  Mrs.  Ben.  Huger  1.* 

29.  Mrs.  Gadsden  very  ill.    30.  Charlotte  1. 
Oct.  4.  Heard  from  my  Son,  who  had  been  very  ill,  but 

was  a  little  better.    6.  Had  another  letter. 

He  grows  better  at  Bristol.*    11.  Mrs.  Ben. 

^  Elias,  son  of  Thos.  Horry  and  his  wife  Ann  Branford  bom. 

*  John  Sommers  and  Patty,  daughter  of  Wm.  Roper,  Esq;  deceased,  were 
married  in  June,  1772. 

^John  Lewis  Gervab  to  Polly,  daughter  of  the  late  Mr.  John  Sindur, 
merchant.    {S.  C,  Gaz,  and  Country  Journal,  October  12,  1773.) 

*  Birth  of  Francis  Kiidoch  Huger,  son  of  Maj.  Ben.  Huger  and  Mary  Kin- 
loch;  he  made  the  attempt  to  rescue  Lafayette  from  Ohnutz,  in  1798. 

*  Letter  from  Mary  Stead — Addressed:  Mrs.  Manigault,  Charles  Town, 
South  Carolina  per  Capt  Maitland. 

Dear  Madam 

It  is  a  long  time  since  I  had  the  pleasure  of  writing  to  you,  &  tho'  it  is  always 
a  great  satisfaction  to  me,  I  should  be  glad  that  at  present  it  were  not  in  some 
measure  owing  to  Papa's  having  both  hands  confined  with  the  gout,  which 
renders  him  unable  to  answer  yours  &  Mr.  Manigault*s  obliging  letters. 

I  wish  I  may  be  the  first  that  acquaints  you  with  Mr.  Manigault's  safe  arrival 
in  England  the  30th  last  month;  &  since  it  is  necessary  you  should  know  he  has 
been  ill,  I  am  happy  to  have  it  in  my  power  at  the  same  time  to  tell  you  he  is 
recovered.  In  his  way  to  London  between  Plymouth  &  Exeter  he  was  taken 
with  a  fever,  &  as  there  was  no  help  to  be  had  where  he  was,  he  was  obliged  with 
difficulty  to  be  conveyed  to  Exeter:  he  is  now  under  the  care  of  an  eminent 
Physician  there.  We  have  had  the  pleasure  of  two  letters  from  him  (one  of 
which  came  yesterday)  wherein  he  says  he  is  much  better  &  hopes  to  be  in  town 
in  a  fortnight.  The  fever  has  lain  chiefly  in  his  head,  &  wei^ened  his  Eyes  a 
little  but  he  nevertheless  hopes  to  write  to  you  by  this  same  opportunity.  I 
h<^  you  will  not  conceive  a  bad  opinion  of  this  Country  from  this  misfortune, 
but  attribute  it  to  the  fatigue  of  a  long  voyage;  &  his  own  poor  state  of 
health:  but  when  we  get  him  amongst  us,  change  of  climate  good  care  &  advice 


66  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Cattell  1.*^  23.  Heard  from  my  Son.  29 
Mrs.  Coslett  1.  Betsy  H.  and  the  Children 
went  over  the  Bar. 

Nov.  1.  Mr.  M.  to  Silkhope,  returned  the  6th.  3. 
Heard  from  my  son — very  ill.  14.  Miss  New- 
man arrived.**  IS.  Mrs.  Clarkson  arrived.** 
27.  Mrs.  Roger  Pinckney  1.^  25.  My  Grand- 
son G.  had  a  little  fever  and  Sorethroat — 
Took  an  emetic. 

Dec.    1.  Heard   from   my   Son — ^A   little   better,    Mrs. 

Danl.    Huger    L.    23.  My    Grandsons    went 

into  the  country,  returned  1st.  Jany.  30.    Mr. 

Edwards  married.^^ 

1774.    Jan.  5.   Miss  Hopton  married."    4.   Mr.  Ansley  died. 

13.    Heard   of   my  Sons   death."     26.    Mrs. 

will  make  him  send  3rou  such  an  account  of  his  health,  as  I  dare  say  you  will  not 
regret  his  coming  over. 

I  am  endeavouring  all  I  can  to  recollect  him  &  continually  asking  Papa  some- 
thing about  him.  I  shall  imagine  when  I  see  a  son  so  tenderly  beloved  by  you 
and  Mr.  Manigault  that  it  is  yourselves  whom  I  behold;  &  guess  Madam  what 
a  joy  that  would  be  to  me;  you  whose  goodness  to  us  all  Papa  has  so  often  told 
us  of,  you  whom  I  respect  &  love  so  much  without  being  acquainted  with  yout 
I  cannot  but  be  happy  to  hear  you  continue  to  enjoy  your  health  &  hope  you 
may  much  longer  be  a  blessing  to  all  you  friends,  &  continue  to  love  me,  as  I 
flatter  myself  you  have  always  done  for  my  father  and  mother's  sake. 

Papa  &  Sister  beg  leave  to  join  me  in  respectful  Comps.  to  you  &  Mr.  Mani- 
gault. 

I  am,  Dear  Madam, 

Your  obliged  hbl.  servt. 

Mary  Stead. 
London,  July  20th,  1773. 

^  Lydia,  daughter  of  Benj.  Cattell  and  Mary  McCall,  bom. 

<•  From  the  Northern  Colonies.    (5.  C.  Gaz,,  November  15,  1773.) 

^  From  New  York,  Mr.  Levinius  ClaiiLson  and  family.    (Ibid,,  November  16.) 

^  Child  of  Roger  Pinckney  and  Susannah  Quash. 

*'  John  Edwards  Esq;  to  Mrs.  Rebecca  Holmes,  widow. 

^  Daughter  of  Wm.  Hopton,  Esq;  to  Robert  William  Powell.  John  Ainslie 
Esq;  died. 

*>  On  Wesnesday  last  arrived  here,  in  the  Brig.  AmUy,  Capt.  Ash  from  Lon- 
don, and  was  the  same  Evening  deposited  in  the  family  Vault  in  the  French 
Church  Bui3ang-Ground,  the  Body  of  the  Hon.  Peter  Manigault,  who  went  for 
England  on  the  12th  of  November  last  for  the  Recovery  of  his  health,  but  died 
in  London  on  the  12th  of  November,  aged  42  years. — ^This  Gentleman  was  a 


EXTRACTS  FROM  JOURNAL  OF  BIRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT  67 

Lowndes   1."     16.   My  Son's   Body   arrived. 

Parson  Smith  married."    24.  Miss  Hesse  Mid- 

dleton  married.** 
Mar.  1.  Miss  Harriett  Middleton   married.*^     8,   Betsy 

H.  and  the  children  to  James  Island.    16.  My 

Grandson  G.  in  bad  health.    17.  Heard  of  Mrs. 

Delancy's  death.*®    18.  I  rode  out  for  the  first 

time.    19.  My  Grandson  G.  much  indisposed 

with  a  disorder  in  his  Bowels.    He  took  physick. 

30.  Algernon  Wilson  died.** 
Apr.  24.  Mr.  King  dined  with  us.*®    26.  Mrs.  Dawson  1.*^ 

24.  Moses  Lindo  died.** 

native  of  this  Town,  and  only  son  of  Gabriel  Manigault,  Esq;  one  of  the  most 
respectable  characters  in  this  Province. — An  excellent  Understanding,  improved 
by  the  most  liberal  Education,  a  benevolent  Heart,  a  liberal  Hand,  and  a  most 
social  Di^)osition,  rendered  him  a  very  useful  Member  of  the  Conmiunity, 
and  a  most  agreeable  Companion.  He  was  chosen  Speaker  of  three  successive 
Houses  of  Assembly  of  this  Province,  in  which  important  Station  his  Talents 
so  distinguished  him  that  he  always  acquitted  himself  with  Honour  and  to  the 
entire  satisfaction  of  hb  Constituents  and  Countrymen,  and  he  was  one  of 
those  Gentlemen  to  whose  liberal  Support  we  owe  the  Establishment  of  Mr. 
Egan's  Brewery  in  this  Town,  now  in  such  a  state,  as  to  rival  our  Northern 
Neighbors,  and  retain  in  this  Province  near  20,000  pounds  a  Year.  We  must 
not  omit  to  mention  that  many  Unfortunates  in  particular,  enjoyed  his  Friend- 
ship in  uncommon  Degree,  and  will  long  deplore  his  loss,  with  unaffected  Grief. 
(5.  C.  Gas.  February  21,  1774.) 

**  Rawlins  Lowndes  and  Sally  Jones  married  in  January,  1773. 

»  Rev.  Robert  Smith  to  Sarah  Shubrick.    (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

••  Charles  Drayton,  Esq;  M.D.  2d.  son  of  Hon  John  Drayton,  to  Hester,  2d 
daughter  of  Hon.  Henry  Middleton. 

*^  Harriett,  eldest  daughter  of  Hon.  Henry  Middleton,  to  Edward  Rutledge, 
Esq. 

**  Capt.  Besnard,  in  Ship  Carolina,  just  arrived  from  London,  in  7  weeks. 
.  .  .  .  The  Day  before  he  left  London,  Advice  was  received  there  of  the 
new  Way  of  making  Tea  in  America  with  Sea-Water. — Capt  Besnard  very 
judiciously  refused  to  bring  out  what  Teas  were  offered  to  be  shipped  by  him. 
— He  brings  an  Account  of  the  Death  of  Mrs.  De  Lancy,  widow  of  our  late 
Deputy  Postmaster  General.    (S.  C.  Gaz.,  March  14,  1774.) 

**  Of  St  Paul's  parish;  he  had  married  in  1747,  Sarah  Procter,  dau^ter  of 
Marmaduke  Daniel. 

*®  Mr.  Isaac  King,  merchant,  from  London.    (S.  C.  Gas.,  April  25,  1774.) 

*'  Child  of  John  and  Joanna  Dawson. 

**  For  many  years  inspector  general  of  Indico. 


68  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGAZINE 

May  5.  Miss  Mary  Shubrick  married.^  8.  Mr.  King, 
Mr.  Walton  Mr.  Purcell  at  dinner.  Mr.  M. 
had  a  fever — ^took  an  emetic.  14.  Mrs.  Wragg 
1.  Mr.  M.  very  ill  with  a  great  swelling  in  his 
mouth  and  toothache — 15th.  It  broke  and 
he  was  better.  22.  John  Lewis  died.  24. 
Betsy  H.  my  Grandson  G.  and  Dr.  F.  went 
over  the  bar.** 

June  1.  A  great  storm — ^  My  Grandson  J.  not  well.  8. 
Little  Ben.  Smith  died.  9.  Mr.  M.  and  my 
Grandson  J.  to  the  funeral.  Keating  Simons 
married.**  22.  I  heard  from  my  dear  Grand- 
son G. 

July  26.  Mr.  Wooding  died.*^  30.  A  storm.  My  Grand- 
daughter A.  fainted  at  church. 

Aug.  11.  Mr.  Pamam  died.**  IS.  My  Grandson  J.  not 
well.  16.  Mrs.  Elias  Horry  1.  27.  Mrs. 
Prioleau  1.  19.  Heard  from  my  Grandson 
G. — not  well.  21.  Mr.  Dale,  the  schoolmaster 
died.** 

**  Daughter  of  Thos.  Shubrick,  to  Nicholas  Eveleigh. 

**  Mrs.  Bull,  Lady  of  His  Honour  the  Lieut.  Gov.,  Miss  Hasell,  and  Master 
Gabriel  Manigault,  eldest  son  of  the  late  Peter  Manigault,  (for  the  recovery  of 
their  Healths.)  .  .  .  .  Dr  Farquharson,  embarked  for  Rhode  Island. 
(5.  C.  G<u,y  May  13,  1774.) 

^  Last  Wednesday,  June  1st,  the  memorable  Day  on  yMch  the  Blockade 
of  the  Town  of  Boston  was  to  commence,  the  very  elements,  at  this  Distance^ 
were  in  such  Commotion,  between  four  and  five  o*Gock  in  the  afternoon,  that 
all  the  vessells  lying  at  the  wharves  were  torn  from  them  in  an  Instant.  .  .  . 
(5.  C.  G(u.,  June  6,  1774.) 

**  To  Sarah,  only  child  of  Sedgwick  Lewis. 

^  Mr.  Thomas  Wooding,  Weigher  and  Guager  for  this  Port.  {S.  C.  Gas. 
and  Country  Journal,  August  2,  1774.) 

*>  John  Pamham,  formerly  a  merchant  of  this  Town.    (Ibid.,  August  16.) 

** "  Mr.  Oliver  Dale,  Schoolmaster;  some  of  whose  Pupils  had  no  longer  than 
Thursday  Se'ennight  before  presented  the  Tragedy  of  Cato,  with  applause,  at 
the  Theatre  in  this  Town."    (5.  C.  Gaz.,  August  22.) 

In  the  same  paper  for  July  4,  appears  the  following  which  gives  a  different 
schoolmaster  for  the  pupils  performing  the  play: 

"On  Wednesday  evening  last,  a  number  of  Young  Gentlemen,  Pupils  of 
James  Thomas,  A.M.,  late  Tutor  of  New  Jersey  College,  performed  the  Trag- 
edy of  Cato  in  the  presence  of  Several  Hundreds.     .     .     . 


>f 


EXTRACTS  PKOM  JOUBNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  HANIGAX7LT  69 

Sept.  6.  Mr.  King  came.  10.  I  was  not  well.  16.  Very 
unwell  with  a  cholick.  17.  Better— 18th.  not 
well  20.  Mrs.  Gervais  1.^®  Heard  from  my 
Grandson  G. — ^He  was  better.  22.  Mrs.  Deas 
1.  I  was  not  well — 25.  I  had  a  little  of  the 
Gout. — 26th  I  had  a  swimming  in  my  head. 
27.  Called  to  see  Mr.  Banbury,  who  had  been 
sick  some  time. 

Oct.  3.  Yoimg  Mr.  Middleton  married.^  7.  Mrs.  Arthxir 
Middleton  1.^*  15.  Heard  from  my  Grandson 
G.  24.  Mr.  M.  and  my  Grandson  J.  to  Silk- 
hope,  returned  29th.  25.  Mr.  King  called. 
30th.  Mr.  Lamboll  died,'* 

Nov.  3.  Heard  from  my  Grandson  G.  7.  Heard  again. 
8.  Mr.  M.  and  my  Grandson  J.  to  Goosecreek, 
returned  the  9th,  26.  Mrs.  T.  B.  L.  27. 
Mrs.  Edwards  1. 

Dec.  10.  Betsy  H.  my  Grandson  G.  and  Dr.  Farquharson 
arrived  at  3  o'clock  in  the  afternoon.'*  Mrs. 
Barnard  Elliott  died.'*  15.  Mrs.  Rd.  Shubrick  1 . 
16.  Mrs.  Bull  arrived."  My  Grandson  G. 
went  to  Mr.  Williams.  18.  Mr.  Walton  and 
Dr.  F.  at  dinner. — a  bad  fire  in  Dean  Square.'^ 


'®  Claudia  Butler,  daughter  of  John  Lewis  Gervais  and  his  wife  Mary  Sin- 
clair, bom. 

^  This  Mr.  Middleton  not  placed. 

^  Eliza  Caroline,  daughter  of  Arthur  Middleton,  bom. 

^  Last  Saturday  evening  died,  in  the  81st,  or  as  some  suppose,  the  86th  year 
of  his  age,  Thomas  Lamboll  Esq;     .     .     .     .(S,C,  Gaz.,  October  31, 1774.) 

'*  From  the  Northern  Colonies. 

»  The  remains  of  Mrs.  Mary  Elliott,  (the  wife  of  the  Hon.  Bamard  Elliott) 
who  died  in  Child-bed  on  Sunday  the  11th  Instant,  were  interred  on  Wednesday 
last.  Few  have  left  more  relations,  few  had  more  Friends  than  this  most 
amiable  and  excellent  Lady,  yet  the  latter  Clause  of  the  Continental  Association 
was  strictly  adhered  to  at  this  Funeral.  (5.  C.  Gaz.y  Dec.  18,  1774.)  She  was 
the  dau^ter  of  Thomas  Law  Elliott,  and  married  Bamard  Elliott,  April  27, 
1766. 

'•The  wife  of  the  Lt.  Gov.  retumed  from  the  Northern  Colonies. 

^  Last  Sunday  Morning  a  Fire  broke  out  in  an  Out-Building  belonging  to 
Thomas  Ferguson,  Esq;  which  in  a  short  time  consimied  the  same.  And  be- 
tween 7  and  8  o'Clock  the  same  Night,  a  terrible  Fire  broke  out  in  a  Kitchen 


70  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

19.  Mr.  Francis  Huger  arrived.^*  23.  My 
Grandson  G.  went  into  the  country.  25.  I 
was  indisposed  with  a  cholic  and  continued 
until  31st.  Dec.  26.  My  Grandson  J.  went 
into  the  country  with  his  uncle.  28.  Mr. 
Fenwick*s  family  arrived.^* 
1775.    Jan.  14.  My  Grandson  went  to  the  Quarter-house.    17. 

Called  at  Mrs.  Fenwick's.    24.  I  had  Gout  at 
night.    25th.  Better. 

Feb.  12.  Capt.  Nottingham,*®  Frans.  Huger,  Mr.  King, 
Mr.  Mercer,  Dr.  F.  dined  here.  14.  Mrs.  T. 
Horry  1.  15.  Mrs.  T.  Harris  I.**  17.  Fast 
day.  13.  Mrs.  Burrows  died.^  15.  Old  Mc- 
Alpin  died.®    19.  Old  Mrs.  Prioleau  died." 

Mar.  1.  Mrs.  Tidyman  1.  29.  All  the  Family  but  myself 
dined  at  Mr.  Wm.  Wragg's.^ 

the  upper  end  of  Queen  St.  which  soon  communicated  the  Flames  to  some  adja- 
cent buildings  by  which  means  Five  Dwelling-Houses  were  entirely  Consumed, 
three  of  them  the  Property  of  Mr.  Benjamin  Baker,  one  of  Mr.  Samuel  Cordes, 
and  the  other  of  Capt.  John  Stevenson.  The  Fire  raged  with  great  Violence 
for  Four  Hours  before  it  was  got  under.  (5.  C.  Gas.  and  Country  Jour.,  Decem- 
ber 22,  1774.) 

^'  From  the  northern  Colonies. 

^»  Edward  Fenwick,  Esq;  Lady  and  Family,  from  London. 

^  On  Tliursday  last,  the  new  Packet  boad  Sandwichy  Richard  Nottingham 
commander,  arrived  here  with  the  December  Mails.  {Ibid.,  February  7, 
1775.) 

"  Tliomas  Harris  and  Susannah  Wirt  widow,  married  December  4,  1770, 
St.  Philip's  Register. 

"  Within  a  few  days  of  each  other,  died  Mrs.  Mary  Burrows,  wife  of  William 
Burrows,  Esq;  and  Miss  Sally  Burrows,  his  youngest  daughter.  (5.  C.  and  Am, 
Gen.  Gaz.j  February  17.)    William  Burroi^'s  was  Master  in  Chancery. 

"  James  McAlpin,  aged  80  years;  formerly  esteemed  as  an  eminent  teacher 
of  Music;  arrived  in  the  Province  at  the  age  of  19.  (S.  C.  Gas.,  February  20, 
1775.) 

•*  Providence,  the  wife  of  Samuel  Prioleau,  Esq;  she  was  married  in  1739; 
was  the  daughter  of  David  Hext  and  his  wife  Ann,  widow  of  George  Bamet, 
and  daughter  of  John  Hamilton,  Esq;  and  Mary  Grimball. 

*  Hon.  William  Wragg,  who  married  his  cousin  Henrietta  Wragg,  sister  to 
Elizabeth  Wragg,  wife  of  Peter  Manigault. 


EXTRACTS  FROM  JOURNAL  OF  BIRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT  71 

Apr.  2.  Miss  Mary  Dewar  married.^  4.  Miss  Corbett  l.*'^ 
Mrs.  Edward  Rutledge  1.  11.  Mrs.  Whitter 
very  ill  in  Town.  13.  Better.  My  Grandson 
G.  went  in  the  Country  to  Mr.  Wm.  Wragg's 
and  my  Grandson  J.  to  Mr.  Godin's.  Mrs. 
Dry  and  Mrs.  Smith  called.^  17.  Mrs. 
Whitter  very  ill  a  week  past,  a  little  better 
this  morning. 

May  10.  Mrs.  Coslet  l.^*  11.  Miss  Judith  Banbury 
married.*®  14.  Miss  Poaug  died.  18.  Miss 
Ann  Shadd  died.  23.  My  grandson  G.  em- 
barked, and  sailed  over  the  Bar  the  next  day, 
and  had  a  terrible  gust,  which  put  them  in  great 
danger.*^  23.  Mr.  M.  and  the  children  to 
Silkhope. 

"  Daughter  of  Charles  Dewar,  merchant,  to  Robert  Moncreef ,  merchant. 

^  Hannah  Margaret,  daughter  of  Thomas  Corbett  merchant,  and  his  wife 
Margaret  Harleston. 

*'  Last  Tuesday  arrived  here  from  Cape  Fear,  the  Lady  and  Family  of  the 
Hon.  Wm.  Dry,  of  Cape  Fear.  (5.  C  Gaz.,  April  10, 1775.)  Mary  Jane,  dau. 
of  W.  Rhett  and  Mary  Trott,  married  in  1745,  William  Dry,  Jr. 

*•  Hon.  Chas.  Mathewes  Coslett  married  Dec.  17, 1772,  Anne  Grimk6,  they 
had  two  children,  Charles  Grimk6,  bom  October  29,  1773,  and  Ann  Grink6, 
bom  May  10,  1775;  she  married  in  1779,  her  second  cousin,  William  Rutledge, 
son  of  Hon.  John  Rutledge  and  Eiiz:  Grimk6. 

•®  To  John  Cordes.     (St.  P.  Reg.) 

•*  For  London,  where  he  was  sent  for  three  years  to  complete  his  education. 
Letter  from  Mrs.  Manigault: 
Addressed:  To  Mr.  Gabriel  Manigault, 

Att  Goose  Creek 

There. 
April  21,  1775. 
My  Dear  Gabriel 

I  received  yours  some  days  ago  but  have  no  opportunity  of  writing  to  3rou 
I  was  glad  to  hear  you  was  well  and  so  much  diverted — Capt.  Gunn  arrived  the 
day  before  yesterday  which  put  me  in  a  little  fluster,  Mr.  Savage  engaged  his 
cabin  as  soon  as  he  came  ashore  and  you  are  to  go  with  him  please  God  nothing 
prevents,  your  GrandPapah  thinks  he  may  go  in  three  weeks.  Your  pore  aunt 
Whitter  has  been  extremely  ill  since  you  went  but  is  a  little  better  my  compli- 
ments to  all  my  friends  and  are  my  Dear  Child  your  ever  affectionate  Grand 
Mother 

Anne  Manigault. 


72  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

June  2.  Mrs.  Danl.  Huger  1.  12.  Lady  Head  died.** 
17.  Lord  Wm.  Campbell  and  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Izard  arrived.*    July.  Hannah  died. 

Aug.  15.  Dr.  MiUigan  went  on  board  a  Man  of  War  to  go 
ofiF.**    27.  Mrs.  Parson  Smith  1.^ 

Sept.  IS.  Mrs.  Wilhn.  Wragg  1.  14.  Prince  died.  17. 
Mr.  ChifiFelle  married.** 

Oct.  13.  Mr.  King  came  in.  20.  Mrs.  Roger  Smith  1.*^ 
23.  Mr.  M.  to  Silkhope.    26.  Mrs.  T.  B.  1.** 

Nov.  5.  Old  Flora  died.  7.  I  had  a  bad  toothache.  23. 
My  Grandson  J.  not  well  and  continued  so 
until  the  8th  Dec.  During  10  days  ill.  My 
Granddaughter  H.  had  a  fever  the  22d  Novr. 
She  had  a  very  severe  illness,  was  very  weak 
and  lost  her  speech.  She  mended  slowly,  was 
not  well  until  the  ISth.  Dec.  A  very  sick 
time  and  warm  weather. 

Dec.  26.  Pierrot  died.  Mrs.  Tom.  Middleton  1.  in  Deer. 
Mrs.  Cotesworth  Pinckney  1.  17th  Deer. 
Dr.  Clitheral  married  19th  Dec.** 

(To  be  cofUmued) 

*>  Wife  of  Sir  Edmund  Head,  Bart. 

**  On  Saturday  Evening  last,  his  Excellency  the  Right  Hon.  Lord  William 
Campbell  Governor  Commander  in  Chief  &c  of  this  Province,  with  his  Lady 
and  Family,  arrived  here  in  the  Scorpion,  Man  of  War  from  England.  .  .  . 
5.  C.  Gat.  and  Country  Journal,  June  20,  1775.) 

**  George  Milligan  Esq;  chief  Surgeon  to  all  the  Garrisons  for  His  Majestys 
Forces  in  this  Province,  sailed  in  the  Ea^  Packet  boat  (with  the  Mail)  for 
London.    (Ibid,,  August  25.) 

"  Sarah  Motte,  daughter  of  Rev.  Robert  and  Sarah  Smith,  bapt.  September 
27,  1775.)    (St.  P.  Reg.) 

**  Nicholas  LafEelle  (sic)  &  Mary  Oats  spinster,  married  September  17, 
1775.    (Ibid.) 

''J.  Rutledge,  son  of  Roger  and  Mary  Smith,  bapt.  February  17,  1776. 
(Ibid,) 

**  Roger  Smith,  son  of  Thos.  and  Sarah  Bee,  bapt.  February  18,  1776. 
(Ibid,) 

**  Dr.  John  Clitheral  to  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Smith,  widow  of  Thos.  Loughton 
Smith,  Esq. 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  CHRIST  CHURCH 

PARISH 

CoUected  by  Anne  Ring  Gregorie 

m 

OAKLAND  PLANTATION,  FORMERLY  CALLED  YOUGHALL 

This  plantation,  now  owned  by  Mr.  Ferdinand  Gregorie  and 
his  son  F.  Gregorie,  Jr.,  was  part  of  a  grant  of  1300  acres  on  the 
south-east  side  of  Seewee  Sound  which  was  made  May  14,  1696, 
to  Capt.  George  Dearsly;  this  tract  afterwards  became  vested  in 
Thomas  Hamlin,  who  conveyed  part  to  William  Capers,  and 
the  remaining  982  acres,  he  conveyed  January  1,  1704,  to  John 
Perry,  Esq;  then  of  the  Island  of  Antigua,  but  formerly  of  the 
parish  of  Youghal,  near  Cork,  in  Ireland.  This  plantation  was 
settled  for  John  Perry  by  his  agent  in  Carolina,  John  Abraham 
Motte.i 

John  Perry  died  in  1713,  leaving  all  his  plantations  in  South 
Carolina  to  his  daughter  Mary,  who  married  in  1728,  John  Cle- 
land,  of  London;  they  removed  to  South  Carolina  about  1735,  and 
on  March  12,  1740,  John  Cleiand  and  his  wife  Mary,  conveyed 
the  above  982  acres,  then  called  "Yoeghall,"  to  Captain  George 
Benison  of  Christ  Church  Parish,  the  bounds  being  then  given  as, 
south-east  partly  on  Captain  Benison  and  partly  on  a  great 
marsh;  south-west  partly  on  Capt.  Thomas  Boone;  north-west 
partly  on  Mr.  Barton,  and  on  Capt.  Thomas  Boone. 

George  Benison  (who  married  first  Elizabeth  Capers,  1700- 
1733,  and  second,  in  1735,  Hannah  Screven,  widow)  conveyed  by 
deed  of  gift,  December  9,  1741,  500  acres,  part  of  the  larger  tract 
of  982  acres,  called  Youghall*  to  his  son  George  Benison,  Jr.,  the 
southward  part  bounding  on  Copahee  Sound. 

Col.  George  Benison  died  Jime  9,  1748,  leaving  a  will,  dated 
September  IS,  1747,  in  which  he  bequeaths  to  his  son  William 

'  Mesne  G)nveyance  Office,  Book  V,  p.  384,  and  this  Magazine^  vol.  \x, 
p.  85. 

»  M.  C.  O.,  X,  p.  1. 

73 


74  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

and  his  heirs  the  remaining  482  acres  of  the  Youghall  tract,  giving 
the  bounds  as  being  south  on  Thomas  Hamlin,  west  on  Capt. 
Thomas  Boone,  northward  on  his  son  George  Benison,  and  east 
on  Copohee  Sound;  if  W^am  died  without  heirs,  then  Capt. 
Benison's  yoimgest  son  Richard  was  to  inherit,  failing  heirs  of 
Richard,  then  all  of  his  children,  Sarah,  Mary,  Elizabeth  and 
Jane.  Sarah  had  married  John  Parris  in  1742,  and  Mary  married 
William  Gibbes  in  1744. 

William  Benison  married  Ann  Brown  in  1750,  and  died  in  1751 
without  issue  (will).  Richard  died  intestate  about  1758;  Cxeorge 
Benison,  Jr.,  bom  in  1722,  married  Elizabeth  Bremar;  he  died 
intestate  between  October  1750  and  February  26,  1751,  leaving 
sons  William  and  Francis  Bremar  Benison  (will  of  his  wife  Eliza- 
beth, dated  April  7,  1751.) 

Sometime  before  February  3, 1755,  the  482  acres  had  been  con- 
veyed by  Rawlins  Lowndes,  provost  marshall,  to  Thomas  Barks- 
dale,  who  was  already  a  large  land  owner  in  Christ  Church  parish, 
who  on  that  date,  conveyed  to  his  son  Charles,  who,  before  his 
death  in  1757,  seems  to  have  acquired  also  the  500  acres  belonging 
formerly  to  George  Benison,  Jr. 

Charles  Barksdale,  who  had  married  in  1741,  Maria  Wingood, 
widow  of  Charvil  Wingood,  by  his  will,  dated  April  5,  1756,  leaves 
all  his  lands  to  his  sons  Charles,  Thomas  and  George. 

Thomas  Barksdale  (1745-1800)  appears  to  be  the  next  owner 
of  the  tract  on  which  the  burying  ground  is  placed;  he  died  in 
1800,  leaving  a  will,  which  mentions  his  wife  Mary,  his  son  Thomas, 
and  daughters  Elizabeth,  Mary,  Sarah,  and  Sabina. 

Thomas,  the  son  of  the  above  Thomas,  married  Serena  Maria 
Payne  and  died  about  1850,  leaving  a  will,  in  which  he  states  that 
it  would  be  a  great  gratification  to  have  his  plantation  called 
Youghall  continued  in  the  family,  it  having  been  for  more  than  a 
century  in  the  Barksdale  family;  he  especially  provides  for  the 
holding  of  the  family  burial  ground,  with  privilege  of  access.  He 
had  no  sons,  and  the  plantation  was  conveyed  by  his  wife  Serena 
M.  Barksdale,  as  executrix,  to  James  Macbeth,  April  26,  1852; 
James  Macbeth  having  married  Mary  Vanderhorst  Barksdale, 
the  eldest  daughter  of  Thomas  and  Serena.  The  acreage  and 
bounds  were  changed  several  times  in  the  various  division  during 
the  Barksdale  ownership. 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROlf  CHRIST  CHURCH  75 

James  Macbeth  conveyed,  to  Philip  Edward  Porcher,  January 
20,  1859,  the  plantation  called  "Oakland,  formerly  Youghall,"  so 
the  name  of  Oakland  was  probably  given  to  the  plantation  by 
Macbeth. 

The  place  was  conveyed  by  Mr.  Porcher  to  his  daughter  Mrs. 
Ferdinand  Gregorie. 

The  house  probably  built  by  the  Benisons  is  old  and  interest- 
ing, with  good  lines  and  fine  wood-work;  the  burying  ground  is 
surroimded  by  a  good  brick  wall,  some  what  in  need  of  repair, 
and  has  a  number  of  handsome  tombstones,  which  have  been 
damaged  by  the  earthquake,  and  by  n^lect. 

In  /  Memory  of  /  George  Barksdale  /  Edwards  /  Died  July  1860. 

/  In  the  51st  /  year  /  Of  his  age  / 
In  /  Memory  of  /  George  Edwards  /  Died  April  1859  /  In  the 

83d  /  year  of  his  age. 
Sacred  /  to  the  Memory  of  /  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Edwards  /  Wife  of  / 

George  Edwards  Esqr:  /  and  Daughter  of  /  Thomas  and  Mary 

Barksdale  /  She  departed  this  life  in  Charleston  /  the  23rd 

April  1832,  /  Aged  Fifty  Nine  Years  and  2  Months  /  [Eulogy 

omitted.] 
To  the  Memory  /  of  /  Sarah  Gamage,  /  who  departed  this  life  / 

On  the  4th  of  Jime  /  Anno  Domini  1841,  /  Aged  Fifty  Five 

Years,  /  and  11  months  /  [Eulogy  omitted.] 
Sabma  Payne  /  Obit  3rd.  Octr.  1853  /  Aged  75  Years. 
In  /  Memory  of  /  Mary  Barksdale,  /  Died  Deer.  1854  /  In  the 

75th  year  /  of  her  age. 
[Foot  stone].    Mary  Barksdale  /  obit  14  Deer.  1854  /  Aged  74 

years. 
Twin  Children  /  of  /  Thomas  and  Serena  M.  Barksdale;  /  1834. 
In   Memory  /  of  /  Wm.    Payne   Barksdale  /  son   of  /  Thos.    & 

Serena  M.  Barksdale.  /  Departed  this  life  in  Charleston  /  the 

23d.  day  of  September  /  1817  /  aged  2  Years  11  Months  and 

21  Days  /  [Verses  omitted.] 
Beneath  this  Monument  /  Are  deposited  the  Remains  of  Thomas 

Barksdale  Esq:  /  who  passed  from  death  to  life  /  on  the  25th 

of  June  1800  /  Aged  55  years  5  months  and  11  days.    [Eulogy 

omitted.] 


76  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  /  of  /  Mary  Barksdale  /  Relict  of  / 
Thomas  Barksdale  /  Esquire  /  who  departed  this  life  in 
Charleston  /  the  8th  day  of  June  1814  /  Aged  64  years  1  month 
&  14  days  /  [Eulogy  omitted.] 

Also  a  brick  vault  without  a  name. 

[2] 
hamlin's  cross  road 

The  following  three  stones  are  in  a  thicket  in  sight  of  the  road, 
at  Hamlin's  Cross  Roads. 

Wm.  Hamlin  /  and  Family  /  1832 

Eliza  Hamlin  /  1828  /  William  HamUn  /  1832 

William  /  Son  of  /  Wm.  and  Eliza  HamUn  /  1831. 

[3] 
BEE  mvE  plantation 

The  stones  are  near  a  tenant's  house. 

In  /  Memory  of  /  William  Dorrill  /  who  died  Deer.  26th  /  1799 
/  Aged  45  Years  / 

Sacred  /  to  /  the  memory  of  /  Edward  Mortimer  Legare  /who 
expired  /  on  the  19th  Nov.  1829  /  in  his  29th.  year  /  He  has 
left  an  aged  mother  /  a  widow  and  three  children  /  to  mourn 
their  /  loss  /  His  bereaved  and  afflicted  /  widow  erects  this  / 
monument  to  his  /  memory. 

Sacred  /  to  the  Memory  of  /  Thomas  Hamett  /  who  departed 
this  life  /  on  the  6th  of  October  1833  /  aged  Twenty  Seven 
Years  /  and  One  Month  /  This  stone  was  erected  /  by  his 
disconsolate  /  Widow. 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
{Continued  from  January) 

Break  in  the  file  from  June  25,  1790  to  February  21,  1791. 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening  the  13th  instant,  Josq)h  Blyth, 
Esq;  sheriff  of  Georgetown  district,  to  the  amiable  and  accom- 
plished Miss  Elizabeth  AUston,  daughter  of  William  Allston, 
esquire,  of  Georgetown,  deceased.    (Monday,  Feb.  21, 1791.) 

Died.  On  Monday,  Mrs.  Hinson,  wife  of  Mr.  Thomas  Hinson. 
(Wednesday,  February  23,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last  at  Georgetown,  Mr. 
Thomas  M.  Woodbridge,  merchant,  to  Miss  Mary  Porter,  of 
Georgetown.     (Monday  Feb.  28,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening.  Rev.  John  Huddiston  to  Miss 
Polly  Stiles,  daughter  of  Benjamin  Stiles,  esq.  (Saturday,  Mar.  5. 
1791.) 

Died.  In  this  city  on  Sunday  evening  last  Mr.  Edward  Gavin, 
of  Prince  Williams  parish.     (Saturday,  Mar.  12, 1791.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  John  Keys,  house 
carpenter,  to  Miss  Rebecca  Martin.  (Wednesday,  Mar.  16, 
1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  in  St.  Thomas's  parish,  Hopson 
Pinckney,  Esq;  to  Mrs.  Mary  Hasell,  both  of  that  plaLce.  (Thurs- 
day, March  17,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Thomas  Wigfall,  Esq;  to  Miss 
Moore  both  of  St.  Thomas  Parish.    (Tuesday,  Mar.  22,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  morning  Mrs.  Ann  M'Callester,  of 
this  dty.    (Friday,  Mar.  25,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  Mrs.  Phoebe  Fletcher.  (Monday, 
Mar.  28,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Simday  morning  last,  Mrs.  Sarah  Tebout,  widow  of 
the  late  Mr.  Tunis  Tebout.    (Tuesday,  Mar.  29,  1791.) 

Yesterday  morning,  a  duel  was  fought  with  pistols,  between 
Mr.  Alexander  Inglis,  and  William  Allen  Deas,  Esq  in  which  the 

77 


78  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

former  gentleman,  unhappily  received  a  very  dangerous  wound. 
(Thursday  Mar.  31) 

Died.  Alexander  Inglis,  Esq;  of  a  wound  he  received  in  a  duel 
fought  on  Wednesday  last,  and  of  which  he  languished  imtil 
yesterday  morning,  when  he  expired,  to  the  great  affliction  of  a 
very  respectable  family.  TTie  ball  entered  on  the  right  side  imder 
the  lower  ribs,  and  went  in  a  direct  line  to  the  opposite  side  whence 
it  was  extracted.  An  inquest  was  held  on  the  body  of  the  de- 
ceased, and  the  jury  brought  in  a  verdict,  that  he  came  to  his 
death  in  the  manner  above  recited.     (Friday,  April  1, 1791.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  Dr.  Remington,  of  Christ-church 
parish. — Yester  morning,  Miss  Jenkins,  daughter  of  the  Rev. 
Mr.  Edward  Jenkins.     (Saturday,  April  2,  1791.) 

Died.  Yesterday,  Miss  Elizabeth  Bonsall,  in  the  7th  year  of 
her  age.     (Several  lines  of  verse.)     (Friday,  April  8,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Simday  last,  Mr.  Daniel  L^are,  of  this  city,  aged 
57  years. — On  the  same  evening,  in  the  62d  year  of  her  age,  Mrs. 
Ann  Cox,  widow. — Mrs.  Margaret  Pagett,  wife  of  Mrs.  Thomas 
Pagett.     (Tuesday,  April  12,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  Mr.  Robert  Harper,  of  this  city., 
(Wednesday  April  13,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Robert  Lees,  to  Miss  Cath- 
erine A.  Grattan.    (Monday,  April  18,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  David  Saylor,  of  this  city.  .  .  . 
(Thursday,  April  21,  1791.) 

Died.  Of  the  influenza,  in  St.  Thomas's,  on  Monday  last, 
Mr.  John  Singletary,  an  old  and  respectable  gentleman  of  that 
place.     (Friday,  April  22,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  last,  capt.  John  Connelly,  of  the  ship 
America,  to  Miss  Polly  Davis. — and  on  Monday  evening,f  Mr. 
Frederick  Wolf  to  Miss  Margaret  Strohaker.  (Wednesday, 
April  27,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  Mr.  Laurence  Campbell,^to 
Miss  Elizabeth  Prince. — ^And  last  evening,  in  St.  Thomas's  parish, 
Mr.  Daniel  Dupre,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Chovin,  both  of  St.  James 
Santee. 

Died.  At.  Philadelphia,  on  the  16th  instant,  Nicholas 'Eve- 
leigh.  Esq;  the  comptroller  of  the  imited  states,  after  a  lingering 
illness  of  more  than  seven  weeks.     (Friday,  April  29,  1791.) 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  79 

Married.  On  Thursday  the  21st  instant  at  Waccamaw,  Mr. 
John  Labruce,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Martha  Pawley,  daughter  of 
Mr.  Percival  Pawley,  deceased. 

On  Simday  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Thackham  to  Mrs.  Judith  Gready, 
of  this  city.     (Tuesday,  May  3,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  morning  last,  Mrs.  Rachel  Logan,  wife  of 
Mr.  John  Logan,  aged  25  years  and  8  months.  This  youthful 
lady  has  left  to  lament  her  death,  amongst  a  number  of  relations^ 
four  small  children (Thursday,  May  5,  1791.) 

Died.  In  the  69th  year  of  his  age,  Alexander  Fraser,  Esq. 
Through  life,  he  ever  supported  the  character  of  a  strictly  upright 
and  honest  man.     (Monday,  May  9,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Simday  the  8th  instant,  Mr.  Benjamin  Snipes, 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Toomer,  second  daughter  of  Anthony  Toomer, 
Esq;  of  this  dty. 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  Dr.  George  Hahabaum,  of  this  city. 
(Tuesday,  May  17,  1791.) 

Died.  In  St.  Thomas  parish,  Mrs.  Mary  Lesesne,  widow  of 
the  late  Mr.  Daniel  Lesesne,  of  that  place,  deceased.  (Wednes- 
day, May  18,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  the  10th.  instant,  Mr.  James  Richard- 
son to  Miss  Ann  Sinkler,  only  daughter  of  James  Sinkler,  Esq;  of 
St.  Stephen's  parish.     (Thursday,  May  19,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  morning,  Mr.  Joseph  Cullen,  son  of  Mr. 
Thomas  Cullen,  lately  from  Philadelphia.  On  Wednesday  the 
18th  instant,  Mr.  Archibald  Fletcher,  merchant,  of  Montenegro- 
Bay,  Jamaica.     (Monday,  May  23,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Saturday,  28th  instant,  Mr.  Henry  Metzker, 
coach  maker  of  Charleston,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Long,  of  Jackson- 
borough.     (Wednesday,  June  1,  1791.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Thomas  Ham,  to  Miss 
Margaret  Ralph,  both  of  this  City.     (Saturday,  June  11,  1791.) 

Died.  Yesterday,  Mr.  William  Saunders,  merchant,  of  Bris- 
tol.   (Wednesday,  June  IS,  1791.) 

Died.  In  this  City,  on  Friday  last.  Miss  Frances  M'Cleland, 
of  Santee.     (Tuesday,  June  21,  1791.) 

Died.  Lately  at  Granby,  Mr.  Richard  Ellis,  formerly  of  the 
Quarter  House.     (Thursday,  June  30,  1791.) 


80  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Wednesday  last,  at  one  o'clock,  Mr.  Moses 
Cohen  to  Miss  Rachel  Cohen,  both  of  this  City.  (Friday,  July 
1,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last,  at  Horse  Savannah,  occasioned  by  a 
fall  from  his  horse,  Mr.  William  Livingston,  a  gentleman  much 
regretted  by  a  numerous  and  valuable  acquaintance. — ^At  Coosa- 
whatchie,  Edward  Griffith,  eldest  son  of  Mr.  Edward  Griffith, 
formerly  a  respectable  merchant  of  this  city.  (Wednesday, 
July  6,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  last,  Mr.  John  Smith,  to  Miss  Catherine 
Erhard,  both  of  this  city. — On  Tuesday  last.  Dr.  Charles  Lewis 
Seeger,  to  Miss  Mary  M.  Strobel,  eledest  daughter  of  Mr.  Daniel 
Strobel,  of  this  dty.     (Thursday,  July  7,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  Mrs.  Ann  Slade,  an  old  inhabitant 
of  this  dty.     (Monday,  July  11,  1791.) 

Married.  Thursday  last,  David  Adams,  of  St.  Helena,  to  Miss 
Mary  Lawrence,  daughter  of  Mr.  Etsell  Lawrence,  of  this  dty. 

Died.  On  the  Sth  of  January  last,  at  Exeter,  England,  George 
Kincaid,  Esq;  formerly  of  this  state.     (Tuesday,  July  12,  1791.) 

Married.  Mr.  John  MTeer,  to  Mrs.  Barre,  widow  of  the 
late  Mr.  William  Barre,  of  this  dty. 

Died.  Mr.  Thomas  Lockwood,  of  this  City.  (Wednesday, 
July  13,  1791.) 

On  Saturday  last  was  buried.  Master  James  M'Call,  only  son 
o!  James  McCall,  Esq;  of  this  dty.  [Verses.]  (Monday,  July  25, 
1791.) 

Married.  Latdy  at  the  Cheraw  Hill,  Christopher  Vernon,  Esq; 
to  Miss  Badg^ood,  of  that  place. 

Died.  Yesterday  morning.  Miss  Jane  Christie,  of  this  dty. 
(Saturday,  July  30,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  the  13th  instant,  at  Cambridge  in 
the  district  of  Ninety-six,  Mrs.  Ann  Shaw,  mother  of  T^lliam 
Shaw,  Esq;  attorney  at  law  of  that  place;  whose -death  is  most 
sorrowfully  lamented  by  her  distressed  family.  She  arrived  in 
Charleston  from  England  on  the  24th  of  April  last,  and  those  days 
which  she  hoped  to  have  prolonged  in  comfort  and  happiness 
^th  her  son  were  cut  off  by  the  interposing  hand  of  providence. 
She  died  in  her  sixtieth  year.     (Monday  August  1,  1791.) 


MAKSIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  81 

Died.  Yesterday  afternoon,  about  i  past  five  o'clock,  George 
Abbot  Hall,  Esq;  cdlector  of  the  customs  for  the  district  of  South 
Carolina. — On  Sunday  evening,  at  the  Quarter  House,  o^t. 
Henry  Lawrence.    (Tuesday,  August  2,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  Miss  Sarah  Glover,  second  daughter  of 
Charles  Glover,  Esq.    (Wednesday,  August  2,  1791.) 

Died.  In  this  city,  Mr.  Maybury  Jolly,  formerly  of  Pennsyl- 
vania.   (Saturday,  August  6,  1791.) 

On  Thursday  the  7th  of  July,  departed  this  life,  on  Spring 
Island,  Beaufort  district,  Mrs.  Mary  Cochran  Edwards,  the  con- 
sort of  the  late  John  Edwards,  senior,  esq;  .  .  .  .leaving 
three  small  children.    .    .    .    (Monday  August  15,  1791.) 

Married.  Yesterday,  Mr.  Andrew  Williamson,  to  Miss  Martha 
Procter,  both  of  this  city.    (Friday,  August  19,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Monday  evening,  Mr.  John  Potter,  merchant, 
to  Miss  Kitty  Fuller,  daughter  of  Thomas  Fuller,  Esq;  deceased. 
(Wednesday  August  24,  1791.) 

Died.  In  St.  John's  parish,  on  the  15th  instant,  universally 
lamented  by  all  who  knew  her,  Mrs.  Ann  Bricknell,  wife  of  Dr. 
Joseph  Bricknel,  of  that  place,  and  youngest  daughter  of  Mr. 
John  Hatfield  formerly  of  Charleston.  She  was  a  good  wife,  a 
tender  mother,  and  a  sincere  friend.    (Thursday,  August  25, 1791.) 

Died.  Generally  lamented,  at  Little  River,  N.  C.  on  the  9th 
instant,  Col.  Lewis  DuPre.  ...  A  representative  of  this 
state.     (Friday,  August  26,  1791.) 

Died.  In  this  dty,  on  Wednesday  last,  in  the  10th  year  of  his 
age.  Master  Samuel  Waring  Brailsford,  son  of  John  Brailsford, 
Esq;  of  Stone.     (Saturday,  August  27,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Ethan  Sickels,  formerly  of  New 
York.    (Monday,  August  29,  1791.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mrs.  Sarah  Vane,  an  old  and 
respectable  inhabitant  of  this  dty.  (Thursday,  September  1, 
1791.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Archibald  Davidson,  Esq; 
of  Black  River,  to  Miss  Jane  C.  Sweetmen. — ^At  Santee,  on  Thurs- 
day nth  of  August,  Mr.  William  R.  L.  Stukes,  of  this  dty,  to 
Miss  A.  Baxter,  eldest  daughter  of  John  Baxter,  Esq;  of  Pee  Dee, 
(Friday,  Sept.  2,  1791,) 


82  so.   CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Tuesday  morning,  Mr.  Daniel  Hales,  to  Miss 
Sarah  Johnston,  daughter  of  Robert  Johnston,  Esq;  of  St.  Thomas's 
parish.     (Thursday,  Sept.  8,  1791.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mr.  Simeon  Thayer,  in  the  22d. 
year  of  his  age.     .     .    .     (Saturday,  Sept.  10,  1791.) 

Married.  At  Georgetown,  on  Tuesday  evening  the  30th  of 
August,  Henry  Gibbes,  Esq;  to  Mrs.  Dunbar,  reUct  of  Thomas 
Dunbar,  deceased.     (Thursday,  Sept.  15,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  Miss  Mary  Petrie.  (Friday,  Sept. 
16,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last.  Dr.  John  Press  Smith,  to  the 
amiable  Mrs.  Eliza  Clifford,  widow  of  Charles  Clifiord,  Esq. 

Died.  On  Tuesday  the  13th  inst.  at  St.  James,  Santee,  Mr. 
Archibald  M'Clellan,  sen.     (Saturday,  Sept.  17,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Saturday,  the  3d.  inst.  Mrs.  Sarah  Stewart  Wick- 
ham,  the  wife  of  Dr.  Thomas  T.  Wickham,  of  Peedee,  in  George- 
town district,  in  the  22d  year  of  her  age.  (Monday  Sept.  19, 
1791.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  St.  John,  wife  of 
Mr.  James  St.  John,  of  John's  Island. — Mrs.*  Dorothy  Schepler, 
wife  of  Mr.  L.  C.  A.  Schepler. — Mrs.  Mary  Grant,  wife  of  Mr. 
John  Grant,  of  this  city.     (Tuesday,  Sept.  22,  1791.) 

Died.  At  his  plantation  on  Little  River,  in  Laurens  county, 
on  the  16th  of  June  last,  William  Bailey,  aged  95.  He  was  bom 
in  Scotland,  came  to  America  when  young,  lived  in  the  county  in 
which  he  died  26  years  inmiediately  preceding  his  death,  and 
enjoyed  the  free  use  and  exercise  of  his  reason  to  the  last;  looked 
after  his  own  plantation  assisted  in  planting  his  com  this  crop; 
he  travelled  to  Georgia  alone  last  summer,  on  a  visit,  was  to  have 
done  the  same  this  by  appointment.  ...  He  has  left  a 
brother  in  the  same  county,  aged  85  who  perfects  business  with 
as  much  ease  and  dispatch  as  men  in  general  do  who  are  past  the 
prime  of  life.    (Friday,  Sept.  23,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  aged  69  years,  Mrs.  Mary  Grimk^,  a 
native  of  this  state,  widow  of  John  Paul  Grimk^,  Esq;  deceased.— 
On  Saturday,  in  this  city,  Mr.  John  Wilson,  of  Georgetown,  for- 
merly an  officer  in  his  Britannic  majesty's  service.  (Tuesday, 
Sept.  27,  1791.) 


MAERIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  83 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mr.  James  Taylor,  merchant,  of 
this  city.     (Wednesday,  Sept.  28,  1791.) 

Died.  In  this  dty,  on  Wednesday  morning,  Mr.  George 
Watson,  upholster. — At  Savannah,  capt.  Bull,  lately  from  the 
bay  of  Honduras.     (Friday,  Sept.  30,  1791.) 

Died.  Wednesday  evening,  Mr.  William  Patterson  Jr.,  of 
this  city.     (Friday  Oct.  7,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening.  Dr.  DeRosset,  of  Wilmington, 
to  Miss  Mary  Fullerton,  of  this  City. 

Died.  Dr.  John  Budd,  in  the  59th  year  of  his  age,  who  for 
nearly  forty  years,  had  practised  physic  with  great  reputation. 
He  was  descended  from  respectable  ancestors  in  New  Jersey, 
among  whom  was  one  of  the  original  twenty-four  proprietors  of 
that  province.  His  father  was  80  and  his  mother  SO  years  old  at 
the  time  of  his  birth.  His  father  who  labored  imder  the  gout  for 
sixty-years,  transmitted  that  disorder  to  his  son;  but  he  by  rigid 
and  perhaps  excessive  temperance.  .  .  .  suffered  little  from  it 
for  several  of  the  last  years  of  his  life;  nevertheless,  from  the 
suddeness  of  his  death,  it  is  supposed,  that  at  last  it  proved  fatal, 
by  an  instantaneous  attack  on  the  brain.  ...  In  November, 
1775,  when  hostilities  commenced  within  the  harbor  of  Charleston 
by  the  Cherokee  and  Tamer,  armed  vessels  of  the  king  of  Great 
Britain  firing  on  the  provincial  schooner  Defence,  commanded  by 
capt.  Tufts,  Dr.  Budd  paddled  himself  in  a  canoe,  from  a  wharf 
on  the  Bay,  and  boarded  the  Defence  in  the  midst  of  the  firing 
in  order  to  give  the  aids  of  his  profession  to  his  countrymen,  who 
were  supposed  to  have  suffered  much  from  having  been  long 
exposed  to  the  fire  of  two  British  vessels  within  gimshot. 

For  several  years  the  doctor  had  the  honor  of  representing 
Charleston  in  the  l^slature  of  the  state.  ...  In  the  year 
1780,  when  the  British  troops  had  nearly  over  ran  the  state,  he 
renounced  the  comforts  of  home  and  the  profits  of  his  profession 
rather  than  return  to  his  all^iance  to  the  king  of  Great  Britain, 
and  as  such  had  the  honor  of  being  exiled  to  St.  Augustine,  by 
Lord  Comwallis,  as  an  incorrigible  rebel  against  the  royal  govern- 
ment.   (Saturday,  Oct.  8,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  Mr.  William  Scott,  to  Miss 
Rebbecca  Ham,  daughter  of  Mr.  Richard  Ham,  of  this  city. 
(Friday,  Oct.  14,  1791.) 


84  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died.  At  his  plantation,  near  Cambridge,  on  Tuesday  the  7th 
inst.  Richard  Champion,  Esq.    (Saturday,  Oct.  IS,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  in  thb  dty,  Mr.  John  M'Culloch, 
late  a  merchant  of  Savannah.    (Wednesday,  Oct.  19,  1791.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Capt.  Thcmias  Blundell,  of  this 
dty.    (Thursday,  October  20,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  morning,  Isaac  Huger,  jun.  Esq;^  late 
sheriff  of  Charleston.    (Monday,  October  24,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  last,  Thomas  Parker,  Esq; 
attorney,  at  law,  to  Miss  Mary  Drayton,  daughter  of  the  honor- 
able William  Henry  Drayton,  Esq;  deceased. 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  on  James  Island,  Mr.  Sebastion 
Keeley,  lately  a  merchant  of  this  dty.  (Thursday,  October  27; 
1791.) 

Married.  Mr.  Henry  Grey,  to  Miss  Hannah  Wilson,  and  Ben- 
jamin Grey,  to  Miss  Nancy  Cudworth.  (Saturday,  October  29, 
1791.) 

Died.  In  the  bloom  of  life,  Mrs.  Ann  Glover,  the  amiable 
consort  of  Charles  Glover,  esq;  [verse]. 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Coachman,  relict  of 
the  late  William  Coachman,  Esq.  .  .  .  (Wednesday,  Nov. 
2,  1791.) 

Died.  Lately,  at  Col.  Wylly's,  near  Savannah,  Mr.  James 
Lincoln,  of  this  place.    (Friday,  Nov.  4,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  John  Davall,  to  Miss 
Martha  Addison,  of  St.  Thomas's  parish.  (Saturday,  November 
5,  1791.) 

Died.  In  this  city,  last  Sunday  morning,  Mr.  John  Niot.  A 
few  dsLys  ago,  at  Columbia,  Mr.  Robert  Hewes,  printer.  (Tues- 
day, November  8,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last.  Dr.  Alexander  Garden, 
of  St.  Thomas's,  to  Miss  Lessesne,  daughter  of  Daniel  Lessesne, 
Esq;  deceased.    (Wednesday,  Nov.  9.  1791.) 

Georgetown;  Died.  On  Tuesday  the  18th  inst.  Mrs.  Horry, 
the  amiable  consort  of  Mr.  Peter  Harry.    (Friday,  Nov.  11, 1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Samud  Wigfall,  Esq;  to  Miss 
Wigfall,  only  daughter  of  Joseph  Wigfall,  Esq;  of  St.  Thomas's 
parish. 

^  He  is  buried  on  a  plantation  on  the  Ashley  river  (see  this  Magazine,  vol. 
ix,  p.  36). 


MAIUOAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  85 

Died.  On  Wednesday,  last,  Mrs.  Tart,  consort,  of  Nathan 
Tart,  Esq;  of  St.  Thomas's  parish.     (Monday  Nov.  14,  1791.) 

Died.  In  this  dty,  Mr.  William  George.  (Wednesday,  Nov. 
16,  1791.) 

Died.  In  Rhode  Island,  Mr.  Samuel  Miller,  of  this  City. 
(Thursday  Nov.  17,  1791.) 

Died.  In  this  dty,  Mr.  Arthur  Honeywood.  (Friday,  Nov. 
18,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening.  Captain  John  Jonah  Murrell, 
of  Santee,  to  Miss  Martha  Hall,  daughter  of  William  Hall,  Esq; 
deceased. — ^At  Santee,  Dr.  William  Smith  Stevens,  of  this  dty, 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Legare,  daughter  of  Joseph  Legare  Esq;  of 
St.  James. — On  the  10th.  in  St.  Paul's  parish,  Mr.  William  Bran- 
ford  Peters,  to  Miss  Charlotte  Baker  yoimgest  daughter  of  Rich- 
ard Bohim  Baker,  Esq;  deceased. 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  at  Peedee,  Mrs.  Harriot  Postell, 
wife  of  John  Postell,  Esq;  of  that  place.  Mr.  Joseph  Sanders,  of 
St.  Thomas's  parish.     (Saturday,  Nov.  19,  1791.) 

Married.  At  James  Island,  on  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  James  Blair, 
to  Miss  Eliza  Todd,  both  of  Charleston.  (Monday,  Nov.  21, 
1791.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last,  at  Camden,  Col.  Joseph  Kershaw,  of 
that  place.     (Tuesday,  Nov.  22,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  at  Walnut  Hill,  near  Dorchester,  in 
the  14th  year  of  her  age.  Miss  Harriet  Walter,  daughter  of  Mr. 
John  A.  Walter  deceased.  Her  death  was  occasioned  by  the 
bums  she  received  in  the  fire  of  the  16th  instant,  as  mentioned  in 
our  paper  of  Saturday  last.  During  the  fire  she  saved  the  lives 
of  two  negro  children,  by  bringmg  them  down  stairs;  she  then 
ascended  the  stairs  again,  and  assisted  her  aunt  the  third  time  she 
went  to  get  some  dothes,  and  save  some  artides,  but  before  her 
return  the  flames  had  hemmed  her  in.  (Thursday,  Nov.  24, 
1791.)« 

'  About  one  o'dock,  on  Tuesday  morning  last,  the  elegant  house  of  Ralph 
Izard,  jun.  Esq;  a  few  miles  from  Dorchester,  took  fire  and  was  burned  to  the 
ground.  Miss  Oliphant  and  the  two  daughters  of  Mr.  John  AUejme  Walter, 
deceased,  were  living  in  the  house,  which  was  ahnost  in  a  general  blaze  before 
they  were  af^raised  of  their  danger.  Miss  Oliphant  and  the  eldest  Miss 
Walter  escaped  unhurt,  but  the  youngest,  in  attempting  to  save  some  articles 


86  so.   CA.   HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died.  Last  week,  at  the  Saltketchers,  Captain  Joseph  Stevens, 
of  that  place. 

Died  at  Wihnington,  North  Carolina,  on  the  14th  instant,  Mrs. 
Alicia  MacNeil,  the  amiable  consort  of  Dr.  Daniel  McNeil,  of 
that  place (Friday,  Nov.  25,  1791.) 

Died.  At  Bristol,  in  England,  the  Rev.  Caleb  Evans,  D.D., 
principal  of  a  celebrated  academy  in  that  place,  belonging  to  the 
Baptist  congregation.     (Saturday,  Nov.  26,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  Mrs.  Mary  Scott,  wife  of  Mr.  James 
Scott,  merchant  of  this  city.     (Monday,  Nov.  28,  1791.) 

Died.    On  the  25th  inst.  at  Capers  Island,  Miss  Hannah  Forest, 

in  the  bloom  of  life In  this  city,  in  the  bloom  of 

youth.  Master  Joseph  Righton,  nephew  of  Mr.  M'Cully  Righton, 
of  this  city.     (Tuesday,  Nov.  29,  1791.) 

Married.  Last  Saturday  evening  Mr.  John  Miller,  jun.  to 
Miss  Jane  Grey.     (Wednesday,  Nov.  30,  1791.) 

Died.  At  Stono,  on  Thursday  last,  in  the  prime  of  life,  Mr. 
John  Ellis,  much  regretted  by  a  numerous  acquaintance.  (Mon- 
day, Dec.  5,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Paul  Pritchard,  of  this  city. 
(Tuesday  Dec.  6,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  the  10th  instant,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Purcell, 
relict  of  Mr.  James  Purcell,  aged  70  years.  (Wednesday,  Dec. 
14,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  in  this  city,  Mr.  William  Holmes,  of 
John's  Island.     (Saturday  Dec.  17,  1791.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Robert  Brodie,  to  Miss 
Mary  North.     (Monday,  December  19,  1791.) 

Died.  In  St.  Stephen's  parish,  on  Friday  morning  last,  Mr. 
Benjamin  Walker.     (Tuesday,  Dec.  20,  1791.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Thomas  Joel,  Esq;  of  St. 
Thomas,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Lee,  daughter  of  Major  William  Lee, 
of  Charleston.     (Friday,  Dec.  23,  1791,) 

of  value,  was  much  burnt,  and  her  life  is  despaired  of.  A  negro  woman  who 
was  in  the  second  story,  finding  the  flames  had  reached  the  stairs,  took  up  a 
small  trunk,  and  threw  herself  out  of  the  window,  but  providentially  received 
no  injury,  although  from  a  great  height.  The  furniture  and  everything  in 
the  house  was  consiuned  with  the  building.    (Saturday,  November  19,  1791.) 


MAIUOAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  87 

Died.  On  Thursday,  the  22d  instant,  in  this  city,  Mr.  George 
Fisher.    (Saturday,  Dec.  24,  1791.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  after  a  short  iUness,  Mrs.  Elizabeth 
Harvey,  consort  of  Mr.  Benjamin  Harvey,  of  this  dty.  (Wednes- 
day, Dec.  28,  1791.) 

Married.  On  Monday  last,  John  Rutledge,  jun.  Esq;  to  Miss 
Sarah  Smith,  daughter  of  the  Rev.  Robert  Smith,  of  this  dty. 
(Friday,  Dec.  30,  1791.) 

||.Died.    On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  John  Sonuners,  house  carpenter, 
of  this  dty.    (Saturday,  Dec.  31,  1791.) 

{To  be  conHnued.) 


HISTORICAL  NOTES 

REBUILDING  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH 

The  following  advertisement  fixes  an  approximate  date  for  the 
rebuilding  of  Christ  Church,  which  was  burned  by  the  British  in 
1783:— 

"CAm/  Church  Parish  AprU21,1787. 

Whereas  the  Vestry  and  Church  wardens  of  the  Episcopal 
Church  in  the  parish  of  Christ  Church,  have  resolved  to  rebuild 
the  church  and  vestry  house,  as  speedily  as  possible;  therefore, 
public  notice  is  hereby  given  to  any  person  or  persons,  that  are 

inclined  to  undertake  the  rebuilding  of  the  same 

Stephen  Townsend  and  Paul  Pritchard 

Church  wardens. 
S.  C.  GazeUe  and  Morning  Post,  May  8,  1787, 

advertisements  of  artists 

Following  are  a  few  advertisements  of  artists  and  their  works 
which  have  been  gathered  from  the  Gazettes, 

S.  C,  Gaz,  Dec.  IS,  1766.  Warwell,  from  London,  now  at 
Charles-Town,  South-Carolina,  Begs  leave  to  inform  the  Curious, 
who  are  collecting  Natural  Productions  for  Cabinets  or  Grottoes, 
that  they  may  be  supplied  with  a  great  variety  from  his  collection 
opposite  to  the  Right.  Hon.  Lord  Montagu's — He  is  finishing  a 
Grotesque  Fountain  of  400  weight,  composed  of  English  Topazes, 
Amethists  and  other  Petrifications,  and  builds  small  ones  for 
chimnies  niches,  or  brackets — ^He  paints  Altar-Pieces,  Landscapes, 
Sea  pieces.  Scene  painting,  coaches,  windows  and  coach  Blinds, 
Deceptive  Triumphal  Arches,  Ruins,  Obelisks  Statues  &c  for 
Groves  and  Gardens — Pictures  carefully  cleaned  or  mended 
Gilding.  A  collection  of  Ancient  Drawings  to  be  sold.  White- 
washed rooms  or  passages  painted  in  water-colours,  in  a  new  and 
lively  taste.  On  April  13,  1767.  "Warwell  Sr."  advertises  that 
he  intends  to  leave  the  Province. 

So,  Ca.  Gazette,  March  30,  1767.  Lewis  Turtaz,  Limner  and 
miniature  painter,  from  Lausanne  in  Switzerland,  Gives  notice 

88 


HISTORICAL  NOTES  89 

That  he  proposes  to  open  a  School  on  Monday  of  April  next,  at 
Mr.  David  Boillat's  (French  Baker)  in  Church  Street,  to  teach 
Drawing  in  all  its  branches  and  also  Miniatures;  and  that  he  will 
wait  upon  ladies  that  chose  it  at  their  own  houses. 

He  will  also  draw  Ladies  and  Gentleman's  Pictures  in  minia- 
ture at  the  moderate  rate  of  Twenty  poimds  for  a  head  and  bust; 
one  half  to  be  paid  at  the  beginning  the  other  half  on  delivery  of 
the  peice. 

Ibid.  November  30,  1767.  A  parcel  of  Italian  Marble  Chim- 
ney Pieces  of  the  newest  fashion  to  be  sold,  Enquire  on  board  the 
ship  America  lying  at  Col.  Beale's  wharf  of 

John  Rainier. 

So.  Ca.  Gazette.  April  4, 1771.  Mr.  Foumier,  Miniature  Painter, 
&c.  Is  removed  to  Mrs.  Rivers  in  Tradd  St.,  almost  opposite  to  Mr. 
Andrew  Broughton's:  and  having  now,  in  a  great  measure,  recov- 
ered his  health,  is  ready  to  wait  upon  any  Gentlemen  or  Ladies 
who  may  be  pleased  to  favor  him  with  their  Commands. 

Ibid.  May  7,  1772.  Mr.  Foumier,  Miniature  painter  &c. 
Is  returned  from  Georgia,  He  may  be  found  at  Mr.  Juhans,  in 
the  House  lately  possessed  by  Dr.  Fayssoux,  near  the  New-Eng- 
land or  White  Meeting. 

So.  Ca.  Gaz.  Mar.  26,  1772.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  Bambridge, 
an  ingenious  Limner,  &c.  embarked  on  his  Return  to  Philadelphia, 
with  some  other  Passengers  in  the  Brigt.  Prince  of  Wales,  Capt. 
Moore. 

Ibid.    April   5,    1773 From    Philadelphia,    Mrs. 

Benbridge  (the  wife  of  Mr.  Benbridge,  Portrait  Painter)  a  very 
ingenious  Miniature  Paintress. 

[Henry  Bembridge  was  bom  in  Philadelphia  about  1750;  studied 
in  Rome  under  Pompeio  Battoni,  and  received  instructions  from 
Meng.  He  is  said  to  have  commenced  his  portrait  painting  in 
CharlesTown,  and  was  the  instmctor  of  Thomas  Coram.  He 
married  a  Miss  Sage  of  Philadelphia.  In  1799,  according  to 
Thomas  Sully,  he  was  settled  in  Norfolk,  Va.  He  died  in  Phila- 
delphia in  poverty.  (Dtmlap — Hist.  Arts  of  Design  in  V.  S. 
vol.  1.) 

The  Copley-Pelham  Letters,  page  208,  Dr.  John  Morgan  to  Mr. 
Byers,  Philadelphia,  Nov.  24, 1773,  mentions  Bembridge  as  follows 

"In  a  visit  I  lately  made  to  CharlesTown  South  Carolina,  I 


90  so.   CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

saw  Mr.  Bambridge,  who  is  settled  very  advantageously  there, 
and  prosecutes  his  Profession  with  Reputation  and  success."] 

So  Ca,  Gaz.  Dec.  31,  1772.  The  General  Gazette  of  last  Mon- 
day tells  us,  that  "A  Lady  arrived  here  a  few  Days  ago  who  is  a 
Niece  of  her  Majesty*s  Portrait  Painter,  the  celebrated  Miss  Reid, 
and  was  by  her  instructed  in  the  Art  of  painting  Portraits  in 
Crayons,  which  we  are  informed,  she  intends  following  here." — 
But  that  Paper  does  not  favour  us  with  her  name,  or  make  it 
known  that  she  is  a  Scotch  Lady,  and  related  to  the  Hon.  His. 
Majesty's  Superintendant  &c.  of  Indian  Affairs  for  this  District. 

So,  Ca,  Gaz,  Dec.  12,  1774.  The  Drawing  and  Painting 
Academy  (as  formerly  advertised)  was  opened  on  Wednesday  the 
23d.  Nov.  last,  by  John  &  Hamilton  Stevenson,  Limners,  who 
propose  to  teach  the  Principles  and  Practice  of  this  beautiful  Art 
in  all  its  various  Branches,  after  the  Manner  they  are  taught  in 
the  Roman  Schools,  viz.  Portraits,  Landscapes,  Flowers,  Birds, 
Figures  and  Drawing  from  the  Bust  and  Statue,  in  a  stile  never 
before  taught  in  this  Province;  Painting  from  the  Life  in  Crayons 
and  in  Miniature  on  Ivory:    .... 

They  Continue  to  paint,  as  usual,  at  their  House  in  Meeting 
Street,  next  Door  to  James  Parson's  Esq;  History  and  Portraits, 
Large,  in  Miniature  for  Rings  and  Bracelets;  executed  in  Colors, 
in  a  Manner  never  before  attempted:  also  sewing  with  Hair  upon 
Silk  for  Bracelets,  a  Method  which  preserves  the  Hair  and  Work 
to  the  Latest  Ages 

Hamilton  Stevenson  has  been  employed  for  some  years  of 
late  in  the  most  distinguished  Families  at  Home,  as  a  teacher  of 
Drawing  and  painting.  They  intend  to  give  a  Constant  Place 
and  Materials  gratis  to  Two  Young  Men  of  Genius  that  may  be 
recommended  by  the  Church-Wardens  or  the  South  Carolina 
Society,  the  Place  to  be  supplied  by  new  Pupils  every  Year. 

5.  C.  Gazette  J  Supplement  j  Oct.  31,  1774.  Proposals  for  publish- 
ing by  Subscription,  A  view  of  Charles-Town;  This  view  has  been 
taken  with  the  greatest  Accuracy  and  Care  by  Mr.  Leech,  who 
is  now  employed  about  painting  a  finished  Picture  from  the  Draw- 
ings already  made  by  him^ — ^The  Picture  will  be  ready  to  send 
home  by  the  best  Ships,  expected  from  London,  in  order  to  be 
engraved;  and  will  be  so  exact  a  Portrait  of  the  Town,  as  it  appears 
from  the  Water,  that  House  in  View  will  be  distinctly  known: — 


mSTOiaCAL  NOTES  91 

And  that  nothing  might  be  wanting  to  render  it  most  complete, 
the  two  greatest  Artists  in  the  World — Messrs.  WooUett  and 
Smith  have  been  engaged  to  undertake  to  engrave  it. 

Mr.  Leech  cannot  support  the  Expence  of  such  a  Work  without 
Assistance,  and  therefore  proposes  to  all  the  Lovers  of  Polite  Arts, 
opening  a  subscription,  at  so  low  a  Price  as  a  Guinea  a  Piece. — 
Half  to  be  paid  down  at  the  Time  of  Subscribing,  the  other  half 
on  the  Delivery  of  the  Print. 

The  Print  will  be  Thirty  Inches  long,  by  Eighteen  high:  and  the 
Impressions  may  be  most  compleate,  as  soon  as  Three  Hundred 
are  subscribed  for,  the  Subscription  will  be  closed,  the  Picture 
sent  Home,  and  no  more  Struck  off  than  are  Subscribed  for. 

The  Print  will  be  delivered  the  First  of  January,  1776 

Subscriptions  will  be  received  by  Mr.  Leech,  at  his  House  in 
Meeting  Street,  opposite  the  Surveyor  General's  Office 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
CHARLESTON.  S.  C. 


VOLUME  XXE,  No.  3  JULY,  1920 


PUBLICATION  COMMITTEE 

JosEsn  W.  Babmweix^  Henst  A.  M.  Smith, 

A.  S.  Saixey,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webber. 


CONTENTS 

Swiss  Notes  on  South  Carolina 93 

The  Register  of  Christ  Church  Parish lOS 

Extracts  from  the  Journal  of  Mrs.  Ann  Manigault,  1754-1781  112 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  the  City  Gazette 121 

Cemetery  Inscriptions  from  Christ  Church  Parish 132 

Motte  Alston  Read 136 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  I,  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  Historical  Society.  Members  of  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Membership  fee  is  84.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January),  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Society,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 
^  $>ovtb  Carolina  Historical  Soqety, 

Charleston,  S.  C, 


NOV  26  1920 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXI  JULY,  1920  No.  3 


SWISS  NOTES  ON  SOUTH  CAROLINA 
By  Gilbert  P.  Voigt 

"On  Tuesday  last  [February  1st]  arrived (Charlestown) 

Capt.  Dunbarr  from  Rotterdam  with  above  200  Switzers  out  of 
the  Canton  of  TOCEIENBURGH  [Toggenburg],'  who  are  come  to 
settle  a  Township  on  Savanna  River  called  New  Windsor,  which 
was  reserved  for  them  upon  a  Petition  to  the  Honorable  the  Gov- 
ernor and  Council,  granted  some  time  since  to  one  of  their  Com- 
missioners Sebastasian  Zouberbuhler,  who  was  sent  here  by  them 
to  look  out  for  and  pitch  upon  Land  which  he  should  think  most 
convenient  for  planting  of  hemp  and  Flax,  and  which,  't  is  hoped 
in  time  will  be  of  no  small  Advantage  to  this  Province," 

So  reads  an  item  in  the  Gazette  for  January  29-February  5, 1737. 
This  party  of  German-Swiss  settlers  had  left  their  mountainous 
fatherland  "in  the  beginning  of  August  last"  [1736]  and  bad  jour- 
neyed to  Rotterdam,  where  they  arrived  "in  September  following" 
and  "where  they  met  with  great  hardships  and  a  long  detention 
from  the  Magistrates"  of  that  city,  the  latter  "pretending  to  oblige 
them  to  embark  in  a  Dutch  vessell  when  the  said  familys  had  al- 
ready contracted  for  thdr  passage  to  Carolina  in  an  English  Ves- 
sell which  occasioned  a  demurage  of  Six  weeks  and  an  expence  of 

*  The  Toggenburg  is  a  portion  of  the  present  Canton  of  St.  Gall.  In  the 
Sdtzburger  Nackrichten  (vol.  3,  p.  1044),  Halle,  1740,  these  settlers  are  called 
"Switzers  from  the  Canton  of  Appenzell."  Cf.  the  "Petition"  of  Sebastian 
Zouberbuhler  quoted  below. 

93 


94  so.  CA.  mSTOIUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

several  hundreds  of  pounds".*  This  delay  had  entailed  a  ''Great 
Loss  and  Detriment"  to  these  ''familys"  as  well  as  to  Sebastian 
Zouberbuhler  and  "his  Friends".*  The  British  "Minister  at  the 
Hague"  had  interceded  for  them  with  the  result  that  they  had 
"obtained  leave  to  embark  in  the  said  English  vessel"  This  they 
had  done  in  November  1736  and  had  "sailed  directly  for  Caro- 
lina." 

In  Sebastian  Zouberbuhler's  account  of  the  migration  of  these 
Switzers,  no  mention  is  made  of  his  having  been  sent  to  South 
Carolina  by  them  for  the  purpose  of  selecting  and  securing  a  tract, 
or  tracts,  of  land,  as  is  stated  in  the  Gazette.^  It  was  "the 
Encouragements  given  to  Colonel  Puny  for  the  settling  a  Town- 
ship upon  the  River  Savanna"  that  led  him  to  come  to  the  Prov- 
ince in  the  year  1734  "at  his  own  cost  and  charge — ^in  hopes  of 
meeting  with  the  same  encouragements  in  proposing  to  People 
another  Township."  He  fmlher  states  that  "during  his  stay  in 
South  Carolina  he  travell'd  all  over  the  Country  to  take  a  view  of 
the  Lands,"  on  which  His  Majesty  had  "Ordered  the  Townships 
to  be  laid  out,  and  after  several  conferences  held  with  the  Coimdl 
at  Charles  Town  he  ...  .  concluded  a  Contract  with  them 
signed  the  17  th  July  1736  for  settling  a  Township  up  the  River 
Savanna  on  a  Place  formerly  an  Indian  Village,  then  called  Savanna 
Town  (at  present  New  Windsor)  and  for  bringing  over  one  hun- 
dred Protestant  Familys  in  the  space  of  one  Year  w***  a  farther 
promise  to  bring  over  two  hundred  Familys  more  after  the  first 
hundred  be  well  settled  and  able  to  subsist  themselves."^ — "In 
pursuance  of  the  said  Contract"  he  writ  to  his  friends  at  Appenzel 
to  come  away  with  as  many  familys  as  could  be  got  ready  accord- 
ingly they  set  out  with  about  fifty  Familys  consisting  of  one  him- 

'  "The  Humble  Petition  of  Sebastian  Zouberbuhler  of  the  Canton  of  Ap- 
pensel  in  Swiserland."  (Transcripts  in  the  Office  of  the  Historical  Commis- 
sion, vol.  18,  p.  176  flf.) 

•  See  page  95. 

^  He  first  proposed  in  1735  to  bring  over  100  Protestant  Swiss  families  and 
asked  for  Provisions,  Cattle,  Tools  and  free  Warrants  Plots  and  Grants. 
After  having  ''spent  some  time  in  viewing  several  Places  in  consequence  of  this 
Petition  and  having  been  taken  ill  he  found  it  impossible  for  him  to  transport 
to  Carolina  the  said  100  Familys  in  the  time  he  at  first  Proposed."  (Tran- 
scripts, vol.  XVni,  p.  267  fif.) 

'He  does  state  that  ''they  are  chiefly  qualified  for  cultivating  hamp  and 
Flax,  and  the  Lands  of  the  said  Township"  are  "very  fitt  for  that  purpose." 


SWISS  NOTES  ON  SOUTH  CAROLINA  95 

died  and  ninety  two  Persons  (most  able  body'd  young  people  and 
not  above  twenty  children  among  them)  ....  Upon  their 
arrival  in  Charles  Town,  the  party  encomitered  another  hindrance 
and  delay,  so  that  it  was  not  imtil  that  April  they  began  the  jour- 
ney to  New  Windsor.  "After  a  great  deal  of  Trouble,"  writes 
the  Rev.  Bartholomew  Zouberbuhler  from  "Charlestown  in  South 
Carolina"  April  9th,  1737,  "to  his  Son  Sebastian  Zouberb\ihler  at 
London,"*  "The  Government  of  South  Carolina  Resolved  on  the 
2d  of  April  to  assist  the  People  with  three  Pettiagos  for  Trans- 
porting them  and  their  Baggage  hence  to  New  Windsor.  But 
that  in  case  they  wanted  more  The  People  should  provide  them 
at  their  own  Charges.  Whereupon  the  People  who  absolutely 
refused  to  be  at  the  Charge  of  a  Sufficient  Number  of  Pettiagoes 
and  Boats,  came  to  me  and  told  me  that  as  I  had  promised  them 
that  they  should  be  carried  to  the  Place  free  of  all  Charges,  so  they 
desired  that  I  might  provide  them  with  a  sufficient  Number  of 
Pettiagoes  and  Boats.  Thus  I  foimd  myself  obliged  to  hire  One 
Pettiagoe,  over  and  above  those  provided  by  the  Government, 
for  which  I  am  to  pay  One  Pistole  per  diem;  as  also  Two  Trading 
Boats  to  carry  them  and  their  Baggage  from  Purrysburgh  up  the 
River  to  New  \^ndsor  for  the  Pettiagoes  cannot  go  higher  than 
Purrysburgh.  All  which  Expences  fall  upon  my  Account.  And 
therefore  you  must  see  to  find  Ways  and  Means  for  discharging 
the  said  Expences."  The  journey  from  Charles  Town  to  Purrys- 
burg  lasted  "four  full  Weeks,"  while  the  remaining  distance  from 
the  latter  point  to  New  Windsor  required  "  Seventeen  days  more."^ 
On  the  evening  of  the  seventh  of  May,  some  of  the  party*  arrived 
at  Ebenezer,  Ga.,  where  they  spent  the  night  with  the  Saltzburg- 
ers,  while  almost  a  month  later,  June  4th,  another  boatload  touched 
at  this  place.^ 

*Tlus  is  a  "translation  of  Part  of  a  Letter  ....  written  in  Hi^ 
German  by  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Bartholomew  Zouberbuhler,  etc."  Transcripts, 
voL  18,  pp.  232-33. 

^  ''Translation  of  Part  of  a  Letter  written  by  the  same  hand,  at  Charles- 
town  ye  4  December  1737."    Ibid. 

*  ''Yesterday  evening  (i.e.  May  7th)  a  large  boatful  of  Switzers  from  the 
Canton  of  AppenzeU  arrived  at  our  settlement  and  spent  the  night  here." 
Saltsburger  Nachrichten,    Part  1,  p.  1044. 

•"Yesterday  evening  (i.e.  June  4th)  during  our  prayer-meeting,  there 
arrived  here  from  Purrysburg  a  boatful  of  Switzers,  who  likewise  are  journey- 
ing to  their  place  near  Savanna  Town."    Ibid,,  p.  1060. 


96  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

The  emigration  of  these  settlers  of  New  ^A^dsor  is  inenti<»ied  at 
some  length  in  the  *'21sies  NeujakrsblaU  der  Zuerchersichen  Had/s- 
gesdlschaft;'  1821. 

''Enticed  by  these  descriptions,'^  the  number  of  emigrants  soon 
increased.  The  town  of  Savannah  (Savanna  Town?)  was  popu- 
lated chiefly  by  Switzers,  and  later  (sic!)  Newbem,  North  Caro- 
lina, was  likewise  settled  by  our  fellow-countrymen.  It  was 
observed  that  at  that  time  several  hundred  families  passed  through 
the  pass  near  Wallenburg  into  the  Cantcm  of  Basel  alone.  One 
of  the  largest  crowds,  consisting  of  inhabitants  of  eastern  Switzer- 
land, set  out  under  the  leadership  of  Governor  Tobler,  who  had 
been  dismissed  from  his  position  during  the  disturbances  that 
took  place  in  Appenzell  at  that  time,  and  of  a  St.  Gall  preacher 
by  the  name  of  Zuberbuhler.^  According  to  the  reports  of  the 
latter,  they  had  landed  happily  in  Charlestown  after  a  voyage  of 
seven  weeks.  During  the  journey  they  had  lost  only  two  chil- 
dren out  of  two  hundred  and  fifty  persons.  They  had  found 
enough  fertile  land  and  had  been  accorded  a  friendly  reception 
everywhere.  They  had  every  reason  to  be  sure  of  their  future 
prosperity,  provided  that  they  should  be  industrious  and  orderly. 
He  added  that,  in  view  of  these  facts,  his  son  would  return  to  St. 
Gall  shortly  and  would  bring  fifty  to  sixty  families  more.  The 
ordinances  of  the  government  prevented  this;  nevertheless  Tobler 
and  Zouberbuhler  kept  in  touch  with  their  fatherland  for  yet  a 

>^  ''An  exceedingly  favorable  description  of  those  districts  and  of  the  ad- 
vantages of  the  settlements  there  (i.e.  ''South  Carolina  and  Georgia") »  with 
an  appended  map,  by  a  native  of  Basel  who  was  living  there."  "A  consider- 
able edition"  of  this  work,  which  "appeared"  in  1711,  "had  been  quickly 
sold."  2)  A  publication  prepared  by  Col.  John  Pierre  Purry,  y^iuch  is  men- 
tioned as  follows:  "When  toward  the  end  of  the  year  1733,  Puny  made  a 
journey  to  Switzerland,  he  brought  with  him  several  letters  by  different  emi- 
grants, who  all  testified  as  to  their  great  satisfaction  with  their  new  father- 
land. He  himself,  too,  published  some  reports  about  Carolina.  These,  along 
with  the  afore-mentioned  letters,  were  translated  into  Gerqian,  under  the 
title    .    .    .    .    ,  printed,  and  scattered  everjrwhere." 

"  "There  is  a  man  among  them  (i.e.  the  settlers  of  New  Windsor,  who  q)ent 
the  night  of  May  7  th  at  Ebenezer),  whom  they  call  Governor.  He  is  said 
to  be  very  clever  and  of  high  repute  by  them.  To  some  of  the  Saltzburgers 
he  spoke  in  very  high  terms  of  the  district,  to  which  they  are  joume3dng  and 

which  he  himself  has  already  seen "    (Saltzburger  Nackrichten, 

Part  1,  p.  1044.) 


SWISS  NOTES  ON  SOUTH  CAROLINA  97 

long  while,  and  the  fonner,  who  was  not  unlearned  in  surveying 
and  astronomy,  dedicated  to  the  states  of  Glarus,  Appenzell  and 
the  three  confederacies  an  almanac^  for  the  year  1754,  which  con- 
tained a  description  of  South  Carolina  and  on  whose  title  page  he 
designated  himself  Justice  of  the  Peace  of  Granville  County. 
Meanwhile,  not  all  of  his  former  fellow-travelers  (i.e.  emigrants) 
had  been  in  like  measure  satisfied  with  their  lot.  Several  returned 
to  Europe  in  a  wretched  state,  and  one  of  these,  Wemhard  Trachs- 
ler  of  Elgg  published  a  short  accoimt  of  his  journey,  in  which  he 
complained  bitterly  of  the  hardships  of  the  journey,  the  unfriend- 
liness of  the  climate  and  of  the  inhabitants,  poor  food  and  dwell- 
ings, diseases,  wild  people  and  wild  animals,  and  dissuaded  every- 
one from  joume3dng  thither.  There  also  appeared  with  this  report 
a  lament  of  those  who  had  remained  behind  in  Carolina,  which 
contained  among  other  stanzas  the  following  one:  [Note.  A  prose 
translation  is  given.] 

''I  journeyed  from  a  free  land,  in  which  I  lived  honestly  and 
honorably.  I  did  not  know  of  Carolina,  where  I  am  now  a  slave. 
I  have  no  freedom  at  all.    Great  God,  grant  me  Thy  grace!" 

Hans  Wemhard  TracLsler's  "short  account  of  his  journey," 
which  has  been  mentioned  in  the  foregoing  paragraph,  bore  the 
following  title:  "Brief  Description  of  a  Journey  to  the  Province  of 
Carolina,  situated  in  the  West  Indies,  together  with  a  Report  of 
the  Character,  Nature,  and  Features  of  this  Land  by  a  Citizen 
who  Recently  Returned  to  his  own  Country."  It  was  published 
in  1738  at  Zurich  and  was  "printed  in  Burckli's  Printery."  A 
translation  which  follows  is  complete  save  for  a  few  words  that 
are  unintelligible  in  the  written  copy  from  which  it  was  made. 

"ELans  Wemhard  Trachsler  of  Elgg,  district  of  Zurich,  formerly 
soldier  in  Imperial  and  Ro3ral  French  service,  had  the  desire  to  see 
Carolina  and  undertook  to  do  it.  Accordingly  on  the  ninth  of 
September,  1736  he  took  leave  of  his  wife  and  children  at  Elgg 
and  with  eighty  five  gulden^'  cash  journeyed  to  Holland  alone. 
From  Basel  to  Rotterdam  it  costs  a  person  over  twelve  years  of 
age  eight  gulden;  from  four  to  twelve  years  four  gulden,  boat  pas- 
sage alone,  without  food  and  drink,  besides  baggage  six  gulden 

^  Bibliographies  of  Tobkr's  almanacs  prepared  by  Miss  Webber  and  Mr. 
A.  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  have  appeared  in  previous  numbers  of  this  magazine. 

» ''Till  1876  a  gulden  of  Is  8d  was  the  unit  in  the  South  German  States." 


98  so.  CA.  HISTOIUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

per  hundred  weight.  In  Rotterdam  he  met  many  persons  who 
also  intended  to  travel  thither,  from  various  places,  especially 
Switzers  from  Appenzell,  Pundten?  (Graubuenden?)  and  Rhein- 
tal;  among  whom  were  Mr.  Zuebli^^  of  St.  Gall,  Pastor  Zuberbueh- 
ler  of  Troguen,  Governor  Tobler  of  Herisau,  and  others.  These 
men  and  all  the  rest  present,  making  a  company  of  250  persons, 
entered  into  an  agreement  with  the  obtain  of  a  vessel  before  the 
voyage  to  the  afore-mentioned  province  of  Carolina.  He  under- 
took to  carry  them,  and  made  them  pay  him  for  freight,  care,  and 
food,  for  a  grown  person  five  louisd'ors;  for  a  person  from  three  to 
twelve  years  old,  two  and  a  half  louisd'ors;  and  for  children  under 
three,  nothing.  During  this  time  there  was  apportioned  to  them, 
in  messes  of  five  persons,  every  twenty-four  hours  on  Sundays 
and  Tuesdays,  dried  beef.  On  Saturdays,  pork;  on  Fridays,  cod- 

^  In  a  letter  of  the  Salzbuiger  pastors,  Boltstus  and  Gronau,  dated  July 
29,  1737,  mention  is  made  of  Mr.  Zueblin,  who  had  "recently  brought"  them 
''the  letters  and  the  gift,"  and  who  had  been  sick  in  Purrysbuig  "almost  as 
long  as  he"  had  been  "in  the  land."  From  the  diary  of  these  pastors  we  learn 
that  Mr.  Zueblin  of  Purrysburg  had  two  brothers  who  had  desired  to  be  taken 
in  at  Ebenezer.  The  date  of  this  item  is  Dec.  19,  1737.  The  entry  for  Feb. 
25, 1736  contains  the  information  that  two  brothers  named  "Zid)ely"  had  been 
suf^lied  with  provisions  "from  the  store-house  in  Savannah"  at  the  request 
of  the  pastors,  when  "some  time  ago"  they  had  been  "in  veiy  great  want  of' 
these  and  had  been  "forsaken  by  everybody."  Their  parents  in  St.  Gall  were 
said  to  be  "wealthy  people,"  and  they  wished  to  "pay  back  everything  with 
joy  in  due  time."  "Both  brothers  fear  God/'  we  are  told,  "and  make  use  of 
our  (the  Saltzburger  pastors')  ministry,  as  often  as  we  come  to  Purrysburg." 
From  the  entry  of  November  8,  1742,  we  learn  that  Mr.  David  Zuebli  had  a 

son  in  Switzerland,  who  was  studying  theology "The  father 

should  have  liked  to  have  had  him  become  the  German  preacher  in  Purrys- 
buig; but  .because  the  number  of  the  German  people  is  becoming  continually 
smaller  and  he  himself  no  longer  has  a  great  desire  to  remain  there,  therefore 
he  desires  that  the  German  people  in  Savannah  might  call  him  to  be  their 
preacher."  We  are  further  informed  (February  8,  1743)  that  "Mr.  Zuebli 
from  Purrysburg"  had  written  to  one  of  the  pastors  "that  he  wished  to  keep 
the  most  of  his  negroes  only  a  few  days  longer  and  to  release  himself  from 
this  burden  (or  charge)  and  to  change  his  manner  of  life  according  to  God's 
apparent  direction."  Again  (February  8,  1743)  we  are  told  that  "Mr. 
Zuebli"  had  "bought,  on  his  arrival  in  the  land,  a  plantation  of  two  hundred 
acres  on  the  Savannah  River,  but"  that  he  had  "long  ago  been  forced  by  the 
frequent  flooding,  which  now  for  two  years  had  continued  longer  than  for- 
merly, to  abandon  it  and"  had  "rented  another  in  the  interior  that"  was  "very 
remote  (isolated)."    [These  items  are  taken  from  the  Saltzburger  Nachrichten,] 


SWISS  NOTES  ON  SOUTH  CAROLINA  99 

fish;  on  other  days,  boiled  rice,  peas,  and  barley  together  with  a 
quart  of  water  and  beer  and  a  piece  of  zwieback  per  head.  Chil- 
dren under  three,  as  they  paid  no  passage,  were  counted  to  their 
parents.  But  this  supply  of  food  was  not  sufficient  for  them, 
they  being  people  not  accustomed  to  V03rages,  so  that  every  one  had 
to  try  at  times  to  buy  something  from  the  ship-steward  out  of  his 
own  pocket.  Moreover,  they  had  to  he  on  the  hard  floor  without 
any  beds,  and  the  sea  caused  them  many  sick  days  and  fever. 
After  twelve  weeks  and  three  dajrs  they  finaUy  arrived  in  Caro- 
lina, and  they  disembarked  in  the  chief  city,  Charleston,  situated 
in  South  Carolina,  and  were  lodged  in  two  shacks.  There  they 
caused  a  petition  to  be  presented  to  the  EngUsh  Council  and  the 
Governor  that  they,  like  those  who  had  arrived  before  them, 
might  receive  the  provision  and  support  for  the  first  year,  as  was 
promised  to  the  aforenamed  Pastor  Zuberbuehler's  son  in  Caro- 
lina and  even  in  London;  but  they  were  refused  and  silenced,  inas- 
much as  His  Royal  Majesty  of  England  has  issued  an  order  not 
to  advance  or  give  anything  more  to  anybody.^  Hereupon  they 
found  themselves  in  the  most  extreme  poverty;  they  had  to  eat 
themselves,  as  it  were;  home  and  hope  they  had  none;  work  they 
did  not  find.  They  scattered  here  and  there.  Some  remained 
in  Charlestown;  others  went  to  Purrysburg  and  Orangeburg, 
Congaree,  Savannah  (Savannah  Town,  i.  e.  New  Windsor?)  and 
other  places,  where  they  were  assigned  to  woodland  and  raw  fields; 
others,  and  especially  the  women  who  had  lost  their  husbands  on 
the  vo3rage,  begged.**    Trachsler,  for  his  part,  found  some  credit 

^  The  Minutes  of  Council  for  February  4,  1737/8  contain  the  reply  of  the 
Council  to  a  message  from  the  House,  in  which  reply  we  find  the  following 
words:  "  ....  the  late  Lieut*.  Governor  by  the  advice  of  His  Majesty's 
Council,  with  proper  prudence  and  Caution  near  a  Year  Agoe  Caused  an  Ad- 
vertizement  to  be  Published  and  Continued  in  the  Weekly  Gateite  giving 
Notice  of  the  Expiration  of  that  Law  (i.e.,  the  Appropriation  Law)  and  of 
the  Insufficiently  of  the  Fund  to  provide  for  the  poor  Protestants  then 
Arrived"    .... 

^*  On  February  3,  1737/8  a  message  was  sent  by  the  House  to  the  Council 
In  which  we  find  the  following  reference  to  the  plight  of  some  newly  arrived 
Immigrants:  "  .  .  .  .  Especially  as  we  have  Such  frequent  Complaints 
that  for  want  of  some  Provision  being  made  for  these  people  (Irish  Protes- 
tants) and  the  Other  Poor  Protestants  lately  arrived  in  this  Province,  this 
Town  is  filled  with  people  begging  from  Door  to  Door  in  So  much  that  Un- 
less they  are  Some  way  forthwith  provided  for  they  will  become  a  perfect 


100         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

and  began  to  butcher,  and  rented  in  Charlestown  a  shed  or  shanty 
made  of  boards  for  20  Batzen  of  our  money  per  week.  Some 
time  afterwards,  when  Spain  made  some  moves  looking  to  an 
invasion  of  the  country  and  on  this  account  the  fortresses  were 
occupied,  he  received  from  the  said  CouncU  in  Charlestown  the 
favor  to  be  placed  in  the  fortress  of  Port  Royal,  which  lies  in  the 
direction  of  Georgia,  as  sergeant  with  fifty  men  from  the  best 
people  under  the  command  of  a  lieutenant  from  Prussia.  Here 
they  had  enough  to  eat,  but  after  four  months  were  paid  off  and 
discharged.  Then  he  went  to  Orangeburg  and  tried  to  support 
himself  again  with  butchering  and  soap-boiling,  which  he  had 
learned  years  before  in  France.  He  also  entered  into  an  agree- 
ment with  a  captain,  to  whom  he  offered  to  teach  soap-boiling,  for 
four  years  for  a  half  of  the  profits.  But  he  was  unable  from  the 
very  beginning  to  come  to  any  accounting  with  the  gentleman. 
Therefore  he  applied  to  the  magistrate  and  there  had  himself 
released  from  the  contract.  As  he  now  had  some  money  on 
hand,  he  again  hired  passage  with  it  on  a  ship  and  sailed  back  to 
Holland,  taking  with  him  the  wife  of  a  smith  in  Troguen.  Only 
a  few  days  ago  he  returned  to  his  children  in  Elgg. 

All  persons  who  get  to  Rotterdam  will  be  transported  to  this 
province.  Such  as  are  provided  with  money  can  engage  passage 
themselves  on  the  ships,  which  sail  at  intervals.  But  such  as  are 
not  in  a  condition  to  do  this  will  be  taken  charge  of  and  sent  over 
by  the  Messrs.  Hoppen,^^  prominent  merchants  there,  (a  few 
unintelligible  words)  in  the  manner  described  above,  except  that 
those  who  live  only  by  grace  fare  even  somewhat  worse  in  the 
treatment  over  the  sea  and  in  this  province.  To  those  who  pay 
the  ship-passage  out  of  their  own  money,  inmiediately  a  portion 
of  land,  thirty  acres**  to  the  head,  is  apportioned,  but  without 

Nusance  to  the  Present  Inhabitant  of  the  Town."  Relief  and  action  was 
urged.  The  Council  replied  on  the  following  day  (cf .  note  on  preceding  page) 
and  recommended  that  the  ''poor  Protestants"  ''Enter  into  Service  without 
more  loss  of  time." 

'^  In  a  pamphlet  entitled  "Umstaendliche  Nachricht  vor  diejenigen,  welche 
auf  eine  sichere  Weise  nach  S.  C.  America,  ziehen  wollen,"  Speyer,  1741,  there 
is  a  copy  of  a  contract  drawn  up  between  some  emigrants  to  South  Carolina 
and  the  firm  of  "Archibald  Isaac  Zachariah  Hope,  Merchants  in  Rotterdam." 
The  date  of  this  contract  is  April  5,  1741. 

1*  This  should  be  fifty  instead  of  thirty  acres. 


SWISS  NOTES  ON  SOUTH  CAROLINA  101 

house,  baniy  victuals  nor  implements  for  the  cultivation  of  this 
land:  but  they  are  simply  assigned  to  the  apportioned  piece  of 
land  thus  bare  of  all  things.  It  is  true  that  in  the  beginning  the 
provision  in  victuals  and  other  things  was  advanced  to  the  Euro- 
peans who  arrived  in  this  land  for  the  first  year;  but  in  the  year 
1736  His  Majesty  of  England  issued  a  manifest  that  no  advance 
should  any  more  be  given  to  any  stranger.  But  the  others,  who 
are  taken  charge  of  by  the  aforenamed  Messrs.  Hoppen  in  Rotter- 
dam, are  sold  to  the  farmers  settled  there  for  four  years.  They 
serve  for  food  and  clothing,  but  must  do  such  work  as  is  too  severe 
for  them  in  this  hot  country  and  uses  the  most  of  them  up.  This 
South  Carolina  is  a  very  hot  country.  Already  in  March  the 
heat  is  as  great  as  in  the  middle  of  the  sununer  in  Switzerland. 
In  December  there  is  sometimes  wet  and  cold  weather,  but  not 
enough  to  freeze  at  this  time.  But  especially  in  the  approaching 
spring,  often  so  sharp  a  wind  blows  that  one  needs  the  best  cloth- 
ing if  one  wishes  to  work  outdoors.  Around  the  towns  and  along 
the  two  rivers  the  land  is  very  fertile,  so  that  anything  can  be 
planted  in  the  gardens;  but  there  are  no  grape-vines.  Every 
acre  around  there  is  worth  200  gulden. 

But  the  land  which  is  distant  from  the  rivers  and  which  is  dis- 
tributed to  the  new-comers,  is  hot  beyond  all  measure,  and  if  one 
wishes  to  plant  anything  at  all  on  it,  especially  in  the  beginning 
when  it  must  be  cleared,  it  requires  strong  hand-work.  This 
land  is  full  of  wild  men  who  live  in  the  woods  stark  naked,  but 
who  do  no  harm  to  other  people.  They  do  nothing  but  shoot 
wild  animals,  bears,  wolves  and  deer  and  bring  their  skins  and 
pelts  to  the  towns  to. sell  them  and  exchange  them  for  victuals. 
Besides,  there  are  very  many  negroes  who  have  been  sold  thither 
as  slaves.  These  people  are  worth  a  high  price,  because  they  are 
much  more  able  to  do  the  work  and  much  cheaper  to  keep  in 
food  and  drink  than  the  Europeans.  As  to  divine  service,  there 
are  neither  ministers  nor  churches  anywhere  except  in  the  chief 
city  Charlestown,  where  there  is  a  French  Church.**  Neither 
does  one  find  Bibles  or  other  books  for  sale.    In  Orangeburg,  a 

1*  I  am  indebted  to  Mr.  A.  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  for  the  information  that  at  this 
time  there  were  six  churches  in  Charlestown  alone. 


102  so.  CA.  mSTOIUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

goldsmithy  Gietzendanner  of  Liechtenstaeg,^  has  lately  set  up  as 
a  pastor  and  preached  every  Sunday  in  an  open  place  near  to  his 
own  cottage.  Children  as  old  as  nine  years  were  brought  to  him 
for  the  administration  of  baptism,  and  people  came  a  distance  of 
forty  English  miles  (one  of  which  makes  half  an  hour)  to  his  preach- 
ing. On  account  of  the  vehement  heat  and  the  bad  food  and  drink, 
everybody  who  comes  to  this  country  must  endure  severe  dis- 
eases, especially  fevers,  from  which  the  most  die.  One  sees  no 
money  consisting  of  silver  and  gold,  but  only  paper,  on  which  the 
English  coat  of  arms  and  the  value  are  printed.  There  are  notes 
of  four,  two  and  one  louisd'ors,  an  English  pound  containing  ten 
batzen  of  our  money,  and  so  on  down  to  a  half  crown,  which  is 
equal  to  ten  kreutzer.  If  anyone  is  fortunate  enough  to  obtain 
a  loan,  he  must  pay  ten  per  cent  interest  per  year  to  Englishmen 
for  it,  and  fifteen  per  cent  to  the  Jews,  who  have  also  invaded 
this  coimtry.  In  the  government  as  in  all  other  matters  there  is 
not  the  least  order.  Everybody  can  trade,  work  and  undertake 
whatever  he  wishes  to.  But  crimes,  especially  theft,  are  severely 
punished.  Everything  produced  by  handiwork  brings  a  high 
price;  clothing  and  agricultural  implements  can  scarcely  be  had. 
Tools  necessary  for  work  and  cultivating  the  ground  are  worth 
•very  much:  a  saw  is  sold  for  nine  English  pounds,  a  shovel  or  a 
hoe  for  thirty  batzen,  an  axe  for  twenty  batzen,  a  hand-mill  for 
nine  pennies,  and  so  forth.  This  country,  like  other  countries, 
is  subject  to  blessed  as  well  as  unfruitful  years;  but  all  provisions 
are  always  dear.  A  hundred  weight  of  rice  is  worth  four  to  five 
Carolina  poimds,  a  loaf  of  bread  half  a  p)ound,  a  pound  of  lean 
beef  a  batzen  (altogether  the  cattle  in  this  country  is  small,  and 
the  largest  ox  will  weigh  not  more  than  four  and  a  half  hundred 
weight;  it  is  not  stall-fed,  but  roams  wild  in  the  woods),  a  pound 
of  tallow  ten  kreutzer;  one  poimd  of  sea-fish  ten  kreutzer,  and  so 

^  In  the  GoMette  for  March  5-12  and  19-26,  1737  appeared  the  foUowicg 
advertisement: 

''Jno.  inrich  Giessendaner  Silversmith  gives  Notice,  that  he  makes  & 
mends  all  sorts  of  small  work,  designs  and  engraves  Seals,  Coats  of  Anns  &c 
in  Gold,  Silver,  Copper  or  Pewter.  He  lives  on  the  Green  by  the  Church  in 
the  House  of  Mrs.  Hammerton.  He  likewise  sells  a  Balsamus  Aromaticus 
good  for  the  head  and  tooth-ache  and  other  Infirmities,  also  an  excellent  and 
comfortable  Balsam  of  Mace." 


SWISS  NOTES  ON  SOUTH  CA&OLINA  103 

forth.  On  account  of  the  great  heat,  there  is  no  f ruit,  figs  and  the 
like.  The  drink  consists  of  bad  water  or  in  a  mixture  of  brandy, 
sugar,  lemon  and  water,  which  is  called  punch  there  and  is  dear. 
A  quart  is  sold  for  twenty  kreutzer.  But  it  is  quite  unhealthful 
and  unadapted  to  the  nature  of  Europeans.  Wine  from  Spain 
is  also  brought  into  the  country,  but  on  accoimt  of  the  high  price 
only  the  rich  can  afford  it.  Only  in  and  around  the  towns  are 
houses  to  be  found,  but  in  the  country  only  shacks  or  shanties 
made  of  boards  and  covered  with  brush,  in  which  the  people  stay. 
All  that  these  are  able  to  plant  on  the  land  given  to  them,  and  that 
too  with  the  most  laborious  work,  consists  of  Indian  com,  of  which 
they  make  cakes,  bake  them  at  the  fire  and  so  nourish  themselves. 
But  the  poor  get  nothing  all  the  year  round  for  their  sustenance 
but  potatoes,  which  they  dig  out  of  the  groimd  themselves. 
With  these  alone  they  have  to  keep  themselves  alive,  and  they  see 
neither  bread,  meat,  nor  an3rthing  else. 

This  province  of  South  Carolina,  here  described,  is  four  hundred 
miles  distant  from  Pennsylvania.  But  there,  according  to  reports, 
life  is  much  more  miserable  and  toOsome.  This  deponent,  Hans 
Wemhard  Trachsler,  met  some  of  the  people  who  disembarked 
there,  who  were  in  extreme  poverty  and  could  not  sufficiently 
lament  their  misery,  so  that  one  even  broke  out  into  this  lamen- 
tation: 'It  is  better  to  die  upon  the  ocean  than  to  come  into  West 
India  and  perish  there.'  For  not  a  few  die  from  misery  and  sorrow 
up)on  the  almost  endless  open  sea  and  find  a  grave  in  the  wild  waves 
of  the  desolate  ocean.  Therefore  one  cannot  sufficiently  thank 
God  when  he  gets  back  healthy  into  his  dear  fatherland  and  into 
his  old  home,  especially  as  it  is  very  difficult  to  get  free  and  away 
again;  for  it  must  be  known  that  if  one  wishes  to  leave  the  country 
again,  he  must  first  give  notice  at  the  state  chancellory  in  Caro- 
lina and  have  his  name  called  out  for  three  weeks  and  three  days 
in  order  that  if  anybody  has  any  claims  against  him,  he  may  report 
and  make  everything  right  before  his  departure.  But  the  princi- 
pal thing  is  that  they  are  not  willing  to  let  people  out,  because  the 
more  populous  the  country  is,  the  safer  they  fed;  among  other 
things  also  on  account  of  the  pests,  like  snakes  and  crocodiles,  of 
which  there  is  a  multitude.  Finally,  one  of  the  chief  hindrances 
to  getting  away  is  the  overwhelming  costs  which  are  demanded  of 
those  who  return.    For  instance,  the  deponent  and  Anna  Maria 


104         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

Hugendobler,  with  three  children,  had  to  give  162  gulden  for  pas- 
sage as  far  as  London,  Gabrief  Schaeffer,  however,  had  to  pay  125 
gulden  for  himself  alone,  because  they  had  to  give  him  more 
serviceable  food;  although  the  journey  is  also  long  and  one  reckons 
from  Carolina  to  Rotterdam  alone  2200  hours  on  the  water,  in 
which  there  is  many  a  bitterly  sad  moment,  to  which  the  person 
mentioned  at  the  outset  will  testify  from  his  own  experience  to 
the  end  of  his  days." 


THE  REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH 

C(^ied  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
{Continued  from  April) 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISMS 

Mary  the  Daughter  of  William  and  Jane  Joy  was  Baptized  by  the 
Revd.  Mr.  Charles  Martyn  in  Christ  Church  the  8th  July  1770. 

P^gy  the  Daughter  of  Daniel  and  Mary  Lewis  was  Baptized  by 
Mr.  Martyn  same  day  as  above. 

Nancy  the  Daughter  of  Charvill  and  Elizabeth  Wingood  was 
Baptized  by  Mr.  Martyn  same  day  as  above. 

The  Son  of  Samuel  and  Patty  Lacey  was  Baptized  by  Mr.  Mart3m. 
Same  day  as  the  above. 

Benjamin  the  Son  of  John  Sandford  and  Martha  Dart  was  Bom  in 
St.  Michaels  Parish,  Chas.  Town,  on  Thursday  Sept.  24th.  1767 
and  was  baptized  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  James  Crallan  assistant 
Lecturer  to  St.  Philips  Parish  on  November  25th  1767. 

Jacob  Motte  Dart,  the  Son  of  John  Sandford  Dart  and  Martha 
his  wife,  was  Bom  in  St.  Michaels  Parish  Chas.  Town,  April 
ye  13th.  1769  and  was  Baptized  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Robert  Cooper 
Rector  of  St.  Michaels  Parish,  April  27th.  1769. 

Isaac  Motte,  the  Son  of  John  Sandford  Dart  and  Martha  his  wife 
was  Bom  in  St.  Michaels  Parish,  Chas.  Town  on  Sunday  May  ye 
27th.  1770,  and  was  Baptized  in  Chas.  town  on  January  ye  1st. 
1772  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Robert  Smith,  Rector  of  St.  Philips, 
Sponsors. 

DEATHS  AND  BURIALS 

Beati  in  Domino  Morientes 

On  Sunday  June  ye  17th  1770  Departed  this  Life  Jacob  Motte 
Esq;  Thirty  Years  Public  Treasurer  of  this  Province,  and  was 
interred  in  his  Family  Burying  Ground  in  St.  Philips  Church 
Yard  on  Tuesday  following  Aged  Sixty  Nine  Years  Six[?] 
Months  and  Eighteen  Days. 

105 


106         so.  CA.  HISTOIUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

''His  Corps  was  attended  to  the  Grave  by  a  very  considerable 
Number  of  the  Inhabitants,  who  were  indeed  real  Mourners. 
The  Characters  of  Husband,  Parent  and  Relation,  in  which  he 
stood  foremost  may  be  paralelled,  but  cannot  be  exceeded.  His 
publick  Character  rendered  him  generally  known,  his  private 
virtues  as  unanimously  respected.  He  lived  in  constant  prac- 
tice of  every  Christian  duty  and  was  a  striking  example  of  that 
vivacity  and  cheerfullness  which  distinguishes  the  man  void  of 
o£Fence.  He  esteemed  every  good  character  and  in  return  was 
beloved  by  all.  His  Charity  was  distinguished  by  a  prudent 
application  to  deserving  objects — ^And  it  may  well  with  great 
truth  and  justice  be  said,  that  in  him  the  Province  has  lost  an 
excellent  citizen,  and  the  poor  a  most  generous  benefactor." 

Thomas  Lynch  Dart,  the  fourth  Son  of  John  Sandiford  Dart  and 
Martha  Dart,  was  bom  at  Cooks  Farm  in  Christ  Church  parish 
on  Saturday  Febrary  ye  10th  1776  and  W3S  privately  baptissed 
by  the  Revd.  Henry  Purcell  A.B.  Rector  of  the  said  Parish  on 
Thursday  June  6th  1776. 

the  Daughter  of  John  and  Sarah  Hollibush  and  Wife  of 

Mr.  Plowden  Weston,  of  Chas.  Town  Merchant,  Departed  this 
life  July  ye  14th  1771,  and  was  Buried  at  the  said  Weston's 
Plantation  in  this  Parish,  July  ye  17th  1771  AEr— Years,  the 
Revd.  Mr.  Jno.  Hinde.  A.M.  performed  the  service. 

William  Joy  Departed  this  life  February  ye  10  1772,  and  was 
Buried  in  this  Church  Yard  on  ye  12  of  said  Month  by  the  Revd. 
Henry  Purcell,  Minister  of  this  Parish.  AE  —  Years. 

Sarah  Page  Departed  this  Life  March  3  1772  and  was  Buried  at 
said  Pages  plantation  in  this  Parish  the  11  of  said  month  by 
the  Revd.  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  minister  of  this  Parish. 

John  Bennett  Senr.  Departed  this  Life  March  ye  1,  1772  and  was 
Burried  in  the  said  Parish  Mar  3, 1772  AE  96  years. 

Ann  Wrand  wife  of  William  Wrand  Departed  this  Life  Novr.  ye 
18:  1770  and  was  Buried  at  the  Plantation  of  Oliver  Spencer 
Senr.  in  this  Parish  Novr.  ye  20: 1770.  AE  31  years. 

Elizabeth  Daughter  of  John  and  Esther  Rose  Departed  this  Life 
August  ye  29th  1772  and  was  Buried  in  the  Family  Burying 
Ground  of  the  late  Jacob  Bond  Esq;  in  this  Parish  on  Monday 
Evening  August  ye  31:  1772  Ae  —  Years. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  107 

Susannah  the  Daughter  of  James  BoUough  Departed  this  life  June 

12th  1772  and  was  Buried  the  13th  June  1772— By  Mr.  Henry 

Purcell  of  this  parish. 
Rebecker  Oliver  Wife  of  Mark  Olive  Departed  this  life  March  14, 

1773  and  was  Bury'd  the  15  Instant  by  Mr.  Henry  Purcell 

Rector  of  this  Parish. 
On  Thiursday  Evening  September  ye  10th:  1772  was  interred  at 

Hobcaw  in  this  Parish,  the  remains  of  [Charles]  Little  Esquire, 

(Lieutenant  of  his  Majesty's  Ship  the  GibralUr.  Sir  Thomas 

Rich,  (Bart.  Conmiander)  a  Gentleman  greatly  lamented  by  all 

who  had  the  pleasure  of  his  acquaintance,  for  his  many  good 

qualities. 
On  Friday  Night  April  ye  2nd  1773  Departed  this  Life  Mr.  Henry 

Linn,  (Nephew  to  Mr.  David  Linn)  much  regretted  by  all  that 

knew  him,  his  remains  was  interred  in  the  Scot's  Burying  Ground 

Charlestown  on  Sunday  Evening  April  ye  4th  1773. 
Thomas  Player  Sener,  Departed  this  Life  May  the  4th,  1773  and 

was  Buried  in  the  said  parish  of  the,  (sic)  6th  Instant,  aged  — 

years. 
Sarah  Duva  Departed  this  Life  April  the  4, 1772  and  was  Bury'd 

the  5th  Instant  By  the  Revrd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of 

this  Parish. 
Elizabeth  Dorrell  the  wife  of  John  Dorrell  Departed  this  Life 

November  the  1st  1773  and  was  Bury'd  the  2d-1773  in  this 

parish. 
Daniel  Lewis  Senr  Departed  this  life  December  the  18th  1773 

and  was  Buried  at  the  Parish  Church  in  Christ  Church  parish  on 

Monday  the  20th  of  the  said  Instant,  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry 

Purcell  Jun'r. 
Thomas  Durand  the  son  of  Levi  and his  wife  Departed 

this  Life  May  the  9  1774  and  was  Buried  at  the  parish  Church 

in  Christ  Church  Parish  on  thursday  the  12th  of  the  same 

Instant — By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell. 
Sarah  the  Daughter  of  Frances  and  Mary  Jones  Departed  this  life 

August  ye  6th  1774  and  was  Buried  at  the  parish  Church  in 

Christ  Church  parish  on  Sunday  the  8th  of  the  said  Instant — 

By  the  Rev.  Henry  Purcell  Junr. 
Ralph  Yoimg  the  Overseer  of  John  Dart  Esqr  Departed  this  Life 

December  the  3d  1774  and  was  Buried  at  the  parish  Church  in 


108         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

Christ  Church  Parish,  on  Sunday  the  4th  of  the  same  Instant 
By  the  Rev'd  Henry  Purcell  Junr. 

John  Williams  Departed  this  Life 1774  and  was  Buried 

at  the  Parish  Church  in  Christ  Church  parish  on  Sunday  of  the 
same  Instant  By  the  Revd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Junr. 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISMS 

Daughter  of  Joseph  and  Hannah  Cook  was  Bom  and 


Baptized  on  Sunday  July  ye  14th  1774,  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  John 
Hinde  A.M.  Minister  of  this  Parish. 

Daniel  the  Son  of  Francis  and  Mary  Jones  was  Bom  and  Baptized 
July  21st  1771,  by  the  Revd-Mr.  John  Hinde,  A.M.  Sponsors 
Mesrs  John  Jones  and  John  Whitesides  and  Mrs  Sarah  Dorrell. 

Sarah  the  Daughter  of  Robert  and  Martha  Dorrell  was  bom 
September  ye  22nd  1771  and  Baptized  February  ye  — ,  1772  By 
the  Revd.  Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Philip  the  Son  of  John  and  Ann  Jones,  was  Bora  October  ye  14 
1772  and  Baptized  January  the  12th  1772  by  the  Rev'd  Mr. 
Henry  Purcell  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Robert  the  Son  of  Robert  and  Marthar  Dorrell  was  Bom  May  the 
25th,  1778  (corrected  to  1768?). 

Mary  the  Daughter  of  Samuel  and  Marthar  Lacey  was  Bom  on 
November  the  4th  1772,  and  Was  Baptized  at  the  Church  on 
Sunday  January  the  3d.  1773.  by  the  Revd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell 
A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Thomas  the  Son  of  John  and  Ann  Jones  was  Bom  November  the 
4th  1769,  and  was  Baptized  December  the  25th  1769  By  the 
Revd.  Mr.  Thomas  Panting  A.M. 

Mary  the  daughter  of  John  and  Sarah  Hartman  was  bom  Novem- 
ber 20th  1770. 

Elizabeth  the  Daughter  of  Andrew  and  Elizabeth  Hibben  was 
Baptized  in  Christ  Church,  on  Sunday  March  the  28th  1773,  by 
the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  Parish- 
Sponsors,  Colonel  George  Paddon  Bond,  Mrs.  Mary  Mibier 
and  Miss  Sarah  Bond. 

Sarah  the  Daughter  of  Frances  and  Mary  Jones  was  Baptized  in 
Christ  Church,  on  Sunday  March  the  28th  1773,  By  the  Revd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  parish. 


REGISTEK  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  109 

George  the  Son  of  John  and  Sarah  Hartman  was  Bom  February 
the  7th  1773,  and  Baptized  the  27th  of  June  1773,  By  the  Revd. 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Thomas  and  Jean  Twins  of  Thomas  and  Jean  Whiteside  was  Bom 
Jime  the  22,  1773,  and  was  Baptized  the  12  of  December  1773, 
By  the  Revd.  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  and  rector  of  this  parish. 

John  The  Son  of  John  and  Ann  Jones  was  bom  July  the  30th  1773 
and  was  Baptized  September  the  26,  1773,  by  the  Revd.  Mr. 
Smith  Rector  of  St.  Philips  Parish. 

William  the  Son  of  William  and  Mary  Bennet  was  Bom  September 
the  26th  1773,  and  was  Baptized  November  the  21st  Instant 
1773,  by  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this 
Parish. 

Mary  the  Daughter  of  Peter  Croft  and  Mary  his  wife  was  Bom 
1775— and  was  Baptized  January  the  8th  1775  By  the  Rev'd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  A.B.  and  Rector  of  this  Parish,  Sponsors, 
Mrs.  Mary  White,  Miss  Mary  White. 

MARRIAGES 

Peter  Croft  was  Married  to  Miss  Mary  Boone  Spinster  the  Daugh- 
ter of  William  Boone  Deceased  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Henry  Pur- 
cell A.B.  Rector  of  This  Parish.    [No  date  given.] 

George  Arthur  was  Married  to  Miss  Sarah  Whitesides  Spinster, 
on  Friday  October  the  30th  1772,  by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Alexander 
Garden  Rector  of  Saint  Thomas  and  Saint  Dennis's  Parish. 

Thomas  Whitesides  was  Married  to  Jean  Joy  Relict  of  William 
Joy  on  Sunday  the  23d  May-1772,  by  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry 
Purcell  A.B.  Rector  of  Christ  Church  Parish. 

Samuel  Wayney  [corrected  in  another  hand  to  Waning,  and  Mr. 
Cheves,  in  his  copy,  suggests  that  it  is  Venning]  was  dudy 
Married  to  Miss  Sarah  Murrell  Spinster,  on  July  ye  1st.  1773, 
By  the  Rev'd  Henry  Purcell  A.B.  Rector  of  this  parish. 

Joseph  Huggins  was  duly  Married  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Murrell 
Spinster  on  July  the  2nd  1773  by  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell, 
A.B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

John  Eden  was  Duely  Married  to  Miss  Rebekah  Player  Spinster 
on  Febmary  the  16th  1774,  by  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell, 
A.B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 


110         so.  CA«  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

William  Player  was  Dudy  Married  to  Miss  Ann  Lewis  Daughter 
of  Daniel  Lewis  Dec'd  on  Monday,  April  3d  1775,  By  the  Rev'd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell  A.B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

DEATHS  AMD  BUIUALS 

David  Linn  Departed  this  Life  December  the  9th  1774  and  was 
Buried  at  the  Plantation  of  the  said  Deceased  on  December  the 
nth,  1774  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  A.B.  and  Rector 
of  this  Parish — aged  73  Years. 

Thomas  son  of  Thomas  and  Jeane  Whiteside  Departed  this  Life 
Sepr.  1,  1775,  and  was  Buried  at  the  Parish  Church  the  2d. 
Sept,  1775— By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  said 
Parish. 

Jeane  Daughter  of  Thomas  and  Jeane  Whiteside  Departed  this 
Life  the  5  September  1775  and  was  Buried  the  7th  of  the  same 
distant  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  said  Parish. 

Sarah  Daughter  of  William  Rowser  and  Mary  his  Wiie  Departed 
this  Life  September  1,  1775  and  was  Buried  the  2,  of  the  same 
Instant. 

Elizabeth  Flemming  Departed  this  Life  21st  September  1775  and 
was  Buried  at  the  Parish  Church  23d  September  1775,  By  the 
Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Anna  Daughter  of  Thomas  and  Jeane  Whiteside  Departed  this 
Life  2d  September  1775  and  Buried  at  the  Parish  Church  2d 
September  1775. 

Samuel  Vamer  Departed  this  Life  6th  Dec'r  1775  and  was  Buried 
at  the  parish  Church  7th  Dec'r  1775  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry 
Purcell  rector  of  said  Parish. 

Daughter  of  Peter  and  Mary  Croft  Departed  this  Life 

on  March  5th  1776  and  was  Buried  at  the  Parish  Church  the 
6th  1776  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Purcell  Rector  of  said  parish. 

George  Dawes  son  of  James  Dawes  Departed  this  Life  on  29th 
July  1776 — ^And  was  Buried  at  the  family  Buring  ground  at 
Captain  Lempaire  on  30th  of  the  same  Instant. 

Esther  Rose  the  Wife  of  John  Rose  Departed  this  Life  on  Sep- 
tember ye  18,  1776  and  was  Buried  in  the  family  Biuying 
Ground  of  the  late  Jacob  Bond  EsqV  in  this  Parish  on  fryday 
Evening  ye  20  1776,  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of 
this  Parish. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHX7RCH  PARISH  111 

John  Boone  the  son  of  Capt.  Thomas  Boone  Departed  this  life  on 
Monday  6th  January  1777 — ^and  was  Buried  in  the  family  Bury- 
ing Ground  of  the  late  Captain  Boone  in  this  Parish  on  Wednes- 
day 3rd  of  same  Instant  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector 
of  this  Parish — ^Aged  42  Years. 

Henry  the  son  of  Thomas  and  Jean  Whiteside  Departed  this  Life 
23d  January  1777,  and  was  Buried  the  25th  of  the  Same  Instant 
— By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  Rector  of  Christ  Church 
Parish. 

Mary  Milner  the  wife  of  Job  Milner  Deceased  Departed  this 
life  on  Wednesday  19th  Feb'y  1777 — ^and  was  Buried  in  the 
family  Burying  Ground  of  the  late  Jacob  Bond  Esq;  in  this 
parish  on  Saturday  22d  of  the  same  Instant — By  the  Rev'd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  this  parish — ^Aged  51. 

(r^^  be  continued) 


EXTRACTS  FROM  THE  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN 

MANIGAULT 

1754r-1781 

With  Notes  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
{Continued  from  April) 

1776.    Jan.  1.  Mr.  Bam'd.  Elliott  married.^    3.  Mr.  Partridge 

Killed  in  a  Duel.  Dr.  Haly  died.^  11.  Miss 
Ainslie  and  Miss  Deas  married.'  13.  Mr. 
Pringle  died.*  16.  Lady  Mary  married.*  25. 
Mrs.  J.  Rutledge  1. 

Feb.  18.  Mrs.  Fenwick  married.*  22.  Mr.  King  at  din- 
ner.^   26.  Mr.  Parker's  house  burnt.* 

Mar.  7.  Mr.  Ben:  Legare  married.*  Miss  Betsy  St.  Mar- 
tin married.*®  16.  I  was  taken  with  the  Gout. 
17th  Grow  bad.  18th  Very  bad.  19th  very 
bad  in  the  other  foot.    Very  bad  'till  the  24th 

^  To  Susannah,  dau:  of  Benj.  Smith  Esq. 

*  All  newspapers  for  this  period  missing. 

*  Hannah,  dau.  of  John  Ainslie,  Esq;  deceased,  to  Lt  Wm.  Moultrie. 
Katherine,  dau.  of  David  Deas,  Esq;  to  Col.  Isaac  Motte. 

*  Robert  Pringle,  Esq;  late  one  of  the  Assistant  Judges  of  the  Court  of 
Common  Pleas.     (S.  C.  and  Am.  Gen,  Gaz.    January  19,  1776.) 

*Hon.  Lady  Mary  Ainslie,  widow  of  John  Ainslie,  Esq;  and  Dau.  of  the 
late  Earl  of  Cromartie,  to  Henry  Middleton,  Esq. 

•Mrs.  Mary  Fenwick,  widow  of  the  Hon.  John  Fenwick,  Esq;  to  Wm. 
Gerard  DeBrahm. 

^  Isaac  King? 

'On  Sunday  night,  the  25th  ult.  about  half  an  hour  past  eleven,  a  fire 
broke  out  in  Meeting-street  in  a  house  belonging  to  one  Lamput,  a  free  Negro, 
about  200  Yards  to  the  Northward  of  the  White  Meeting.  It  raged  with 
great  Violence  till  about  three  o'Clock,  when  the  Progress  of  the  Flames  was 
stopped  at  a  Brick  House,  nearly  in  a  line  behind  the  Old  Church.  Nineteen 
Dwelling  Houses  were  burnt  to  the  Ground,  besides  a  Number  of  Outbuildings. 
The  Provincials,  particularly  a  Detachment  from  Co.  Robert's  Regiment  of 
ArtiUery,  were  very  active,  and  afforded  every  Assistance  in  their  Power  to 
the  Inhabitants.     (S.  C.  &  Am.  Gen.  Gaz.    March  8,  1776.) 

*  Lieut.  Ben.  Legare,  to  Alice,  dau.  of  George  Cox,  deceased. 

^®  Samuel  Bonsall  to  Elizabeth  St.  Martin,  spinster.     (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

112 


EXTRACTS  FROlf  JOUKNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT        113 

then  a  little  better  till  April  2d.  Then  taken 
with  a  pain  in  my  knee  wch.  on  the  6th  grew 
worse,  and  was  very  bad  until  14th  April.  Then 
a  Uttle  better  for  several  days.  17th.  Very 
bad  again  in  my  knee  and  hyp.  Continued 
sometimes  very  bad,  sometimes  better  until  the 
31st  May,  when  I  was  carried  down  Stairs. 
(N.B.  On  the  18th  May  I  was  taken  with  a 
disorder  in  my  bowels)  From  31st.  May  to 
June  8th  grew  rather  better.  I  then  went  up 
to  Goosecreek  in  a  Waggon,  as  the  British  Men 
of  War  were  then  coming  in  to  attack  Fort 
Moultrie"  I  returned  to  Town  the  19th  July. 
13th  Sept.  I  cannot  get  strength.  July  22. 
Many  of  our  Servants  who  had  been  at  Goose- 
creek  with  me  were  taken  sick,  and  I  had  a  very 
sick  House  a  great  part  of  the  Siunmer.  I  re- 
covered Slowley  myself  from  my  Gout.  I  did 
not  go  into  the  Garden  until  the  9th.  of  Sept. 

April  14.  Miss  Wragg  Married  to  Mr.  Gadsden.^  [May] 
21.  Mr.  Sam:  Legare  married  to  Miss  Hoyland.^' 
Mar.  20.  Mrs.  Fraser  1. 

May.  Young  Mrs.  Fenwick  1. 

July  21.  Young  Mrs.  Bounetheau  died." 

Aug.  25.  Mr.  Coslet  died.**    28.  Mrs.  Rantowle  died. 

Sept.  23.  Miss  Lowndes  married.** 

Oct.  18.  Mrs.  Roger  Smith  1.  28.  Mr.  M.  to  the  coimtry; 
returned  the  2d.  Nov. 

"No  paper  issued  between  May  31  and  August  2d;  the  presses  having 
removed  out  of  town,  owing  to  the  British  attadL  upon  GiarlesTown.  The 
S.  C.  and  Am,  Gen,  Gaz.  for  August  2d.  gives  a  condensed  account  of  the  events 
which  took  place  in  the  interval. 

^  Christopher  Gadsden  and  Ann  Wragg.    (St.  Philip's  Register.) 
^  Samuel  Legare  and  Eleanor  Sarah  Hoyland  spinster.    (Ibid,) 
^«The  wife  of  Peter  Bounetheau,  Esq.    (5.  C.  6r  Am,  Gen,  G<u,    August 
2, 1776.) 

>*  Charles  Mathews  Cosslett,  in  his  35th  year.  (Tombstone  in  St  Michael's 
church  yard.) 

^  Capt.  Roger  Saunders,  to  Amarinthia  Lowndes,  daughter  of  Hon.  Rawlins 
Lowndes,  Esq. 


114         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Nov.  20.  Mr.  Peter  Smith  Married.^^ 

Dec.  15.  Heard  of  Mr.  Stead's  death.    2.  Mrs.  Corbett 

1.    10.  Mrs.    Keating    Simons    1.^^    23.  Mr. 

Rugdy  died.    Mrs.  Rugdy  and  her  child  died 

5th  of  same  month.** 

1777.    Feb.  3.  Not  well  had  the  Gout  8  days,  part  of  the  time 

badly.    27.  I  had  a  bad  cough  several  weeks 
from  this  time. 

Jan.  8.  Mrs.  Edward  Rudedge  1.*® 

Feb.  6.  Mrs.  John  Rutledge  1.  24.  Miss  Fenwick  mar- 
ried.« 

Mar.  10.  Mrs.  T.  Bee  1.  29.  Mrs.  Lamberton  died."  31. 
Mrs.  Watson  and  Mrs.  Milligan  embarked  (Re- 
mained in  the  Road  'till  the  21  April,  and  then 
went  over  the  bar.) 

Apr.  2.  Mrs.  Robert  Gibbes  1."  6.  Dr.  Air  married.** 
12.  Mrs.  Ben:  Smith  married."  22.  Mrs.  Ed- 
ward Pinckney  1. 

May  1.  Miss  Lynch  married.**  8.  Dr.  Chalmers  died.*^ 
27.  Miss  Peggy  Hasell  married.**  5.  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Bull  called  to  take  leave.  14.  Mr.  M. 
Had  a  tooth  drawn. 

June  27.  Mrs.  Baron  1.  17.  Dr.  Air  died.**  A  swimming 
in  my  head.    Took  an  emetic. 

»^  Mary,  daughter  of  Hon.  Henry  Middleton,  Esq;  to  Peter  Smith. 

*'Ann,  daughter  of  Keating  Simons  and  Sarah  Lewis  his  wife,  bom  on 
this  date. 

"  Rowland  Rugely.    See  this  Magazine^  vol.  xvii,  p.  123. 

^  Henry  Middleton  Rutledge,  1777-1849,  son  of  Hon.  Edward  Rutledge, 
and  his  wife  Henrietta  Middleton. 

*^  Sarah,  dau:  Hon.  Edward  Fenwick  deceased,  to  Mr.  M'Cartan  Campbell. 

*•  Richard  Lamberton,  Esq;  many  years  deputy  Auditor  General.  (Am. 
Gen.  Gat.,  April  3,  1777.) 

^  James  Air  and  Elizabeth  Legare  spmster.  (St.  Philip's  Register.)  She 
was  a  daughter  of  Solomon  Legare  Sen. 

^  Mary,  widow  of  Hon.  Benjamin  Smith,  Esq. 

••  Lionel  Chalmers,  M.D.,  in  his  63d  Year. 

**  John  Harleston  and  Elizabeth  Lynch.     (St  Philip's  Register.) 

"At  GeoigeTown,  John  Wflson  to  Margaret,  daughter  of  Thomas^Hasell 
deceased.    (Am.  Gen.  Gaz.,  June  12,  1777.)  \ffi 

''James  Air,  M.D.  in  his  26th  year.  Assistant  to  the  General  Ho^ital. 
(Ibid.,  June  19,  1777.)    Dr.  Wm.  Keith,  Jr.  was  appointed  in  his  place. 


EXTRACTS  FROlf  JOUENAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  ICANIGAULT        115 

Aug.  10.    Young  Mrs.  Moultrie  1.    13.  Dr.  Kdth  died.*® 

13.  Parson  Tennant  died."  29th.  His  Mother 
died.  31.  My  leg  broke  out.  Sept.  18.  A  little 
better.    Dec.  11.  No  better. 

Sept.  7.  Mrs.  Peter  Smith  1.    21.  Mr.  Godin  died.«    26. 

Mr.  Carss  died.** 
Oct.  18.  Mrs.  Fraser  1.    29th.  Old  Mrs.  Price  died.** 
Nov.  20.  Mrs.  Rhind  1.    9.  Young  Mr.  Shubrick  died.* 

14.  Mr.  David  Graeme  died. 

Dec.  7.  Mrs.  Powell  1.    Mrs.  Bacot  1.    12.  Mr.  Evans 
died.    17.  Mrs.  Wamwright  1.    28.  Mrs.  Ben 
Huger  1.    Mr.  Leger  died.* 
1778.    Jan.  1.  Miss  Hannah  Shubrick  married.'^    2.  Mrs.  John 

Harleston  1 .  15.  A  most  dreadful  Fire  in  Town, 
which  occasioned  great  distress.'®  18.  I  am 
very  weak  in  my  hand  with  fatigue.  Feb.  14. 
Still  very  weak  in  my  hand.  23.  Mr.  Banbury 
being  burnt  out  stays  with  us.  24.  Young 
Mrs.  Bounetheau  1. 

Mar.  6.  Mr.  Wm.  Gibbes  Junr.  arrived  and  called  on  us. 
8.  Mr.  DeSaussure  dined  here.  Mrs.  Brian  1. 
Lewis  Imer  married.    10.  Mrs.   Shephard   1. 

15.  Dr.  F.  Mr.  Moreau,  Wm.  Gibbes,  Thos. 

*•  Dr.  Wmbaxk  Kdth,  Sr. 

'^  Rev.  William  Tennant,  pastor  of  the  Congregational  church;  he  died  at 
the  ffigh  Hills,  Santee,  on  his  Return  home  from  New  Jersey.  {Ibid.,  August 
16, 1777.) 

**  Isaac  Godin,  Esq. 

"  ^^niliam  Carss,  Master  of  the  Free  School 

^  Mrs.  Jane  Price,  widow  of  the  deceased  Mr.  Rice  Price,  in  her  82d.  Year. 
(Ibid,,  October  30,  1777.) 

*Capt  Richard  Shubrick,  of  the  2d.  Continental  Battalion.  {Ibid,,  No- 
vember 13, 1777.) 

<*  Peter  Leger,  Esq;  Col.  of  the  CharlesTown  Regiment  of  Militia.  (Ibid,, 
January  1,  1778.) 

<7  William  He3rward,  to  Hannah  Shubrick  spinster.    (St  Philip's  Register.) 

**  An  account  of  this  fire  is  given  in  the  S,  C,  6*  Am.  Gen.  Gag.  for  January 
29, 1778,  and  re-printed  in  the  CharlesUm  Year  Book,  1880,  p.  303,  250  dwelling 
houses  were  destroyed,  and  the  damage  was  estimated  to  exceed  a  million 
pounds  Sterling.  The  Charles  Town  Library  Society's  collection  of  books  and 
instruments,  being  in  a  house  in  the  neighborhood,  was  almost  entirely  lost. 


116         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Gadsden  dined  here.    22.  Mrs.  Edwaxd  Rut- 
ledge  1.    24.  Mrs.  John  Rutledge  1. 

Apr:  10.  Mrs.  Roger  Smith  1.  28.  Mr.  Jacob  Shubrick 
died.»*    29.  Col.  Cattell  died.^ 

May  1.  Mr.  Thos.  Shubrick  married.^  7.  Mr.  M.  to 
Silkhope  returned  the  12th.  26.  Mrs.  Roberts 
married.**  28th.  Miss  Farr  do.*»  27.  Young 
Mrs.  Campbell  1. 

June  23.  Paul  Townsend  died.** 

July  21.  Thos.  Gadsden  returned  from  Augusta. 

Aug.  1.  Ben:  Dickinson  died.  9.  Had  a  letter  from  my 
Grandson  G.  10.  Mrs.  Keating  Simons  1.  A 
very  bad  Storm.**  16.  Mrs.  Major  Butler  1. 
Mrs.  Geo:  Hall  1.  28.  Mrs.  Barnard  Elliott  1. 
29.  Mrs.  Harris  1. 

Sept.  S.  Mrs.  Whitter  died.*«  10.  Mrs.  Cotesw:  Pinck- 
ney  1.  12.  Heard  from  my  Grandson  G.  by 
Mr.  Peronneau. 

Oct.  1.  Miss  Judith  Smith  married.*^  4.  Mary  Labruce 
married.  15.  Miss  Martha  Fenwick  married. 
Andrew  Hasell  married.**    23.  Mr.  F.  Grimke 

**  Jacob  Shubrick,  Esq;  in  his  2l8t  year.  Capt  in  2d.  regt.  of  Infantry, 
on  the  Continental  Establishment. 

^  William  CatteU,  in  his  31st  year;  Lt.  Col.  Ist  Regt.  of  Continental  Estab- 
lishment. 

«  Thos.  Shubrick  Jr.  and  Mary  Branford  spinster.     (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

'  Mrs.  Ann  Roberts,  widow  of  the  deceased  Dr.  T^^lliam  Roberts,  to  Mr. 
Jacob  Valk. 

**  Elizabeth,  dau.  Thomas  Farr,  Esq;  to  Mr.  John  Splatt  Cripps. 

^  Aged  53  years;  member  2d  Provincial  Con^^ess. 

*N.  E.  storm  of  rain  and  wind,  began  early  in  the  morning,  and  lasted 
until  late  in  the  afternoon,  when  the  wind  changed  to  N.  and  N.  W.  Several 
vessels  damaged,  trees,  fences,  and  the  walls  of  some  of  the  houses  burnt  in 
January  were  blown  down.    (5.  C.  6*  Am,  Gen.  Gas.,  August  13,  1778.) 

^  Elizabeth,  widow  of  Mr.  Samuel  Witter,  deceased. 

^^  To  James  Ladson  (St.  Philip's  Register). 

**  Martha  dau.  of  Hon.  Ed.  Fenwick,  Esq,  deceased,  to  Capt.  Thos.  Gadsen. 
Andrew  Hasell  to  Mary,  daughter  of  Job  Milner,  Esq. 


EXTRACTS  FROlf  JOUKNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT        117 

died/*    Mr.  Parson's  died.*^    25.  Mr.  Barnard 
Elliott  died."    28.  John  Frederick  died. 

Nov.  29.  Mr.  Rantowles  married." 
1779.    Jan.  1.  Mrs.  Thomas  Shubrick  1.    16.  Mrs.  Heyward  1. 

21.  Colo.  Powell  died." 

Feb.  13.  Old  Capt.  Read  died."  28.  Mrs.  Kinloch,  her 
daughter  and  Son  called  here. 

Mar.  17.  Tweed  hanged."  26.  Mrs.  Boimetheau  1.  Mrs. 
Poinsett  1. 

April  15.  Heard  from  my  Grandson  G.  22.  Dr.  Mottet 
died.    Miss  Pickering  died." 

May  4.  Great  uneasiness  on  account  of  the  British  troops. 
9th.  Great  Confusion  as  they  were  very  near.  10. 
They  were  in  sight  of  CharlesTown.  11th.  Much 
fireing,  and  it  was  expected  the  town  would  be 
attacked — Benj :  Huger  killed  by  our  own  people 
by  mistake — 12th  Many  Flags  sent  into  town. 
They  marched  off  in  the  night — 13th  Pretty 
quiet,  but  they  are  very  troublesome  in  the 

^  Frederick  Grimk^,  Esq;  aged  74  years,  45  of  whkh  he  had  lived  in  this 
country.  (5.  C.  6*  Am,  Gen,  Gat.y  October  22,  1778.)  He  was  bom  in  Ger- 
many, Oct.  12, 1705;  son  of  Christopher  Grimk6  (b.  1670,  d.  February  27, 1742) 
and  his  wife  Mary  Elizabeth— (b.  1677,  d.  March  16, 1746)  Emigrated  to  South 
Carolina  in  1733;  married  1737  Martha  (Emms)  Williamson,  widow;  she  died 
22,  September,  1764;  they  had  two  children,  (1)  Mary,  married  1755,  Alex- 
ander Eraser;  she  died  January  3,  1807,  leaving  issue;  (2)  Elizabeth,  married 
1763  John  Rutledge  (Governor),  and  left  issue. 

**  George,  only  son  of  Hon.  James  Parsons,  Esq. 

"^Member  of  Gen.  Assembly,  and  Ltl.  Col.  of  the  Continental  Corp  of 
Artillery.    (5.  C.  6*  Am.  Gen,  Gas,,  October  29,  1778.) 

"  Alexander  Rantowles  to  Eleanor  Wardrobe.  She  died  in  January,  1779. 
{Jhid.,  January  28,  1779.) 

•s  George  Gabriel  PowelL 

**  James  Reid,  Esq;  in  his  78th  year. 

"  On  Monday,  '^^lliam  Tweed  and  Andrew  Groundwater  received  sentence 
of  death,  and  were  yesterday  Executed,  ijhid,,  March  18,  1779.)  Tweed 
was  suspected  of  having  set  fire  to  his  house,  and  causing  a  conflagration  on 
February  20th.  The  recoUection  of  the  great  fire  of  the  jrear  before  excited  and 
incensed  the  inhabitants;  Groundwater  was  thought  to  be  associated  with 
Tweed  in  the  attempt  to  fire  the  town;  they  were  taken  in  atten4>ting  to  go 
to  the  British.    (McCardy,  1775-1780,  pp.  345-347.) 

"  Mary  Pickering.    Dr.  Lewis  Mottett,  in  his  86th  year. 


118         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

country — 15th  We  hear  nothing  of  them — 16th 
We  are  still  very  uneasy,  they  are  ravaging  the 
country — I7th  to  21st  The  same,  and  Genl. 
Lincoln  cannot  prevent  it. — 22d  Some  of  our 
people  went  to  Johnson's  Fort,  were  fired  upon, 
and  a  good  many  wounded — 23d.  Coimt  Pulaw- 
sky  had  a  skirmish  with  them.  28th  They  left 
James  Island  and  went  to  Johns  Island.  Jiine 
3d.  The  British  still  on  Johns  Island.  10th. 
Still  there.  A  little  skirmish. — 13th.  Very  hot 
and  dry  weather.  30th.  They  were  gone  from 
John's  Island.*^ 

May  27.  Dr.  Hjnue  married. 

June  28.  Mrs.  Danl.  Heyward  1.  21.  Colo.  Roberts 
killed." 

July  2.  Very  hot  dry  weather.  11th.  Very  hard  thunder 
and  rain.  6.  Mr.  Blake  called.  7.  Mrs.  Par- 
son Smith  died."    11.  Old  Mr.  Raper  died.«<> 

Aug.  2.  Mr.  Thos  Middleton  died.  14.  Old  Capt.  Shu- 
brick  died.  19.  Mrs.  Cripps  1.  I  took  a  fever, 
took  an  emetic.  21.  Better.  22.  Hext  Prio- 
leau  died. 

Sept.  6.  Count  D'Estaign  arrived  from  Georgia.  7.  My 
leg  broke  out.  14th.  Bad— 17th  Obliged  to 
stay  upstairs.  20th  Had  the  Gout  in  both  feet. 
Oct.  1.  A  little  better.  10th  I  am  better  but 
walk  with  crutches — 16th  I  walk  alone.  22 
Pretty  well.    26  Mr.  M.  not  well. 

Oct.  1.  Mr.  Parsons,  the  Lawyer,  died.  3.  Mrs.  Roger 
Smith  1.    9.  Capt.  Shepherd,  Capt.  Motte  and 

•'See  McCrady,  vol.  1775-1780.  There  was  no  paper  between  April  30 
and  May  29,  owing  to  Provost's  invasion.  The  paper  (5.  C.  6*  Am.  Gen.  Gas.) 
for  May  29  contains  an  account  of  the  events  which  took  place  in  the  intervaL 

•*  Col.  Owen  Roberts,  killed  at  the  battle  of  Stono.  (This  Magaeine,  vol. 
xvi,  p.  124-125.) 

••  Sarah,  wife  of  the  Rev.  Robert  Smith. 

"^R.  Raper,  Esq.,  in  his  70th  year.  (5.  C.  and  Am.  Gen.  Gas.,  July  16, 
1779.) 


EXTRACTS  PROM  JOURNAL  OF  MRS.  ANN  MANIGAULT    119 

young  Hume  killed  at  the  attack  on  Savannah.*^ 
10.  A  procession  in  honor  of  Count  Pulawski.^ 

Nov.  7.  Miss  Polly  Fenwick  married.**    18.  Mrs.  Bee  1. 

Dec.  2.  Alick  Keith  married.**    19.  Mr.  D.  Blake  and  Mr. 
Lloyd  called. 
1780.    Jan.  8.  Major  Butler's  child  died.*    22.  Under  appre- 

hendsions  of  the  British.    29.  Very  cold  since 
the  20th  Dec. 

Feb.  11.  Mr.  Bulliatt  died.  4.  Some  of  the  St.  Eustatia 
Fleet  arrived.  We  heard  my  Grandson  G.  was 
at  sea.  S.  Heard  he  was  at  George-Town.  10. 
He  arrived  very  well.  11.  His  friends  called  to 
see  him.  13.  Mr.  Wm.  Gibbes  dined  here.  We 
are  much  afraid  of  the  British,  who  are  on  John's 
Island.  IS.  People  go  out  of  Town  very  fast. 
16.  Miss  Wragg  and  my  Grand-daughter  A. 
went  to  day.  17.  My  two  Grandsons  went  to 
Goosecreek.  23.  The  British  upon  James  Is- 
land. 26.  People  very  much  distressed.  The 
British  are  trying  to  repair  Johnson's  Fort.  28. 
Our  Frigates  fired  on  them  all  day,  but  to  little 
purpose — 

Mar.  4.  A  fire  in  Tradd  St.  S.  My  Grandson  G.  went 
upon  duty. 


Mr.  M.  died  on  Tuesday  5  th.  June  at  about  ten  O'Clock  in  the 
Morning  aged  77  years  and  one  month. 

*^  Charles  Shepherd;  Charles  Motte. 

^The  gallant  Count  Pulaski  died  at  Sea,  on  his  return  from  Georgia,  of 
his  wound;  and  on  Thursday  last  week  hb  funeral  rites  were  performed  here 
in  a  manner  suitable  to  the  rank  and  merit  of  that  interpid  and  much  lamented 
officer.    (Ibid,,  October  29,  1779.) 

•»  Mary  Fenwick  to  Walter  Izard.     (St.  Philip's  Register.) 

^'Capt.  Alexander  Keith  to  Miss  Susannah  BuUein,  daughter  of  John 
Bullein,  Esq;  deceased. 

*  Child  of  Major  Pierce  Butler,  burned  to  death.  (Charles  Town  QuetU, 
January  11,  1780.) 


120         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

J.  M.  went  over  the  Bar,  5  July  1781.* 

Sir  Egerton  Leigh  died  16  Sept  1781.    Juba  died  13  Sept:  1781 


P.  M.  was  bom  10th.  October  1731,  sailed  for  England  22  April 
1750,  arrived  from  London  1st  Dec.  1754  and  was  married  8  June 
1755 

[Mrs.  Ann  Manigault,  wife  of  Gabriel  Eaqr.  deceased,  buried  ^ril  25, 1782. 
St  Philip's  register.] 

{The  end) 

"  Joseph  Manigault,  second  son  of  Peter  Manigault,  of  Charieston,  S.  C, 
entered  the  Middle  Temple,  September  6,  1781.  (American  Historical  Re- 
view, July,  1920,  p.  688.) 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
(Continued  from  April) 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  in  this  dty,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Larry,  82 
years  of  age,  a  native  of  Bermuda.  And  on  Thursday  last,  master 
James  Trescot,  son  of  Edward  Trescot,  Esq;  of  this  dty.  (Wed- 
nesday, Jan.  4, 1792.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Samuel  Prioleau,  sen.  Esq;  a  re- 
spectable native  of  this  state,  aged  74  years.  (Thursday,  Jan. 
1792.) 

Died.  On  the  19th  ult.  Peter  Sinkler,  Esq;  of  St.  Stephen's 
parish.    (Sat.  Jan.  7,  1792.) 

Died.  At  his  plantation  on  the  Wateree,  on  Wednesday,  the 
28th  ult.  Samuel  Boykin,  Esq.  And,  at  Camden,  on  Thursday, 
the  29th  ult.  Col.  Joseph  Kershaw.    (Monday,  Jan.  9,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Benjamin  Pepoon, 
to  Miss  Lucy  Nott,  both  of  this  dty.    (Tuesday,  Jan.  10,  1792.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mrs.  Huddleston,  wife  of  the  rev. 
Mr.  Huddleston,  and  daughter  of  capt.  Benjamin  Styles,  of  James 
Island.    (Wednesday,  Jan.  11,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Monday  afternoon,  Mr.  Robert  Gibson,  senior,  of 
this  dty,  schoolmaster.  Yesterday  morning,  Mr.  George  Morris, 
painter,  of  this  city.    (Wednesday,  Jan.  18,  1792.) 

Died.  On  John's  Island,  Mr.  Alexander  M'Gillivray,  in  the 
26th  year  of  his  age.    (Thursday,  Jan.  19,  1792.) 

Died.  Capt.  Every,  in  Savannah  on  the  ship  Henry,  belonging 
to  Liverpool.    (Saturday,  Jan.  21,  1792.) 

Died.  In  this  dty,  last  Thursday  night,  Mrs.  Ann  Ralph,  48 
years  of  age,  wife  of  Mr.  John  Ralph,  cabinet  maker.  Yesterday 
morning,  at  New-market,  Mr.  John  Creighton,  81  years  of  age. 
(Monday,  Jan.  23,  1792.) 

Married.  On.  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Miller,  fac- 
tor, to  Miss  Elizabeth  Cox,  both  of  this  city. 

121 


122         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGAZINE 

On  Monday,  the  16th  ult.  at  Indian  Land,  Mr.  James  Guignil- 
liat,  to  Miss  Sarah  Pdot,  of  that  place. 

Died.  On  the  16th  instant,  in  St  James's  parish,  Santee,  capt. 
William  Jordan,  late  of  the  Continental  Georgia  line 

At  his  plantation  in  St.  Thomas's  parish,  on  the  20th  instant. 
Robert  Johnston,  Esq;  an  old  and  respectable  inhabitant  of  that 
place.    (Tuesday,  Jan.  24,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  at  Stono,  Mr.  Robert  Brown,  of 
Round  O,  to  Miss  Judith  M'Donald.    (Wednesday,  Jan.  25, 1792.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  the  24th  of  January,  at  Stono,  Mrs.  Agnes 
Guerin,  wife  of  Mr.  Francis  Guerin.    (Wednesday,  Feb.  1,  1792.) 

Died.  At  Beaufort,  on  the  30th  inst.  Mrs.  Sarah  Daunay.  In 
this  dty,  yesterday  morning,  Mr.  John  Lesesne.  (Thursday,  Feb. 
2, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last.  Mr.  Abraham  Joy,  to 
Miss  Susannah  Bessileau.    (Monday,  Feb.  6,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  evening,  Mrs.  Robinson,  wife  of  Mr.  Wil- 
liam Robmson,  of  this  dty.    (Tuesday,  Feb;  7,  1792.) 

Married.  Last  Tuesday  evening,  Mr.  C.  F.  Graeser,  merchant, 
to  Miss  Ann  Maria  Clements,  eldest  daughter  of  Mr.  John  Clem- 
ents, of  this  dty.    (Thursday,  Feb.  9,  1792.) 

Died.    On  Wednesday  evening  last,  in  his  43d.  year,  Mr.  Joseph 

Bee,  carpenter,  of  this  dty And  in  Christ  Church 

parish,  John  Boone,  Esq;  of  that  place.    (Friday,  Feb.  10,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  James  M.  Watson, 
of  Hampstead,  to  Miss  Rachel  Ross,  of  Charleston.  (Saturday, 
Feb.  11,  1792.)  Died.  In  this  dty,  on  Friday  last,  Mrs.  Capers, 
wife  of  Mr.  William  Capers,  of  Christ  Church  parish.  (Monday, 
Feb.  13, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Lee,  Esq;  attorney 
at  law,  to  Miss  Keriah  Miles,  daughter  of  John  Miles,  Esq;  of 
Horse-Savannah.    (Wednesday,  Feb.  15, 1792.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  in  the  34th  year  of  his  age,  after  a 
very  short  illness,  capt.  Archibald  M'Calester,  of  the  late  Mary- 
land line  on  the  continental  establishment.  This  gentleman  served 
with  much  reputation  during  the  late  war,  was  honored  with  sev- 
eral confidential  trusts,  and  particularly  distinguished  himself  at 
the  surprise  of  the  British  garrison  at  Powles  Hook  in  the  year 
1779.    On  this  successful  enterprize  he  led  a  forlorn  hope — ^was 


MAIULIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  123 

the  first  man  who  entered  the  fort,  and  for  his  bravery  and  good 
conduct  on  that  occasion,  was  honored  by  congress  with  a  brevet 
commission.  His  fimeral  was  attended  yesterday  by  the  members 
of  the  Cincinnati  and  a  ntmiber  of  other  respectable  citizens;  and 
his  remains  deposited  in  St.  Philip's  church  yard.  (Tuesday  Feb. 
28,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  Alexander  Juhan,  to  Miss 
Eliza  Bourdeaux,  daughter  of  Daniel  Bourdeaux,  Esq.  (Friday, 
Mar.  2, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  Frands  Thomas,  to 
Miss  Sarah  Vernon,  daughter  of  William  Vernon,  Esq;  deceased. 
(Tuesday,  Mar.  6,  1792.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Patrick  Bum,  to  Mrs. 
Mary  Stewart,  and  Mr.  Robert  Henderson,  to  Mrs.  Ann  Reming- 
ton. (Saturday,  Mar.  10,  1792.)  Died.  In  Prince  William's 
parish,  James  Smith,  Esq;  of  Coosawatchie.  (Tuesday,  Mar.  13, 
1792.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  the  27th  of  November  last  at  Liverpool, 
Robert  Norris,  Esq.  a  gentleman  from  that  town  well  known  as  a 

del^ate  on  the  African  business Mr.  Norris  was 

equally  well  known  in  this  state,  where  his  death  is  much  lamented. 
(Wednesday,  Mar.  14,  1792.) 

Died.  At  his  plantation  in  St.  John's  Berkley  county,  major 
Ephraim  Mitchell,  of  the  late  4th,  or  artillery  regiment,  raised  in 
this  state  the  continental  establishment,  and  late  surveyor  gen- 
eral of  this  state.    (Friday,  Mar.  16,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  at  the  residence  of  John 
Jenkins,  Esq;  in  South  Edisto,  Leighton  \^lson,  Esq;  of  Bristol, 
to  Miss  Ann  Adams,  eldest  daughter  of  Nathaniel  Adams,  Esq; 
deceased,  of  the  same  place.    (Saturday,  Mar.  17,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  at  Georgetown,  after  a  short  illness 
of  six  days,  captain  George  Cogdell,  late  an  officer  in  the  5th.  con- 
tinental regiment  of  this  state.    (Monday,  Mar.  19,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening  last,  Mr.  James  Scrivener,  to 
Miss  Brown,  eldest  daughter  of  lieut.  col.  Brown,  late  of  East- 
Florida,  both  of  this  city.    (Tuesday,  Mar.  20,  1792.) 

Married.  At  Beaufort,  on  Thursday  the  15th  instant,  Mr, 
John  Sams,  of  Datha,  to  Miss  Catherine  Deveaux,  third  daughter 
of  Jacob  Deveaux,  Esq;  of  Charleston.    (Friday,  Mar.  23,  1792.) 


124         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  Yesterday  evening  in  Tradd  St.  William  Lamie, 
Esq;  of  Jamaica,  to  the  agreeabel  Miss  Cosens,  daughter  of  John 
Cosens,  Esq;  of  the  same  Island.    (Tuesday,  Mar.  27, 1792.) 

Died.  Yesterday,  Mr.  James  Johnston,  formerly  a  lieutenant 
in  the  2d.  Pennsylvania  regiment  on  the  Continental  establish- 
ment.   (Friday,  April  6,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Pagett,  to 
Miss  Eliza  Gibson,  of  this  dty.    (Saturday,  April  7, 1792.) 

Married.  Last  evening,  M!r.  David  Alexander,  merchant,  to 
Miss  White,  daughter  of  Sims  White,  Esq;  of  this  dty.  (Wednes- 
day, April  11, 1792.) 

Died.  Yesterday,  Mr.  Alexander  Latta.  (Friday,  April  13, 
1792.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  in  the  42d  year  of  his  age,  at  his  plan- 
tation on  John's  Island,  after  a  short  illness,  James  St.  John,  Esq; 
grandson  of  James  St.  John,  Esq;  formerly  surveyor  general  under 
the  British  government.    (Saturday,  April  14,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  capt.  Daniel  Bythwood,  to 
Miss  Eliza  Taylor,  both  of  this  dty.    (Thursday,  April  19,  1792.) 

"Died  lately  in  the  70th  year  of  his  age,  at  Long  Cane  settle- 
ment mudi  and  deservedly  lamented  by  all  who  knew  him.  Rev. 
Thomas  Clark (Thursday,  April  26,  1792.) 

On  Simday  morning  last  departed  this  life,  Mrs.  Henrietta 
Rutledge,  the  wife  of  Edward  Rutledge,  Esq;  and  eldest  daughter 
of  the  late  honorable  Henry  Middleton 

On  the  same  day  at  her  plantation  in  Christ  Churdi  parish  Mrs. 
Sarah  Rutledge,  in  the  68th  year  of  her  age.  A  lady  justly  re- 
spected for  her  benevolence  and  amiableness.  Her  death  is  uni- 
versally regretted.     (Friday,  April  27,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Jackson,  of  Cainhoy,  to 
Mrs.  Elizabeth  Wallace,  of  this  place. 

Died.  At  his  plantation  in  the  parish  of  St.  George,  Dorchester, 
Dr.  Benjamin  Lucas  Perry,  surgeon  in  the  late  American  army. 
(Monday,  April  30, 1792.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  George  Fardo,  factor,  of  this 
dty. — ^also  in  Hampstead,  Richard  Cole,  Esq;  one  of  the  wardens 
of  this  dty.     (Friday,  May  4,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  in  this  dty.  Mr.  Thomas  Lesesne, 
late  of  Daniel's  Island.    (Sat.  May  6,  1792.) 


ICAUOAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  125 

Harried.  At  Snow-Hill  in  South  Cardina,  Mr.  Henry  Wilscm, 
of  the  town  of  Cambridge,  merchant,  to  Miss  Betsy  Whitefidd, 
daughter  of  George  Whitfield,  Esq.    (Monday,  May  7,  1792.) 

Died.  On  the  11th  instant,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Waring,  the  amiaUe 
consort  of  doctor  Thomas  Waring.    (Monday,  May  14,  1792.) 

Died.  Master  William  Gibbes,  only  son  of  William  Hasdl 
Gibbes,  Esq;  master  of  equity.    (Friday,  May  18, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  John  Adcock,  of  Jackson- 
borough,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Cambridge,  of  this  dty.  (Saturday, 
May  19, 1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  at  Stono,  at  the  jJantation  of  Josq^ 
Farr,  Esq;  Miss  Jane  Boone,  daughter  of  Wm.  Boone,  Esq;  of 
John's  Island,  deceased.    (Wednesday,  May  23,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  at  Combahee,  Mr.  John  Minott, 
of  this  dty,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Smith,  eldest  daughter  of  Charles 
Smith,  Esq;  deceased.    (Thursday,  May  24,  1792.) 

Married.  On  the  6th  instant,  the  hon.  Thomas  Wadsworth,  a 
senator  of  I>nnety-Six  district,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Lamb,  of 
Boston.    (Friday,  May  25,  1792.) 

Died.  In  Westminster,  England,  Mar.  3,  sir  Joshua  Reynolds, 
knt.  doctor  of  laws  of  the  imiversity  of  Oxford  and  Dublin  princi- 
pal painter  to  his  majesty,  president  of  the  royal  academy  of  paint- 
ing, sculpture  and  architecture,  fellow  of  the  royal  sodety  of 
antiquarians. — ^His  funeral  was  magnificant — ten  noblemen  of  the 
first  distinction  were  pall-bearers — and  the  company  very  num- 
erous. He  was  buried  in  the  vast  crypt  of  the  cathedral  church  of 
St.  Paul,  next  to  the  body  of  Dr.  Newton,  and  dose  to  the  tomb 
of  the  famous  sir  Christopher  Wren,  the  architect  of  that  great 
edifice.    (Monday,  May  28,  1792.) 

Married.  The  21st  inst.  at  Georgetown,  by  Dr.  Smith,  William 
Heriot,  Esq;  merchant,  to  Miss  Mary  Thomas,  second  daughter 
of  Edward  Thomas  Esq. 

On  Saturday  last,  Henry  Laurens,  jun.  Esq;  to  Miss  Eliza  Rut- 
ledge,  yoimgest  daughter  ai  the  honourable  John  Rutledge.  (Tues- 
day, May  29,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  evening,  Hext  M'Call,  Esq;  attorney  at 
law.    (Saturday,  June  2,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  the  27th  ult.  Mr  John  Gordon,  to  Miss 
Ann  Williams,  both  of  this  city.    Yesterday  evening,  Mr.  James 


126         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Bass,  of  this  dty,  to  Miss  Dorothy  Horlbeck,  daughter  of  Mr. 
Peter  Horlbeck,  of  Dorchester.    (Monday,  June  4,  1792.) 

Sunday  evening  was  married  John  Hanahan,  Esq;  of  Edisto,  to 
Miss  Mary  Clark,  of  the  same  place.    (Tuesday,  June  5, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Monday  evening,  Mr.  Ralph  Atmar,  jun.  of  this 
dty,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Arnold,  of  John's  Island.  (Wednesday, 
June  6, 1792.) 

Married.  A  few  da3rs  since,  at  the  High  Hills  of  Santee,  Mr. 
Mathew  James^  son  of  the  late  col.  James,  to  Miss  Letitia  Billups. 

Died.  Yesterday,  Mrs.  Rutledge,  the  wife  of  the  hon.  John 
Rutledge,  Esq;  chief  justice  of  this  state.  (Thursday,  June  7, 
1792.) 

Died.  On  the  4th  ult.  col.  John  Purves,  of  Edgefield  county, 
in  this  state.    (Monday,  June  11,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  Mrs.  Mann,  the  wife  of  Mr.  Spencer 
Mann,  of  this  dty.    (Wednesday,  June  IS,  1792.) 

On  monday  the  14th  June  died  the  infant  son  of  Mr.  Peter  Henri, 
the  celebrated  miniature  painter.  His  death,  or  the  cause  of  the 
disease  of  which  he  died  was  a  perforation  of  the  gall  bladder. 
To  the  medical  world  a  brief  statement  of  the  case  may  not  be 
unacceptable;  and  the  describer,  who  dissected  the  body  takes 
this  method  of  conveying  it.  [Then  follows  the  description  of  the 
cause  and  the  disease,  signed  Charles  F.  Bartlett.]  (Thursday, 
June  14,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  John  Wsh,  to  Miss  Cath- 
erine Singelltary,  both  of  this  city.     (Monday,  Jime  18,  1792.) 

Died.  At  Deal,  Capt.  George  Kerr,  late  master  of  the  ship 
Britannia.    (Tuesday,  June  19,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  capt.  John  Wilson,  of  New  York, 
late  master  of  the  schooner  Columbia.    (Monday,  June  25,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last.  Master  George  Cross,  of  this  dty, 
aged  17  years,  2  months,  and  11  days.    (Tuesday,  Jime  26, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  28th  instant.  Mr.  Joseph  Sayer  Cart, 
to  Miss  Sarah  Good  Smith,  both  of  this  dty.  (Saturday,  June  30, 
1792.) 

Died.  Last  evening,  Mrs.  Mary  Agnes  Kenund.  All  her  rela- 
tions and  friends  are  desired  to  attend  her  funeral  this  evening,  at 
five  o'dock,  at  No.  42  Queen-street.    (Friday,  July  6,  1792.) 


SfAKRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  127 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  doctor  John  Houseal,  to 
Miss  Eloisa  Carohne  Tucker,  of  Dorchester.  (Monday,  July  9, 
1792.) 

Married.  Mr.  Josias  Dupre,  of  N.  Carolina,  to  the  amiable 
Miss  Sarah  Miller,  of  Black  Mingo.     (Wednesday,  July  11, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening  last,  Dr.  Edward  Oats,  of  this 
city,  to  Miss  Catherine  Watson,  daughter  of  the  late  Mr.  John 
Watson,  of  Hampstead.    (Tuesday,  July  17,  1792.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Charles  Bradford,  of 
this  dty,  to  Miss  Woodruff.    (Thursday,  July  19,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last,  Mrs.  Purcell,  wife  of  the  Rev.  Dr. 
Purcell.  Mr.  William  Ball,  of  this  city.  (Thursday,  July  26, 
1792.) 

Died.  At  the  Rock  landing,  on  the  12th  inst.  Martin  Brimmer 
Sohier,  lieutenant  in  the  2d.  United  States  regiment,  and  adjutant 
to  the  federal  troops  in  Georgia.    (Thursday,  Aug.  2,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Abraham  Jones, 
Clerk  of  the  Hebrew  Synagogue,  to  Mrs.  Nathan. 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mr.  Thomas  Martin  (son  of  the 
Rev.  John  Nicholas  Martin)  of  this  city.  Mrs.  Cames,  wife  of 
Dr.  Cames.    (Saturday,  Aug.  4,  1792.) 

Deaths.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  John  Miller. — On  Saturday,  Mr. 
Luke  Breen. — On  Sunday,  capt.  Emanuel  Autonet. — ^and  yester- 
day, capt.  Robert  Hutchinson.     (Tuesday,  Aug.  14,  1792.) 

Died.  In  this  dty  on  Thursday  last,  Mrs.  Walker,  wife  of  Mr. 
Thomas  Walker.     (Thursday,  Aug.  18, 1792.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last.  Rev.  Archibald  Taylor. — Mr.  Reuben 
Newman.    (Wednesday,  Aug.  22,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  in  this  city,  Jacob  Randolph,  Esq;  of 
Bristol. — On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Christopher  Brown.  (Monday, 
Aug.  27,  1792.) 

On  Wednesday  last,  departed  this  life.  Miss  Catherine  Stro- 
acker,  niece  to  Mr.  Eberly.  Cut  off  in  the  bloom  of  youth. 
.    .    .    .     (verse.) 

Deaths.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  Francis  Cobia. — Master 
Thomas  Shirley  Colcock,*  eldest  son  of  Mr.  Job  Colcock. — yester- 
day, Mr,  Joel  Holmes,  after  a  long  indisposition. — Miss  Dulles, 
sister  of  Mr.  Joseph  Dulles,  merchant,  of  this  city. — Mr.  Philip 
Schaun,  of  Hampstead.    (Friday,  Aug.  31,  1792.) 


128         so.  CA.  mSTOUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died.  On  Tuesday  mornings  in  the  65th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs. 
Ann  Timothy,  prq>rietor  of  the  SkUe  GazeUe.  Her  loss  is  a  sub- 
ject of  regret  to  an  extensive  acquaintance,  but  is  mcMre  particu- 
larly felt  by  a  deeply  afflicted  family. — ^Yesterday,  Mr.  James  M. 
Warscm,  of  Hamstead.    (Wednesday,  September  12,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Jacob  Jennerette,  Esq;  of  Santee;  and 
on  Sunday,  Mrs.  Jennerette,  wife  of  that  gentleman.  (Wednesday, 
Sept  19, 1792.) 

Died.  Yesterday,  Mr.  Thomas  Rybold,  ta)^r,  of  this  dty, 
aged  84  years.    (Thursday,  Sept  20,  1792.) 

Died.  Mr.  Th<xnas  Duncan,  taylor,  of  this  dty.  (Friday, 
Sept  21, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  George  Whitefidd,  mer* 
chant,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  H.  Howard,  dau^ter  of  Mr.  Robert 
Howard,  of  this  dty.    Mr.  Joseph  Purcell,  to  Mrs.  Ann  B<msall. 

Died.  At  the  poor-house,  aged  89,  Jonathan  Emitt,  the  oldest 
inhabitant  of  Christ  Church  Parish.    (Saturday,  Sept.  22, 1792.) 

Afarried.  On  the  7th  inst.  at  Providence,  Rhode-Island, 
Edward  Mitchell,  Esq;  of  Georgetown,  to  Miss  Ann  Bowen. 

Died.  On  Sunday  morning,  capt.  Jeremiah  King,  of  the  Packet- 
Diligence,  of  New  York.    (Tuesday,  September  25,  1792.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mr.  Saunders,  the  celebrated  equali- 
brist,  latdy  arriv^  here  from  New  Providence.  Mr.  Eliphakt 
Loring,  mate  of  the  Schooner  Polly,  from  Boston.  Last  Monday 
night,  Mrs.  Catherine  Massey,  widow  of  the  late  coL  Massey. 
(Wednesday,  Sept.  26,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  night,  Mrs.  Mary  Gordon,  72  years  of 
age,  a  native  of  this  state.    (Monday,  Oct.  1, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  David  Campbell,  Esq;  to 
Miss  Motte,  eldest  daughter  of  Isaac  Motte,  Esq. 

Died.  Last  Thursday  afternoon,  in  the  68th  year  of  her  age 
....  Mrs.  Mary  Gordon,  a  native  of  this  country.  .  .  . 
Her  remains  were  interred  on  Friday  evening  in  the  independent 
churchyard.    (Tuesday,  Oct.  2,  1792.) 

Died.  Last  Tuesday,  in  this  dty,  Mr.  Joseph  Rivers  son  of 
Mr.  Francis  Rivers.    (Saturday,  Oct  6,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Thursday,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Grove,  87  years  of  age, 
upward  of  seventy  of  which  she  resided  in  this  state.  On  Friday, 
Dr.  Kirkpatrick,  latdy  from  Maryland.     (Monday,  Oct.  8,  1792.) 


MARHIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  129 

Died.  On  Wednesday  night,  Mr.  John  Gardner,  merchant,  of 
thb  dty.    (Saturday,  Oct  13,  1792.) 

Died.  In  this  dty,  on  Saturday  evening,  Mr.  Samud  F.  Ken- 
nedy, formerly  of  Philaddphia.    (Monday,  Oct  15,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  captain  Samud  Purches,  of  this  dty. 
(Tuesday,  Oct  16, 1792.) 

Died.  In  the  17th  year  of  his  age.  master  Benjamin  Saltus,  son 
ci  Mr.  Samud  Saltus,  of  the  island  of  Bermuda,  a  promising 
youth.    (Wednesday,  October  17,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Brodie,  factor,  to 
Miss  Sally  Howard,  daughter  of  Mr.  Robert  Howard,  in  this  dty. 

Mr.  Godfrey  Humbert,  to  Miss  Sarah  Gilbert. 

At  Georgetown,  on  the  18th  instant,  Mr.  Thomas  Hutchinson, 
merchant,  of  this  dty,  to  Miss  Mary  Cuttino,  daughter  of  Mr. 
William  Cuttino,  of  Georgetown,    (Satuday,  Oct.  27,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Thomas  Porcher,  Esq;  of  St 
John's  parish,  to  Miss  Charlotte  Mazyck,  third  daughter  of  William 
Mazyck,  of  Charleston,  Esq;  deceased.  And  on  Sunday  evening, 
Edward  Rutledge,  Esq  to  Mrs.  Evdeigh,  relict  of  the  late  coL 
Evddgh. 

Died.  On  Saturday  the  27th  instant,  Benjamin  \^epontouz, 
Esq;  an  old  and  respectable  inhabitant  of  this  dty.  On  Friday 
last,  in  Christ  Church  parish,  Mr.  Alexander  M'NiUage.  (Tues- 
day, October  30,  1792.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Theodore  Gaillard,  jim.  Esq; 
son  of  Theodore  Gaillard,  Esq;  to  Miss  Martha  Doughty,  daughter 
of  William  Doughty,  Esq.    (Saturday,  Nov.  3,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  the  3d.  instant,  John  Robertson,  Esq;  one 
of  the  wardens  of  this  dty (Monday,  Nov.  S,  1792.) 

Died.  On  the  3d  instant,  at  the  Edisto  Sawmills,  Col.  Richard 
Hampton,  much  regretted  by  all  his  acquaintance.  (Tuesday, 
Nov.  6,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  William  Ferguson,  to 
Miss  Eliza  Colcock,  second  daughter  of  John  Colcock,  Esq.  de- 
ceased.   (Thursday,  Nov.  8,  1792.) 

Died.  At  Beaufort,  on  the  24  ult.  in  the  72d  year  of  her  age, 
Mrs.  Martha  Barnwell,  relict  of  John  Barnwell,  Esq;  deceased. 
(Friday,  Nov.  9,  1792.) 


r 


i 


130  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  the  Rev  Dr.  Gates  to  Miss 
Eliza  PostelL  Mr.  D.  Waring  to  Miss  H.  Mazyck.  Mr.  Roger 
Pinckney  to  Miss  Susannah  Shubrick. 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  Mrs.  Frances  Pearce,  aged  52  years. 
(Monday,  Nov.  12,  1792.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  on  James  Island,  Mr.  Stiles 
Rivers,  of  said  Island,  to  Miss  Martha  Scott,  of  this  dty. 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  capt.  Nathaniel  Marston,  of  this 
dty.     (Tuesday,  Nov.  13,  1792.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday,  Dr.  James  Brickell,  to  Mrs.  Mit- 
chell, widow  of  the  late  major  Ephraim  Mitchell.  (Wednesday, 
Nov.  14,  1792.) 

Married.  On  tuesday  evening,  Mr.  William  Pritchard,  to  Miss 
Hamilton,  daughter  of  Mr.  David  Hamilton,  of  this  dty. 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  at  Ponpon,  in  the  55th  year  of  her  age, 
Mrs.  Rebecca  Peter,  after  a  long  and  unconmionly  painful  illness. 
....  In  this  dty,  on  Thursday  last,  in  the  bloom  of  life. 
Miss  Sally  Arthur.    (Saturday,  Nov.  17,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  Charles  Banks,  Merchant,  to 
the  amiable  Miss  Catherine  Anna  Lockwood,  daughter  of  the 
late  conmjodore  Lockwood.     (Thursday,  Nov.  22,  1792.) 

Died.  At  St.  Stephen's  parish,  last  Friday,  Mr.  Bracey  Single- 
ton, of  this  dty.     (Friday,  Nov.  23,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  John  Gaillard,  jun.  Esq;  to 
Miss  Mary  Lord,  third  daughter  of  Andrew  Lord,  Esq;  deceased. 
(Saturday,  Nov.  24,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  William  Calhoim,  mer- 
chant, to  Miss  Lydia  CatteD.     (Monday,  Nov.  26,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  in  this  dty,  Mr.  Isaac  Lesesne,  of 
DaniePs  Island.    (Wednesday,  Nov.  28,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mrs.  Ann.  Graem,  of  this  dty. 
(Monday,  Dec.  3,  1792.) 

Married,  on  Monday  night,  William  Mathew,  Esq;  to  Miss 
Martha  Osborne,  daughter  of  col.  Thomas  Osborne,  of  this  dty. 
(Wednesday,  Dec.  5,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  capt.  Edward  Lynah,  to 
Miss  Elizabeth  Sanders  Rose,  of  this  city. 

Died.  On  Thursday  night,  Mrs.  Smith,  wife  of  the  rev.  Dr. 
Smith.    (Saturday,  Dec.  8,  1792.) 


MASIUAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  131 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  at  Mepkin,  the  honorable  Henry 
Laurens,  Esq;  formerly  President  of  Congress.  (Tuesday,  Dec. 
11,  1792.) 

Married.  At  Sampit,  on  Monday  the  10th  instant.  Mr.  Francis 
Withers,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Thomas,  daughter  of  Edward  Thomas, 
Esq.    (Tuesday,  Dec.  18,  1792.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  John  Blake,  to  Mrs.  Anto- 
nie,  of  this  city.     (Wednesday,  Dec.  19,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Arthur,  of  this  dty. 
(Friday,  Dec.  21,  1792.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Clement  Prince,  to  Miss 
Mary  Morgan. — ^Mr.  Joseph  Dill,  to  Mrs.  Rivers. — Mr.  John 
Brailsford,  jun  to  Miss  Roper,  daughter  of  WOliam  Roper.  Esq; 
deceased.    (Saturday,  Dec.  22,  1792.) 

Died.  Yesterday  monring,  Mrs.  Liglesby,  wife  of  Mr.  V^am 
Liglesby  of  this  city. — On  Saturday  last,  capt.  Samuel  Yates. — 
On  Monday  evening,  Miss  Polly  Cudworth,  after  a  very  long  and 
painful  iUness.    (Thursday,  Dec.  27, 1792.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  Mr.  Squire  Brown,  to  Miss 
Maria  Ayre.    (Friday,  Dec.  28,  1792.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Mrs.  Righton,  the  wife  of  Mr.  M'CuDy 
Righton,  of  this  city.    (Monday,  Dec.  31,  1792.) 

{To  be  continued) 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS   FROM    CHRIST    CHURCH 

PARISH 

Collected  by  Anne  King  Gregobie 

[4] 

cook's  old   field   (pAKT  of  the  HAMLIN  PLANTATION) 

Jere  /  William  Ldand  /  Died  Nov.  3, 1891  /  Aged  9  months  /  and 
23  days  /  Our  bright  and  /  beautiful  boy  /  Beloved  'tU  life  / 
could  chaim  no  more. 

Our  Sister  /  Hannah's  /  Little  Daughter  /  Hannah  /  Bom  in  Ala- 
bama /  April  19,  1845  /  Died  in  Columbia  S.  C.  /  Feb  /  17, 
1847  /  (Foot  stone,  H.  N.  P.) 

Little  Sallie  /  Daughter  of  /  J.  A.  &  A.  A.  Leland  /  Bom  Feb.  16 
1849  /  Died  June  25  1849  /  "It  is  well  with  the  Parents" 

Little  Johnny  /  son  of  /  J.  A.  &  A.  A.  Leland  /  Bom  June  6  1847  / 
Died  July  26  1848  /  "It  is  well  with  the  Child" 

Little  Lizzie  /  Daughter  of  /  J.  A.  &  A.  A.  Leland  /  Bom  Jan.  9, 
1852  /  Died  Oct.  6,  1854  /  "It  is  well" 

Another  /  Little  /  Johnny  /  Son  of  /  J.  A.  &  A.  A.  Leland,  /  Bora 
August  16,  1856  /  Died  August  19  1857  /  He  was  a  pleasant 
child. 

In  /  Memory  /  of  /  John  /  son  of  /  Rev.  A.  W.  &  Mrs.  Eliza  / 
Leland  /  Bom  3rd.  Nov.  1813  /  Died  9th  Feb'y  1814  /  Sleep  on 
sweet  Babe  /  We  hope  to  meet  again. 

Ann  Allston  /  wife  of  /  J.  A.  Leland  /  Bom  June  5,  1824  /  Died 
July  8,  1903  /  The  law  of  kindness  /  Governed  her  life. 

John  Adams  /  Leland  /  Bom  Aug.  22,  1817  /  Died  March  19, 
1892  /  "The  very  Gentlest  of  /  All  human  natures  /  He  joined 
to  Courage  /  Strength. 

Here  /  Repose  in  hope  /  of  the  Resurrection  imto  Life  /  the  pre- 
cious mortal  remains  of  /  Mrs.  Eliza  Leland  /  Daughter  of  / 
Hon.  James  and  Sarah  Hibben,  /  and  Consort  of  /  Rev.  A.  W. 
Leland  D.D.  /  Prof,  of  Theo'y  in  the  Sem'y  in  CoFa  S.  C.  / 
Who  calmely  fell  asleep  in  Jesus  Dec  29,  1856  /  Aged  64  yrs. 
2  mos.  and  12  days  /  For  nearly  48  years  she  was  the  light  of 
her  Husband's  home  /and  had  become  the  untiring  prop  of 

132 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  CHRIST  CHURCH  133 

his  age  /  She  did  all  that  a  Mother  Could  do,  and  /  lived  to  see 
all  her  Children  the  professed  followers  /  of  her  "Blessed 
Saviour."  /  Her  Youngest  Son  a  few  weeks  before  her  death  / 
when  with  a  full  heart  she  exclaimed  /  "My  work  on  Earth  is 
done"  [19  more  lines  of  eulogy.] 

Jesus  Wept.  /  Beneath  this  tablet  /  Sweetly  reposes  /  The  lovely, 
and  much  loved  form  of  /  Mrs.  Eliza  Hibben  Bardwell  /  consort 
of  /  Rev.  Joseph  Bardwell,  /  and  daughter  of  /  Rev.  Dr.  A.  W. 
and  Mrs.  Eliza  Lelend  /  Who  departed  this  lif e  /  In  the  Faith 
of  Christ,  /  August  13th  1857  /  Aged  27  Years  and  3  Days  / 
[five  Hnes  of  eulogy  omitted]  An  affectionate  and  dutiful  Daugh- 
ter/A fond  and  tender  sister  /  A  loving  and  faithful  Wiie  /  And 
a  devoted  and  self-sacrificing  Mother  /  Her  work  on  earth 
though  short,  was  done  /  And  ''well  done"  /  For  many  years 
a  consistent  Member  /  of  the  Presbyterian  Church  /  [12  more 
lines  of  euology  omitted.] 

Here  /  sleep  in  Jesus  the  mortal  remains  of  /  Mrs.  Sarah  Hibben  / 
the  beloved  Wife  of  /  James  Hibben  /  who  finished  a  course  of 
distinguished  /  Piety  and  Usefulness  /  and  entered  into  the 
joy  of  her  Lord  /  on  the  26th  day  of  July,  Anno  Domini,  1827,  / 
in  the  Fifty  sixth  year  of  her  age.  /  (4  lines  of  eulogy)  A  most 
affectionate  Wife  /  A  most  tender,  faithful  Mother  /  (8  Hnes  of 
eulogy)  With  uncomplaining  patience,  she  endured  /  the  several 
and  long  protracted  sufferings  /  of  her  last  illness,  /  and  thus 
through  much  tribulation  /  entered  into  immortal  glory.  /  Let 
her  descendants  /  from  generation  to  generation  cherish  /  with 
grateful  veneration  the  memory  /  of  their  excellent  Ancestress,/ 
to  whom  they  will  be  indebted  for  /  Inestimable  Blessings. 

This  Tablet  /  Is  inscribed  /  By  the  bereved  and  mourning  Fam- 
ily, /  As  a  memorial  of  their  affection  and  grief,  /  To  the  memory 
of  their  most  beloved  /  And  excellent  Father;  /  James  Hibben,  / 
Who  having  served  God  and  his  generation  /  Faithfully,  /  By 
a  life  of  active  usefulness  /  And  enlarged  benevolence,  /  Finished 
his  course  with  joy  /  January  4th  1835;  /  Aged  68  3rears  /  Let 
the  rememberahce  of  the  virtues,  /  That  adorned  his  charac- 
ter, /  And  honored  his  name  /  As  the  friend  of  the  poor  /  The 
patron  of  the  deserving,  /  As  the  Benefactor  of  the  community,  / 
And  the  devoted  Servant  of  Christ  /  Assuage  the  sorrows  of 
his  /  Afflicted  Children.  /  And  excite  them  to  give  all  diligence  / 


134         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

To  foUow  his  example,  partake  of  his  Faith  /  and  Thus  obey 
his  dying  injunction  /  "Prepare  to  meet  me  in  Heaven"  / 
Being  death  he  yet  speaketh. 

In  Memory  /  of  /  Mrs.  Sarah  Margaret  Cater  /  consort  of  /  Rev'd 
Edwin  Cater,  /  Pastor  of  Wappetaw  church,  /  And  Daughter 
of  /  Rev'd  Dr.  A.  W.  and  Mrs.  Eliza  Leland,  /  of  Columbia, 
S.  C.  /  who  calmly  fell  asleep  in  Jesus  /  At  Mt  Pleasant,  the 
place  of  her  Nativity  /  October  8th  1857  /  Aged  46  Years  and 
4  Months  /  She  was  a  most  affectionate  Daughter,  /  A  loving 
WUe,  a  tender  Mother,  /  A  fond  Sister,  a  kind  Relative.  /  [6 
lines  of  eulogy.] 

Departed  this  life  /  on  the  11th  of  Jan'y  1840  /  Mrs.  Sarah 
Hamlin  /  of  Christ  Church  Parish,  /  Aged  76  years  /  and  8 
months  /  This  tribute  of  esteem  and  afection  /  for  departed 
worth,  is  Erected  /  by  her  Children.  /  [6  lines  of  eulogy.] 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  /  of  /  Thomas  Hamlin  /  who  departed  this 
life  /  on  the  7th  of  January.  1818  /  In  the  63rd.  year  of  his  Age  / 
[8  lines  of  verse.] 

Here  repose  the  remains  /  of  /  John,  Jane  Dewees,  /  Elizabeth 
Anna,  Thomas,  /  and  William,  who  died  in  infancy.  /  And  of 
Theodora  Emily  /  Daughter  of  John  and  Ann  Hamlin;  /  Who 
departed  this  life  on  the  Sth  April  /  A.  D.  1847.  /  Aged  Seven- 
teen Years  and  10  Months,  after  a  short  and  severe  illness.  / 
[25  lines  of  eulogy.] 

In  Memory  of  /  Arnold  Wells,  Esq'r.  /  Who  departed  this  life  on 
the  11th  day  of  /  July  A.  D.  1805.  /  Aged  26  years  and  6  months 
[9  lines  of  eulogy.] 

This  Tablet  /  Is  inscribed  by  grateful  affection,  /  To  the  memory 
of  /  Mrs.  Sarah  Margaret  Bennett  /  Who  having  finished  a 
course  of  /  Active  usefulness,  /  Died  in  the  Faith  &  Hope  of  the 
Gospel  /  On  the  8th  day  of  December  1827,  /  Aged  bodv  years.  / 
Fifteen  of  her  grandchildren,  /  And  forty  of  her  great-grand 
children,  /  Siu^ve  to  venerate  her  memory. 

Underneath  /  This  monmnent  of  filial  affection,  /  Are  the  mortal 
remains  of  /  Mrs.  Martha  Gordon,  /  who  departed  this  life,  / 
On  the  1st  day  of  March  1833  /  Aged  62  years.  /  [6  lines  of 
eulogy.] 

In  Memory  /  of  /  Mary  Harriet  Pepper,  /  Yoimgest  Daughter  of  / 
A.  M.  and  P.  A.  Pepper,  /  Who  died  Feb  13,  1861,  /  Aged  15 
years,  4  mos.  and  27  days.  /  (14  lines  of  eulogy  and  quotation.) 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  CHRIST  CHURCH  135 

Our  Little  Son  /  Frank  CarUle  /  Only  Chfld  of  /  N.  C.  and  S.  A. 
Hamlin.  /  Bom  Nov'r  23rd  1856  /  Died  Oct'r  15th  1858.    .    .    . 

In  Memory /of /Sarah  Ann  Hamlin /Wife  of /N.Cobia  Hamlin,/ 
An  affectionate  wife,  a  mother  /  bereaved  of  her  only  child,  / 
a  sufferer  from  /  protracted  illness,  /  a  sinner  trusting  in  the 
blood  /  of  Jesus  /  she  fell  asleep  in  the  /  communion  of  the  / 
Christian  Church,  /  on  the  7th  of  March,  1859,  /  aged  27  3rears 
and  2  months.  /    .    .    .    . 

In  Memory  /  of  /  Emily  G.  Hamlin,  /  Wife  of  Thomas  Hamlin,  / 
who  died  /  July  10th  1859,  /  Aged  28  years.  /  By  common  con- 
sent, /  one  of  the  lovliest  and  /  most  devoted  Christians  /  who 
have  ever  adorned  /  This  community;  /  one  whose  holy  life 
was  /  an  unanswerable  proof  /  of  the  religion  of  Jesus.  /  Weep, 
a£9icted  Parish,  /  for  another  praying  soul  /  has  been  taken  from 
thee!  /  Affectionate  sister,  /  dutiful  daughter,  /  tender  wife, 
faithful  mother,  /  Christ-like  saint,  /  Farewell.  /    .    .    .    . 

Girardeau  /  Infant  son  of  /  Thomas  and  Emily  G.  Ilamlin,  /  who 
died  /  July  14th  1859  / 

Mike  /  A  faithful  Servant  of  /  Thomas  Hamlin  Esq.  /  Died  Sept. 
1857.  /  He  was  an  honest,  intelligent,  /  Christian  man. 

Our  /  Mother  /  In  Memory  /  of  /  Mary  Hamlin,  Daughter  of 
Philip  Moore,  /  and  Relict  of  /  Thomas  Hamlin.  /  Who  died 
January  25th  1868  /  Aged  68  Years,  11  months,  /  and  19  days  / 


•    •    . 


Erected  /  In  affectionate  rememberance  /  Of  /  Mrs.  Sarah  White,  / 
Consort  of  /  John  White,  /  who  departed  this  life  /  On  the  25th 
day  of  May  1842,  /  Aged  Fifty  Four  Years,  /  And  Five  Months 


•    .    •    • 


In  Memory  /  of  /  Thomas  Hamlin,  /  Who  died  2Sth  February 

1849  /  Aged  Fifty  Five  Years,  1  Month,  and  9  Days.  /  (19  lines 

of  eulogy) 

[Also  a  bricked  up  grave  prepared  for,  but  never  furnished  with 
a  slab. 

In  the  same  bur3dng  ground  are  the  unmarked  graves  of  Mr. 
James  Hamlin,  a  brave  scout  of  the  Confederacy;  and  of  a  faithful 
servant,  Amanda  Switzer] 


iHotte  SDbMon  leUiib 

MoTiE  Alston  Read  became  a  member  of  the  South  Caitdina 
Historical  Society  in  1909  and  was  chosen  as  a  curator  in  1912. 

He  was  bom  June  20,  1872,  and  was  the  eldest  son  of  William 
Melvin  Read  of  Vii^ginia  by  his  wife  Jane  Ladson  Alston,  daughter 
of  Mr.  Jacob  Motte  Alston  of  South  Carolina. 

He  onnpleted  his  college  education  at  Harvard  University  wbtxe 
he  received  the  degree  of  Bachelor  of  Science  in  1893.  His  sub- 
sequent scientific  work  can  be  best  tcdd  by  a  quotation  from  the 
News  and  Courier  (August  6,  1914)  telling  of  his  election  to  the 
chair  of  Biology  in  the  College  of  Charleston,  which  the  condition 
of  his  health  prevented  him  from  ever  filling: 

''He  continued  his  scientific  work  in  Munich  during  several 
years  in  the  later  nineties  and  in  1901  was  elected  to  the  chair  of 
Ph3rsiography  in  Harvard  University.  In  1902  he  was  again  in 
Europe,  engaged  in  palaeontological  faunal  studies  in  the  Tyrol, 
and  returning  to  Harvard  in  the  fall  was  elected,  while  still  hold- 
ing the  Harvard  Chair,  to  the  instructorship  in  Physiography  in 
Radcliffe  College  and  in  the  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Tech- 
nology. Prof.  Read  was  at  various  times  vice  president  of  the 
Harvard  Natural  History  Society,  a  member  of  the  Boston  Nat- 
ural History  Society,  field  assistant  in  the  United  States  Geo- 
logical Survey,  member  of  the  International  Congresses  of  Geolo- 
gists, which  met  in  Washington  in  1891,  in  Russia  in  1897,  and  in 
Paris  in  1900.  He  is  also  a  member  of  the  German  Alpine  Verein, 
and  a  charter  member  of  the  Harvard  Traveller's  Club,  devoted 
to  furthering  scientific  travel.  The  principal  subjects  of  his  re- 
search have  been  palaeontology  of  the  Amphibia  and  R^tilia, 
the  geographical  distribution  of  life  and  lands  past  and  present, 
and  eugenics.  His  chief  publication  is  Gastropods  of  ike  Volcanic 
Tuff  of  the  Seisser  Alp,  Tirol,  Triassic." 

Mr.  Read  was  also  an  earnest  student  of  history,  principally  in 
its  economic  and  racial  development.  For  he  was  a  careful 
observer  of  heredity  both  in  its  narrower  or  personal  aspect  and 
in  its  broader  sense,  as  involving  the  development  or  decay  of 

136 


MOTTE  ALSTON  READ  137 

groups  of  individuab,  connected  by  blood  or  descent^  called  loosely 
tribes,  nations,  and  races. 

This  it  was  that  gave  the  impulse  to  his  historical  studies  of  the 
older  families  of  Virginia  and  the  Carolinas,  and  led  to  his  con- 
tinued interest  in  this  Society,  and  its  publications.  And  it  is  a 
distinct  loss  that  the  increasing  infirmity  produced  by  his  cruel 
disease  prevented  his  completing  the  work  he  had  in  hand  for 
publication  in  this  magazine.  This  disease  it  was  which  in  the 
full  vigour  of  manhood  broke  off  his  professional  career  and  com- 
pelled his  retirement  to  his  Texan  ranch  in  the  hope  that  an  active 
out-of-door  life  might  assist  his  powers  of  resistance.  Finding 
this  hope  a  vain  one,  he  made  his  home  in  Charleston  and  resigned 
himself  to  the  sedentary  life  of  his  library,  where  his  mental 
activities  in  the  acquirement  and  arrangement  of  knowledge  con- 
tinued to  his  death,  even  though  his  own  productiveness  became 
daily  more  limited  by  pain  and  loss  of  ph3^ical  powers. 

And  yet  visits  to  this  library  were  constant  pleasures  to  his 
friends,  for  they  f oimd  in  it  a  fortitude  which  allowed  no  place  to 
regrets  for  lost  opportunities  and  no  complaints  over  present  dis- 
abilities. But  in  place  of  these  they  met  an  active  interest  in 
current  events,  a  keen  intelligence,  a  superb  memory,  and  a 
readiness  to  discuss  the  great  movements  of  the  intellectual  world 
whether  in  science,  in  history,  or  in  art.  For  among  his  acquire- 
ments was  a  knowledge  and  developed  taste  in  the  last,  which 
made  his  opinions  authoritative  among  connoisseurs,  and  enabled 
him  to  form  for  his  own  pleasure  a  fine  collection  of  Jsipaneae 
Color  Prints. 

He  died  at  his  residence  No.  8  Atlantic  Street  on  July  12,  1920. 

D.  £.  HuGER  SiaiH. 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
CHARLESTON.  S.  C. 


VOLUME  XXI,  No.  4  OCTOBER,  1920 


PUBUGATION  COMMITTEE 

JO6EFH  W.  BABN\^rELL^  Hensy  A.  M.  SMITHi 

A.  S.  Saixsy,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webber. 


CONTENTS 

A  Bill  of  Complaint  in  Chancery,  1700 139 

The  Register  of  Christ  Church  Parish 144 

Two  Letters  from  Charles  Cotcsworth  Pinckney  to  Ralph 

Izard ISO 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  the  City  Gazette 153 

Inscriptions  from  the  Church-s^ard  at  Strawberry  Chapel. . .  161 

Index 171 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  ly  aire  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  ICstorical  Sodety.  Members  df  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January),  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
receiving  the  Magames,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Sodety,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 

Miss  Mabd  L.  Webber, 

South  Caioliiia  Histoiical  Sodety, 

Cfaarleston,  S.  C 


1  now      ■--.■.■>, 

■>      \ 


1     "    - 


V. 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXI  OCTOBER,  1920  No.  4 


A  BILL  OF  COMPLAINT  IN  CHANCERY,  1700 
Contributed  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

The  following  rather  amusing  and  unusual  bill  of  complaint  was 
copied  from  a  paper  found  among  some  unindexed  docimients  in 
the  oflSce  of  the  Clerk  of  Court,  Charleston,  S.  C. 

Most  of  the  people  mentioned  werfe  prominent  at  that  period; 
Thomas  Cary  and  John  Danson  were  sons-in-law  of  Governor 
Archdale,  Cary  being  at  one  time  a  member  of  Council  (McCrady, 
Vol.  1).  George  Dearlsey  was  a  member  of  Council  in  1697,  and 
a  large  land  owner,  had  several  holdings  in  Christ  Church  parish 
(see  page  73);  he  made  his  will  Jime  20,  1702,  and  mentions 
Patrick  Logan,  son  of  George  Logan  Esq;  to  whom  he  leaves 
negroes,  and  two  of  four  lots  in  Charles  Town  purchased  of  John 
Barksdale,  George  Logan  the  brother  of  Patrick  to  inherit  in  case 
Patrick  die;  leaves  to  Susannah  Cornish  household  goods  and 
plantation  (goods?)  whatsoever  in  Carolina,  two  negroes  and  200 
acres  at  Boowatt  purchased  of  John  Nix;  to  her  daughter  Ann, 
under  age,  four  negroes;  To  Edward,  son  of  Susannah  Turlow,  four 
negroes  and  one  town  lot,  and  plantation  of  400  acres  at  Wap- 
petaw;  to  his  sister  Elizabeth  Quelch  and  her  heirs,  plantation 
where  he  lived,  with  all  buildings,  stock  and  10  negroes.  To 
friend  George  Logan  Esq;  horse  and  negro  boy  Buckingham,  said 
George  Logan  to  be  sole  executor. 

The  fourth  part  of  the  briganteen  Mayflcwer  which  he  owns  to 
be  sold  on  her  return  to  Carolina  to  pay  for  the  finishing  of  the 

139 


140         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

ship  he  is  now  building  for  his  father  Richard  Dearsley  in  Bar- 
badoes,  but  if  the  said  vessel!  make  a  profitable  voyage,  then  after 
debts  are  paid,  one  half  to  father  Richard  Dearsley,  Esq;  and  in 
case  of  his  death  to  brother  and  sbters  in  law  equally  divided; 
one  fourth  to  sister  Elizabeth  Quelch  and  the  other  to  be  divided 
equally  between  Susannah  Cornish  and  her  daughter  and  Susannah 
Turlow's  son  Edward. 

Witnesses  were  Robert  Dacres,  Wm.  Allen,  John  Morgan  and 
Anth'y  Mathews;  Examined  April  20,  1704  (or  9?)  and  recorded 
July  6,  1719.     (Probate  Court  1711-18,  page  60.) 

George  Heame  was  a  ^bondsman  for  Frances  Betterson,  widow 
of  William  Betterson,  May  9,  1705  (This  Magazine,  vol.  xii,  213). 

Robert  Dacres  "late  of  the  Province  of  Carolina,  bachelor" 
died  intestate;  administration  was  granted  28  April,  1707  to 
Robert  Johnson,  Esq;  attorney  for  Hon.  Thos.  Broughton,  Dame 
Mary  Dacres,  mother  of  the  defimct,  first  renouncing  {Ibid  vol. 
iv,  236). 

South  Carolina. 

Filed  in  ye  Secret'^.  OflSce 

May  ye  8th,  1700 

To  the  Right  Hon'ble  Joseph  Blake  Esq'.  Govern'.  And  One 
of  the  Lords  Proprietors  of  Carolina,  and  to  the  Hon"*,  the  Gen- 
tlemen of  the  Coundll  being  the  High  Court  of  Chancery  for  this 
Province. 

Humbly  Complaining  Sheweth  imto  ye  HonT)ls  Your  Orator 
Robert  Dacres  of  Carolina  Gent.  That  on  or  about  the  thirteenth 
day  of  January  1698/9  Your  Orator  being  on  board  of  a  Ship  to 
take  leave  of  Some  ffriends.  And  being  there  Overtaken  in  drinke 
coming  home  One  George  Heame  came  into  CompV  w***.  Your 
Orator  and  Invited  him  to  his  the  sd.  Heame's  house.  And  there 
perceiving  Yr  Orator's  Disorder,  He  took  that  Opportunity  to 
tempt  Yr.  Orator  to  play.  And  so  wone  of  Yr.  Orator  the  Summe 
of  fl5vty-Nine  pounds,  and  accordingly  gott  Yr.  Orator  being  So 
in  drinke  to  Sign  a  Note  or  bill  Under  his  hand  to  pay  the  Sd. 
Heame  the  Said  smnme  of  flfivety  Nine  pounds.  And  in  Some  few 
days  afterwards,  he  the  sd.  Heame  demanded  the  sd.  Summ  of 
flSvety  Nine  pounds  of  Yr.  Orator,  But  your  Orator  not  remember- 
that  he  was  in  the  Comp*.  of  the  sd  Heame,  Or  had  played  with 


A  BILL  OF  COMPLAINT  IN  CHANCERY  141 

him  Or  had  given  any  Note  or  bill  for  the  sd  Summ  of  ffivety 
Nine  pounds  refused  the  payment  of  the  Same,  Whereupon  upon 
the  sd  Heame  Relating  how  he  had  won  moneys  of  yr  Orator  to 
Coll"  Thomas  Cary  &  Mr.  John  Danson  of  Carolina  Merch'ts: 
They  the  sd  Cary  and  Danson  acquainting  yr  Orator  with  the 
Same,  did  propose  to  yr  Orator  that  if  he  would  Ventmre  five 
pounds  they  would  play  oflf  the  sd  Note  for  £59: — ^wth  the  said 
Heame,  And  win  the  Same  back  again  for  yr  Orator,  And  take  up 
yr  Orator's  Note,  Which  Yr  Orator  consenting  to,  and  Engaging 
to  pay  the  sd  Cary  &  Danson — ^if  they  Lost  so  farr  as  five  pounds 
Upon  this  Consideration,  That  what  they  wone  of  the  sd  Heame, 
it  should  be  to  the  discharging  of  yr  Orators  Note  of  £59 — as 
aforesaid,  And  upon  this  Consideration  the  sd  Cary  &  Danson 
played  wth  the  sd  Heame,  and  wonn  of  him  to  ye  flfvde  Value  of 
£59  in  discharge  of  )rr  Orators  Note,  togeather  with  more  Monys 
for  thenselves.  But  the  sd  Cary  &  Danson  after  having  wonn  of 
the  sd.  Heame  as  aforesaid,  pretended  to  yr.  Orator  that  they 
could  nott  gett  his  Note  for  the  sd  Summ  of  £59;  from  the  sd 
Heame,  Excepting  yr  Orator  (for  a  Colour)  wovdd  give  a  Note 
Either  to  ye  sd.  Cary  or  Danson  for  the  Summ  of  £59; — ^And 
accordingly  the  sd.  Cary  drew  a  bill  for  flSvety  Nine  pounds 
payable  to  the  sd  Danson  Who  both  of  them  promised  yr.  Orator 
it  should  not  be  made  use  of  against  him,  but  that  the  same  should 
be  given  up  to  yr  Orator  when  desired.  And  yr  Orator  confiding 
in  the  Promises  of  the  sd  Cary  &  Danson,  accordingly  Signed 
the  same,  and  had  the  Note  for  £59  pay"*  to  the  sd.  Heame 
delivered  to  him,  But  so  it  is  may  it  please  )rr  Hon",  that  the  sd 
Danson  being  bound  on  a  Voyage  to  England  on  Or  about  the 
Latter  End  of,  the  Sd.  Month  of  ffebruary  or  beginning  of  March 
1698/9  Yr  Orator  desired  y  sd.  Danson  to  give  him  up  the  sd 
Note  for  £59:  so  Obtained  as  aforesaid.  According  to  his  the  sd 
Danson  and  Cary*s  Promises  to  ye  sd  Orator.    And  the  sd.  Dar- 
son  replyed  that  he  had  put  the  sd  Note  into  the  hands  of  the  sd 
Coll"  Cary  and  further  say*d  that  the  said  Cary  wovdd  deliver 
yr.  Orat'  the  said  Note  when  desired.  When  in  tmth  the  said 
Darson  had  not  delivered  the  sd  Note  to  the  sd  Cary,  but  had 
delivered  the  S)ane  to  Maj'.  George  Dearsly  with  Power  and 
Directions  to  put  sd  Note  in  Suite,  against  yr  Orator,  as  soon  as 
he  the  sd  Danson  was  gone  oflf.  Which  the  sd.  Maj'.  Dearsley 


142  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Accordingly  did,  in  the  Name  of  the  sd.  Danson  by  causing  Writts 
to  be  prosecuted  against  yr  Orator,  who  was  arrested  upon  the 
Same  on  or  about  the  22th  day  of  March  1699/00 — in  an  action 
of  Debt  for  flSvety  Nine  pounds,  And  a  Declaration  upon  the 
Same  filed  against  yr.  Orator  the  fifth  day  of  Aprill  1699  in  the 
Coiurt  of  Common  Please  of  this  Province,  as  by  the  Records  of 
the  same  doth  appear,  all  which  practices  of  the  sd  Danson  are 
Contrary  to  all  Rights,  Equity,  and  good  Conscience,  In  tender 
Consideration  whereof.  And  for  as  much  as  yr  Orator  is  not  reliev- 
eable  in  the  promises  by  the  Strict  Rules  of  the  Common  Law,  but 
is  altogether  remediless  in  the  same.  Unless  by  the  Aid  of  this 
Hon'****.  Court,  yr.  Orator  may  have  A  Particular  discovery 
thereof  by  the  Corporable  Oaths  of  the  sd  John  Danson  Thomas 
Cary,  and  yr.  sd.  George  Heame,  who  are  well  known  and  are 
Satisfied  of  the  Truth  of  all  and  Singular  the  promises  before 
Sett  forth,  who  when  they  doe  answer  to  these  Upon  Oath,  must 
&  will  discover  the  same.  To  the  End  therfore  that  the  sd.  Con- 
federators  Danson  Cary  and  Heame,  and  Every  of  them  may  Sett 
fforth  upon  what  Consideration  the  sd.  Note  of  £59:  pay**^  by 
yr.  Orator  to  ye  sd  Danson  was  given.  And  if  the  Same  was  for  the 
moneys  Lent  of  Goods  &  Merchandise  sold  and  Delivered,  or  any 
other  LawfuU  Consideration,  And  if  the  same  was  not  Obtained 
from  yr.  Orator  as  above  sett  flforth,  and  Upon  noe  Other  Consid- 
eration whatsoever. 

May  it  Please  Yr.  Hon'"  to  grant  unto  yr.  afors**  Orator  the 
Writt  or  Writts  of  Supoena  to  be  directed  to  the  sd.  John  Danson, 
Thos.  Cary  &  George  Heame,  commanding  them  &  Every  of  them 
att  a  Certain  day,  and  Under  a  certain  Penalty,  there  in  to  be 
Limited  personally  to  be  and  appear  before  yr  Hon".  Coiurt 
then  and  there  to  make  direct  Answer  upon  Oath  to  Every  Clause 
and  Article  in  this  yr.  Orators  bill  of  Complaint,  as  fully  as  if  the 
Same  had  againe  been  reported  and  interrogated.  And  further  to 
stand  to  and  abide  such  Order  &  Decree  therein,  as  to  yr.  Hon*, 
shall  seem  just  w*^.  Equity. 

And  also  the  writt  of  Injuction  injoying  him  the  sd.  John 
Danson,  his  Coimcill*.  Attorneys  &  SoUicitors,  to  Stay  &  Sur- 
cease all  further  prosecution  upon  the  Note  or  bill,  and  that  there 
be  noe  further  proceedings  on  the  Same,  untill  Other  Orders  shall 
be  taken  therein  by  Yr.  Hour*.    And  that  y'  Orator  by  Decree  of 


A  BttL  OF  COMPLAINT  IN  CHANCERY  143 

this  Hon"®  Court  may  be  flfuUy  relieved  in  the  Promise  According 
as  to  y'  Honr*.  in  Your  Wisdom  shall  seem  meet,  agreeable  to 
Equity  and  good  Conscience. 
And  Y'.  Orator  as  in  Duty  bound 
Shall  Every  pray  &c 

Nicholas  Trott  for  y^  Compl*: 
Endorsed: 
Bill  of  Complaint 
Dacres  Vs  Danson 
Bill  in  Chancery 
1700 
Trott 


THE  REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH 

Copied  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  July.) 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISMS 

Elizabeth  Martin,  the  first  Daughter  of  John  Sandford  Dart  and 
Martha  Dart,  was  Bom  in  CharlesTown  on  Wednesday  June 
the  22nd.  1774  and  Baptized  in  Saint  Philip's  Parish  on  Wednes- 
day October  the  26th,  1774  By  the  Revd  Mr.  Robert  Purcell, 
B.  L.  assistant  Lectiurer  to  said  Parish,  by  the  aforesaid  name 
of  Elizabeth  Martin.  Sponsors  Jacob  Motte  Esqr.  Mrs.  Eliza- 
beth Lynch,  and  Miss  Susannah  Smith. 

Thomas  the  son  of  Samuel  Lacey  and  Marthar  his  wife  was  bom 

Bom  on 1775  and  was  Baptized  July  the  9,  1775  By 

the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell — Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Anna  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  and  Jane  Whiteside  was  Bom 
May,  Sth,  1775,  and  was  Baptized  June  18th  1775  By  the  Rev'd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  this  parish. 

Elizabeth  Haddrell  Hort  Daughter  of  William  and  Alice  Hort  was 
bom  in  Christ  Church  parish  Saturday  9th  of  September  1775 
— and  Baptized  by  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  on  Tuesday 
ye  26th  September  1775. 

William  Rutherford  Bumsides  was  bom  ye  19,  July  1775  and  was 
Baptized  ye  13  November  1775. 

Richard  Hartman  was  bom  October  ye  23rd  1775  and  was  Bap- 
tized March  ye  31st.  1776  By  the  Reb'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell. 
Rector  of  this  Parish. 

John  the  son  of  John  &  Sarah  Whitesides  was  Bom  ye 

1776— and  was  Baptized  April  ye  7,  1776  By  the  Rev'd  Mr. 
Henry  Pmrcell  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Sally  the  Daughter  of  Peter  &  Mary  Croft  was  bom  1776  and 
baptized  September  1776  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Henry  Purcell. 

The  Son  of  James  and  Elizabeth  Evans  was  bom  ye 1776 — 

and  was  Baptized  September  15th  1776— By  the  Rev'd  Mr. 
Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

144 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  145 

Henry  the  Son  of  Thomas  and  Jean  Whitesides  was  bom  ye — 
1776— and  was  Baptized  ye  20  October  1776— By  the  Rev'd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Samuel  the  Son  of  Richard  and  Mary  Reya  was  born  the  20  July, 
1776  and  was 

Sarah  the  Daughter  of  Samuel  Lacey  and  Marthar  his  wife  was 
Bom  Dec'r  29  1776— and  was  Baptized  Jan'y  1777,  by  the 
Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  Rector  of  said  Parish. 

MARRIAGES 

James  Evans  was  Duely  Married  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Bennett 
Spinster,  the  Daughter  of  John  Bennett — 1775  By  the  Rev'd 
Mr.  Henry  Purcell  A.  B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

John  Whitesides  was  Duely  Married  to  Mrs.  Sarah  Dorrell,  relict 

of  Robert  Dorrell  Jimior,  on 1775 — ^By  the  Rev'd  Mr. 

Henry  Purcell,  A.  B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Jonathan  Dorrell  was  Duely  Married  to  Miss  Mary  Whiteside 
Spinster,  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  Whiteside  Decec'd  on  Dec.  17, 
1775  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  A.B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Richard  Reya  was  Duely  Married  to  Mary  Burges  Daughter  of 
Samuel  Burges  ye  21  Nov.  1776 —  By  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry 
Purcell,  A.B.  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

William  Dorrill  was  Duely  Married  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Whiteside 
Spinster  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  Whiteside  Deceased  on 
February  ye  24  1778  by  the  Reverend  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  A.B. 
Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Jonathan  Dorrill  was  Duely  Married  to  Miss  Mary  Combe  Spin- 
ster on  December  7,  1785  by  the  Reverend  Henry  Purcell  of 
Charleston. 

William  Dorrill  was  Married  to  Miss  Rebekah  McKoy  July  24 
1785  by  the  Reverend  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  of  Charleston. 

James  Butler  was  Married  to  Ann  Bennett  (the  daughter  of 
Thomas  Bennett  and  Mary  Metheringham  of  Christ  Church 
Parish  the  Nineteenth  day  of  Dec.  1782  by  the  Rev'd  Alex- 
ander Garden. 

Thomas  Butler  Son  of  James  Butler  and  Ann  his  Wife  was  bom 
the  Nineth  day  of  February  1785. 

James  Butler  was  Married  to  Mary  Hamlin  (Daughter  of  George 
Hamlin  and  his  Wife  Mary)  on  the  20  th  day  of  May  1790— 
by  the  Rev'd  John  Stewart. 


146         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

DEATHS   AND  BURIALS 

John  son  of  James  Eavens  Departed  this  life  April  ye  1,  1777 — 

and  was  buried  the  2d  of  the  same  Instant  By  the  Rev'd  Mr. 

Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  this  Parish. 
Susannah  Wigfall  the  \^e  of  Joseph  Wigfall  Departed  this  life  on 

Simday  ye  Sth  April  1777 — and  was  Buried  the  3rd  of  the  same 

Instant,  at  the  Parish  Church  of  this  Parish  By  the  Rev'd  Mr. 

Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  this  Parish. 
Elizabeth  Lindsay  Departed  this  life  Jvdy  6th.  1777,  and  was 

biuied  the  Sth  of  Uie  same  Instant  in  the  Family  Burying 

Groimd  of  the  Late  Capt  Jacob  Bond  Esqr;  in  this  Parish 

Aged  60  Years. 
On  Tuesday  Night  December  ye  30,  1777  Departed  this  Life 

Robert  Dorrill  Senr,  and  was  Entered  into  his  Family  Burying 

Groimd  on  Thursday  following  aged  Sixty  Years  and  Eight 

Months. 
Monday  morning  October  ye  16th  1780  Departed  this  life  Mary 

Dorrill  Daughter  of  Jonathan  &  Mary  Dorrill  and  was  buried 

at  the  Parish  Church  the  Tuesday  following  Aged  Three  Years 

and  One  Month. 
On  Thursday  morning  February  ye  13th  1783  departed  this  Life 

Mary  Dorrill  the  wife  of  Jonathan  Dorrill  and  was  Buried  at 

the  Parish  Church  the  Satmrday  following. 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISMS 

William  Ainslie  Felix  the  son  of  John  and  Alice  Mauroumit  was 
bom  the  11,  March,  1777,  and  was  Baptized  the  2d,  April, 
1777 — Sponsors  Wm.  Moultrieson  of  General  Movdtrie,  Baron 
Lewis  Felix  Misinback,  Hannah  Moultrie,  Daughter  of  Col. 
Ainslie,  and  Miss  Anna  BeUa  Moultrie,  niece  of  General  Movdtrie. 

Caroline,  daughter  of  Peter  and  Mary  Croft  was  baptized  the  14, 
December,  1777 — Sponsers  the  said  father  and  mother.  By  the 
Rev'd.  Mr.  Henry  Purcell,  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Mary  the  daughter  of  Jonathan  Dorrill  and  Mary  his  wife  was 
Bom  on  Saturday  September  the  13th,  1777  and  was  Baptized 
by  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Henry  Purcell  Rector  of  this  Parish. 

Mary  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  and  Elizabeth  Player  was  Bom 
April  8,  1771. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  147 

Martha  the  Daughter  of  Thomas  and  Elizabeth  Player  was  Bom 
May  24,  1774. 

Joshua  the  Son  of  Thomas  and  Elizabeth  Player  was  Bom  March 
11,  1777. 

Jonathan  the  Son  of  Jonatha  Dorrill  and  Mary  his  Wife  was  bom 
on  Wednesday  Jime  14,  1780  and  was  Baptized  by  the  Rev'd 
Mr.  Alexander  Garden. 

Elizabeth  Daughter  of  Jonathan  Dorrill  and  Mary  his  Wife  was 
Bom  on  Monday  July  8,  1782  and  was  baptized  by  the  Rev- 
erend Mr.  Hill. 

DEATHS  AND  BURIALS 

Wednesday  Evening  September  ye  13,  1784  Departed  this  Life 
Elizabeth  Dorrill  Daughter  of  Jonathan  and  Mary  Dorrill  and 
was  biuied  at  the  Parish  Church  the  friday  following  Aged  two 
Years  and  two  Months. 

On  Tuesday  Morning  March  ye  29,  1785  Departed  this  life  Eliza- 
beth Dorrill  the  wife  of  William  Dorrill  and  was  Buried  at  the 
Parish  Church  the  thursday  following  Aged  25  Years. 

On  Friday  Morning  May  ye  23,  1788  Departed  this  Life  Jonathan 
Dorrill  of  Christ  Church  Parish  and  was  Biuied  at  the  parish 
Chiurch  the  Simday  following  aged  43  Years. 

On  Thursday  Morning  July  ye  16,  1788  Departed  This  Life 
William  Hartman  and  was  Buried  at  his  family  Burring  Ground 
on  friday  following. 

Ann  the  Wife  of  James  Butler  Departed  this  life  the  Ninth  day 
of  August  1789  and  was  Buried  at  Wambaw  church  near  Santee. 

BIRTHS   AND  BAPTISMS 

John  The  Son  of  Elias  Euvans  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was  bom 

on  Wednesday  March  the  fifth  1783. 
James  the  Son  of  James  Euvans  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was  bom 

June  9,  1778. 
John  the  Son  of  James  Euvans  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  was  born 

September  20,  1780. 
William  the  Son  of  James  Euvans  and  Elizabeth  his  Wife  bom 

March  10,  1783. 


148  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Elizabeth  the  Daughter  of  George  Arthur  and  Sarah  his  Wife  was 

born  24  of  February  1777. 
George  Son  of  George  Arthur  and  Sarah  his  Wife  was  bom  22 

Aprill  1779. 
Martha  Daughter  of  George  Arthur  and  Sarah  his  wife  was  bom 

14  January  1783. 
Stephen  the  Son  of  Stephen  Townsend  and  Sarah  his  Wife  was 

bom  2  of  October  1786. 
Joseph  the  son  of  Jonathan  Dorrill  and  Mary  his  Wife  was  Bom 

on  Saturday  October  7th,  1786  and  Baptized  April  22,  1787. 
Mary  the  Daughter  of  John  and  Jane  Combe  was  bom  May  the 

27th  1764  and  was  baptized  by  the  Reverend  Mr.  Alexander 

Garden. 

Ann  The  Daughter  of (iorn). 

Elizabeth  the  daughter  of  William (torn)  and  Rebekah  his 

wife  was  Bora  ye  28—1787. 
Robert  the  Son  of  John  Dorrill  and  Damar — his  wife  was  Bom  on 

thursday  Oct.  31,  1775. 
James  the  Son  of  John  Dorrill  and  Damaris  his  wife  was  bom  on 

friday  July  31,  1778. 
Rebekah  The  Daughter  of  William  Dorrill  and  Rebekah  his  Wife 

was  Bom  July  31,  178— 
Sarah  The  Daughter  of  John  Hartman  and  Mary  his  wife  was 

bom  Febmary  28th  1786  and  was  baptized  by  the  Reverend 

Mr.  Willis. 
Mary  Dorrill  the  Daughter  of  John  Hartman  and  Mary  his  wife 

was  bom  December  23,  1787  and  was  baptized  by  the  Reverend 

Mr.  McCavdey. 
(torn)  of  William  Cook  and was  bom  Febm- 
ary 1,  1782. 
The  Daughter  of  William  Cook  and  Ann  his  Wife  was 

born  June  16,  1784. 
Mary  the  Daughter  of  William  Cook  and  Ann  his  Wife  was  bom 

March  16,  1786. 
William  the  Son  of  William  Cook  and  Ann  his  wife  was  bom 

May  10,  1788. 
John  The  Son  of  John  Eden  and  Rebecca  his  Wife  was  bora  June 

18,   1775  and  baptized  by  the  Reverend   Henry   Purcell  of 

Charleston. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  149 

Sarah  the  Daughter  of  John  Eden  and  Rebecca  his  Wife  was  bom 

August  the  28th  1777  and  was  baptized  by  the  Reverend  Mr. — 

of  this  Parish. 
Thomas  Townsend,  Son  of  Stephen  &  Sarah  his  wife  Was  Bom 

Feb.  27,  1789. 
Maried  on  Janerary  the  24,  1805,  John  Allman  Esq.  to  Miss 

Sarah  Heartman  by  Rev.  P.  Mathews. 
Samuel  Royce  Son  of  Richard  Royce  &  Mary  his  wife  was  bom 

16  June  1776. 

{To  be  continued.) 


TWO  LETTERS  FROM  CHARLES  COTESWORTH  PINCK- 

NEY  TO  RALPH  IZARD 

(From  Collection  of  South  Carolina  ICstorical  Society) 

HI 

(Address  missing) 

Charleston  Nov':  Sth:  1794 
Dear  S— ^: 

By  Strong  we  had  expected  the  pleasure  of  Mrs.  Izard's  Com- 
pany; but  as  she  has  preferred  the  Journey  by  Land  I  have  agree- 
able to  your  desire  written  to  M';  Chesnutt,  &  I  have  no  doubt 
but  that  he  will  pay  her  every  attention  when  she  arrives  at  Cam- 
den, and  we  still  flatter  ourselves  we  shall  be  favoured  with  her 
Company  when  she  comes  to  Charleston — 

From  one  of  her  letters  to  Mrs.  Pinckney  I  find  I  have  not 
received  one  or  two  of  your  Letters,  and  that  one  of  mine  has 
miscarried — In  that  I  informed  you  that  Mr.  Hamilton^  the  Ship 
Builder  did  not  chuse  to  be  concerned  in  the  Building  of  a  Frigate; 
that  Mr.  Pritchard*  thought  it  might  be  done  here,  and  that  Capt''. 
George"  said  he  would  undertake  it;  I  also  inclosed  you  Copies  of 
Capt.  Mayrant's^  Commission  and  Certificates,  and  which  I  also 
now  inclose,  that  if  more  Frigates  should  be  put  into  Commission 
he  may  be  in  the  way  of  promotion — a  Letter  from  the  Secretary 
of  War  to  me  has  also  miscarried,  as  in  a  Letter  of  his  to  the  Grov- 
emor,  he  directs  him  to  cause  a  certain  vessel  to  be  delivered  up 
to  the  original  owners,  and  mentions  to  him  ''that  if  he  did  not 
chuse  to  execute  the  order  I  could,  and  that  a  copy  of  the  order 
and  of  the  Letter  was  sent  to  me  for  that  purpose — " 

This  Letter  the  Governor  shewed  to  Judge  Bee  and  to  Mr. 
Holmes  the  Collector,  and  at  the  same  time  caused  the  vessel  to 
be  delivered  up,  but  no  copy  of  it,  or  of  the  order  ever  came  to 
me — 

^  David  Hamilton;  he  married  in  1774,  Elizabetli  Re3molds,  stepdaughter 
to  the  elder  Paul  Pritchard. 

*  Probably  Wm.  Pritchard;  Paul  Pritchard  the  elder,  and  first  shipbuilder 
here  of  that  name,  was  dead  by  this  date. 

*  James  George,  a  sea  captain. 

*  John  Mayrant. 

150 


LETTERS  FROM  C.  C.  PINCKNEY  151 

The  Letters  I  received  from  the  Secretary  at  War  were  previous 
to  this,  and  had  no  allusion  to  the  vessel  which  was  the  subject 
of  this  Letter — I  wish  I  could  discover  the  rascals  who  amuse  them- 
selves in  interrupting  my  Correspondence — By  C^t.  Strong  I 
send  a  small  Box  with  two  articles  sent  in  it,  to  be  altered  agree- 
able to  the  paper  in  the  Box,  also  25  Dollars  with  which  I  will 
beg  you  to  pay  the  inclosed  Bill  [of]  Gardelters,  and  to  return  the 
Articles  when  altered  either  by  Strong  or  any  other  safe  oppor- 
tunity. 

I  am  just  setting  out  for  the  review  of  the  Southern  regiments, 
and  on  my  return  shall  not  remain  in  Charleston  above  three 
days  before  I  set  out  for  Columbia  where  I  expect  to  have  a  very 
disagreeable  sessions  owing  to,  the  Appian  politics — 

With  great  regard  and  Esteem  I  remain 

Y'  friend 
Charles   Cotesworth  Pinckney. 

[2] 
Honble 

Ralph  Izard 

Charleston  DeC.   26th:   1794. 
Dear  S': 

On  the  20th  instant  I  wrote  to  you  from  Colmnbia,  and  gave 
you  an  account  of  our  Elections  and  the  termination  of  the  Appian 
business;  this  Letter  will  be  confined  altogether  to  the  manage- 
ment of  your  plantating  Interest.  Mr.  Owen  called  on  me  yes- 
terday and  we  had  a  long  conversation  on  that  subject.  I  find 
with  220  workers  you  have  not  made  this  year  more  rice  than  E 
Rutledge  and  myself  have  at  Charleywood  with  ninety;  That  in 
some  of  your  plantations  there  has  been  considerable  embezzle- 
ment; and  that  on  your  plantation  where  you  make  most  to  the 
hand  and  really  a  good  crop,  there  is  no  overseer  but  only  a  Black 
Driver — From  hence  I  conclude  that  your  planting  Interest  is 
most  abominably  managed,  and  that  it  will  continue  to  be  so 
while  Mr.  Pryor  has  anything  to  do  with  it — He  is  infirm,  imwieldy, 
without  activity  Monstrum,  horrendum,  informe,  ingens,  cuj  lumen 
ademptum. — *  It  is  impossible  for  him,  (if  he  had  the  inclina- 
tion) to  look  after  your  business  with  the  attention  it  requires, 

» Virgil:  AE.  Lib.  Ill,  658. 


152  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

and  both  Mr.  Owen  and  myself  are  of  the  opinion  that  it  is  essen- 
tial to  your  Interest  that  Mr.  Pryor  should  be  dismissed.  Fraser 
is  dead — Mr.  Owen  thinks  Mr.  Perry  might  be  prevailed  on  to 
superintend  it,  if  that  could  be  accomplished,  as  he  already  rides 
through  your  plantations  twice  or  thrice  a  week,  and  is  an  excd- 
lent  Planter,  it  would  be  most  a  desirable  object — But  if  Mr. 
Perry  should  decline  this  business  I  think  that  you  had  better  let 
Mr.  Owen  direct  as  he  did  in  1777  when  without  the  Santee  Ne- 
groes, you  made  fifteen  hundred  Barrells  of  Rice,  whereas  this  year 
with  the  addition  of  the  Santee  Negroes  will  not  make  a  thousand. 
I  have  thus  frankly  given  you  my  sentiments  on  your  afiFairs,  you 
however  are  the  best  judge  how  they  should  be  conducted  and  will 
act  accordingly. 

I  inclose  a  paper  with  the  additional  Militia  Act  and  the  Num- 
bers of  the  Divisions  Brigades  and  raiments  which  I  will  request 
you  to  shew  with  my  Compts  to  Generals  Pickens  and  Winn — 
accept  the  Compliments  of  the  Season  and  be  assured  I  am 

Your  friend 

Charles  Cotesworth  Pinckney. 
Honblr  Ralph  Izard  Esq. 
(Endorsed) 

Charleston  Deer:  26th  1794 

From  Genl.  Pinckney. 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE   CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

(Continued  from  July) 

Married.  Last  Evening,  Mr.  Samuel  Smith,  to  Miss  Caroline 
Tennant,  both  of  this  City. 

Died.  On  Sunday  morning  last,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Mentzing,  of 
this  dty.    (Tuesday,  Jan.  1,  1793.) 

Died.  Lately,  at  Coosawhatchie,  aged  79  years,  Thomas 
Hutchinson,  Esq;  register  of  mesne  conveyance  for  the  district  of 
Beaufort.  This  venerable  gentleman  was  a  native  of  Ireland,  and 
arrived  in  South  Carolina  in  the  year  1742.  he  resided  within 
40  miles  of  the  sea  board,  to  the  time  of  his  death,  and  enjoyed  an 
almost  uninterrupted  good  state  of  health.  (Thursday,  Jan.  3, 
1793.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  John  Legare,  to  Miss  Ann 
Blake,  both  of  St  James,  Santee.  On  Thursday  evening  last. 
Dr.  S.  H.  Flagg,  to  Miss  Eliza  M'Cleish,  both  of  this  dty. 

Died.  Yesterday  Morning,  capt.  George  Warley,  formerly  of 
the  South  Carolina  Line  in  the  continental  army.  (Monday, 
Jan.  7,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  evening  last,  in  the  63d  year  of  his  age, 
Edward  We3anan,  Esq;  surveyor  of  customs  for  the  port  of  Charles- 
ton.— ^in  the  parish  of  St  George,  Dorchestor,  aged  71  years,  Mr. 
Thomas  Young,  a  worthy  good  man. 

On  Tuesday  the  2Sth  December,  departed  this  life,  in  the  S2d 
year  of  his  age,  after  a  lingering  and  painful  illness,  at  his  planta- 
tion near  Wilmington,  N.  C.  Thomas  Clark,  Esq;  late  a  brigadier- 
general  of  the  United  States  (long  eulogy).  (Tuesday,  Jan.  8, 
1793.) 

Married.  Last  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  C  F  Goring,  merchant, 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Burckmeyer,  daughter  of  Mr.  Charles  Burck- 
meyer,  of  this  City 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  Mr.  Arthur  Honeywood,  of  this  dty. 
(Wednesday,  Jan.  9,  1793.) 

153 


154  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  Mr.  Bethel  Threadcraft,  to 
Miss  Peggy  Poyas  both  of  this  city.     (Friday,  Jan.  11,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Henry  Bonneau,  of  St. 
Thomas's,  to  Miss  Sabina  Barksdale,  second  daughter  of  Thomas 
Barksdale,  Esq;  of  Christ  Church  Parish.  (Thursday,  Jan.  17, 
1793.) 

Married.  On  the  High  Hills,  Mr.  Mathew  Moore,  to  Miss 
Mary  M'Donald,  youngest  daughter  of  colonel  Archibald  McDon- 
ald deceased.    (Tuesday,  Jan.  22,  1793.) 

Died.  On  the  12th  instant  at  his  plantation  at  the  Euhaw, 
John  He)^ward  Jun.  Esq;  in  the  31st.  year  of  his  age.  In  justice  to 
his  memory,  it  may  be  truly  said,  his  benevolent  disposition  was 
always  ready  to  assist  the  wants  of  the  poor.  (Tuesday  Jan.  22, 
1793.) 

Died.  On  the  7th  inst  in  Marlborough  county,  Cheraw 
district,  colonel  George  Hick, — ^a  gentleman  of  an  excellent  char- 
acter, and  a  very  old  inhabitant  of  that  place.  (Wednesday, 
Jan.  23,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  morning  last,  in  the  prime  of  life,  after  a 
lingering  illness,  Mr.  Charles  Isaac  Grimball,  of  this  City.  The 
benevolence  of  heart  and  gentleness  of  manners,  which  character- 
ized this  young  gentleman,  had  gained  him  universal  esteem; 
his  family  and  friends  now  suffer  a  loss  sincerely  to  be  deplored. 
(Tuesday,  Jan.  24,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  Timothy  Ford,*  Esq;  to  Miss 
Sally  Desaussure,  daughter  of  Daniel  Desaussure,  Esq.  (Friday, 
Jan.  25,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Ebenezer  Thayer, 
merchant,  to  Miss  Caroline  Sinclair  Heyward,  both  of  this  city. 
(Monday  Jan.  28,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening,  capt.  Hunter,  to  Miss  Mary 
Wyatt,  daughter  of  Mr.  John  Wyatt,  of  this  dty.  (Tuesday, 
Jan.  29,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  Mr.  Henry  Snipes,  to  Miss 
Mary  Toomer,  daughter  of  Anthony  Toomer,  Esq;  of  this  city. 
(Sat.  Feb.  2,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Monday  evening,  Ezekial  Pickens,  Esq;  to  Miss 
Elizabeth  Bonneau.     (Wed.  Feb.  6,  1793.) 

^  Mr.  Ford's  diary  was  published  in  this  Magazine,  Vol.  13. 


UARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  155 

Died.  At  Camden,  Mrs.  Catherine  Dubose,  wife  of  Isaac 
Dubose,  Esq.     (Tuesday,  Feb.  12,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last.  Miss  Mary  Hutchinson,  aged  16  years 
.    .    .    .    (Sat.  Feb.  16,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  Edward  Shrewsbury,  of  this 
City.    (Sat.  Feb.  23,  1793.) 

Died.  At  Dorchester,  on  Friday  last,  George  Evans,  Esq;  of 
that  place.    (Monday,  Feb.  25,  1793.) 

Married.  At  St  Helena,  Mr.  James  Stoning  of  Hilton  Had, 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Mosse,  daughter  of  Dr.  George  Mosse,  of  St. 
Helena  (Wed.  February  27,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Jeremiah  Wilcox,  to  Miss 
Jane  Elliott.    (Saturday,  Mar.  2,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  James  Mitchell,  to  Miss 
Margaret  Saylor.    (Sat  Mar.  16,  1793.) 

Died.  Lately  in  the  Waxhaws,  Lancaster  county,  Camden 
Dist  Margaret  Adams,  aged  111  years;  her  husband,  David 
Adams,  died  in  1792  aged  114  years.    (Tuesday,  Mar.  19,  1793.) 

Married.  On  the  3rd  of  this  instant,  at  Liberty  Hill,  Mr. 
Patrick  M'Dowall,  of  Cambridge,  merchant,  to  Miss  Agatha 
Conway,  second  daughter  of  col.  Edwin  Conway,  from  Virginia. 
(Tuesday,  Mar.  26,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Wm.  Mason,  Esq;  to  Miss 
Sally  Timothy.    (Wednesday,  Mar.  27,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  afternoon.  Major  Albert  Amey  Muller. 
(Thursday,  Mar.  28,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  night,  capt.  Ahrens,  master  of  the  ship 
Goede  Friendschap,  of  Hamburg.     (Friday,  March  29,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  the  24th  March,  at  Amelia,  Mr.  James 
Courtonne,  aged  73,  for  many  years  a  respectable  inhabitant  of 
this  city.  At  the  same  place,  Mr.  Richard  Owens,  aged  70. 
(Thursday,  April  4,  1793.) 

Died.  On  the  28th  ult  near  Coliunbia,  in  the  bloom  of  life, 
Mrs.  Hunt,  the  wife  of  James  Green  Hunt,  and  the  only  daughter 
of  col.  Thomas  Taylor.    (Friday,  April  5,  1793.) 

Died.  The  7th  instant,  captain  Bryan  Foskey,  aged  69  years, 
the  oldest  branch  pilot  belonging  to  this  port.  (Wednesday, 
April  10,  1793.) 


156  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  in  the  prime  oi  life,  Mr.  Thomas  Stone, 
bricklayer,  of  this  dty;  he  was  a  kind  husband,  an  indulgent 
parent,  and  a  truly  charitable  man.  He  has  left  a  disconsolate 
widow  and  three  children  to  bewail  his  loss.  His  remains  were 
interred  on  Sunday  last  in  the  burial  ground  of  St.  Michael's 
church,  with  military  honors,  by  the  Charleston  battalion  of 
artillery,  of  which  he  was  a  member.    (Tuesday,  April  16,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening  last,  col.  Robert  Anderson, 
of  Ninety-Six  Dist.  to  Mrs.  Lydia  Maverick,  of  this  dty.  (Fri- 
day, April  19,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last.  Mr.  George  Schepeler, 
merchant  to  Miss  Sarah  Clarke  Clement,  second  daughter  of  Mr. 
John  Clement,  of  this  dty.    (Saturday,  April  20,  1793.) 

Died.  A  short  time  since,  at  his  plantation  on  Peedee,  greatly 
lamented,  William  Wilson,  Esq;  a  member  of  the  senate,  and  one 
of  the  Justices  of  the  quorum.    (Monday,  April  22,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  James  Miles,  of 
Charleston,  to  Miss  Rachel  Porcher,  daughter  of  Samuel  Porcher, 
Esq;  of  St.  Peter's  parish,  deceased.     (Friday,  April  26.,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Cato  Ash,  of  Togodoo,  to 
Miss  Mary  Bounetheau,  daughter  of  Peter  Bounetheau,  Esq;  of 
this  dty.  Mr.  William  Purse,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Hammet,  both 
of  this  dty. 

Married.  At  Savannah,  Mr.  James  Inglesby,  to  Miss  Elizabeth 
HiUs. 

Died.  Miss  Mary  Lining,  niece  of  Charles  Lining  Esq;  ordi- 
nary of  Charleston  district.  Mr.  Nathanile  Morgan,  of  James 
Island.  On  Monday  Morning,  Mr.  Samuel  Clinton.  (Wednes- 
day, May  1,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  John  Ward,  Esq;  to  Miss  Mary 
Somarsall.     (Tuesday,  May  7,  1793.) 

Married.  Last  Monday  evening  Edward  Weyman  Esq.  to 
Miss  Chaterine  Turpin,  of  this  dty.  On  Wednesday  evening  last, 
Mr.  Martin  Dierson,  to  Mrs.  Mary  Schaun,  of  Hampstead. 
(Wednesday,  May  8,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Daniel  Cruickshanks,  to  Miss 
Jenny  Miller,  both  of  this  city.     (Sat.  May  11,  1793.) 

Married.  On  the  23d  ult.  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Knox,  at  Black 
River  Mr.  Jabez  Porter,  of  Georgetown,  merchant,  to  Miss  Judith 
Eliza  JeflFords,  of  Seewee.     (Monday,  May  13,  1793.) 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  157 

Died.  Samuel  Beach,  Esq;  from  whose  highly  cultivated 
understanding  and  truly  benevolent  disposition,  his  family  and 
friends  had  grounds — to  expect  a  large  harvest  of  comfort  and 
usefulness.  Early  in  life  he  rose  to  distinguished  eminence  in 
literature,  and  with  great  reputation  discharged  the  duties  of  a 
tutor  in  the  college  of  New- Jersey;  but  his  juvenile  studies  laid  the 
foundation  of  a  consimiptive  complaint,  which  proved  fatal,  after 
having  been  parried,  for,  upwards  of  eight  years,  by  the  most 
giiarded  regimen.    (Wednesday,  May  15,  1793.) 

Married.  Last  Sunday  evening,  in  this  city,  Mr.  John  Conyers, 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Stone,  daughter  of  capt.  Samuel  Stone;  Mr. 
Charles  Hill,  to  Miss  Caroline  Finlayson;  and  Mr.  Eberhart 
Spidell,  to  Miss  Mary  Gurley.    (Wednesday,  May  22,  1793.) 

Married.  Yesterday  evening,  Alexander  Edwards,  Esq;  to 
Miss  Mary  Desaussure.  Mr.  Ebenezer  Coffin,  merchant,  to  Miss 
Mary  Mathewes.    (Thursday,  May  23,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Isaac  Johnston,  to  Miss  Ann 
Caroline  Milligan,  daughter  of  capt  Jacob  Milligan.  (Monday 
May  27,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  on  John's  Island,  James  Shool- 
bred,  Esq.  of  this  City,  to  Miss  Mary  Middleton,  daughter  of 
Thomas  Middleton,  Esq.  deceased.  On  Thursday  evening,  by 
the  rev.  Dr.  Purcell,  Mr.  Chambers,  comedian,  to  Miss  Charlotte 
Sully.    (Saturday,  June  1,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  capt.  Benjamin  Spurr,  to 
Miss  Sarah  Crawford.    (Monday,  June  3,  1793.) 

Married.  Mr.  John  Will,  of  Monck's  Comer,  to  Miss  Eliza- 
beth James,  of  this  City.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  England,  to 
Miss  Isabella  Carmichael,  both  of  this  City.  Mr.  Lewis  Tim- 
mons,  to  Mrs.  Ann  Legge.  And  Mr.  Greenland,  to  Miss  Hamil- 
ton.   (Tuesday,  June  4,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  John  Wigfall,  Esq.  of  St.  Thomas's 
parish.     (Thursday,  June  6,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Walter  Rudd,  to  Miss 
Sarah  Campbell,  both  of  this  city.     (Saturday,  June  8,  1793.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Harman  Henrichson, 
to  Miss  Susannah  Rush,  of  this  city.     (Monday,  June  10,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  morning,  in  Christ-Church  parish,  in  the 
74th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Dorcas  Scott,  widow  of  the  late  John 


158  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Scott,  Esq;  merchant,  of  this  dty.  She  was  a  native  of  this 
state.    .    .    .    (Thursday,  June  13,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Hugh  Swinton,  jun.  to  the 
amiable  Miss  Ann-  Jane-  Bruce  Scott,  daughter  of  William  Scott, 
Esq;  of  Christ  Church  parish.    (Monday,  June  17,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thurdsay  evening  last,  capt.  Joseph  Dickinson, 
of  the  federal  army,  to  Miss  Catherine  Cudworth,  of  this  city. 
And  on  Sunday  evening  last,  Mr.  Joseph  Dickenson  (sic)  to  Miss 
Elizabeth  JeflFerson,  both  of  this  city.    (Tuesday,  June  18,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening  last,  Mr.  James  Bums,  to  Miss 
Clementine  Martha  Lybert,  daughter  of  Daniel  Lybert,  both  of 
this  dty.    (Wednesday,  June  19,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Thomas  Fry,  to  Miss  Jane 
Andrews,  both  of  this  dty.     (Thursday,  June  25,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Hunter,  to 
Miss  Mary  Kennedy,  both  of  this  dty.    (Tuesday  July  2,  1793.) 

Deaths.  Mrs.  Pinckney,  the  mother  of  gen.  Pinckney.* — On 
Saturday  last.  Miss  Johnston,  the  sister  of  Mr.  Charles  Johns- 
ton.— On  Tuesday  last.  Miss  Mary  L^are,  daughter  of  Nathan 
Legare,  Esq;  of  Christ-Church  paris,  deceased.  (Thursday, 
July  4,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  Joseph  Worthington, 
cabinet  maker,  to  Miss  Betsy  Arnold,  lately  arrived  from  Cork. 
(Saturday,  July  6,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  in  the  prime  of  life,  Mr.  Jacob  Hillegas, 
of  this  dty.    '(Monday,  July  8,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Christopher  M'Kune,  in  the 
prime  of  life.    (Tuesday,  July  9,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  John  Lynes,  at  Bacon's  Bridge. 
(Thursday,  July  11,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  morning,  9th  July,  in  the  SOth  year  of  his 
age,  Mr.  Casper  Wershing,  an  honest  man,  and  for  many  years  an 
inhabitant  of  this  city.     (Saturday,  July  12,  1793.) 

Died.  In  the  seventy  first  year  of  her  age,  at  Philadelphia, 
whither  in  compliance  with  importunate  solidtations  of  her 
friends,  anxious  for  the  preservation  of  so  valuable  a  life,  she  had 
gone  for  the  recovery  of  her  health,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Pinckney,  the 
amiable  relict  of  the  honorable  colonel  Charles  Pinckney,  formerly 

'  Eliza  Lucas,  who  first  introduced  the  cultivation  of  indigo  in  this  State. 


MA&RIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  159 

SO  eminent  at  the  bar,  on  the  judiciary  bench,  and  in  the  legisla- 
ture of  this  country;  and  mother  of  brigadier  general  Pinckney, 
and  of  Mr.  Pinckney,  the  present  minister  of  the  United  States  of 
America,  at  the  court  of  Great-Britain.  This  all  accomplished 
lady,  possessed,  in  a  most  eminent  d^ree,  all  the  amiable  and 
engaging  qualities,  imited  to  all  the  virtues  and  graces,  which 
embelish  and  exalt  the  female  character. — ^Her  manners  had  been 
so  refined,  by  a  long  and  intimate  acquaintance  with  the  polite 
world,  her  countenance  was  so  dignified  by  serious  contemplation 
and  devout  reflection,  and  so  replete  with  all  that  mildness  and 
complacency  which  are  the  natural  results  of  a  r^ular  uninter- 
rupted habit  and  practice  of  virtue  and  benevolence  that  it  was 
scarcely  to  behold  her  without  emotions  of  the  highest  veneration 
and  respect  Her  understanding,  aided  by  an  imcommon  strength 
of  memory,  had  been  so  highly  cultivated  and  improved  by  travel 
and  extensive  reading,  and  was  so  richly  furnished,  as  well  with 
scientific,  as  practical  knowledge,  that  her  talent  for  conversation 
was  imrivalled,  and  her  company  was  sedulously  sought  after  by 
all,  without  distinction  of  age  or  sex,  who  coidd  be  so  happy  as  to 
gain  admission  into  it.  Her  religion  was  rational,  liberal,  and 
pure.  The  source  of  it  was  seated  in  the  judgement  and  the  heart, 
and  from  thence  issued  a  life,  regular,  placid,  and  uniform. 

"Mild  as  the  blest  above,  without  serene 
As  Eden's  air,  and  calm  as  heaven  within." 

In  a  word,  her  whole  life  was  like  the  Milky  way  with  stars, 
thick-set  with  the  genuine  fruits  of  sincere  piety  and  active  benev- 
olence. The  natural  consequence  of  such  a  life  was,  that  she 
met  death  in  the  midst  the  most  excruciating  pain,  with  a  truly 
Christian  fortitude,  and  a  Heaven  born  tranquility. 

"She  taught  us  how  to  live,  and,  oh  too  high 
A  price  for  knowledge!  taught  us  how  to  die." 

(Wednesday,  July  17,  1793.) 

Died.  In  Laurens  county,  on  the  16th  day  of  June,  in  the  19th 
year  of  her  age,  Miss  Jane  Himter,  eldest  daughter  of  the  honor- 
able John  Hunter  Esq.  This  youthful  lady  is  much  regretted  by 
her  relations  and  friends,  and  all  those  that  had  the  pleasure  of 
her  acquaintance.    (Friday,  July  19,  1793.) 


160  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married  On  Monday  last,  two  celebrated  widows,  ladies  of 
America  and  France,  after  having  repudiated  their  husbands  on 
account  of  their  ill  treatment,  conceived  the  design  of  living 
together  in  the  strictest  union  and  friendship;  the  said  amiable 
ladies,  in  order  to  give  a  pledge  of  their  fidelity,  requested  that 
their  striped  gowns  should  be  pinned  together,  that  their  children 
should  be  looked  upon  as  one  family,  while  their  mothers  showed 
them  an  equal  affection.  Mr.  Lee  officiated  with  dignity  as  their 
proxy,  and  explained  the  reciprocal  obligations  these  two  ladies 
promised  to  confer  on  each  other,  inviting  their  children  at  the 
same  time  to  imitate  their  mothers;  Mr.  Samuel  Prioleau  acted  as 
the  sponsor  of  the  American  lady,  with  that  dignity,  which  such  a 
deserving  ward  required;  Mr.  Huger,  Ramsay,  and  Burke,  three 
of  her  faithful  guardians,  assisted  at  the  feast  on  this  occasions 
The  brave  artillery  signed  that  contract  by  the  fire  of  their  guns, 
and  all  their  brothers  in  arms  by  thousands  of  huzzas;  the  merry 
guests  waited  for  his  excellency  in  an  anxious  solicitude,  they 
lamented  his  absence,  but  they  rested  assured  of  his  patriotism; 
the  representative  of  the  gallic  lady,  M.  A.  B.  Mangourit,  was  so 
feelingly  touched  at  this  so  noble  a  scene,  that  while  his  eyes 
overflowed  with  tears  of  joy,  he  only  lamented  the  absence  of  the 
president  and  all  those  of  his  colleagues  that  are  true  friends  to 
those  ladies,  to  join  with  the  French  Americans  to  celebrate  the 
Carmagnole  and  sing  Ca  Ira,    (Saturday,  July  20,  1793.) 

(To  be  continued,) 


INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  THE  CHURCH-YARD  AT  STRAW- 

BERRY  CHAPEL. 

Copied  by  Mabel  L.  Webber^ 

The  name  of  Strawberry  was  used  for  this  locality  on  the  East- 
em  side  of  the  Western  branch  of  the  Cooper  river,  as  early  as 
July,  1698,  when  James  Child  had  a  grant  of  1200  acres  there;  he 
early  laid  out  a  town  at  the  bluflf  on  the  river,  which  he  called 
"Childsberry  Town,"  and  in  his  will,  dated  October  29,  1718,  he 
gave  an  acre  and  a  half  in  the  town,  for  a  Church,  or  Chapel. 

On  December  9,  1725,  an  Act  was  passed  for  establishing  a 
Parochial  Chapel  at  Ease  at  Childsbury  to  the  Parish  Church  in 
St.  John's  Parish,  Berkeley  County.  The  Chapel  was  built  at 
the  charge  of  several  of  the  parishioners,  on  the  land  given  by 
James  Child  in  his  will;  it  was  of  brick,  and  is  the  same  building 
which  stands  to-day.  The  name  of  Childsbury  soon  disappeared, 
and  the  chapel  has  always,  and  still  is,  called  Strawberry  chapel. 
The  burying  ground  is  still  in  use. 

A  full  account  of  Childsbury,  with  a  plat  of  the  town,  and  the 
Strawberry  locality,  written  by  Judge  Henry  A  M..  Smith,  will 
be  foimd  in  this  Magazine,  vol.  xiv,  pages  198-203,  and  vol.  xv, 
pages  107-112. 

MURAL  TABLETS 

EUas  Ball  Esquire  /  Endeared  to  his  friends  /  By  his  social 
qualities  /  Entitled  to  the  gratitude  /  Of  His  /  fellow  parishoners 
/  By  his  constant  faithful  /  And  Valuable  exertions  /  In  their 
service  /  And  by  his  liberal  benefactions  /  To  Their  Church  / 
Died  at  Limerick  in  this  parish  /  January  2nd  A.D.  1810  /  Aged 
57  years  /  The  members  of  this  Church  /  In  Testimony  /  of  the 
respect  and  affection  /  with  which  they  cherish  /  His  memory  / 
Have  caused  this  tablet  /  To  be  erected. 

Sacred  to  the  memory  of  /  William  Bell  White  Howe  D.D.  / 
Lay  Reader  and  Catechist  in  this  parish  /  In  1845  and  '46  / 
Deacon  and  assistant  Minister  in  1847  and  '48  /  Priest  and  Rector 

*  The  copyist  is  greatiy  indebted  to  Mrs.  Edward  H.  Mclver  for  assistance 
in  verifying  the  copies,  and  in  getting  to  the  isolated  church  yard. 

161 


162  so.  CA«  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

1849-1859  /  Consecrated  to  the  Episcopate  in  Oct  1871  /  Our 
faithful  Bishop  until  his  death  in  Nov.  1894  /  Endeared  to  this 
parish  by  his  services  and  /  The  example  of  a  Christ  like  life  and 
Ministery  /  He  was  esteemed  among  us  for  his  sound  learning  / 
EQs  dear  and  eloquent  preaching  of  the  Go^)el  /  and  his  devotion 
to  the  Church  /  [Then  follows  a  quotation  of  four  lines  in  Greek.] 

This  flock  /  mourns  the  loss  /  of  the  Rev'd  Edward  Thomas  / 
Their  late  rector  /  a  well  learned,  sound  and  practical  Theologian 
/  a  successful  instructor,  a  persuasive  preacher  /  a  patient  and 
conscientious  catechist  /  a  true  friend  to  them  and  their  children 
/  and  /  a  lovely  example  (A  Christian  kindness,  meekness  /  mode- 
ration and  heavenly  mindness  /  He  departed  this  life  11th  July, 
1840  /  in  the  40th  year  of  his  age  /  and  the  16th  of  his  ministry. 
[Quotation  from  Luke  xii,  42,  43] 

The  Rev'd  John  Jacob  Tschudy  /  was  bom  in  Phil.  7th  June 
1778  /  and  Died  /  in  this  parish  17th  Sept  1831  /  Having  served 
/  in  the  capacity  of  its  Rector  /  for  nearly  23  years  /  This  tablet 
is  /  erected  to  his  memory  by  his  Parishoners  /  He  loved  them  / 
and  sought  to  do  them  good  /  and  though  dead  /  He  yet  speak- 
eth  /  Through  the  rememberance  of  his  /  virtues  and  humble 
Faith  /  (Removed  from  the  ruins  of  Biggin  Church  1857.) 

BALL    LOT 

Inclosed  by  brick  wall. 

Sacred  /  To  the  Memory  of  Elias  Ball  /  Lydia  his  wife  &  Isaac 
their  Son  /  whose  Bodies  lie  interred  beneath  /  the  Bricks  that 
support  this  Marble  /  Elias  Ball  was  bom  at  Comingtee  the  22nd 
of  Decem'r  1709  &  died  at  /  Kensington  the  8th  of  August  1786  / 
Lydia  Ball  was  a  Daughter  of  /  Isaac  Child  she  was  bom  at  Childs- 
bury  /  the  22nd  of  Sept'r  1721  &  died  /  the  1st  of  April  1765  / 
Isaac  Ball  was  bom  at  Kensington  /  the  Uth  of  May  1754  &  died 
/  5th  of  January  1776. 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  /  of  /  John  Ball  /  youngest  son  of  / 
Elias  and  Lydia  Ball  /  bom  at  Comingtee  /  St  Johns  Parish  / 
the  10th  day  of  July  A.D.  1760  /  Died  in  Charleston  on  the  /  29th 
day  of  October  1817 /aged  57  years  8  months  &  19  Days/    .     .     . 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  of  /  Elias  Ball  /  Eldest  son  of  Elias  and 
/  Lydia  Ball  /  bom  at  Kensington  St  John's  /  Parish  Berkley 
County  /  on  the  10th  day  April  A.D.  1752  /  and  Died  at  Limerick 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  STRAWBERRY  CHAPEL       163 

his  place  of  /  residence  in  the  said  Parish  /  The  2nd  day  of  Jan- 
uary A.D.  1810  /  Aged  57  years,  8  months  and  23  daj^  /    .    .    .    . 

....  Jane  Ball  /  the  much  loved  wife  of  /  John  Ball  / 
who  died  the  5th  Oct'r  1804  /  aged  43  years  &  6  mos./    .... 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  /  of  /  Isaac  Ball  /  Third  son  /  of  /  John 
and  Jane  Ball  /  Bom  at  Kensington  /  in  this  Parish  /  September 
6th  1785  /  and  departed  this  Life  in  Charleston  /  December  2nd. 
1825. 

Sacred  /  to  the  Memory  /  of  Alwjm  Ball  /  late  of  Elwood  in  this 
Parish  /  Died  at  Charleston  /  on  the  5th  of  July  1835  /  In  the 
28th  year  of  his  age  /    .    .    .    . 

....  John  Ball  /  who  died  June  1834  /  aged  52  years  / 
A  good  Man  a  kind  Neighbor  /  an  unostentatious  Patriot.  / 
He  discharged  properly  every  duty  of  /  Life  to  himself  his  family 
and  /  the  Public 

Sacred  /  To  the  Memory  of  /  Our  Mother  /  Ann  Ball  /  who 
departed  this  Life  /  on  the  25th  June  1840  /  in  the  65th  year  of 
her  age. 

....  Hugh  Swinton  /  Ball  /  of  Mepshew  House  /  in  this 
Parish  /  He  was  the  second  /  Son  of  /  John  and  Caroline  Ball  / 
of  Kensington  /  Bom  at  Charleston  /  on  the  18th  Oct  1808  / 
and  perished  on  board  /  the  steamer  Pulaski  /  on  the  night  of  / 
the  14th  June  1838  /  This  Monument  is  erected  /  to  Him  and  his 
Wife  /  in  grateful  rememberance  /  by  an  affectionate  /  Brother. 
[Other  side  same  monument]. 

In  /  Memory  /  of  Anna  Elizabeth  Ball  /  Consort  of  /  Hugh 
Swinton  Ball  /  and  Daughter  of  /  Walter  Channing  Esq.  /  Mer- 
chant of  Boston,  Mass.  /  Bom  at  Newport  R.  I.  /  on  the  25th 
Nov.  1809  /  and  Perished  with  her  /  Husband  /  on  the  14th  June 
/1838. 

Francis  Guerin  /  Infant  Son  of  /  Isaac  and  M.  L.  Ball.  [No 
date] 

Wm.  McBumey  /  Infant  Son  of  /  Isaac  and  M.  L.  Ball.  [No 
date] 

William  James  /  Ball  /  fell  asleep  /  June  15,  1880  /  In  his 
38th  year  /    .    .    .    . 

Julia  Ball  /  Died  July  12th  1858  /  Aged  34  years,  7  Months  / 
and  22  Days  /    .    .    .    . 

John  Gibbes  /  Shoolbred  /  Bom  /  October  31,  1842  /  Died  / 
May  1,1900/    .    •    .    • 


164  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

William  James  Ball  /  of  Limerick  Plantation  /  in  this  Parish  / 
Oct  14,  1821— April  26,  1891  /    .    .    .    . 

Our  /  Precious  Baby  /  Horry  Deas  Simons.  Third  son  of 
Lewis  &  Ann  S.  Simons.  /  Born  Oct  18,  1860  /  Died  January  11, 
1861  /  Aged  2  months  /  and  24  Days  /. 

Our  /  Angel  Annie  /  Ann  Himie  Simons  /  eldest  daughter  of  / 
Lewis  and  Ann  S.  Simons  /  Bom  Nov.  15,  1851  /  Died  December 
13,  1860  /  Aged  9  years  and  28  Days. 

Our  /  Darling  Frank  /  Francis  Waring  Simons  /  Eldest  son  of 
Lewis  and  Ann  S.  Simons  /  Bom  April  21st,  1853  /  Died  Decem- 
ber 24,  1860  /  Aged  7  Years  8  Months  and  4  Days. 

Isaac  Ball  /  Eldest  son  of  Isaac  &  Eliza  /  C.  Ball  /  who  departed 
this  Life  /  in  Charleston  on  the  /  Uth  October  1824  /  aged  6  years 
and  12  days  /    .    .    .    . 

Edward  Ball  /  the  vth  son  of  /  John  &  Jane  Ball  /  was  bom 
July  3d,  1788  /  m  Charieston  &  died  /  there  August  21,  1796  / 

Francis  Guerin  /  son  of  William  J.  and  Julia  Ball  /  Died  Sept 
26th  1850  /  Aged  6  months  /  and  13  Days. 

....  Elias  Ball  M.D.  /  who  departed  this  life  /  on  the 
26th  of  September  /  1834  /  aged  29  years,  6  months,  9  days  /  and 
of  his  Wife  /  Catherine  Cordes  /  Ball  /  youngest  daughter  of  / 
William  &  Caroline  Dawson  /  she  departed  this  life  on  /  the  4th 
August  1832  /  Aged  21  years  and  4  Months. 

John  Ball  /  Died  11th  July  1854  /  aged  26  years  10  Months  / 
and  10  Days    .... 

....  Catherine  Theus  /  who  fell  asleep  in  Jesus  /  July 
7th  1866  /  Aged  53  Years  /  6  Months  /  and  10  Days  /    .    .    .    . 

John  Coming  /  Son  of  /  J.  C.  &  A.  H.  BaH  /  Bom  Oct  27, 1878 
/  Died  Nov.  26,  1878. 

Sacred  /  To  the  Memory  of  /  Henry  Deas  Deas  /  Bom  March 
26,  1853  /  Died  May  27,  1877  /    .... 

.  .  .  .  Francis  Malbone  /  Waring  /  who  was  bom  /  in 
Newport  R.  I.  /  June  8  th.  1804  /  and  Died  in  Charleston  /  July 
15th  1837  /  aged  33  years  /  1  month  7  days  / 

[Same  monument]  ....  Lydia  Jane  Waring  /  consort 
of  Francis  M.  Waring  /  who  was  bora  in  Charleston  /  December 
24th  1807  /  and  Died  at  Comingtee  /  April  18th  1841  /  aged  33 
Years  3  Months  /  and  24  days. 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  STRAWBERRY  CHAPEL        165 

[Same]  In  Memory  /  oi  /  Francis  Malbone  /  third  Son  of  / 
Francis  M.  and  L.  Jane  /  Waring  /  who  was  bom  /  in  Charleston  / 
April  11th  1836  /  and  died  in  Cordesville  /  September  23rd. 
1850  /  aged  14  years  5  months  /  and  12  Days. 

....  Elizabeth  Ball  /  Wife  of  /  John  BaU  /  of  Coming- 
tee  /  Who  died  in  Charleston  /  September  22nd.  A.D.  1812  / 
aged  28  years  6  mos.  &  17  Da)^  /    .    .    .    . 

Sacred  /  to  the  Memory  of  /  Isaac  /  son  of  /  John  and  Maria 
Louisa  /  Ball  /  who  died  1st  Sept.  /  1847  /  aged  29  Days. 

.  .  .  .  Mathurin  Guerin  /  Son  of  /  John  and  Maria  Lonisa 
/  Ball  /  who  died  Jan.  26th  1852  /  aged  15  Months  /  and  4  days. 

William  James  /  BaU  /  Fell  asleep  /  June  15th  1880  /  In  his 
38th  Year/    .... 

....  Catherine  Theus  /  wife  of  /  William  James  Ball  / 
Daughter  of  /  M.  G.  &  M  L..  Gibbs  /  Nov.  19,  1843  /  Sept  28, 
.9.0. 

....  John  Coming  Ball  /  who  was  bom  /  in  Charleston  / 
September  11,  1812  /  and  died  at  Strawberry  /  May  19th  1845  / 
Aged  32  years  8  months  /  and  8  Days. 

....  Elias  Ball  /  2d  Son  of  /  John  and  Jane  Ball  /  who 
died  /  at  Kensington  the  28th  of  /  March  1797  aged  /  13  Years  / 
and  28  Days  /    .    .    .    . 

....  Eliza  Catherine  Ball  /  eldest  daughter  of  /  Isaac 
and  Eliza  C.  Ball  /  who  departed  this  life  /  In  Charleston  on  the 
26th  February  1824  /  aged  4  years  1  month  /  and  19  Days  / 
.    •    .    • 

Julia  Ball  /  Died  July  12th  1858  /  aged  34  years  7  months  / 
and  22  Days. 

Ann  Hume  BaU  /  March  16th  1857  /  March  24,  1914. 

Katherine  Gibbs  /  Daughter  of  /  Elias  &  Mary  M.  /  Ball  / 
Jan.  1,  1915  /  Mar.  4,  1918.  [This  stone  is  just  outside  the  Ball 
inclosure.] 

Just  in  front  of  the  church  is  a  large  tomb,  in  a  very  bad  state 
of  repair,  which  has  no  other  inscription  than  the  one  name 
"Harleston." 


166  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

COllBETT-HASLESTON-LAXTRENS  LOT 

Inclosed  by  a  brick  wall. 

Sacred  /  to  the  Memory  /  of  /  Mrs.  Margaret  Corbett  /  Wiit 
of  /  Thomas  Corbett  Esq.  /  who  departed  this  life  /  on  the  28th 
of  November  1819  /  in  the  70th  year  of  her  age  /    .    .    .    . 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  of  /  Thomas  Corbett  Esq  /  Bom  at 
Bridgnorth,  Shopshire  England  /  Died  at  Charleston  11th  Novem- 
ber 1814  /  AE  71  years  8  months  /    .    .    .    . 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  Corbett  /  Bom  January  Sth  1778  /  Died  Sep- 
tember 17th  1837  /    .    .    .    . 

....  Thomas  Corbett  /  Departed  This  Life  /  on  31st 
July  1850  /  In  the  80th  Year  of  his  age  /    .    .    .    . 

....  Richard  Corbett  M.D.  /  Died  ISth  November  1825  / 
aged  24  Years 

....  John  H.  Corbett  /  Died  11th  May  1855  /  aged  56 
years  /  and  3  months. 

....  Thomas  Corbett  Jr.  /  Bom  July  14th  1807  /  Died 
June  26th  1846  /  aged  38  years  10  months  /  and  12  Days  /  .  .  . 

Richard  Corbett  /  Laurens  M.D.  /  Died  24th  Nov.  1855  / 
aged  29  Years. 

Lucy  Laurens  /  Died  March  20th  1855  /  Aged  26  years  /  and 
—  months  /  and  Her  Infant  Daughter  /    .    .    .    . 

Frederick  Laurens  /  aged  5  Months  /  [no  date]. 

....  Miss  Elizabeth  Harleston  /  Bom  /  November  1st. 
1747  /  Died  13th  November  1830. 

Emma  Irving  /  Wife  of  /  John  Beaufain  Irving  /  bom  January 
15th  /  1805  /  Died  June  30th  1867. 

....  Major  Isaac  Child  /  Harleston  /  of  /  the  Conti- 
nental Army  /  Bom  /  October  9th  1745  /  Died  January  20th 
1798/    ...    . 

....  Hierom  (?)  Hutchinson  /  departed  this  Life  / 
December  28th  1820  /  aged  27  years  and  11  months. 

HAKLESTON  LOT 

....  Edward  Harleston  /  Bom  /  Dec.  20,  1835  /  Died  / 
Oct  30  1891. 

The  grave  /  of  /  my  wife  /  Elizabeth  Serena  /  Harleston  /  who 
died  10th  April  1850  /  and  our  little  daughter  Lieze  Barksdale  / 
who  died  29th  April  1851  / 


.    .    •    • 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  STRAWBERRY  CHAPEL       167 

Frank  Huger  /  Harleston  /  Captain  1st  Regt  S.  C.  Artillery  / 
Regulars  /  Bom  Dec.  9th  1839  /  Killed  at  Fort  Sumter  /  Novem- 
ber 24th  1863  /  Aged  23  years,  11  months  /  and  17  Days. 

This  Slab  /  Is  intended  to  mark  /  where  the  body  of  the  late  / 
James  Bum  Harleston  lies  /  He  died  on  the  21st  of  September 
1828  /  In  the  24th  year  of  his  age  /  The  remains  /  of  his  departed 
ancestry  /  are  deposited  on  each  side  /  of  this  spot. 

Thomas  Cordes  Harleston  /  Died  in  Siunmerville  /  27th  Aug. 
1890  /  in  the  70th  year  /  of  his  age. 

Nicholas  /  The  Posthumous  Son  of  the  2d  /  Nicholas  Harles- 
ton /  of  Bossis  in  this  Parish  /  of  St  John's  Berkley  /  He  was  bom 
on  the  24th  day  of  July  1768  /  about  6  months  after  the  decease 
of  his  father  /  and  died  on  the  3rd  day  of  Oct.  1832. 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  of  /  Ann  Olney  Harleston  /  the  wife  of 
the  above  Nicholas  /  who  died  on  the  14th  day  of  April  1813  / 
aged  42  years. 

Our  Brother  /  Nicholas  Harleston  /  second  son  and  fourth 
child  of  /  Posthumous  Nicholas  /  of  Bossis  /  in  the  parish  of  St 
John's  Berkley  /  He  died  at  Bossis  on  the  28th  of  Novr.  1853  /  in 
the  Fifty  Fourth  Year  /  of  his  age. 

....  Susan  Sommers  Harleston  /  Third  child  and  second 
daughter  /  of  /  Posthumous  Nicholas  /  of  Bossis  /  bom  20th 
July  1798  /  died  21  July  1850. 

....  William  Harleston  /  who  departed  this  life  on  the 
26th  of  /  March  1816  /  aged  59  years  /    .    .    .    . 

Col.  J.  M.  Harleston  /  Bom  Jan.  1,  1819  /  Died  April  4,  1895. 

NELSON   LOT 

Inclosed  by  cement  wall. 

Theodore  Barker  Nelson  /  Bom  Oct  27,  1877  /  Died  /  Feb. 
22,  1911 

Annie  Nelson  Roessler  /  Jan.  10, 1869  /  Jan.  16, 1909  /  Mother. 

Andrew  J.  Nelson  /  Dec.  5,  1870  /  Nov.  21,  1902. 

William  A.  /  Nelson  /  June  27,  1883,  /  Oct  4,  1900. 

Peter  Nelson  /  Oct  29,  1839  /  Jan.  31,  1916.  /  Maren  Kirstine 
/  Hansen  /  His  Wife  /  Mar.  1,  1843  /  Fev.  8,  1893. 

P.  Du  Cue  Nelson  /  July  4,  1874  /  Nov.  24,  1904. 


168  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

OTHER  GRAVES,  NOT  IN  INCLOSED  LOTS 

.  .  .  .  James  F.  Bruce  /  mill  wright  and  Engineer  /  a 
native  of  Scotland  /  who  died  at  Dean  Hall  /  on  the  7th  March 
1835  /  aged  35  years  /    .    .    .    . 

Here  lieth  the  Body  of  /  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Dani  Dwight  A.M.  / 
Late  Rector  of  the  Parish  of  St.  John  /  who  Departed  this  life  in 
Peace  28th  /  of  March  1748  and  Died  in  the  /  Safe  Communion  of 
the  Church  /  of  England  in  which  he  lived  /  Constantly  Endeav- 
ouring to  Reconmiend  /  its  Constitution  to  all  who  were  Dis- 
affected or  Strangers  to  it. 

....  James  Gallavant  /  bom  August  /  11th  1788  / 
departed  /  this  life  /  27th  January  1831. 

Henry  Poyas  Gibbs  /  Died  Dec'r  10th  1856  /  Aged  10  years  8 
months  /  and  21  Days. 

John  Ernest  Gibbs  /  Died  Nov'r  10th  1857  /  Aged  26  Years 
8  Months  /  and  8  Days  /    .    .    .    . 

.  .  .  .  Adeline  Gilmore  /  A  native  of  Manilius,  N.  Y.  who 
fell  asleep  in  Jesus  /  at  Hyde  Park  in  this  Parish  /  on  New  Years 
Day  /  1855  /  Aged  30  years  /    .    .    .    . 

.  .  .  .  Samuel  Grourdin  /  who  departed  this  life  /  on  the 
1st  of  August  1829  /  In  the  32d  Year  of  his  age. 

In  Memory  /  of  Willis  Hatnes  /  Bom  /  March  20th  1810  / 
Died  /  October  16th  1847  /  This  /  Marble  to  his  /  Memory  /  is 
here  placed. 

Dr.  Henry  McAlpin  Holmes  /  Bom  1st  May  1790  /  Died  18th 
January  1851. 

Julia  Gibbes  Holmes  /  Daughter  of  /  Dr.  Henry  M.  and  Eliza 
F.  Hohnes  /  bom  10  March  1836  /  Died  28th  January  1840. 

.  .  .  .  Sarah  Ingraham  /  wife  of  H.  L.  Ingraham  /  and 
Daughter  of  /  Wm.  L.  &  H.  C.  Moultrie  /  Dec.  11,  1838  /  May  4, 
1910. 

H.  L.  Ingraham  /  Died  Jidy  9, 1878  /  aged  41  years  /    .    .    .    . 

.  .  .  .  John  Henry  Ingraham  /  Died  at  his  Plantation  / 
the  Fishpond  /  The  4th  May,  1849  /  After  a  short  illness  / 

.  .  .  .  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Caroline  McAlpin  /  who  departed 
this  Life  /  Nov'r  14th  A.D.  1808  /  aged  19  Years  and  9  Months  / 
also  /  near  this  place  is  her  Brother  /  Walter  B3niie  /  who  departed 
this  Life  /  Oct'r  3d.  1815  /  in  the  23d  year  of  his  age  /  Both  natives 
of  London  England. 


CEMETERY  INSCRIPTIONS  FROM  STRAWBERRY  CHAPEL        169 

Henry  Delisle  /  Mazyck  /  Son  of  /  H.  B.  and  Ceocelia  M.  / 
Mazyck  /  born  29th  August  1856  /  Died  1st  October  1857  /  aged 
2  Years  /  1  Month  /  and  2  Da)^. 

....  Mary  Louisa  /  Daughter  of  the  /  Rev.  Albert  A 
Mueller  /  and  Frances  Mary  his  wife  /  She  was  bom  on  the  / 
31st  of  August  1818  /  and  died  July  25th  / 1819  /  aged  10  Months  / 
and  2  da)^  /    .    .    .    . 

Sacred  to  the  Memory  /  of  /  Alexander  Nisbett  Esq.  /  who 
departed  this  Life  at  /  Dean-Hall  /  on  the  27th  January  A.D. 
1813  /  in  the  42d  /  year  of  his  age. 

....  William  Patterson  /  who  died  /  on  the  18th  of 
Jime  1828  /  In  the  65th  year  of  his  age  /  And  his  four  sons  /  [All 
infants,  inscriptions  not  taken  ] 

Mary  P.  Tucker  /  wife  of  /  T.  G.  Prioleau  /  Bom  March  2, 
1869  /  Died  November  6,  1890. 

.  .  .  .  Thomas  G.  Prioleau  /  Son  of  Thomas  G.  and 
Abbabella  /  Prioleau  /  Bom  11th  Sept.  1849  /  Died  16th  July 
1850  /  Aged  10  Months  /  and  5  Days. 

Thomas  G.  Prioleau  /  June  8,  1851  /  Nov.  23,  1910. 

....  Edward  Harleston  /  Quash  /  who  departed  this  life 
/  April  27th  1858  /  Aged  29  years  6  Months  /  and  18  Days  / 
.... 

.  .  .  .  Robert  Hasell  Quash  /  who  departed  this  life  /  on 
the  11th  of  March  185-  /  aged  31  years  /  and  26  da)^. 

.  .  .  .  Ann  Louisa  Rivers  /  third  Daughter  of  Grada 
Rivers  Esq  /  She  was  bom  on  the  12th  of  December  1799  /  and 
died  the  8th  of  September  /  1814  Aged  14  years  5  /  Months  and 
4  Days  /    .    .    .    . 

Ann  Porcher  /  dau^ter  of  /  S.  P.  &  E.  C.  Stoney  /  Bom  May 
7,  1877  /  Died  Oct.  5  /  1877. 

....  P.  Gaillard  Stoney  /  Bom  Sept.  28,  1809  /  Died  / 
July  27  /  1884. 

S.  DuBose  /  son  of  /  P.  G.  and  A.  M.  Stoney  /  Born  May  7, 
1833  /  Died  Feb.  16th.  1847. 

To  the  Memory  of  /  Thomas  Gadsden  /  Yoimgest  Child  of  / 
The  Rev'd  Edward  and  Jane  M.  Thomas  /  who  died  on  the  22nd  / 
of  April  1810  /  aged  1  year  and  4  months. 

Caroline  Prioleau  /  wife  of  Maham  H.  Tucker  /  Bom  October 
31st  1864  /  Died  June  26th  1884  /    .    .    .    . 


170  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Maham  H.  Tucker  /  Bom  April  16th  1861  /  Died  Aug.  4th. 
1888. 

....  Elizabeth  C.  /  wife  of  Dr.  John  B.  Waring  /  Bom 
April  5,  1830  /  Died  Dec.  29,  1884  /  Aged  54  years  8  mos.  /  24 
days.' 

....  Martha  S.  /  wife  of  J.  B.  Waring  /  Bom  Oct  23, 
1848  /  died  July  18,  1897. 

....  Dr.  John  B.  Waring  /  bom  Jan.  20,  1829  /  Died 
Nov.  18,  1865  /  Aged  36  years,  9  mos  /  29  days. 

Mrs.  Mary  E.  Wondrum  /  wife  of  /  Samuel  R.  Wondrum  / 
who  died    .    .    .    ./  on  the  24th  June  1844  /  aged  46  years/ 


.    •    • 


INDEX 


Ackennan,  Mr.,  50. 
Adams,  Ann,  123. 
Adams,  David,  80, 155. 
Adams,  Margaret,  155. 
Adams,  Nathaniel,  123. 
Adcock,  John,  125. 
Addison,  Martha,  84. 
Ahrens,  Capt.,  155. 
Ainslie,  Col.,  146. 
Ainslie,  John,  16, 112. 
Ainslie,  Hannah,  112. 
Ainslie,  Lady  Mary,  16, 112. 
Ainslie,  John,  66. 
Air,  Dr.  James,  114  (2). 
Alexander,  David,  124. 
Allen,  James,  32,  53. 
Allen,  William,  140 
Allman,  John.  149. 
Allston,  Elizabeth,  77. 
Allston,  William,  12,  77. 
Alston,  Jane  Ladson,  136. 
Alston,  Jacob  Motte,  136. 
Ancrum,  Mrs.,  19.    f* 
Anderson,  Robert,  156. 
Andrews,  Charles  M.,  3. 
Antonie,  Mrs.,  131. 
Archdale,  Gov.,  139. 
Archdale,  John,  50. 
Archibald,  Mr.,  24. 
Andrews,  Jane,  158. 
Arnold,  Betsy,  158. 
Arnold,  Elizabeth,  126. 
Arthur,  Elizabeth,  131, 148. 
Arthur,  Georse,  109, 148. 
Arthur,  Martha,  148. 
Arthur,  Sarah,  130, 148. 
Artists,  advertisements  of,  88^-91. 
Ash,  Cato,  156. 
Ashby,  Thomas,  60. 
Atmar,  Ralph,  126. 
Austin,  Ann,  17. 
Austin,  George,  62. 
Austin,  Mary,  17. 
Austin,  Robert,  17. 
AutoneL  Emanuel,^127. 
Ayre,  Maria,  131. 

Bachler,  Kzetial,  53. 
Bachler,  Mary,  35. 
Bacot,  Mrs.,  115. 
Bacot,  Elizabeth,  12, 17. 
Bacot,  Elizabeth  Henrietta,  12. 


Bacot,  Mary,  17. 

Bacot,  Peter,  12, 17. 

Bailey,  Capt.  John,  22. 

BaUey,  William,  82. 

Baker,  Benjamin,  70. 

Baker,  Charlotte,  85. 

Baker,  Richard  Bohun,  85. 

Baker,  William,  17. 

Ball,  A.  H.,  164. 

Ball,  Alwyn,  163. 

BaU,  Ann,  163. 

Ball,  Ann  Hume,  165. 

Ball,  Anna  Elizabeth,  163. 

BaU,  Caroline,  163. 

Ball,  Catherine  Cordes,  164. 

Ball,  Catherine  Theus,  165. 

Ball,  Edward,  164. 

Ball,  Elias,  161, 162, 163,  164, 165. 

Ball,  Elias,  M.D.,  164. 

BaU,  EUza  C,  164. 

BaU,  EUza  Catherine,  165. 

BaU,  EUzabeth,  165. 

BaU,  Francis  Guerin,  163, 164. 

BaU,  Isaac,  162, 163, 164. 

BaU,  Jane,  163, 164. 

BaU,  John,  162, 163, 164, 165. 

Ball,  John  Coming,  164. 

BaU,  JuUa,  163. 

BaU,  Hugh  Swinton.  163. 

BaU,  Katherine  Gibbs,  165. 

Ball,  Lydia,  162. 

BaU,  M.  L.,  163. 

BaU,  Maria  Louisa,  165. 

BaU,  Marv  M.,  165. 

Ball,  Mathurin  Guerin,  165. 

BaU,  Samuel,  22,  59. 

BaU,  Thomas,  26. 

BaU,  Wmiam,  127. 

BaU,  wmiam  J.,  164. 

Ball,  JuUa,  164. 

BaU,  wmiam  James,  163, 164, 165. 

BaU,  T^mUam  McBumey,  163. 

BaUs,  17,  59. 

Bamfield,  William,  64. 

Banbury,  Mr.,  69,  115. 

Banbury,  Judith,  60,  71. 

Banks,  Charles,  130. 

BardweU,  EUza  Hibben,  133. 

BardweU,  Rev.  Joseph,  133. 

Baron,  Dr.  Alexander,  61. 

Barksdale,  Charles,  31,  73,  74. 

Barksdale,  EUzabeth,  74. 

Barksdale,  George,  74,  75. 


171 


172 


INDEX 


Barksdale,  Mary,  31,  74,  75. 
Barkesdale,  Mary  VanderHorst,  74. 
Barksdale,  Sabina,  74, 154. 
Barksdale,  Sarah,  31. 
Barksdale,  Serena  Maria,  74,  75. 
BariLsdale,  Thomas,  74,  75,  86, 154. 
Barksdale,  William  Payne,  75. 
Bamett,  George,  70. 
Bamett,  John,  24. 
Barnwell,  Mr.,  59. 
Barnwell,  John,  129. 
Barnwell,  Joseph  W.,  2. 
Barnwell,  Martha,  129. 
Barre,  Mrs.  William,  80. 
Bartlett,  Charles  F.,  126. 

Barton, ,  73. 

Barton,  Pridlla,  56. 
Barton,  Sarah,  56. 
Barton,  Thomas,  56. 
Bass,  James,  126. 
Baxter,  A..  81. 
Baxter,  John,  81. 
Beach,  Samud,  157. 
Beale,  Hannah,  15, 64. 
Beale,  John,  15,  22. 
Beale,  Martha,  15. 
Beale,  Mary,  15,  22. 
Beale,  Mary  Hannah,  22. 
Beale,  Othniel,  15, 62, 63. 
Beale,  William,  15. 
Bealer,  Elizabeth,  35. 
Bee,  Judge,  150. 
Bee,  Mrs.,  119. 
Bee,  Joseph,  122. 
Bee,  Roger  Smith,  72. 
Bee,  Sarah,  73. 
Bee,  Susannah,  23. 
Bee,  Thomas,  23,  72. 
Bee,  Mrs.  Thomas,  114. 
Begbie  and  Mason,  22. 
B^ve  plantation,  76. 
Belcher,  Capt.  Gill,  6. 
Bembridge,  Mrs.,  89. 
Bembridge,  Henry,  89. 
Benison,  Elizabeth,  74. 
Benison,  Francis  Bremar,  74. 
Benison,  George,  73,  74. 
Benison,  Jane,  74. 
Benison,  Mary,  74. 
Benison,  Sarah,  74. 
Benison,  Richard,  74. 
Benison,  William,  74. 
Bennett,  Ann,  145. 
Bennett,  Anna,  34. 
Bennett,  Azabel,  56. 
Bennett,  Elizabeth,  32, 145. 
Bennett,  Hannah.  31. 
Bennett,  Henry,  o6t  57. 
Bennett,  John,  2. 


Bennett,  John,  32,  54,  56, 106. 

Bennett,  Mary,  35,  54,  56, 109. 

Bennett,  Samuel,  31. 

Bennett,  Sarah,  32. 

Bennett,  Sarah  Margaret,  134. 

Bennett,  Thomas,  31,  34,  54,  56,  145. 

Bennett,  l^^lliam,  35, 109. 

Beresfoid,  Mr.,  16. 

Beresford,  Mrs.,  64. 

Beresford,  Elizabeth,  19, 44. 

Beresford,  Harriott,  60. 

Beresford,  Richard,  19, 44, 60. 

Bessileau,  Susannah,  122. 

Betterson,  Frances,  140. 

Betterson,  William,  140. 

BOlups,  Letitia,  126. 

Bmford,  Mr.,  40. 

Birds,  7. 

Black,  John,  22. 

Blair,  James,  85. 

Blake,  Aim,  153. 

Blake,  Daniel,  59, 119. 

Blake,  Mrs.  Danid,  118. 

Blake,  John,  131. 

Blake,  Jo6q>h,  140. 

Blunddl,  Tliomas,  84. 

Blakeway,  Sarah,  64. 

Blakeway,  WUliam,  64. 

Blythe,  Jose{^,  77. 

Bohun,  Edmund,  50. 

BoUough,  James,  107. 

Bollough,  Susannah,  107. 

Bond  burying  ground,  110,  ill,  146. 

Bond,  George  Paddon,  33, 106. 

Bond,  Jacob,  56,  106, 110, 146. 

Bond,  Sarah,  108. 

Bonsall,  Ann,  128. 

Bonsall,  Elizabeth,  78. 

Bonsall,  Samud,  112. 

Bonneau,  Elizabeth^  154. 

Bonneau,  Henry,  154. 

Boone  burying  groundi  111. 

Boone,  Jane,  125. 

Boone,  James,  27. 

Boone,  Tohn,  110, 122. 

Boone,  Mary,  54, 109. 

Boone,  Thomas,  73,  74,  111. 

Boone,  MOlliam,  109, 125. 

Bosais  plantation,  167. 

Bounetneau,  Mary,  156. 

Bounetheau,  Peter,  156. 

Bourdeaux,  Daniel,  123. 

Bourdeaux,  Elizabeth,  123. 

Bounetheau,  Mrs.,  21,  il3,  115, 117. 

Bowat,  139. 

Bowen,  Ann,  27, 128. 

Bowman,  John,  14. 

Bo34dn,  Sajnuel,  121. 

Bradford,  Charlea*  127. 


INDEX 


173 


Brailsford,  John,  16,  81, 131. 

BraOsford,  Morton;  26. 

Biailsford,  Samud  Waring,  81. 

Branford,  Ann,  60. 

Branford,  Elizabeth,  20. 

Branford,  Mary,  116. 

Branford,  William,  18,  20,  60. 

Breed,  Timothy,  52. 

Breen,  Luke,  127. 

Bremar,  Elinibeth,  74. 

Brewton,  Mrs.,  16. 

Brewton,  Miles,  11,  14, 16. 

Brian,  Mrs.,  115. 

Bricknell,  ^m.  81. 

Bricknell,  Joseph,  81, 130. 

Bridey,  Robert,  28. 

Brid^  Polly,  30. 

British  near  CharlesTown,  117, 118. 

British,  on  James  Island,  119. 

Brodie,  Robert,  86. 

Brodie,  Thomas,  129. 

Brown,  lieuL-CoL,  123. 

Brown,  Miss,  123. 

Brown,  Ann,  74. 

Brown,  Christopher,  127. 

Brown,  Fanny,  20. 

Brown,  Joseph,  20. 

Brown,  Robert,  122. 

Brown,  Squire,  131. 

Browne,  Dr.,  3. 

Bruce,  James  F.,  168. 

Bruce,  Robert,  28. 

Budd,  Dr.  John,  83. 

Bull,  Capt,  83. 

Bull,  Mrs.,  68. 

Bull,  John,  10. 

BuU,  William,  15. 

Bulliatt,Mr.,  119 

Bullein,  John,  119. 

Bullien,  Susannah,  61, 119. 

Bullien,  Thomas,  61. 

Burdell,  Judith,  53. 

Burckmyer,  Charles,  153. 

Burckmeyer,  Elizabeth,  153. 

Burckmyer,  John,  27. 

Burges,Mary,  145. 

Burges,  Samuel,  145. 

Burke,  Mr.,  160. 

Bum,  Mrs.,  22. 

Bum,  John,  16. 

Bum,  Patrick,  123. 

Burrows,  Mary,  70. 

BumSj  James,  158. 

Bumside,  William  Rutheford,  144. 

Burrows,  Sally,  70. 

Burrows,  Wiluam,  70. 

Butler,  Mrs.,  22. 

Butler,  Charles,  50. 

Butler,  Henry,  24. 


Butler,  James,  145, 147. 
Butler,  Major  Pierce,  119. 
Butler,  Mrs.  Pierce,  116. 
Butler,  Thomas,  145. 
Byrne,  Walter,  168. 
Bythewood,  Daniel,  124. 

Cade,  a  race  horse,  13. 

Calder,  Martha,  28. 

Calder,  William,  28. 

Calhoun,  William,  130. 

Cambridge,  Elizabeth,  125. 

Campbell^  Mr.,  65. 

Campbell,  Mrs.,  21, 116. 

Campbell,  David,  128. 

Campbell,  Laurence,  78. 

Campbell,  M'Cartan,  114. 

Campbell,  Sarah,  157. 

Campbell,  Lord  William,  72. 

Capers,  Amelia,  62. 

Capers,  Elizabeth,  73. 

Capers,  William,  73, 122. 

Carmichad,  Isabella,  157. 

Cames,  Dr.,  127. 

Cames,  Mrs.,  127- 

Carss,  William,  115. 

Cart,  Joseph  Sayer,  126. 

Cart^mght,  Mary,  20. 

Cary,  iSomas,  139-143. 

Cater,  Rev.  Edwin,  134. 

Cater,  Sarah  Marj^aret,  134. 

Cattell,  Mrs.  Benjamin,  66. 

Cattell,  Lydia,  66, 130. 

Cattell,  Col.  William,  116. 

Cavanau,  James,  20. 

Caw,  Dr.  David,  36. 

Cemeteiy  Inscriptions,  Christ  Church 

Parish,  73, 132. 
Chalmers,  Lionel,  114. 
Chambers,  Mr.,  157. 
Champion,  Richard,  84. 
Chancery,  Bill  of  Complaint,    139- 

143. 
Channing,  Mrs.,  14. 
Channing,  John,  14. 
Channing,  Walter,  163. 
Chaplin,  Sally,  25. 
Charleston  Morning  Post  and  Dailv 

Advertiser,  Marriage  and  Death 

Notices  from,  24. 
CharlesTown,    proposed    view    of, 

90-91. 
Charleywood  plantation,  151. 
Chesnut,  Mr.,  150. 
Cheves,  Langdon,  2. 
Chiffelle,  Mr.,  72. 
Child,  Isaac,  162. 
Child,  James,  161. 
Child,  Lydia,  162. 


174 


INDEX 


Childsbury  town,  161. 

Chovin,  Elizabeth,  78. 

Christ  Church,  re-buikUng  of,  88. 

Christ  Church  Parish,  Cemetery  In- 

scrmtions,  73, 132. 
Christ  Church  Parish,  Register,  31, 

52,  105,  144. 
Christie,  James,  80. 
City  Gazette,  Marriage  and  Death 

notices  from,  24,  77, 121, 153. 
Clarke,  Charles,  4. 
Clark,  James,  28,  29. 
Clark,  Martha,  29. 
Clark,  Mary,  126. 
Clark,  Rev.  Samuel,  35. 
Clark,  Thomas,  153. 
Clark,  Rev.  Thomas,  124. 
Clarkson,  Levinious,  66. 
Cleland,  John,  73. 
Cleiland,  Dr.  John,  61. 
Cleiland,  Sally,  61. 
Clements,  Ann  Maria,  122. 
Clements,  John,  122, 156. 
Clement,  Sarah  Claik,  156. 
Cleveland,  John  B.,  2. 
Clififord,  Charles,  82. 
Clifford,  Eliza,  82. 
Clinton,  Samuel,  156. 
Clitheral,  Elizabeth,  15. 
Clitheral,  James,  15. 
Clitheral,  Dr.  John,  72. 
Coachman,  Elizabeth,  84. 
Cobia,  Francis,  127. 
Cobia,  Mary,  27. 
Coffin,  Ebenezer,  157. 
Cogdell,  Capt.  George,  123. 
Cohen,  Moses,  80. 
Cohen,  Rachel,  80. 
Coke,  Rebecca,  26. 
Colcock,  Mrs.,  16. 
Colcock,  Eliza,  129. 
Colcock,  John,  129. 
Colcock,  Job,  127. 
Colcock,  Thomas,  Shirley,  127. 
Cole,  Richard,  124. 
Coleman,  Thomas,  13. 
Collins,  John,  27. 
CoUis,  Elizaceth,  13. 
Combe,  Jane,  148. 
Combe,  John,  148. 
Combe,  Mary,  145,  148. 
Comingtee  plantation,  164. 
Connelly,  John,  78. 
Conway,  Miss,  25. 
Conway,  Agatha,  155. 
Conway,  Edwin,  155. 
Conyers,  John,  157. 
Cook,  Ann,  33, 148. 
Cook,  Elizabeth,  33,  35. 


Cook,  Hannah,  35,  108. 

Cook,  Hannah  Elizabeth,  56. 

Cook,  Joseph,  35,  56,  108. 

Cook,  Joseph  Tomkins,  56. 

Cook,  Mary,  148. 

Cook,  Sarah,  35. 

Cook,  William,  33, 148. 

Cooks  Farm,  106. 

Cooks  Old  Field,  graveyard  at,  132. 

Copahee  sound,  73,  74. 

Coram,  Thomas,  89. 

Corbett,  Mrs.,  114. 

Corbett,  Elizabeth,  166. 

Corbett,  Hannah  Margaret,  71. 

Corbett,  John  H.,  166. 

Corbett,  Margaret,  71, 166. 

Corbett,  Richard,  166. 

Corbett,  Thomas,  14,  71,  166. 

Corbett,  Thomas,  Jr.,  166. 

Cordes,  John,  71. 

Cordes,  Samuel,  70. 

Corker,  Thomas,  20. 

Cormack,  Mary,  26. 

Cornish,  Susannah,  139, 140. 

Cosens,  Miss,  124. 

Cosens,  John,  124. 

Coslett,  Mrs.,  66,  71. 

Coslett,  Ann  Grimk6,  71. 

Coslett,  Charles  Grimk6,  71. 

Coslett,  Chas.  Mathews,  61,  71,  113. 

Courtonne,  James,  155. 

Cox,  Alice,  112. 

Cox,  Ann,  78. 

Cox,  Elizabeth,  121. 

Cox,  George,  112. 

Cox,  Isaac,  25. 

Crafts,  William,  64. 

Crallan,  Rev.  James,  11,  53, 105. 

Crawford,  Sarah,  157. 

Creighton,  John,  121. 

Cripps,  Mrs.,  1 18. 

Cripps,  John  Splatt,  116. 

Croft,  Caroline,  146. 

Croft,  Edward,  26,  53. 

Croft,  Lydia,  53. 

Croft,  Martha,  53. 

Cioft,Mary,  110, 144, 146. 

Croft,  Peter,  109, 110,  144, 146. 

Croft,  Sally,  144. 

Croft,  William,  34. 

Cross,  George,  126. 

Cruickshanks,  Daniel,  156. 

Cudworth,  Catherine,  158. 

Cudworth,  Nancy,  84. 

Cudworth,  Polly,  131. 

Cullen,  Joseph,  79. 

CuUen,  Thomas,  79. 

Cuttino,  Mary,  129. 

Cuttino,  William,  129. 


INDEX 


175 


DaCosta,  Isaac,  28. 

Dacres,  Dame  Mary,  140. 

Dacres,  Robert,  140-143. 

Dale,  Oliver,  68. 

Daniel,  Martha,  64. 

Daniel,  Sarah,  64. 

Danson,  Mrs.,  50. 

Danson,  John,  139-143. 

Dart,  fienjamin,  105. 

Dart,  Isaac  Motte,  105. 

Dart,  Jacob  Motte,  58,  105. 

Dart,  John,  107. 

Dart,  John  Sandford,  53, 58, 105, 106, 

144. 
Dart,  Martha,  58, 105, 144. 
Dart,  Thomas  Lynch,  106. 
Daunay,  Sarah,  122. 
Davall,  John,  84. 
Davidson,  Archibald,  81. 
Davis,  Polly,  78. 
Dawes,  George,  110. 
Dawes,  James,  110. 
Dawson,  Caroline,  164. 
Dawson,  Elizabeth,  61. 
Dawson,  Joanna,  10,  61 ,  67. 
Dawson,  John,  10,  26,  61,  67. 
Dawson,  Mar^,  10. 
Dawson,  William,  164. 
Dean  Hall  plantation,  168. 
Dean  Square,  69. 
Dearsiey,  George,  73, 139. 
Dearsley,  Richard,  140. 
Deas,  Mrs.,  69. 
Deas,  David,  112. 
Deas,  Henry  Deas,  164. 
Deas,  John,  59. 
Deas,  Katherine,  112. 
Deas,  William  Allen,  77. 
Death  Notices,  24,  77, 121, 153. 
DeBrahm,  Geiard,  112. 
Delancy,  Mrs.,  67. 
Delancy,  Elizabeth,  44. 
Delancy,  Peter,  10,  19,  21,  44. 
Dempsey,  Edward,  59. 
DeRosset,  Dr.,  S3, 
DeSaussure,  Mr.,  115. 
DeSaussure,  Mary,  157. 
DeSaussure,  Sarah,  154. 
D'Estaign,  Count,  118. 
Deveaux,  Catherine,  123. 
Deveaux,  Jacob,  123. 
Dewar,  Charles,  71. 
Dewar,  Mary,  71.  • 

Dewees,  Cornelius,  22. 
Dickenson,  Benjamin,  116. 
Dickerson,  Joseph,  158. 
Dierson,  Martin,  156. 
DiU,  Joseph,  131. 
Dillon  and  Grey's  tavern,  18. 
Dorrill,  Elizabeth,  55,  56,  57. 


Dorrill,  Damaris,  148. 
Dorrill,  Elizabeth,  147(2),  148. 
Dorrill,  James,  55,  57,  148. 
Dorrill,  Jonathan,  55, 145, 146, 147(2), 

148. 
DorriU,  John,  55,  57,  107,  148. 
Dorrill,  Joseph,  55, 148. 
Dorrill,  Martha,  108. 
Dorrill,  Mary,  56,  146, 147(2). 
Dorrill,  Rebecca,  148. 
Dorrill,  Samuel,  56. 
Dorrill,  Robert,  35,  52,  53,  55,  56(2), 

108, 145,  146, 148. 
Dorrill,  Sarah,  56,  108, 145. 
DorriU,  William,  76,  145,  147,  148. 
Doughty,  Martha,  129. 
Doughty,  William,  129. 
Downes,  Mrs.,  21. 
Downes,  Rev.  Mr.,  21. 
Downes,  Mrs.,  64. 
Downes,  Elizabeth,  43. 
Downes,  Josiah,  43. 
Downes,  Mary,  43. 
Downes,  Richard,  64. 
Downes,  Richard,  abstract  of  will  43, 

44. 
Downes,  Thomas,  43,  44. 
Doyley,  Daniel,  18. 
Drake,  Rev.  Samuel,  33, 35,  52,  53. 
Drakeford,  William,  32. 
Drayton,  Charles,  22,  67. 
Drayton,  Mary,  84. 
Drayton,  WUiam,  29. 
Drayton,  Mrs.  William,  12,  16. 
Dra3rton,  \^lliam  Henry,  84. 
Dry,  Mrs.,  71. 
Dry,  William,  71. 
DuBosc,  Judith,  62. 
Dubose,  Catherine,  155. 
Dubose,  Isaac,  155. 
Duel,  (Delancy-Haly),  21. 
Dud  (Inglis-Deas),  77. 
Duels,  77,  112. 
Dulles,  Miss,  127. 
Dulles,  Joseph,  127. 
Dunbar,  Capt.  Thomas,  28, 93. 
Dunbar,  Mrs.  Thomas,  82. 
Duncan,  Thomas,  128. 
Dupont,  Charles,  28. 
Dupont,  Mary,  28. 
DuPre,  Daniel,  78. 
DuPre,  Josias,  127. 
DuPre,  Col.  Lewis,  81. 
Durand,  Levi,  107. 
Durand,  James,  53. 
Durand,  Thomas,  107. 
Duva,  Sarah,  107. 
Dwight,  Rev.  Samuel,  168. 


176 


INDEX 


Eakt,  WnUam,  26. 

East  Florida,  15. 

Eberiy,  Mr.,  127. 

Eden,  EUjah,  33. 

Eden,  Isaih,  54. 

Eden,  James,  33,  54. 

Eden,  Jeremiah,  32,  35. 

Eden,  John,  109, 148, 149. 

Eden,  Jonah,  53,  54. 

Eden,  Mary  Christian,  33,  54. 

Eden,  Rd>ecca,  148,  149. 

Eden,  Sarah,  32,  54, 149. 

Edmonds,  Sarah,  35. 

Edwards,  Mrs.,  13,  69. 

Edwards,  Alexander,  157. 

Edwards,  Elizabeth,  75. 

Edwards,  George,  75. 

Edwards,  George  Barkesdale,  75. 

Edwards,  Isaac,  27. 

Edwards,  John,  66,  81. 

Edwards,  Mary  Cochran,  81. 

Elliott,  Barnard,  69, 112, 117. 

Elliott,  Mrs.  Barnard,  116. 

Elliott,  Jane,  155. 

Elliott,  Mary,  69. 

Elliott,  Samud,  28. 

Elliott,  Thomas  Law,  69. 

Ellis,  John,  86. 

Ellis,  Richard,  79. 

Emmett,  Jonathan,  55, 128. 

Emmett,  Mary,  55. 

Emmett,  Sarah,  55. 

England,  Mr.,  157. 

English,  Hannah,  3. 

Ei^lish,  Henroyda,  3,  4. 

Ei^lish,  Mathew,  3. 

Erhard,  Catherine,  80. 

Euhaws,  28. 

Eusebuis,  Mr.,  17. 

Evans,  Mr.,  115. 

Evans,  Rev.  Caleb,  86. 

Evans,  Daniel,  33. 

Evans,  Elias,  55, 147. 

Evans,  Elizabeth,  55, 144, 147. 

Evans,  Geoige,  155. 

Evans,  James,  144,  145, 146, 147. 

Evans,  John,  146,  147. 

Evans,  William,  31,  147. 

Eveleigh,  Mrs.,  129. 

Evelei^h,  Samuel,  8. 

Everleigh,  Nicholas,  78. 

Every,  Capt.,  121. 

Exchiange,  The,  20. 

Fardo,  Elizabeth,  29. 
Fardo.  George,  29, 124. 
Farquhar,  Mary,  27. 
Farquharson,  Dr.  John,  14,  69. 


Farr,  Miss,  116. 

Farr,  Mrs.,  18. 

Farr,  Elizabeth,  116. 

Farr,  Jo8e|>h,  125. 

Farr,  Thomas,  116. 

Farrar,  Field,  24. 

Favourite,  a  race  horse,  13. 

Fenwick,  Mrs.,  113. 

Fenwick,  Edward,  70, 116. 

Fenwick,  John,  112. 

Fenwick,  Mrs.  John,  13. 

Fenwick,  Martha,  116. 

Fenwick,Mary,  112, 119. 

Fenwick,  Sarah,  114. 

Ferguson,  Thomas,  69. 

Ferguson,  William,  129. 

Finlayson,  Caroline,  157. 

Finley,  Mrs.,  65. 

Fisher,  George,  87. 

Fires,  18,  20,  21,  69, 112, 115,  119. 

Flagi^,  Dr.  S.  H.,  153. 

Fleming,  Elizabeth,  110. 

Fletcher,  Archibald,  79. 

Fletcher,  Phod)e,  77. 

Ford,  Timothy,  154. 

Forrest,  Hannah,  86. 

Forman,  Elenora,  29. 

Forman,  Samuel,  29. 

Foskey,  Brian,  155. 

Fothergill,  Dr.  John,  46. 

Foumier,  — ,  89. 

Fowks,  Chandler  Dinwiddle,  29. 

Eraser,  Mr.,  152. 

Eraser,  Mrs.,  12, 29,  60, 113, 115. 

Eraser,  Alexander,  79, 117. 

Frederick,  John,  117. 

Freer,  John,  24. 

Freer,  Reb^xa,  24. 

Freneau,  Capt  Philip,  29. 

Frost,  Frank  R.,  2. 

Frost,  Rev.  Thomas,  44. 

Fry,  Thomas,  158. 

Fuller,  Kitty,  81. 

Fuller,  Thomas,  81. 

Furse,  Ann,  28. 

Fyffe,  Charles,  17. 

Gadsden,  Christopher,  12,  113. 
Gadsden,  James,  17. 
Gadsden,  Mary,  12. 
Gadsden,  Thomas,  59, 115, 116. 
Gaillard,  John,  18, 130. 
Gaillard,  Theodore,  129. 
Gale,  Catherine,  64. 
Gallavant,  James,  168. 
Gamage,  Sarah,  75. 
Gant,  John,  82. 
Gant,  Mary,  82. 


INDEX 


177 


Garden,  Miss,  25. 

Garden,  CoL,  25. 

Garden,  Rev.,  32. 

Garden,  Dr.  Alexander,  12,  84. 

Garden,  Rev.  Alexander,  35. 

Garden,  Elizabeth,  12. 

Gardner,  John,  129. 

Gates,  Rev.,  130. 

Gavin,  Edward,  77. 

Geissendanger,  John  XJlrich,  102. 

Gen.  Assembly  at  Beaufort,  61. 

George,  Capt.  James,  150. 

George,  William,  85. 

Georgetown,  24. 

Gerard,  John,  50. 

Gervais,  Clandua  Butler,  69. 

Gervais,  John  Lewis,  14, 17,  65, 69. 

Gibbes,  Mr.,  59. 

Gibbes,  Elizabeth,  32. 

Gibbes,  George,  32. 

Gibbes,  Henry,  82. 

Gibbes,  John,  35. 

Gibbes,  Robert,  31, 32. 

Gibbes,  Mrs.  Robert,  114. 

Gibbes,  William,  26-74, 115, 119, 125. 

Gibbes,  William  Hasell,  125. 

Gibbons,  Ann,  52. 

Gibbons,  Catherine,  34. 

Gibbons,  Charlotte,  34. 

Gibbons,  Elizabeth,  31. 

Gibbons,  John,  31. 

Gibbons,  Jothan,  34. 

Gibbs,  Henry  Poyas,  168. 

Gibbs,  John  Ernest,  168. 

Gibbs,  M.  G.,  165. 

Gibson,  Eliza,  124. 

Gibson,  Robert,  121. 

Gigniliat,  James,  122. 

Gilbert,  Sarah,  129. 

Giles,  Ann,  57. 

Giles,  Elizabeth,  34,  57. 

Gfles,  Elizabeth  Raner,  32. 

Giles,  Jonathan,  34,  57. 

Giles,  John.  32. 

Giles,  Mary,  34. 

Gillon,  Alexander,  26. 

Gilmore,  Adeline,  168. 

Glaubeck,  Baron  de,  27. 

Glover,  Ann,  84. 

Glover,  Charles,  81, 84. 

Glover,  Sarah,  81. 

Godfrey,  Col.  John,  37. 

Godin,  Mr.,  71. 

Godin,  Mrs.,  12. 

Godin,  Charlotte,  13. 

Godin,  Elizabeth  Sarah,  12. 

Godin,  Isaac,  12,  115. 

Goodwin,  Mrs.,  15. 

Goose  Creek,  42. 


Goring,  C.  F.,  153. 
Gordon,  Mrs.,  16. 
Gordon,  Alexander,  11. 
Gordon,  Frances  Charlotte,  11. 
Gordon,  John,  20, 125. 
Gordon,  John  Alexander,  20. 
Gordon,  Martha,  134. 
Gordon,  Mary,  128. 
Gordon,  "Sandy,"  11. 
Goug^,  Mary  Aim,  62. 
Gough,  Richard,  62. 
Gourdin,  Samud,  168. 
Graem,  Ann^  130. 
Graem,  David,  115. 
Grcady,  Judith,  79. 
Greaser,  C.  F.,  122. 
Gratton,  Catherine  A.,  78. 
Gregorie,  Anne  King,  73, 132. 
Gregorie,  Ferdinand,  73. 
Gregorie,  Ferdinand,  Jr.,  73. 
Gregorie,  James,  26. 
Grey,  Benjamin,  84. 
Grey,  Henry,  84. 
Grw,  Jane,  86. 
Griffith,  Edward,  80. 
Grimball,  Mary,  70.  • 
Grimball,  Charles  Isaac,  29, 154. 
Grimball,  Paul,  25. 
Grimk6,  Ann,  61,  71. 
Grimk6,  Christopher,  117. 
Grimk6,  Elizabeth,  117. 
Grimke,  Frederick,  117. 
Grimk6,  John  Paul,  61, 82. 
Grimk^  Mary,  82, 117. 
Grimk6,  Mary  Elizabeth,  117. 
Grove,  Elizabeth,  128. 
Groundwater,  Andrew,  117. 
Gruber,  John,  30. 
Guerin,  Agnes,  122. 
Guerin,  Francis,  122. 
Gunter,  Dr.  Edward,  13. 
Gurley,  Mary,  157. 

Habersham,  Mr.,  14. 
Haddrell,  Mrs.  31. 
Haddrell,  Susannah,  32. 
Hahabaum,  George,  79. 
Hair,  Edward,  24. 
Hair,  Nancy,  24. 
Hale,  Capt.,  40. 
Hale,  Elinor,  54. 
Hale,  James,  54. 
Hales,  David,  82. 
Hall,  Col.  Arthur,  36. 
Hall,  Mrs.  Geoige,  116. 
Hall,  George  Abbott,  81. 
Hail,  Martha,  36, 85. 
Hall,  Susannah,  29. 
Hall,  William,  84. 


178 


INDEX 


Halstead,  Major,  50. 

Haly,  Dr.  John,  112. 

Ham,  Rebecca,  83. 

Ham,  Richard,  83. 

Ham,  Thomas,  79. 

Hamet,  Elizabeth,  156. 

Hamett,  Thomas,  76. 

Hamilton,  Mr.,  157. 

Hamilton,  Miss,  130. 

Hamilton,  David,  130, 150. 

Hamilton,  John,  70. 

Hamlin,  Ann,  134. 

Hamlin,  Eliza,  76. 

HamKn,  Emily  G.,  135. 

Hamlin,  Frank  Carlile,  135. 

Hamlin,  George,  52,  145. 

Hamlin,  Girardeau,  135. 

Hamlin,  James,  135. 

Hamlin,  John,  134. 

Hamlin,  Mary,  57, 135,  145. 

Hamlin,  N.  Cobia,  135. 

Hamlin,  Sarah,  134. 

Hamlin,  Sarah  Ann,  135. 

Hamlin,  Thomas,  73,  134, 135. 

Hamlin,  William,  76. 

Hampton,  John,^. 

Hampton,  Richard,  129. 

HansLhan,  John,  126. 

Harleston,  Mrs.,  12,  18,  19,  20. 

Harleston,  Ann  Olney,  167. 

Harleston,  Edward,  24, 166. 

Harleston,  ElizabeUi,  166. 

Harleston,  Elizabeth  Serena,  166. 

Harleston,  Frank  Huger,  167. 

Harleston,  Maj.  Isaac  Child,  166. 

Harleston,  Col.  J.  H.,  167. 

Harleston,  James  Bum,  167. 

Harleston,  John,  114. 

Harleston,  Mrs.  John,  17,  65,  115. 

Harleston,  Leize  Barksdale,  166. 

Harleston,  Margaret,  14. 

Harleston,  Nicholas,  10,  167. 

Harleston,  Posthumous  Nicholas,  167. 

Harleston,  Susan  Sommers,  167. 

Harleston,  Thomas  Cordes,  167. 

Harleston,  WilUam,  167. 

Harper,  Robert,  .78. 

Harris,  Mrs.,  65,  116. 

Harris,  Susannah,  70. 

Harris,  Thomas,  70. 

Harrison,  Capt.,  14. 

Hart,  Joshua,  25. 

Hartley,  Thomas,  18. 

Hartman,  Ann,  54. 

Hartman,  Elizabeth,  57. 

Hartman,  George,  109. 

Hartman,  John,  54,  57,  108,  109,  148, 

Hartman,  Mary,  108,  148. 

Hartman,  Mary  Dorrjll,  148. 


Hartman,  Richard,  144. 

Hartman,  Sarah,  33,  54,  57,  108, 148, 

149 
Hartman,  Susannah,  32. 
Hartman,  William,  33, 147. 
Harvey,  Benjamin,  87. 
Harvey,  Elizabeth,  87. 
Hasell,  Andrew,  116. 
Hasell,  Betsy,  15, 18,  68.    . 
Hasell,  Constantia,  60. 
Hasell,  Elizabeth,  60. 
Hasell,  Margaret,  114. 
Hasell,  Mary,  77. 
Hasell,  Thomas,  114. 
Hatfield,  John,  81. 
Hatley,  Roger  Peter  Hansyde,  61. 
Hatnes,  WUlis,  168. 
Hayly,  Dr.John,21,112. 
Head,  Lady,  72. 
Head,  Sir  Edmund,  72. 
Heame,  George,  140-143. 
Heame,  John,  25. 
Henchman,  Mr.,  8. 
Henderson,  Robert,  123. 
Henri,  Peter,  126. 
Henrichson,  Harman,  157. 
Herbert,  J.  A.,  3. 
Heriot,  WiUiam,  125. 
Hewes,  Robert,  84. 
Hext,  Ann,  70. 
Hext,  David,  70. 
Hext,  Elizabeth,  24. 
Heyward,  Mrs.,  117. 
Heyward,  Caroline  Sinclair,  154. 
Heyward,  Mrs.  Daniel,  118. 
Heyward,  John,  Jr.,  154. 
Heyward,  Thomas,  17. 
Heyward,  William,  115. 
Hibben,  Andrew,  53,  57,  108. 
Hibben,  Elizabeth,  57, 108. 
Hibben,  James,  132,  133. 
Hibben,  Sarah,  132,  133. 
Hick,  George,  154. 
Hill,  Charles,  157. 
Hill,  John,  13. 
Hillegas,  Joseph,  158. 
Hills,  Elizabeth,  156. 
Himili,  Mr.,  64. 
Himili,  Rachel,  22. 
Hinde,  Rev.  John,  106. 
Hinson,  Mrs.,  77. 
Hinson,  Thomas,  77. 
Hippo,  16. 
Hobcaw,  22. 
Holibush,  John,  106. 
Holibush,  Sarah,  54,  106. 
Holmes,  Mr.,  150. 
Holmes,  Eliza  F.,  168. 
Holmes,  Dr.  Henry  McAlpin,  168. 


INDEX 


179 


Holmes,  Joel,  127. 

Holmes,  John,  32. 

Holmes,  Julia  Gibbes,  168. 

Holmes,  Rebecca,  66. 

Holmes,  William,  86. 

Honeywood,  Arthur,  85,  153. 

Hopton,  Miss,  26. 

Hopton,  William,  26,  66. 

Horlbeck,  Dorothy,  126. 

Horibeck,  Peter,  126. 

Horry,  Airs.,  84. 

Horry,  Ami,  65. 

Horry,  Daniel,  10,  13. 

Horry,  Elias,  20,  65. 

Horry,  Mrs.  Elias,  68. 

Horry,  Peter,  84. 

Horry,  Mrs.  T.,  70. 

Horry,  Thomas,  60,  65. 

Horse  racing,  see  Racing. 

Hort,  Alice,  144. 

Hort,  Elizabeth  Haddrell,  144. 

Hort,  William,  28,  144. 

Houseal,  Dr.  John,  127. 

Howard,  Elizabeth,  128. 

Howard,  Robert,  128,  129. 

Howard,  Sally,  129. 

Howarth,  Mrs.,  12. 

Howarth,  Col.,  13. 

Howarth,  Henry,  36. 

Howarth,  Martha,  36. 

Howe,  Rt.  Rev.  William  Bell  White, 

161. 
Hoyland,  Eleanor  Sarah,  113. 
Huddiston,  Rev.  John,  77. 
Huddleston,  Mrs.  121. 
Huger,  Mr.,  160. 
Huger,  Benj.,  22,  61. 
Huger,  Mrs.  Benajmin,  18, 115. 
Huger,  Daniel,  11,  44,  66. 
Huger,  Mrs.  Daniel,  72. 
Huger,  Elizabeth,  11. 
Huger,  Francis,  44,  70. 
Huger,  Francis  Kinloch,  65. 
Huger,  Isaac,  11. 
Huger,  Mrs.  Isaac,  12. 
Huger,  Isaac,  Jun.,  84. 
Huger,  John,  11,  26. 
Huger,  Mrs.  John,  15,  23. 
Huger,  Mary,  22,  26. 
Huggins,  Joseph,  109. 
Hughes,  John,  19. 
Humbert,  Godfrey,  129. 
Hume,—,  119. 
Hume,  Robert,  13. 
Hume,  Susannah,  13. 
Hunt,  Mrs.,  155. 
Hunt,  James  Green,  155. 
Hunt,  Samuel,  29. 
Hunter,  Capt.,  154. 


Hunter,  Jane,  159. 
Hunter,  John,  159. 
Hunter,  William,  158. 
Husband,  Leigh,  5. 
Hutchinson,  H — ,  166. 
Hutchinson,  Mary,  155. 
Hutchinson,  Capt.  Robert,  127. 
Hutchinson,  Thomas,  129, 153. 
Hyme,  Dr.,  118. 
Hyme,  Henry,  28. 
Hydrophobia,  28. 

Imer,  Lewis,  115. 
nglesby,  James,  156. 
nglesby,  Mrs.  William,  131. 
nglis,  Alexander,  77,  78. 
ngraham,  H.  L.,  168. 
ngraham,  John  Henry,  168. 
ngraham,  Sarah,  168. 
'On,  Susannah,  33. 
pecac,  16. 
rving,  Emma,  166. 
rving,  John  Beaufain,  166. 
zard,  Mr.,  10. 
zard,  Mrs.,  10. 
zard,  Mrs.,  72. 
zard,  Elizabeth,  13. 
zard,  John,  13. 
zard,  Margaret,  10. 
zard,  Ralph,  20,  85. 
zard,   Ralph,   Letters  from  C.   C. 

Pinckney,  150. 
zard,  Walter,  1 19. 

ackson,  Thomas,  124. 
ames,  Elizabeth,  157. 
ames,  Mathew,  126. 
efferson,  Elizabeth,  158. 
efifords,  Judith  Eliza,  156. 
enkins.  Miss,  78. 
enkins,  C.  Bissell,  2. 
enkins,  Rev.  Edward,  78. 
enkins,  John,  123. 
ennerette,  Jacob,  128. 
ervey,  Elizabeth  Heyward,  39. 
ervey,  Theodore  D.,  2. 
oel,  Thomas,  86. 
ohn's  Island,  24. 
ohnston.  Miss,  158. 
ohnston,  Charles,  158. 
ohnston,  Isaac,  157. 
ohnston,  James,  124. 
ohnston,  Robert,  82,  122. 
ohnston,  Sarah,  82. 
oily,  Maybury,  81. 
ones,  Abraham,  127. 
ones,  Alexander,  27. 
ones,  Ann,  108,  109. 
ones,  Daniel,  108. 


180 


INDEX 


Tones,  Frands,  53, 107, 108(2). 

Jones,  John,  108, 109. 

Jones,  Manr,  107, 108(2). 

Jones,  Phil^),  108. 

Jones,  Sarah,  67, 107, 108. 

Jones,  Thomas,  32, 108. 

Jones,  WOHam,  31. 

Jordan,  WUKam,  122. 

Joy,  Abraham,  122. 

Joy,  Benjamin,  54,  57. 

Joy,  Daniel,  33. 

Joy,  Elizabeth,  54. 

Joy,  Jane,  57. 

Joy,  Jean,  33,  55, 105, 109. 

Joy,  Mary,  57, 105. 

Joy,  William,  33, 55, 57, 105, 106, 109. 

Junan,  Alexander,  123. 

Kaghley,  Barbery,  34. 

Ki^ey,  Henry,  34. 

Kaghley,  Konrod,  33, 34. 

Keeler,  Cap.,  59. 

Keeley,  Sebastion,  84. 

Keith,  Mr.,  21. 

Keith,  Capt.  Alexander,  119. 

Keith,  Dr.  William,  114. 

Kdth,  Dr.  William  Sr.,  115. 

Kemmd,  Mary  Ames,  126. 

Kennedy,  James,  25. 

Kennedy,  Mary,  158. 

Kennedy,  Samuel  F.,  129. 

Kennedy,  William,  25. 

Kensington  Plantation,  163. 

Kerr,  dapt.  George,  126. 

Kerr.  John,  24. 

Kershaw,  Joseph,  85, 121. 

Keys,  John,  77. 

Kincaid,  George,  80. 

King,  Mr.,  67,  68, 69, 70. 

King,  Isaac,  112. 

King,  Jeremiah,  128. 

Kinlodi,  Mrs.,  117. 

Kinlodi,  Frands,  61. 

Kinlodi,  Polly,  61. 

KirkpatridL,  Dr.,  128. 

Knox,  Rev.,  156. 

Koger,  Henry,  30. 

Koger,  Joseph,  Letter  to  John  Koger, 

30. 
Kollodc,  Charles  W.,  2. 

LaBruce,  John,  79. 

LaBruce,  Mary,  116. 

Lacey,  Martha,  108,  144, 145. 

Lacey,  Mary,  108. 

Lacey,  Patty,  105. 

Lacey,  Samud,  105, 108, 144, 145. 

Lacey,  Sarah,  145. 

Ladson,  James,  116. 


Lamb,  Miss..  125. 

Lamberton,  Richard,  114. 

LamboU,  Thomas,  69. 

Lamie,  ^(^lliam,  124. 

Larry,  Elizabeth,  121. 

Latta,  Alexander,  124. 

Laurens,  Mr.,  14. 

Laurens,  Eleanor,  18. 

Laurens,  Frederick,  166. 

Laurens,  Henry,  14, 18, 36, 62, 131. 

Laurens,  Henry,  Letter  to  Gabrid 

Maniffuilt,  46-^. 
Laurens,  Henry,  Jr.,  125. 
Laurens,  Lucy,  166. 
Laurens,  Richard  Corbett,  166. 
Lawrence,  Etsdl,  80. 
Lawrence,  Henry,  81. 
Lawrence,  Mary,  80. 
Lee,  Mr.,  160. 
Lee,  Elizabeth,  86. 
Lee,  Thomas,  122. 
Lee,  William,  86. 
Leech,  Mr.,  90-91. 
Lees,  Robert,  78. 
Legare,  Benjamin.  112. 
L^are,  Danid,  78. 
L^are,*  Edward  Mortimer,  76. 
L^are,  Elizabeth,  85, 114. 
L^are,  John,  153. 
L^are,  Joseph,  85. 
L^are,  Ma^,  158. 
Legare,  Nathan,  158. 
Legare,  Samuel,  113. 
L^are,  Solomon^  114. 
L^r,  Peter,  115. 
L^e,  Ann,  157. 
Le  Grand,  — ,  12. 
Lei^,  Sir  Egerton,  61, 120. 
Lejau,  Frands,  43. 
Lejau,  Mary,  43. 
Ldand,  A.  A.,  132, 133. 
Leland,  Ann  Alston,  132. 
Ldand,  Rev.  A.  W.,  132. 
Leland,  A.  W.,  134. 
Leland,  Eliza,  132. 
Leland,  J.  A.,  132. 
Leland,  Jere  William,  132. 
Leland,  John  Adams,  132. 
Leland,  Johnny,  132. 
Leland,  Lizzie,  132. 
Leland,  Sally,  132. 
Lemprier,  Aim,  52. 
Lemprier,  Capt.  Clement,  14, 110. 
Lennox,  Catherine,  60. 
Lennox,  James,  60. 
Lequerix,  Peter,  52. 
Lesesne,  Miss,  84. 
Lesesne,  Anne,  13. 
Lesesne,  Daniel,  79,  84. 


INDEX 


181 


Lesesne,  Isaac,  13/ 130. 

Lesesne,  John,  122. 

Lesesne,  Mary,  79. 

Lesesne,  Thomas,  124. 

Letters,  Early,  from  S.  C,  3-9. 

Levinck,  Mrs.,  31. 

Lewis,  Ann,  110. 

Lewis,  Charles,  33. 

Lewis,  Daniel,  33, 155, 107, 110. 

Lewis,  John,  55,  68. 

Lewis,  Mary,  33,  53,  55. 

Lewis,  Robert,  33. 

Lewis,  Peggy,  105. 

Lewis,  Mary,  105. 

Lewis,  Sarah,  68. 

Lewis,  Sedgwick,  68. 

Lewis,  Wiluam,  33. 

libby,  Elizabeth,  25. 

Limerick  Plantation,  162. 

Lincofai,  James,  84. 

Lindsay,  Elizabeth,  146. 

Linmg,  Charles,  156. 

Lining,  Mary,  156. 

Linn,  David,  107, 110. 

Linn,  Henry,  107. 

Little,  Lieut  Charles,  107. 

Little,  Mary,  31. 

Livingston,  William,  80. 

Lloyd,  Mr.,  119. 

Lodcwood,  Commodore,  130. 

Lockwood,  Catherine  Anna,  130. 

Lockwood,  Joshua,  29. 

Lockwood,  Mary,  29. 

Lockwood,  Sarah,  29. 

Lockwood,  Thomas,  26, 80. 

Logan,  Mrs.,  64. 

Logan,  George,  139. 

L<^an,  John,  79. 

Logan,  Patrick^  139. 

Ix^an,  Rachel,  79. 

Long,  Elizabeth,  79. 

Lord,  Abi«dl,  4,  5. 

Lord,  Andrew,  130. 

Lord,  Joseph,  3,  Letter  to  Petiver,  6, 

50. 
Lord,  Joseph,  Jr.,  4. 
Lord,  Maiy,  130. 
Loring,  Elmhalet,  128. 
Lowndes,  Amarinthia,  113. 
Lowndes,  Mary,  19,  20. 
Lowndes,  Rawlins,  19,  67. 
Lybert,  Clementine,  Martha,  158. 
Lybert,  Daniel,  158. 
Lynah,  Edward,  130. 
Lynch,  Elizabeth,  114, 144. 
L3mch,  Thomas,  Jr.,  60. 
L3mes,  John,  158. 
Lyttleton,  Gov.,  40. 


McAlpin,  Capt.  Colin,  23. 

McAlpin,  Elizabeth  Caroline,  168. 

McAlpin,  James,  70. 

M'Call,  Hext,  125. 

M'Call,  James,  80. 

M'Calester,    Capt   Archibald,    122, 

123. 
M'Callester,  Miss,  77. 
McCauley,  Rev.,  148. 
Macbeth,  James,  74,  75. 
M'Cleish,  Eliza,  153. 
M'CleUan,  Archibald,  Sr.,  82. 
M'Clelland,  Frances,  79. 
MaCoU,  Mary,  66. 
M'CuUoch,  John,  84. 
McDaniel,  Adam,  59. 
M'Donald,  Judith,  122. 
McDowel,  John,  31,  53. 
McDowd,  Martha,  31,  53. 
M'Dowall,  Patrick,  155. 
McDowel,  Thomas,  31. 
Mace,  Thomas,  64. 
M'Gaw,  Ann,  31. 
M'Gaw,  James,  31. 
M'Gaw,  Jane,  31. 
M'Gillivray,  Alexander,  121. 
M'Intosh,  Lachlan,  27. 
Mclver,  Mrs.  Edward  H.,  161. 
Mackenzie,  John,  13. 
McKoy,  Rebecca,  145. 
M'Kune,  Christopher,  158. 
McNeil,  Alida,  86. 
McNeil,  Danid,  86. 
M'^^lla^^e,  Alexander,  129. 
M'Pherson,  Job,  28. 
MTeer,  John,  80. 
Manhunt,  M.  A.  B.,  160. 
Manigault,  Ann,  Diary  of,  10,  59, 

112. 
Manigault,  Elizabeth,  61,  70. 
Manigault,  Gabriel,  10, 11,  68. 
Manigault,  Gabrid  Sr.,  see  Mani- 

^ult  Diary. 
Manigault,  Joseph,  120. 
Manigault,  Peter,  61,  62,  64,  death 

of,  66,  67. 
Manigault,  Peter,  Letters,  39-49. 
Mann,  Elizabeth,  27. 
Mann,  Spencer,  27. 
Mann,  Mrs.  Spencer,  126. 
Marblehead,  Mass.,  15. 
Marion,  Rebecca,  28. 
Marriage  notices,  24,  77, 121, 153. 
Marston,  Nathanid,  130. 
Martin,  Elizabeth,  144. 
Martin,  John  Nicholas,  127. 
Martin,  Rebecca,  77. 
Martin,  Thomas,  127. 


182 


INDEX 


Martyn,  Rev.  Charles,  14, 105. 
Mason,  William,  155. 
Masons,  29. 
Massey,  Miss,  28. 
Massey,  Catherine,  128. 
Massey,  Elizabeth,  26. 
Mathew,  William,  130. 
Mathews,  Rev.  P.,  149. 
Matthews,  Albert,  36. 
Mathewes,  Charlotte,  13. 
Mathewes,  James,  13. 
Mathewes,  Mary,  157. 
Mauroumit,  Alice,  146. 
Mauroumit,  John,  146. 
Mauroimiit,  William  Ainslie  Felix, 

146. 
Maverick,  Lydia,  156. 
Mayflower,  140. 
Mayne,  Charles,  36. 
Mayne,  Martha,  36. 
Mayrant,  Capt.  John,  150. 
Mayson,  James,  25. 
Mazyck,  Ceocelia  M.,  169. 
Mazyck,  Charlotte,  129. 
Mazyck,  Miss  H.,  130. 
Mazyck,  H.  B.,  169. 
Mazyck,  Henry  DeLisle,  169. 
Mazyck,  Isaac,  19. 
Mazyck,  William^  129. 
Meecker,  Allen,  54,  55. 
Mentzing,  Elizabeth,  153. 
Mepshew  House,  163. 
Mercer,  Mr.,  70. 
Meredith,  Margaret,  60. 
Merrick,  A.,  26. 
Merritt,  Rev.,  35. 
Metherinham,  Ann,  31,  53. 
Metherinham,  John,  31,  35,  52. 
Metheringham,  John,  Jr.,  31. 
Metheringham,  Mary,  35,  52, 145. 
Metzker,  Henry,  79. 
Michie,  Elizabeth,  36. 
Michie,  James,  36. 
Michie,  Mary,  36. 
Michie,  William,  36. 
Middleton,  Mr.,  69. 
Middleton,  Arthur,  22. 
Middleton,  Mrs.  Arthur,  17,  69. 
Middleton,  Eliza  Caroline,  69. 
Middleton,  Henry,  59,  67, 114,  124. 
Middleton,  Hester,  67. 
Middleton,  Mary,  59,  114,  157. 
Middleton,  Thomas,  1 18,  157. 
Middleton,  Mrs.  Thomas,  72. 
Mike,  a  slave,  135. 
Miles,  James,  156. 
Miles,  John,  122. 
Miles,  Keriah,  122. 
Miller,  Jenny,  156. 


MiUer,  John,  86,  127. 

Miller,  Samuel,  17,  85. 

Miller,  Sarah,  127. 

Miller,  William,  121. 

Milligan,  Mrs.,  114. 

Milligan,  Caroline,  157. 

Milligan,  Dr.  George,  11,  16,  72. 

Milligan,  Jacob,  157. 

Mills,  Mrs.,  27. 

Mills,  William,  27. 

Milner,  Daniel,  28. 

Mihier,Job,33,lll,  116. 

Milner,Mary,  108,  111,  116. 

Minott,  John,  27,  125. 

^isinback,  Baron  Lewis  Felix,  146. 

Mitchell,  Edward,  128. 

MitcheU,  Elizabeth,  24. 

Mitchell,  Ephraim,  123. 

Mitchell,  ^lrs.  Ephraim,  130. 

Mitchell,  Thomas,  24. 

Moncrief,  Polly,  16. 

Moncreef,  Robert,  71. 

Montague,  Lady  Charles,  13,  15. 

Montague,    Lord    Charles    Greville, 

13, 15. 
Moore,  Miss,  77. 
Moore,  Daniel,  19. 
Moore,  Philip,  135. 
Morain,  Edward,  31. 
Morain,  Sarah,  31. 
Moreau,  Mr.,  115. 
Morgan,  John,  140. 
Morgan,  Mary,  131. 
Morgan,  Nathaniel,  156. 
Moro,  a  race  horse,  59. 
Morris,  George,  121. 
Mosse,  Elizabeth,  155. 
Mosse,  Dr.  George,  155. 
Motte,  Miss,  128. 
Motte,  Charles,  118,  119. 
Motte,  Charlotte,  11. 
Motte,  Isaac,  112,  128. 
Motte,  Mrs.  Isaac,  12. 
Motte,  Jacob,   11,  18,  53,  105,  106, 

144,  145. 
Motte,  Mrs.  Jacob,  12. 
Motte,  John  Abraham,  73. 
Motte,  Mary,  53. 
Mottett,  Dr.  Lewis,  117. 
Moultrie,  Mrs.,  1 15. 
Moultrie,  Alexander,  60,  65. 
Moultrie,  Anabella,  24,  146. 
Moultrie,  H.  C,  168. 
Moultrie,  Hannah,  146. 
Moultrie,  Dr.  John,  17,  18,  23. 
Moultrie,  Katherine,  64. 
Moultrie,  Judith,  64. 
Moultrie,  William,  12, 112, 146. 


INDEX 


183 


Moultrie,  William  L.,  168. 
Mueller,  Rev.  Albert,  169. 
Mueller,  Frances  Mary,  169. 
MueUer,  Mary  Louisa,  169. 
Mullcr,  Albert  Amey,  155. 
Mulato,  Sarah,  a,  54. 
Murray,  Lady  Anne,  10. 
Murray,  Dr.  John,  10. 
MurreU,  Ann,  55. 
Murrell,  Elizabeth,  109. 
MurreU,  Green,  55. 
Murrell,  John  Jonah,  85. 
MurreU,  Mary,  55. 
MurreU,  Saraii,  109. 
Music  teacher,  70. 

Nathan,  Mrs.  127. 
Natural  history,  (S.  C),  5. 
Natural  History  of  BrasU,  7. 
Nelson,  P.  DuGue,  167. 
Nelson,  Peter,  167. 
Nelson,  Theodore  Barker,  167. 
Nelson,  William  A.,  167. 
Newnam,  Reuben,  127. 
Newton,  Abraham,  29. 
New  Windsor,  94. 
Neyle,  Ann,  55. 
Neyle,  William,  55. 
Niot,  John,  84. 
Nisbett,  Alexander,  169. 
Noble,  a  race  horse,  13. 
Norman,  John,  35. 
Norris,  Robert,  123. 
North,  Mary,  86. 
Nott,  Lucy,  121. 
Nottingham,  Richard,  70. 
NoweU,  Elizabeth,  17. 
NoweU,  John,  17. 

Oakland  plantation,  73. 
Oats,  Dr.  Edward,  127. 
Ogilvie,  Alexander,  27. 
C^vie,  Charles,  36. 
OUphant,  Miss,  85. 
OUver,  Mark,  107. 
OUver,  Rebecca,  107. 
Orange  Garden,  11. 
Osborne,  Martha,  130. 
Osborne,  Col.  Thomas,  130. 
Oswald,  Richard,  14, 36. 
Owen,  Mr.,  151. 
Owens,  Richard,  155. 

Page,  Sarah,  106. 
Pagett,  Margaret,  78. 
Pagett,  Thomas,  78,  124. 
Panting,  Rev.  Thomas,  13,  23,  57. 
Parker,  Mr.,  112. 


Parker,  Thomas,  84. 
Pamham,  John,  68. 
Parris,  John,  74. 
Parsons,  Mr.,  118. 
Parsons,  George,  117. 
Parsons,  James,  36,  117. 
Partridge,  Mr.,  112. 
Patterson,  WiUiam,  169. 
Patterson,  William,  Jr.,  83. 
Pawley,  Martha,  79. 
Pawley,  Percival,  79. 
Payne,  Sabina,  75. 
Payne,  Serena  Maria,  74. 
Pearce,  Rev.,  17. 
Pearcc,  Frances,  130. 
Peepon,  Benjamin,  121. 
Pelot,  Sarah,  122. 
Pepper,  A.  M.,  134. 
Pepper,  Mary  Harriet,  134. 
Peppjer,  P.  A.,  134. 
Perkins,  Amaranthia,  26. 
Perkins,  John,  26. 
Peronneau,  Mr.,  116. 
Perry,  Mr.,  152. 
Perry,  Benjamin  Lucas,  124. 
Perry,  Edward,  27. 
Perry,  EUzabeth  MUes,  27. 
Perry,  John,  73. 
Perry,  Mary,  73. 
Peter,  Rebecca,  130. 
Peter,  WUUam  Branford,  85. 
Petiver,  James,  3,  50. 
Petrie,  Mary,  82. 
Peyie,  Ann,  60. 
PhUUps,  EUzabeth,  32. 
PhiUips,  Thomas,  32, 34. 
PhUUps,  WUUam,  32. 
Pickens,  Ezekial,  154. 
Pickering,  Mary,  117. 
PUce,  Mr.,  17. 
PUie's  baUs,  59. 
Pinckney,  Mrs.,  59, 150. 
Pinckney,  Charles,  12,  14, 158. 
Pinckney,  Charles  Cotesworth,  Let- 
ters to  Ralph  Izard,  150-152. 
Pinckney,  Mrs.  Cotesworth,  72,  116. 
Pinckney,  Mrs.  Edward,  114. 
Pinckney,  Mrs.  EUzabeth,  158-159. 
Pinckney,  Mrs.  EUza,  22. 
Pinckney,  Frances,  12. 
Pinckney,  Harriott,  10. 
Pinckney,  Hopson,  77. 
Pinckney,  Miles  Brewton,  12. 
Pinckney,  Roger,  13,  66, 130. 
Pinckney,  Mrs.  Roger,  17. 
Pinckney,  Thomas,  22,  50. 
Pippin,  Joseph,  24. 
Pitt's  statue,  19. 
Player,  EUzabeth,  146, 147. 


184 


INDEX 


Player,  Martha,  147. 

Player,  Mary,  146. 

Player,  Rebecca,  109. 

Player,  Thomas,  107, 146,  147. 

Player,  William,  110. 

Poaug,  Miss,  71. 

Poaug,  Charlotte,  15. 

Poagu,  John,  15, 64. 

Poinsett,  Mrs.,  117. 

Porcher,  Philip  Edward,  75. 

Porcher,  Rachel,  156. 

Porcher,  Samuel,  156. 

Porcher,  Thomas,  129. 

Porter,  Jabez,  156. 

Porter,  Mary,  77. 

Postell,  Eliza,  130. 

Postell,  Harriot,  85. 

Postell,  John.  85. 

Potter,  John,  81. 

PoweU,  CoL,  15. 

Powell,  Mrs.,  115. 

Powell,  George  Gabriel,  14, 117. 

Powell,  Robert  William,  66. 

Powell,  Sally,  14. 

Popras,  Peggy,  154. 

Pnce,  Jane,  115. 

Prigg,  Elisabeth,  35. 

Prigg,  John,  35. 

Prigg,  Mary,  35. 

Prince,  Charles,  52. 

Prince,  Clement,  131. 

Prince,  Elizabeth,  78. 

Pring,  James,  31. 

Pring,  William,  31. 

Pringle,  Robert,  25, 112. 

Prioleau,  Annabella,  169. 

Prioleau,  Hezt,  118. 

Prioleau,  Mary  P.  Tucker,  169. 

Prioleau,  Pro^odence,  70. 

Prioleau,  Samuel,  70, 121, 160. 

Prioleau,  Sarah,  19. 

Prioleau,  Thomas  G.,  169. 

Pritchard,  Mr.,  25. 

Pritchard,  Mrs.,  26. 

Pritchard,  Paul,  26,  86, 88. 

Pritchard,  A^^lliam,  130. 

Procter,  Miss,  27. 

Procter,  Martha,  81. 

Provost's  Invasion,  118. 

Pryor,  Mr.,  151. 

Pulaski,  Count,  119. 

Pulaski  (Steamer),  163. 

Purcell,  Mr.,  68. 

Purcell,  Mrs.,  127. 

Purcell,  Elizabeth,  86. 

PurceU,  Rev.  Henry,  14,  16,  26,  53, 

144 
Purcell,  James,  86. 
Purcell,  John,  60. 


Purcell,  Joseph,  128. 
Purcell,  Nancy,  26. 
Purches,  Samuel,  129. 
Purry,  Col.,  94. 
Purry,  Charles,  10. 
Purry,  Eleanor,  10. 
Purrysburg,  94. 
Purse,  WiUuun,  156. 
Purves,  John,  126. 

Quash,  Edward  Harieston,  169. 
Quash,  Robert,  59,  60. 
Quash,  Robert  Hasell,  169. 
Quelch,  Elizabeth,  139. 

Races,  12, 13,  59. 
Rainey,  Johnston,  58. 
Rainey,  Robert,  58. 
Ralph,  Ann,  121. 
Ralph,  John,  121. 
Ralph,  Margaret,  79. 
Ramier,  John,  89. 
Ramsay,  Mr.,  160. 
Randolph,  Jacob,  127. 
Rantowles,  Mrs.,  113. 
Rantowles,  Alexander,  117. 
Raper,  R.,  118. 

Read,  Motte  Alston,  2, 136-137. 
Read,  ^Tilliam  Melvin,  136. 
Reid,  Miss,  90. 
Reid,  James,  117. 
Relang,  Nancy,  25. 
Remington,  Dr.,  78. 
Remington,  Ann,  123. 
Remington,  Jane,  55. 
Remington,  John,  55. 
Reya,  Mary,  145. 
Rejra,  Richard,  145. 
Reya,  Samuel,  145. 
Reynolds,  Jolm,  25. 
Reynolds,  Sir  Joshua,  125. 
Rhind,  Mrs..  115. 
Rice,  151, 152. 
Rich,  Sir  Thomas,  107. 
Richardson,  James,  79. 
Richardson,  John,  10. 
Righton,  Joseph,  86. 
Righton,  M'Cully,  86. 
Righton,  Mrs.  M'CuUy,  131. 
Rivers,  Mrs.,  131. 
Rivers,  Ann  Louisa,  169. 
Rivers,  Frands,  128. 
Rivers,  Gracia,  169. 
Rivers,  Joseph,  27, 128. 
Rivers,  Ruth,  21. 
Rivers,  Stiles,  130. 
Roberts,  Ann,  116. 
Roberts,  CoL  Owen,  112, 118. 
Robertson,  John,  129. 


INDEX 


185 


Robinson,  Mrs.  William,  122. 

Roessler,  Ann  Nelson,  167. 

Roger,  Mr.,  12. 

Rogers,  Christopher,  25. 

RoDe,  Dennis,  15. 

Roper,  Miss,  131. 

Roper,  Patty,  65. 

Roper,  William,  59,  65, 131. 

Rose,  Elizabeth,  106. 

Rose,  Elizabeth  Sanders,  130. 

Rose,  Esther,  106, 110. 

Rose,  Hester,  33. 

Rose,  Hetty,  61. 

Rose,  James,  33. 

Rose,  John,  33,  61, 106,  110. 

Ross,  Rachel,  122. 

Rowser,  Mary,  33,  35,  54, 110. 

Rowser,  Richard,  33,  35. 

Rowser,  Sarah,  35,  110. 

Rowser,  Thomas,  54. 

Rowser,  William,  33,  35,  54,  57,  110. 

Royce,  Mary,  149. 

Royce,  Richard,  149. 

Royce,  Samuel,  149. 

Royer,  Peter,  31,  55. 

Royer,  Rebecca,  31. 

Ro3rer,  Sarah,  55. 

Royer,  ^^^lliam,  31. 

Rudd,  Walter,  157. 

Rugdy,  Rowland,  114. 

Ru^,  Joseph,  28. 

Rush,  Susannah,  157. 

Russell,  Chambers,  28. 

Rutledge,  Mrs.,  25, 126. 

RuUedge,  Edward,  67,  114,  116, 124, 

129, 151. 
Rutledge,  Mrs.  Edward,  71. 
Rutledge,  Eliza,  125. 
Rutledge,  Elizabeth,  64. 
Rutledge,  Harriett,  67. 
Rutledge,  Henrietta,  114, 124. 
Rutledge,  Henry  Middleton,  114. 
Rutledge,  Hugh,  25. 
RuUedge,  John,  64,  87, 117, 125, 126. 
Rutledge,  Mrs.  John,  13, 112, 116. 
Rutledge,  Sarah,  124. 
Rutledge,  Thomas,  64. 
Rutledge,  William,  71. 
Rybold,  Thomas,  128. 

St.  EusUtia  fleet,  119. 

St.  John,  Elizabeth,  82. 

St.  John,  James,  82, 124. 

St.  Martin,  Elizabeth,  112. 

St.  Martin,  Henry,  10. 

St.  Pierre,  Mr.,  61. 

Salley,  Alexander  S.,  Jr.,  2,  30,  37. 

Saltus,  Archibald,  28. 

Saltus,  Benjamin,  129. 


Saltus,  Samuel,  129. 
Sams,  John,  123. 
Sands,  James,  15. 
Sandm,  Charles,  30. 
Sanders,  Joseph,  85. 
Saundeis,  Mr.,  128. 
Saunders,  Charles,  24. 
Saundeis,  Harry,  25. 
Saunders,  R<^^>  113. 
Saunders,  Wifiiam,  79. 
Savage,  Mr..  71. 
Saylorj  David,  78. 
Sazarrm,  Jonathan,  19. 
Schaum,  Maiy,  156. 
Schaum,  Philip,  127. 
Schlq>ler,  Dorothy,  82. 
Sch^eler,  George,  156. 
Schq>ler,  L.  C.  A.,  82. 
Schoolmasters,  68. 
Scott,  Ann  Jane  Bruce,  158. 
Scott,  Dorcas,  157. 
Scott,  James,  86. 
Scott,  John,  158. 
Scott,  Martha,  130. 
Scott,  Manr,  86. 
Scott,  Wniiam,  83, 158. 
Scar^n,  Man  of  War,  72. 
Screven,  Hannah,  73. 
Scrivner,  James.  123. 
Seabrook,  Martha,  36. 
Sealy,  Jo8a>h,  27. 
Seaman,  Mrs.  George,  12. 
Seeger,  Lewis,  80. 
Seewee  Soun<^  73. 
Severance,  Susannah,  57. 
Severance,  Thomas,  57. 
Shadd,  Ann,  71. 
Shaeffer,  Gabriel,  102. 
Shaw,  Ann,  80. 
Shaw,  Potts,  28. 
Shaw,  William,  80. 
Shepard,  Mrs.,  29, 115. 
Shq>herd,  Capt.  Charles,  119. 
Shq>pard,  Charles,  30. 
Ship-building  in  S.  C,  14,  22. 
Shinner,  Charles,  10. 
Shoolbred,  James,  157. 
Shoolbred,  James  Gibbes,  163. 
Shrewsbury,  Miss,  25. 
Shrewsbury,  Edward,  155. 
Shubrick,  Capt,  118. 
Shubrick,  Betsy,  60. 
Shubrick,  Hannah,  115. 
Shubrick,  Jacob,  116. 
Shubrick,  Mary,  68. 
Shubrick,  Richard,  61, 115. 
Shubrick,  Sarah,  67. 
Shubrick,  Susannah,  130. 
Shubrick,  Thomas,  60,  68, 115. 


186 


INDEX 


Shubrick,  Mrs.  Thomas,  117. 

Sickels,  Ethan,  81. 

Silk  Hope  plantation,  see  Manigault 

Diary,  all  issues. 
Simons,  Ann,  114. 
Simons,  Ann  Hume,  164. 
Simons,  Ann  S.,  164. 
Simons,  Benjamin,  28,  60. 
Simons,  Catherine,  28. 
Simons,  Francis  Waring,  164. 
Simons,  Horry  Deas,  164. 
Simons,  Keating,  68, 114. 
Simons,  Mrs.  Keating,  116. 
Simons,  Lewis,  164. 
Simons,  Sarah,  114. 
Sinclair,  Ann,  7. 
Sinclair,  John,  65. 
Sinclair,  Polly,  65. 
Singelltary,  Catherine,  126. 
Singletary,  John,  78. 
Singleton,  Mr.,  59. 
Singleton,  Bracey,  130. 
Sinkler,  Ann,  79. 
Sinkler,  James,  79. 
Sinkler,  Peter,  121. 
Skirving,  Charles,  24. 
Skirving,  James,  13. 
Slade,  Ann,  80. 
Sloane,  Sir  Hans,  3. 
Sloane  Manuscripts,  3. 
Smith,  Mrs.,  71. 

Smith,  Benjamin,  15,  18,19(2),  112. 
Smith,  Charles,  125. 
Smith,  D.  E.  Huger,  2, 137. 
Smith,  Elizabeth,  16, 21,  72, 125. 
Smith,  Harriett,  64. 
Smith,  Henry  A.  M.,  2,  161. 
Smith,  James,  123. 
Smith,  J.  Rutledge,  72. 
Smith,  John,  80. 
Smith,  Dr.  John  Press,  82. 
Smith,  Judith,  116. 
Smith,  Mary,  10,  16,  61, 114. 
Smith,  Peter,  114. 
Smith,  Mrs.  Peter,  1 15. 
Smith,  Rev.  Robert,  11,  17,  21,  53, 

67,  87,  118,  130. 
Smith,  Mrs.  Robert,  130. 
Smith,  Roger,  11,61,72. 
Smith,  Mrs.  Roger,  12,  113,  116,  118. 
Smith,  Sarah,  13,  72,  87, 118. 
Smith,  Sarah  Good,  126. 
Smith,  Sarah  Motte,  72. 
Smith,  Samuel,  153. 
Smith,  Susannah,  112, 144. 
Smith,  Thomas,  13,  19. 
Smith,  Thomas  Loughton,  10, 16,  22, 

72. 
Smith,  Mrs.  Thomas  Loughton,  64. 


Smyth,  Robert,  18. 

Snipes,  Benjamin,  79. 

Snipes,  Henry,  154. 

Snowden,  Yates,  2. 

Sohier,  Martin  Brimmer,  127. 

Somarsall,  Mary,  156. 

Sommers,  John,  65,  87. 

Sorethroat,  20. 

Spence,  Peter,  20. 

Spencer,  Ann,  35. 

Spencer,  Oliver,  35, 106. 

Spencer,  Rebecca,  35. 

Spidell,  Eberhart,  157. 

Spragg,  Mary,  4. 

Spurr,  Benjamin,  157. 

Stead,  Benjamin,  39,  45, 114. 

Stead,   Mary,   letter   to  Mrs.   Ann 

Manigault,  65. 
Stevens,  Abigail,  4,  5. 
Stevens,  John,  4.  5. 
Stevens,  Joseph,  86. 
Stevens,  Dr.  William  Smith,  85. 
Stevenson,  Hamilton,  90. 
Stevenson,  John  70, 90. 
Stewart,  Charles  Augustus,  14. 
Stewart,  Rev.  John,  145. 
Stewart,  Mary,  123. 
Stiles,  Benjamin,  77, 121. 
Stiles,  PoUy,  77. 
Stone,  Elizabeth,  157. 
Stone,  Mary,  24. 
Stone,  Samuel,  157. 
Stone,  Thomas,  156. 
Stoncy,  A.  M.,  169. 
Stoney,  Ann  Porcher,  169. 
Stoney,  E.  C,  169. 
Stoney,  P.  Gaillard,  169. 
Stoney,  S.  DuBose,  169. 
Stoney,  S.  P.,  169. 
Stoning,  James,  155. 
Strawberry  Chapel,  InscripUons  from 

the  church  yaid,  161-170. 
Stroacker,  Catherine,  127. 
Strobel,  Daniel,  80. 
Strobel,  Mary  M.,  80. 
Storms,  60,  68,  71,  116. 
Stome,  Mrs.  B.  F.,  30. 
Strong,  Capt.,  151. 
Stoutenbuig,  Luck,  11. 
Stoutenbui^,  Sarah,  11. 
Strohaker,  Margaret,  78. 
Stukes,  WiUiam  R.  L.,  81. 
Sully,  Charlotte,  157. 
Sweetman,  Jane  C,  81. 
Swinton,  Hugh,  Jr.,  158. 
Swiss  Notes  on  S.  C.,  93. 

Tart,  Mrs.  Nathan,  85. 
Tavern,  Dillon  and  Grey's,  18. 


INDEX 


187 


Taylor,  Rev.  Archibald,  127. 

Taylor,  Eliza,  124. 

Taylor,  James,  83. 

Taylor,  Sazah,  44. 

Taylor,  Thomas,  44,  155. 

Taylor,  William,  44. 

Tebout,  Sarah,  77. 

Tcbout,  Tunis,  77. 

Telfair,  Elizabeth,  20. 

Telfair,  Mary  Luda,  20. 

Telfair,  Willmm,  20. 

Temiant,  Caroline,  153. 

Tennant,  Rev.  William,  115. 

Thackam,  Thomas,  79. 

Tharin,  Daniel,  26. 

Thayer,  Ebenezer,  154. 

Thayer,  Simeon,  82. 

Theus,  Catherine,  164. 

Thomas,  Edward,  125,  131, 162. 

Thomas,  Francis,  123. 

Thomas,  James,  68. 

Thomas,  Mary,  125. 

Thomas,  Rev.  Edward,  169. 

Thomas,  Elizabeth,  131. 

Thomas,  Jane  M.,  169. 

Thomas,  Samuel,  60. 

Thomas,  Thomas  Gadsden,  169. 

Thompson,  James,  30. 

Thompson,  Capt.  William,  22. 

Thomson,  Mr.,  24. 

Threadcraft,  Bethel,  154. 

Tidyman,  Mrs.,  65,  70. 

Tid)rman,  Philip,  61. 

Timothy,  Ann,  18, 128. 

Timothy,  Lewis,  157. 

Timothy,  Peter,  18. 

Timothy,  Sally,  155. 

Titcomb,  WiU,  4. 

Todd,  Eliza,  85. 

Toggenburg,  Canton  of,  93. 

Toomer,  Anthony,  79,  154. 

Toomcr,  Elizabeth,  79. 

Toomer,  Mary,  154. 

Torys,  30. 

Townsend,  Paul,  18, 116. 

Townsend,  Sarah,  148,  149. 

Townsenend,  Stephen,  88,  148, 149. 

Townsend,  Thomas,  149. 

Trachler,  Hans  Wemhard,  97, 102. 

Trapier,  Paul,  14. 

Tray,  Mary,  25. 

Trenholm,  Betsy,  24. 

Trescott,  Edward,  121. 

Trescot,  James,  121. 

Trezevant,  Elizabeth,  12. 

Trezevant,  Peter,  12. 

Trezevant,  Theodore,  12. 

Trott,  Mary,  71. 

Trott,  Nicholas,  143. 


Troup,  Frances,  11. 
Troup,  John,  11. 
Tryall,  a  race  horse,  12. 
Tschudy,  Rev.  John  Jacob,  162. 
Tucker,  Caroline  Prioleau,  169. 
Tucker,  Eloise  Caroline,  127. 
Tucker,  Maham,  H.,  169, 170. 
Tufts,  Capt.,  83. 
Turlow,  Edward,  139. 
Turlow*,  Susannah,  139, 140. 
Turpin,  Catherine,  156. 
Turtaz,  Lewis,  88. 
Tweed,  William,  117. 

Urquart,  Capt,  25. 

Valentine,  William,  29. 
Valk,  Jacob,  116. 
Vane,  Sarah,  81. 
Vamor,  Elizabeth,  57,  58. 
Vamor,  Samuel,  54,  57,  58,  110. 
Vamor,  Susannah,  54,  57,  58. 
Vernon,  Christopher,  80. 
Vernon,  Sarah,  123. 
Vernon,  William,  123. 
Vignolle,  Mrs.,  12. 
Villepontoux,  Benjamin,  129. 
Villqx)ntoux,  Drake,  29. 
Villepontoux,  John,  53. 
Villepontoux,  Paul,  35,  53. 
Villepontoux,  Peter,  29. 
Voigt,  Gilbert  P.,  93. 

Wadsworth,  Thomas,  125. 
Wainright,  Mrs.,  31. 
Wainwright,  Mrs.  115. 
Wainwright,  John,  34. 
Waites,  Mrs.,  14. 
Waites,  John,  14. 
Waldron,  Jacob,  17. 
Walker,  Rev.,  64. 
Walker,  Benjamin,  86. 
Walker,  Mrs.  Thomas,  127. 
Wallace,  Elizabeth,  124. 
Wallace,  Sir  James,  27. 
Wallis,  Mr.,  22. 

Walnut  Hill,  burning  of  house,  85. 
Walter,  Harriet,  85. 
Walter,  John  Alleyne,  85. 
Walter,  Thomas,  13. 
Walton,  Mr.,  68. 

Waney,  Waning,  or  Venning,  Sam- 
uel, 109. 
Wappetaw  Church,  134. 
Ward,  John,  156. 
Wardrobe,  Eleanor,  117. 
Waring,  Benjamin,  59. 
Waring,  D.,  130. 
Waring,  Elizabeth,  125. 


188 


INDEX 


Waring,  Elizabeth  C,  170. 

Waring,  Francis  Malbone,  164, 165. 

Waring,  Dr.  John  B.,  170. 

Waring,  Lydia  Jane,  164, 165. 

Waring,  Martha  S.,  170. 

Waring,  Thomas,  125. 

Waring,  Dr.  Thomas,  24. 

Wariey,  George,  153. 

Wamock,  Josooh,  53. 

Warren,  Rev.  Samuel  Fenner,  32,  33. 

Warson,  James  M.,  128. 

Warwell,  — ,  88. 

Watson,  Mrs.,  114. 

Watson,  Catherine,  127. 

Watson,  George,  83. 

Watson,  James  M.,  122. 

Watson,  John,  127. 

Webb,  Ann  Pinckney,  28. 

Webb,  Dr.  William,  28. 

Webber,  Mabel  L.,  1,  2,  10,  24,  52, 

59,  77,  105,  112,  121,  139,  144, 

161. 
Welchuysen,  Amy,  10. 
Welchuysen,  Daniel,  10. 
Wells,  Arnold,  134. 
Wells,  Frances,  27. 
Wershing,  Casper,  158. 
West/Afee,  34. 
West,  Anna,  34. 
West,  David,  34. 
West,  John,  34. 
West,  Jonathan,  34. 
West,  Richard,  34. 
West,  Sarah,  34. 
Westo  King's  pipe,  5. 
Wetman,  Ediwura,  153, 156. 
White,  Capt.  William,  14. 
Weston,  Francis  H.,  2. 
Weston,  Plowden,  106. 
White,  Miss,  124. 
White,  James,  56. 
White,  John,  135. 
White,  Mary,  32,  56, 109. 
White,  Sarah,  135. 
White,  Sims,  33,  56, 124. 
White,  Mrs.  Sims,  26. 
White,  Capt.  William,  22. 
Whitcfield,  Betsy,  125. 
Whitefield,  George,  125,  128. 
Whitefield,  Rev.  George,  16. 
Whitesides,  Anna,  144. 
Whitesides,  Elizabeth,  145. 
Whiteside,  Jean,  109, 110,  111,  144. 
Whiteside,  Henry,  111,  145. 
Whitesides,  John,  144, 145. 
Whitesides,  Mary,  145. 
Whitesides,  Moses,  32. 
Whitesides,  Sarah,  31,  32,  108,  109, 

144. 


Whitesides,  Thomas,  31,  32,  34,  109, 

144,  145. 
Whitesides,  \^^lliam,  54. 
Whitmore,  Maj.  Thomas,  10. 
Wickham,  Thomas  T.,  82. 
Wickham,  Sarah  Stewart,  82. 
Wigfall,  Miss,  84. 
Wigfall,  John,  157. 
Wigfall,  Joseph.  84, 146. 
Wigfall,  Samuel,  84. 
Wigfall,  Susannah,  146. 
^^all,  Thomas,  77. 
T^^lcoz,  Jeremiah,  155. 
^^ey,  Aiezander,  52. 
\^^lkinson,  Morton,  13. 
Wllj  John,  157. 
Willuuns,  Ann,  125. 
^^^lliams,  Elizabeth,  34. 
Williams,  Hannah,  50. 
Williams,  Hannah,  3  (Letter),  5. 
^^^lliams,  John,  30, 108. 
\^llliams,  William,  3, 4. 
\\^lliamson,  Andrew,  81. 
Williamson,  Martha  Emms,  117. 
Williamson,  ^^Uliam,  59. 
Vmiis,  Rev.,  148. 
Wilson,  Hannah,  84. 
Wilson,  Henry,  124. 
\ril8on,  John,  82, 114, 126. 
Wilson,  Leighton,  123. 
Wilson,  Wimam,  156. 
Waton,  Rev, J  34,  53. 
\^bome,  Minster,  36. 
Wingood,  Ann,  33. 
Wingood,  Charvile,  58,  74, 105. 
Wingood,  Daniel,  56. 
Wingood,  Elizabeth,  53,  58, 105. 
\^^ngood,  Ephriam,  33. 
Wingood,  John,  53. 
'^^^ngood,  Mary,  74. 
Wingood,  Nancy,  58, 105. 
^^^ngood,  Samuel,  33. 
Wirt,  Susannah,  70. 
^sh,  John,  126. 
Withers,  Ann,  52. 
Withers,  Francis,  131. 
Withers,  Richard,  27. 
Wtter,  Mrs.,  10,  71. 
Witter,  Elizabeth,  116. 
Witter,  James,  26. 
\^tter,  Samuel,  116. 
Wolf,  Frederick,  78. 
Wood,  Martha,  28. 
Woodbridge,  Thomas  M.,  77. 
Wooding,  Thomas,  68. 
Wondrum,  Mary  E.,  170. 
Wondrum,  Samuel  R.,  170. 
WoodruflF,  Miss,  127. 
Worthington,  Joseph,  158. 


INDEX 


189 


Wragg,  Miss,  15, 18. 
Wiagg,  Mrs.,  11, 58, 59. 
Wragg,  Ann,  42,  113. 
Wragg,  Charlotte,  42. 
Wragg,  Henrietta,  12,  70. 
Wragg,  Joseph,  62. 
Wragg,  Judith,  16,  62. 
Wragg,  William,  12,  70,  71. 
Wrand,  Ann,  105. 
Wrand,  William.  35, 106. 
Wright^  Alexander,  13. 
Wright,  Mrs.  Alexander,  15. 
Wright,  James,  17. 
Wright,  John,  13,  22. 
Wyatt,  John,  154. 
Wyatt,  Maiy,  154. 


Wyatt,  Richard,  25. 
WyUy,  CoL,  84. 

Yamold,  Mr.,  25. 

Yates,  Samud,  131. 

Yeamans,  Sir  John,  date  of  death, 

37. 
Youghall  plantation,  73. 
Young,  Andrew,  55. 
Young,  Mary,  55. 
Young,  Ralph,  107. 
Young,  Thomas,  153. 
Young,  William,  35,  55. 

Zouberbuhler,  Bartholomew,  94. 
Zouberbuhler,  Sebastion,  93, 94,  95. 


J 


SOUTH  CAROLINA 
HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 


SOI 


OCIETY 


ARY,  1921 


PUBUCATION  COMMITTEE 

Joseph  W.  Basnwell^  Henry  A.  M.  Smith, 

A-  S.  Salley,  Jr 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webber. 


CONTENTS 

Izard-Laurens  Correspondence. 1 

The  Register  of  Christ  Church  Parish 12 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  The  City  Gazette 19 

Entries  in  the  Old  Bible  of  Robert  Pringle 25 

Register  of  Marriage  Licenses  Granted,  December,  1765,  to 

August,  1766 34 

Historical  Notes 38 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  I|  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  Historical  Society.  Members  of  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January)^  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duph'cates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Society,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

South  Cuolina  Histoiical  Society, 

Charleston,  S.  C 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 


EDITED  BV 

MABEL  LOUISe  WEBBER 


VOLUME  xxn 


OFFICERS 

OF  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINAHISTORICALSOCIETY 

January,  1921— January,  1922. 

President^ 
Hon.  Joseph  W.  Barnwell. 

1st  Vice-President, 
Hon.  Henry  A.  M.  Smith. 

2nd  Vice-President, 
Hon.  Theodore  D.  Jervey. 
3d  Vice-President^ 
Hon.  F.  H.  Weston. 
4th  Vice-President, 
Hon.  John  B.  Cleveland. 
Secretary  and  Treasurer  and  Librarian, 
Miss  Mabel  Loxtise  Webber. 
Curators: 
Langdon  Cheves,  Esq.,  ^  D.  £.  Huger  Smith,  Esq., 

Prof.  Yates  Snowden,  Charles  W.  Kollock,  M.D., 

A,  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  Esq.,  Frank  R.  Frost,  Esq., 

John  Bennett,  Esq.,  C.  Bissell  Jenkins,  Esq., 

Board  of  Managers, 

all  of  the  foregoing  officers. 

Publication  Committee, 
Henry  A.  M.  Smith,  Joseph  W.  Barnwell, 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 


J'liL    6    1921 


-1-  '        r/ 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXn  JANUARY,  1921  No.  1 


EARD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE 
From  South  Cakouna  Historical  Society  Collections 

[hENKY  LAUSENS  to  RALPH  IZABD] 

[11 

Ralph  Izard;  London. 

Per  Portland — ^\Wlson 

Copy  per  Purchase. 

10th  February  1775. 
Dear  Sir: 

If  I  should  any  longer  delay  writing  you  might  not  only  wonder, 
but  ascribe  my  silence  to  Some  wrong  cause. 

To  morrow  will  complete  two  months  since  my  arrival  here  in 
that  time  the  attention  of  every  Man  of  any  rank  obscurity  has 
been  more  or  less  engaged  in  public  affairs,  not  one  more  particu- 
larly called  upon  than  Mr.  E.  Rutledge/  to  this  drciunstance  I 
attribute  his  inability,  after  many  promises,  to  join  me  in  a  visit 
to  your  plantations  which  I  should  have  made  several  weeks  ago 
if  he  had  not  particularly  signified  a  desire  to  accompany  me,  and 
in  order  to  accomodate  him  as  well  as  to  indulge  my  self  I  would 
continue  to  wait,  if  it  were  not  likely  to  be  attended  with  great 
injury  to  your  Interest — ^but  I  have  heard  from  Mr.  Thomas 
Smith,  concerning  your  Goose  Creek  Plantation  and  of  Mr.  Farr, 
of  your  Estates  in  general  such  bad  Acct's  as  oblige  me  even  at  the 

^  Edward  Rutledge  had  charge  of  Izard's  affairs  m  South  Carolina;  in  July 
1774,  he  got  (Thos.?)  Fan  to  take  charge.    (Izard  Correspondence,  pp.  5,  6.) 

1 


2  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

hazard  of  further  losses  in  my  own  to  interpose  as  far  as  I  can  in 
your  concerns. — I  shall  begin  a  journey  this  Morning  towards 
Bacon  Bridge  and  endeavour  to  take  the  Several  Plantations  in 
this  Quarter  under  examination,  all  that  can  be  accomplished  in 
so  few  days  as  I  have  to  spare  shall  be  to  the  best  of  my  ability — 
my  own  Estates  soward  of  CharlesTown  require  my  attendance 
full  as  much  as  yours,  but  these  shall  have  the  preference.  I  have 
not  seen  my  own  nor  will  I  go  to  them  before  I  visit  yours — at  my 
return  from  this  Journey  I  shall  report  to  Mr,  Rutledge  and  engage 
his  more  particular  attention  during  my  absence  from  Charles- 
Town — when  I  go  to  the  Southward. 

Your  box  of  papers  is  not  yet  come  to  my  hand  when  it  does  I 
shall  take  the  best  measures  in  my  power  contents  (sic). 

From  Mr.  Rutledge's  accounts  of  Remittances  which  he  has 
made  to  you  we  compute  that  £1200  Sterling  more  will  be  necessary 
to  borrow  in  order  to  make  your  demand  of  Four  Thousand, — 
hitherto  our  endeavours  for  procuring  so  much  Money  on  our 
joint  Bond  have  been  fruitless;  Money  is  exceedingly  scarce,  as  I 
too  feelingly  know  in  my  own  affairs  I  am  obliged  to  beg  and  in- 
treat  for  the  payment  of  three  and  four  years  arrears  of  interest 
due  on  Bonds  to  my  self  and  even  under  such  well  grounded  claims 
can  scarcely  bring  in  enough  to  keep  my  House  expences  from 
debt. 

Mr.  Manigault,*  my  Brother'  and  another  friend  will  endeavour 
to  assist  me — a  few  days  longer  delay,  provided  I  succeed  in  the 
end  will  probably  be  attended  by  advantage  to  you  as  the  source 
of  Exchange  seems  to  be  inclining  to  the  old  standard  700  per 
Cent.* 

In  a  word  Sir  although  I  count  myself  in  an  unfortunate  engage- 
ment yet  I  will  do  all  that  I  can  to  serve  you  but  I  perceive  too 
dearly  that  your  affairs  require  as  my  own  did  and  still  do  the 
Eye  and  direction  of  a  Master. 

I  must  dose  here  for  the  present  and  shall  [do]  what  may  be 
needful  at  my  return  on  the  14th  or  ISth  Inst. — My  best  wishes 
attend  you  and  Mrs.  Izard  and  my  compliments  to  your  fellow 

*  Gabriel  Manigault,  Sr. 

*  James  Laurens. 

*  South  Carolina  currency  was  for  many  years  valued  at  7£  Currency  to 
1£  Sterling. 


IZA&D-LAUREKS  CORRESPONDENCE  3 

traveller.  Mr.  Lee* — not  a  single  Syllable  has  been  imported  to 
me  upon  the  subject  of  the  ANSWER,*  altho  I  have  exchanged 
visits  and  been  often  in  company  with  our  friends  from  whom  we 
had  some  expectations  and  I  am  too  nearly  Interested  my  self  to 
admit  of  breaking  the  Ice  you  seem  to  be  the  midle  Man. 

I  remain  with  great  r^;ard  &c 

[2] 
Ralph  Izard:  London 
Recommended  to  W.  Manning, 
Per  Capt.  Yowart. 

Sunbury  in  Geor^,  27  Mar,  1775 
Dear  Sir: 

I  beg  leave  to  refer  you  to  my  last  Letter  from  CharlesTown  of 
10th  flfebruary. — 

I  visited  your  several  plantations,  the  Campy  Jack  Savannay 
Walnut  Hilly  Round  Savanna  and  twice,  Goose  Creek'' — at  each  I 

» Arthur  Lee,  M.D.  1740-1792;  diplomat. 

*  Answer  refers  to  the  reply  to  Sir  Egerton  Liegh's  anonymous  pamphlet, 
entitled  Considerations  on  Certain  Transactions  of  the  Province  of  South  Caro- 
lina (McCrady,  vol.  2,  p.  722),  which  violently  attacked  Laurens. 

From  a  letter  written  by  Laurens  to  John  Lewis  Gervais,  dated  Westminster, 
January  24,  1774  (Laurens's  papers,  Mss.)  we  find  that  Leigh's  pamphlet 
came  out  in  January,  1774,  and  a  copy  was  at  once  sent  to  the  Library  Society 
in  Charles  Town;  Laurens  attributed  it  to  Leigh,  with  whom  he  had  quarreled, 
with  good  cause,  both  for  political  and  family  reasons;  Laurens  took  up  the 
matter  of  a  reply  with  Charles  Garth,  London  agent  for  South  Carolina,  who 
agreed  to  furnish  material  for  the  Answer;  he  then  consulted  with  Izard  who 
took  up  the  cause;  the  Answer  prepared  by  (Arthur?)  Lee,  appeared  April  8, 1774 
(Laurens  papers,  letter  to  John  Laurens).  Edward  Rutledge  in  letter  to  Izard 
July  21, 1774,  mentions  Lee's  pamphlet,  and  states  that  he  and  Lynch  will  do 
what  is  proper.    (Izard  Correspondence^  pp.  5,  77.) 

McCrady  (vol.  2,  p.  722),  thinks  that  the  Answer  resembles  the  style  of 
Wm.  Henry  Drayton.  Mr.  Wallace  {Life  of  Laurens ^  p.  173)  states  that  he 
knows  of  no  move  of  Izard's  in  the  matter.  The  evidence  above,  taken  with 
the  letters  now  being  printed,  seems  to  show  that  the  Answer  was  prepare  by 
(Arthur?)  Lee  from  matter  chiefly  furnished  by  Charles  Garth,  edited  by  Lau- 
rens and  Izard,  and  the  expense  borne  by  Laurens,  with  the  expectations  of 
assistance  from  Edward  Rutledge  and  Thomas  Lynch. 

^  The  Camp  was  near  Ashley  River,  (This  Magazine,  vol.  xix,  p.  73).  Jack 
Savanna,  Round  Savarma,  and  Walnut  Hill,  were  on  the  south  west  side  of 
the  Ashley  River  {Jhid.y  xv,  pp.  150,  155).  The  Goose  Creek  plantation  was 
the  Elms. 


4  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

found  a£Fairs  in  such  order  as  displeased  me  and  made  some  ar- 
rangements which  I  hope  will  be  attended  with  benefit  to  you — ^I 
took  a  state  of  the  Negroes  Cattle  &c — at  each  place  the  par- 
ticulars of  which  shall  be  soon  transmitted  to  you  after  my  return 
to  Charles  Town,  i^ther  I  am  now  proceeding  from  a  visit  from 
my  own  plantations  in  this  Province.  I  mean  to  call  again  on 
yours  in  the  course  of  my  Journey — 

When  I  left  home  which  was  on  the  2Sth  flfebr'y  I  had  reed 
encouragement  from  Mr.  Manigault  and  Mr.  Thos.  Smith  to  hope 
of  finding  at  my  return  Money  in  their  hands  for  your  use,  which 
if  I  am  not  disappointed  shall  be  immediately  remitted  to  your 
direction — 

I  have  conferred  with  Mr.  Wainwright*  in  the  encroachment 
which  it  was  supposed  he  had  made  in  your  Jack  Savannah  Tract; 
said  I  must  go  to  Law  with  him,  that  I  should  endeavour  to  support 
your  right  effectually,  and  hoped  I  might  do  so  without  danger  of 
forfeiting  that  regard  which  he  had  alwa3rs  professed  for  me — 
Mr.  Wainwright  met  me  short  by  a  proceedure  and  declaration 
the  most  candid  and  unexceptional — he  produced  his  plat,  showed, 
as  he  alledged,  that  he  held  in  his  Tract  many  Acres  less  than  of 
right  belonged  to  him  and  none  of  yours — ^proposed  a  survey  of 
your  respective  possessions  and  to  be  determined  by  the  opinion 
and  Award  of  impartial  judicious  Arbetrators,  all  expenses  to  be 
paid  by  the  party  who  should  be  found  to  be  wrong  in  daim  or 
defence — a  fairer  answer  could  not  be  expexted  from  any  Man,  it 
therefore  lies  with  you  now  to  give  your  Attomies  proper  direction 
on  this  head. 

I  have  also  conversed  and  corresponded  with  Mr.  Maine,  late 
Siu^eyor  of  Lands — ^his  answer  to  my  letter  which  you  will  receive 
inclosed  will  shew  you  that  no  aid  can  be  hoped  for  from  him  in 
your  claim  upon  Crowfield  Land*  which  you  suppose  has  encroached 
upon  your  Goose  Creek  Tract — 

You  will  perceive  that  I  have  not  been  quite  unmindful  of  your 
concerns  and  may  rest  assured  that  I  will  do  every  thing  in  my 
power  to  assist  Mr.  Rutledge  in  conducting  them  for  your  advan- 
tage I  can  only  add  my  Compliments  to  Mrs.  Izard  and  that  I 
remain  with  great  regard,  &c. 

■  Samuel  Wainwright.    {Ibid.f  p.  152.) 

•  William  Middleton,  of  Crowfield  HaU,  married  April  21, 1730,  Mary  Izard, 
aunt  to  the  Ralph  Izard,  Jr.,  of  these  letters.    (This  Magazine,  vol.  11,  p.  211.) 


i 


IZASD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  5 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  HENRY  LAURENS] 

13] 

London,  4th  June,  1775. 
Dear  Sir. 

I  am  favoured  with  a  letter  from  you  of  the  10th  Feb'y,  and  an- 
other from  Georgia  of  the  27th  March.  I  think  m3rself  much 
obliged  to  you  for  the  trouble  you  have  taken,  and  do  not  doubt 
but  my  a£Fairs  will  be  in  a  much  better  state  under  your  manage- 
ment, and  friendly  attention.  You  think  that  my  estate  requires 
the  eye  of  a  Master.  The  eye  of  a  friend  will  I  hope  for  some  time 
answer  all  the  purposes  of  it.  The  proposal  that  Mr.  Wainwright 
I^s  made  seems  very  fair;  you  will  be  so  good  as  to  commimicate 
it  to  Mr  Rutledge  and  have  the  matter  settled.  Whatever  you, 
and  he  agree  to  I  will  certainly  abide  by.  You  will  be  so  good  as 
to  speak  to  Mr.  Macpherson  on  the  subject,  and  learn  who  the 
old  people  are  in  the  neighbourhood  who  are  acquainted  with 
the  lines.  I  am  entirely  a  stranger  to  the  mode  of  settling  these 
kind  of  disputes,  but  I  have  been  told  that  a  great  deal  of  care  is 
necessary  to  avoid  being  over  reached.  I  am  not  in  the  least 
acquainted  with  Mr.  Wainwright,  but  Mr.  Manigault  has  described 
him  to  me  as  a  man  extremely  litigious,  a.nd  ever  watchful  to 
take  advantage  of  whatever  may  be  turned  to  his  own  interest. 
I  hope  to  hear  that  his  character  has  been  misrepresented. 

With  regard  to  the  Goose  Creek  Tract,  Mr.  Maine  acted  I  sup- 
pose according  to  the  inteUigence  which  he  received  from  Mr. 
Gerardeau  who  surveyed  Crowfield. 

They  certainly  cut  oflf  part  of  my  land,  and  Gerardeau  told  me 
he  did  it  in  consequence  of  what  he  had  heard  from  Mr.  Walter 
which  was  that  my  Grandfather  had  given  it  to  Mr.  Middleton 
when  he  married  my  Aunt.  The  old  negro  Joshua  at  Goose 
Creek,  or  Robin  can  inform  you  more  about  it  than  I  can.  Mr. 
William  Middleton*^  has  assured  me  that  my  Grandfather  never 
gave  him  any  land.  I  am  extremely  anxious  about  having  my 
lines  settled,  and  knowing  the  value  of  all  my  property  in  Caro- 
lina. As  the  Country  disagrees  with  me  I  am  desirous  of  dividing 
it  and  having  part  in  money  at  interest,  and  part  in  land  in  New 
York;"  will  you  be  so  good  as  to  give  me  your  advice  on  this 

1®  See  note  9. 

"Ralph  Izard  married,  1767,  Miss  Alice  Delancey,  niece  of  Governor 
Delancey,  of  New  York.    (Ibid.,  p.  214.) 


( 


6  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

subject.  If  any  favourable  opportunity  were  to  oflfer,  I  should 
be  glad  to  dispose  of  half  my  lands,  and  Negroes  for  that  purpose. 
Mr  [Benjamin]  Bewicke  teUs  me  that  he  has  received  twenty 
casks  of  Indigo  which  he  cannqt  sell  according  to  the  value  of  the 
Invoice.  Neither  Mr.  Rutledge  nor  Mr.  Farr  have  written  me  a 
s>dlable  on  the  subject;  my  being  on  the  Continent  may  probably 
have  been  the  reason.  I  wrote  to  you  from  Florence,  Leghorn, 
Rome  and  Naples;  some  of  my  letters  I  hope  have  got  to  your 
hands.  It  is  incredible  what  a  number  of  my  letters  I  have  lost 
during  my  Tour.  Many  that  came  safe  appeared  to  have  under- 
gone an  examination  at  the  Post  office;  surely  the  cvuiosity  of  the 
Gentlemen  there  is  insatiable.  I  am  much  surprised  that  neither 
Mr.  Lynch  nor  Mr.  Rutledge  has  mentioned  anything  to  me  about 
the  Pamphlet.  Rutledge  indeed  in  one  of  his  Letters  to  me,  tells 
me  that  he,  and  Lynch  would  take  care,  and  do  what  was  proper 
about  it.**  Whatever  they  intend  doing  I  am  sure  it  is  not  proper 
to  delay  it  so  long.  If  nothing  is  done  I  shall  certainly  share  the 
loss  with  you.  After  the  trouble  we  have  had  in  this  business  I 
think  it  will  savour  a  Uttle  of  ingratitude  if  we  are  suffered  to  be 
losers.  I  shall  write  to  them  about  it. 
Endorsed: 

Copy  of  Letters  in  1775 
to  Henry  Laiurens,  Esq;  No  5. 

[henry  LAURENS  TO  RALPH  IZARD] 

[4] 

Ralph  Izard,  London. 

Per  L.  Despenser;  23  October,  1775 
Dear  Sir: 

I  had  intended  by  this  opportunity  to  have  written  you  a  very 
circumstantial  account  concerning  your  affairs  in  this  Country, 
but  Public  business  and  some  untoward  occurrences  which  are 
pretty  public  too  have  robbed  me  of  the  proper  time,  I  have  risen 
this  Morning  long  before  daylight  in  order  to  write  and  dispatch 
this  on  board  the  Packet  which  is  to  sail  at  Dawn — 

Your  Indigo  Plantations  at  Sant^  have  made  bad  Crops,  that 
under  Boyd's  care  scarcely  enough  to  pay  expences.    And  the 

"  See  note  6. 


•m4 


IZA&D-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  7 

Camp  yields  as  bad  an  Account  as  either,  the  Rice  was  almost 
totally  destroyed  by  Spring  Rains  after  being  planted  and  replanted 
three  times,  I  went  there  the  9th  September  to  view  the  Indigo 
and  had  intended  to  have  shipped  it,  but  found  it  too  wet,  and  I 
am  sorry  to  add  that  the  whole  quantity  will  not  exceed  eight 
hundred  weight. — ^At  Goose  Creek  and  the  Beech  Hill  Plantations 
the  Crops  of  Rice  are  also  short  but  you  are  as  well  off  as  your 
Neighbours  in  general.  I  shall  be  able  to  make  out  Cloathing 
enough  for  about  half  your  Negroes  not  more. 

In  the  late,  I  may  say  present,  bustle  of  people  removing  from 
CharlesTown,  Mr.  Rutledge's  Clerk  called  upon  me  to  take  charge 
of  a  quantity  of  Madeira  Wine  which  he  said  belonged  to  you  the 
first  intimation  I  had  ever  had  of  it. — 

I  found  it  in  extreme  bad  order  the  Casks  in  which  it  had  been 
packed  all  loose  and  open  some  of  them  fallen  asunder  and  much 
breakage  at  the  same  time  a  Cedar  Chest  which  I  suppose  contains 
yoiu:  Papers  was  discovered  and  said  to  belong  to  you  together 
with  certain  Household  plate,  which  are  now  in  my  hands. 

Such  large  demands  are  made  upon  me  for  amounts  due  by  Your 
Estates  before  I  came  into  the  Colony  as  will  oblige  me  to  borrow 
perhaps  £1500  Curency  or  Subjest  yoiu:  Estate  to  attachments — 
these  are  all  impleasant  tidings  and  shew  you  the  necessity  there 
is  for  a  personal  attendance — ^you  may  rely  on  this  for  truth  that 
I  attend  yoiu:  affairs  full  as  much  as  I  do  my  own  and  so  much 
more  as  that  I  have  called  in  the  aid  of  Mr.  John  Lewis  Gervais 
a  Gentleman  well  qualified  for  the  purpose  and  have  promised  to 
give  him  all  the  Commission  to  which  I  shall  be  entitled  in  return 
for  his  assistance. — here  I  must  dose  or  my  Letter  will  be  left  behind 
the  Boat  people  call  on  me  and  will  wait  no  longer. 

Our  public  affairs  are  not  a  whit  more  satisfactory  than  the 
accounts  which  I  have  given  of  the  Crops. 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  HENRY  LAURENS] 

[5] 

London.   16th.  July,   1777. 
Dear  Sir. 

It  is  a  melancholy  situation  for  a  person  of  any  modesty  to  be 
in  when  he  is  obliged  either  to  have  an  undeserved  censure  cast 
upon  his  conduct,  or  to  speak  in  his  own  praise.    To  you  I  think 


8  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

it  will  be  unnecessary  to  say  much  of  my  political  opinions,  and 
conduct.  If  the  knowledge  that  have  had  of  both  when  you 
were  in  London,  was  not  sufficient  to  make  you  think  favourably 
of  them,  neither  would  you  be  induced  to  do  so,  by  any  thing 
I  could  say  to  you  now.  I  had  flattered  myself  that  it  would 
have  enabled  you  to  have  given  my  Countrymen  so  favourable 
an  opinion  of  me,  that  when  the  measures  of  witholding  the  prop- 
erty of  those  Gentlemen  who  were  absent,  was  resolved  on,  I 
might  not  have  had  such  an  affront  offered  me;  not  as  a  favour,  no 
man  has  a  right  to  expect  that,  in  such  times  as  the  present.  In 
the  winter  of  1775  I  sent  a  proposal  to  Mr.  Lynch,  which  I  desired 
him  to  communicate  to  his  friends  who  were  at  that  time  in 
Philadelphia.  It  was  months  after,  before  I  received  a  Letter 
from  him,  which  was  written  in  such  a  manner  that  I  could  not 
understand  it;  I  had  not  then  learned  of  his  misfortunes.**  How- 
ever strong  my  inclinations  may  have  been  since  that  time  to 
carry  my  family  to  America,  my  Wife  has  been  in  such  a  situation, 
that  I  have  never  had  it  in  my  power  to  do  it,  without  great  danger 
to  her.  I  have  not  however  been  idle  here.  Every  exertion  in 
my  power,  has  been  made  to  be  of  service  to  the  cause  I  have  so 
much  at  heart,  and  to  stop  the  progress  of  Tyranny,  which  has 
produced  such  Convulsions,  and  Calamities  in  every  part  of  the 
Empire.  It  is  some  consolation,  though  but  a  small  one,  to  think 
that  if  the  doctrine  which  I  endeavoured  to  inculcate  had  been 
adopted;  if  Commissioners  to  treat  with  the  Congress  had  been 
sent  without  an  Army  and  no  bloody  Germans  had  been  engaged, 
we  should  be  now  in  the  enjoyment  of  the  blessings  of  Peace. 
These  points  I  urged  as  forcibly  as  I  could  with  L;  North,  Lj  G. 
3ermaine,  and  Sir  Gilbert  Elliott;  but  their  system  was  determined 
on,  and  nothing  upon  Earth  could  have  prevailed  on  them  to 
give  it  up.  Other  attempts  to  be  of  service  I  have  made,  not 
proper  for  a  Letter,  and  which  I  hope  have  not  been  altogether 
ineffectual,  I  have  been  attentive  to  the  duties  of  a  good  Citizen, 
labouring  for  the  success  of  a  cause,  which  I  think  the  noblest  that 
ever  was  contended  for.  Conscious  as  I  am  of  this,  it  is  humiU- 
ating  for  me,  when  I  expect  approbation,  to  receive  the  censure 
of  my  Countrymen,  which  I  attribute  to  their  not  having  been 

"  Thomas  Lynch,  St.,  died  Dec.  1776. 


IZARD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  9 

properly  informed  about  me,  and  which  I  cannot  help  lamenting 
as  a  misfortune.  I  have  lately  written  to  your  Son,  to  E.  Rut- 
ledge,  and  to  my  cousin  Ralph,  on  the  subject  of  remittances. 
This  was  done  before  I  received  your  letter  of  2d.  April,  delivered 
to  me  by  Mr:  Wells,  and  which  was  the  first  information  that  I 
had  of  your  being  restrained  from  sending  my  property  to  me. 
I  have  desired  a  remittance  of  £1500  or  £2000  Sterling  to  be  made; 
but  for  the  reasons  which  you  give  in  your  Letter  respecting  the 
price  of  Indigo,  and  the  difficulty  that  I  find  there  is  of  getting 
any  produce  to  an  European  market,  I  wish  not  to  have  above 
five  or  six  hundred  pounds  sent.  The  economical  plan  which  I 
have  adopted,  and  the  receiving  some  money  lately  that  was  due 
me  from  my  Unde  Johnson's"  estate  in  Ireland,  enables  me  to 
make  a  shift  some  time  longer  without  any  remittance;  and  I 
should  not  be  very  anxious  about  having  any,  if  I  did  not  consider 
it  as  a  removal  of  the  misconception  about  me.  This  matter  I 
leave  entirely  to  yourself,  and  desire  that  you  will  let  me  hear 
from  you  about  it,  as  soon  as  you  have  leisure. 

So  much  for  my  pubUck  conduct,  which  to  mention  a  syllable 
of  to  you  in  a  way  that  looks  like  justifying  myself,  wounds  some- 
thing within  me,  which  an  Enemy  would  call  pride,  but  which  I 
think  ought  to  have  a  gentler  appellation.  With  respect  to  my 
private  conduct,  there  cannot  be  much  difficulty  in  clearing  up 
that.  You  say  "that  you  have  frequently  written  to  me,  and  that 
you  have  never  received  a  line  from  me;  that  possibly  Letters  from 
each  may  have  been  intercepted;  which  was  to  be  admitted  only 
as  a  possibility  because  your  Letters  to  other  friends,  and  theirs 
to  you  have  been  received  on  each  side."  If  I  were  capable  of  so 
great  a  neglect  as  this,  I  should  be  altogether  unworthy  of  your 
friendship.  That  I  have  not,  I  do  in  the  most  solemn  manner  in 
the  Presence  of  God  declare.  As  to  my  own  private  affairs,  I 
seldom  said  much  about  them,  having  the  most  implicit  confidence 
in  your  management  and  thinking  then,*as  I  do  still,  that  the  less 
there  was  said  about  them  under  the  appearance  of  giving  direc- 
tions, the  better;  as  you,  who  were  on  the  spot,  could  judge  with 
more  propriety  what  ought  to  be  done,  than  I  at  this  distance. 
I  wrote  several  poUtical  Letters  to  you  wishing  to  keep  up  a  corre- 

**  Henry  Izard,  father  to  Ralph,  married  September  26.  1739,  Margaret, 
daughter  of  Gov.  Robert  Johnson.    (This  Magazine^  vol.  II,  p.  213.) 


y 


10  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

spondence  with  you  in  that  line,  but  not  receiving  any  return,  I 
conceived  that  the  business,  and  engagements  you  had  entered 
into,  made  it  troublesome,  which  was  the  reason  of  my  discontinu- 
ing it.  It  is  extremely  unfortvmate  that  our  Letters  should  so 
frequently  have  miscarried.  I  have  received  none  from  you  but 
those  of  lO.th  Feb:  1775,  27th  March,  1775,  and  23d  Oct:  1775, 
and  likewise  a  note  of  about  four  lines,  informing  me  in  general 
terms,  that  my  a£Fairs  were  in  a  bad  state,  and  that  the  American 
Fleet^^  had  just  made  its  appearance  off  the  Bar.  I  have  been 
for  these  two,  or  three  years  very  little  in  London,  and  therefore 
was  not  in  the  way  of  being  informed  of  private  opportunities. 
When  I  was  in  France,  and  Italy,  I  enclosed  my  Letters  to  you, 
to  Mr:  Sayre  which  he  put  in  the  Post  ofl&ce  expecting  that  they 
would  go  by  the  Packet.  This  I  also  did  myself  upon  my  return 
to  England.  Mrs.  Izard's  letters  to  her  family  at  New  York  have 
been  constantly  opened,  and  ahnost  as  constantly  witheld,  and 
mine  have  without  doubt  been  served  in  the  same  way.  My  let- 
ters to  you  have  not  been  regular  for  the  reasons  I  have  given 
above;  but  I  do  again  in  the  most  solemn  manner  assure  you 
that  I  have  written  to  you  since  your  departure  from  England,  at 
least  seven  or  eight,  which  if  they  had  been  received,  would  have 
exempted  me  from  the  charge  of  neglect.  I  do  not  always  keep 
copies  of  my  letters,  but  think  myself  fortimate  in  having  found 
three  among  my  papers,  which  I  shall  transcribe  several  times, 
together  with  this  Letter,  in  hopes  of  getting  one  copy  to  your 
hands.  You  say  that  you  had  heard  in  CharlesTown,  that  I 
had  taken  Lodgings  in  the  King's  Bench,  whether  this  report  was 
fabricated  by  malevolence,  or  folly,  I  cannot  tell.  In  either  case 
it  cannot  affect  me  otherwise  than  exciting  my  pity,  or  contempt. 
I  could  wish  for  the  Gentleman's  own  sake,  be  he  who  he  may, 
that  it  were  the  latter;  as  the  character  of  a  Fool,  is  not  so  bad  as 
that  of  a  Knave.  You  say  that  you  are  sorry  to  hear  such  a  report, 
and  would  not  believe  it.  I  should  have  expected  no  less  of  you, 
from  the  friendship  you  have  beep  so  good  to  express  for  me  ever 
since  I  have  had  the  pleasure  of  your  acquaintance.  You  will,  I 
doubt  not,  do  me  the  justice  to  beUeve,  that  if  you  had  been  at 
any  time  seperated  from  your  estate,  and  such  misfortune  had 

^*  The  British  fleet  on  the  American  Coast  appeared  off  Charleston  harbor 
June  4, 1776.    (McCrady,  vol.  3.) 


IZASD-LAUSENS  CORRESPONDENCE  11 

befallen  you,  I  should  have  sincerely  lamented  it.  Dean  Swift 
never  knew  a  person  who  could  not  with  philosophy  bear  the  mis- 
fortunes of  another.  He  was.  I  believe  too  severe;  but  I  cannot 
help  being  afraid,  that  if  diUgent  search  were  to  be  made  in  Charles- 
Town,  some  Philosophers  might  be  found  who  would  come  under 
the  Dean's  description.  You  will  I  fear  be  troubled  with  the 
length  of  this  Letter;  and  yet  I  cannot  conclude  without  reminding 
you,  of  what  must  have  escaped  your  attention  when  you  wrote 
yours  of  2d.  April,  I  mean  the  difficulty  there  will  be  for  me  to 
send  doathing  for  my  Negroes.  My  family,  which  is  not  very 
small,^*  cannot  be  supported  without  considerable  expense;  and  you 
know  that  for  these  last  two,  or  three  years,  I  have  not  been  very 
plentifully  supplied  with  the  means  of  doing  it.  I  have  been  told 
that  there  have  been  considerable  importations  of  Negro  cloth 
into  Carolina,  and  that  a  great  deal  has  also  been  manufactm^ 
there.  It  has  been  said  that  some  Gentlemen  have  made  such  a 
quantity,  as  not  only  to  serve  themselves,  but  likewise  to  sell  to 
their  neighbours.  Colonel  Heyward  in  particular  I  hear  has  been 
able  to  do  this.  You  inform  me  that  you  have  £8000  of  mine  out 
at  interest;  I  should  therefore  be  obliged  to  you,  if  you  would 
apply  as  much  of  that  as  is  necessary  to  the  doathing  of  my  Ne- 
groes, even  if  you  should  receive  no  more  money  on  my  account, 
whidi  I  think  can  hardly  be  the  case. 

I  now  condude  with  offering  the  Compliments  of  my  Wife,  and 
both  our  congratulations  on  your  late  appointment,^^ 

I  am  Dear  Sir,  with  great  regard 

Yr.  friend  and  humble  Servant 

Ra:  Izard. 
The  Honourable 
Henry  Laurens,  Esq. 
Endorsed: 
Ralph  Izard 
16  July,  1778. 
No  3. 

{To  be  continued) 

^*  At  this  time  Izard  had  five  diildren  living.    (This  Magazine,  vol.  II.) 
^^  Laurens  was  elected  a  member  of  the  Continental  Congress  January  10 
1777.    (Wallace,  Life  of  Laurens,  p.  226.) 


y 


THE  REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH 

Copied  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
{Continued  from  October) 

[The  entries  in  the  original  registers  were  finished  in  the  last 

issue;  the  later  register  not  being  accessible,  the  copy  made  a 

number  of  years  ago,  by  Langdon  Cheves,  Esq.,  for  this  Society, 

has  been  used.] 

William  H.  Ellsworth  was  married  to  Mary  Sanders  in  Christ 
Church  Parish  by  the  Revd,  Mr.  Mulkr  January  18th,  1820. 

Benjamin  Dubose  was  married  to  Ann  Cleland  widow,  November 
ISth  1821,  in  Christ  Church  Parish  by  Rev.  Mr.  Mueller. 

Benjamin  Sutton  was  married  to  Rebecca  Allen,  November  1822 
by  the  Revd.  Mr.  Muller. 

William  B.  Hohnes,  married  to  Sarah  Whitesides  April  20th  1862 
by  Rev'd  Mr.  Rutledge. 

I  certify  that  on  the  13th  day  of  October  1833 1  married  according 
to  the  f  onn  of  Solemnization  of  matrimony  of  the  Protestant  Epis- 
copal Church  in  these  United  States,  Mr.  John  Henry  Mey  to 
Mrs.  Caroline  Marchand,  both  of  the  City  of  Charleston,  in 
the  presence  of  Mr.  \K^[lliam  Allen  and  his  Son. 

Signed,  Andrew  Fowler,  Rector  of  Christ  Church 

Parish  in  the  State  of  South  Carolina. 

John  Henry  Mey  was  married  to  Mrs.  Caroline  Marchand;  by 
Revd.  Andrew  Fowler  (as  above)  Rector  of  Christ  Church  Par- 
ish the  15th  October  1833. 

Samuel  Venning  was  married  to  Mrs.  Ann  Pearce  August  2d.  1834 
in  Christ  Church  Parish,  both  of  this  Parish,  by  Rev'd  Andrew 
Fowler. 

Col.  Joseph  Maybank  was  married  to  Miss  Ann  Pearce,  March 
10th.  1838  in  Christ  Church  Parish;  both  of  this  Parish,  by 
Rev'd.  Andrew  Fowler. 

Omitted  previous — ^Albert  H.  Grey  was  married  to  Harriet  Rivers 
Fabian  April  19th  1829,  both  of  Charleston  by  theRev'd  Rector 
Andrew  Fowler. 


12 


\ 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  13 

Mortimer  W.  Venning  was  married  to  Martha  Elizabeth  Dickson 
Dec:  20th,  1838  by  Rev.  Boshop  Wm.  Capers. 

Mortimer  W.  Venning  was  married  to  2d.  wife  Jane  Elizabeth 
Rivers  Sept'r  7th  1847  by  the  Rev'd  Whiteford  Smith. 

DEATHS 

Mary  Prince  the  wife  of  Clement  L.  Prince  departed  this  Life 
Monday  February  17  th  1823  and  was  buried  Thursday  the  20th 
in  the  Family  burial  grovmd  near  her  late  residence  Prince's 
point. 

Amoldus  Vanderhorst  "one  of  the  Vestry"  departed  this  life 
June  25th.  1825,  aged  52  years.  > 

William  Hort  "Chairman  of  the  Vestry"  departed  this  life  Janu- 
ary 18th  1826  aged  76  years  llmo. 

Elizabeth  Gibbes  Boone  died  the  5th  and  on  the  6th  of  October 
1811  (sic)  aged  23  yrs:  5  mos:  and  23  days. 

Darrell  died  17th  March  1811. 

John  Pepper  died  22  August  1817.  . 

BIRTHS  AND  BAPTISliS 

1810,  Dec:  9.  William  Roach  Fo)«der  son  of  Richard  and  Mary 

Fowler  was  baptized  into  the  chinch  by  the  Rev'd  James  Dewar 

Simons. 
1816.  June  23d.  Hester  Guerin  daughter  of  William  and  Ann 

Cleiland,  likewise  ^A^dliam  Bamet  son  of  the  Same.    Also  Peter 

Porcher  son  of  Amoldus  and  Martha  Bonneau. 
1818,  March  5th.  Mary  Catherine  Farrd  daughter  of  Bernard  and 

Elizabeth  Farrell  was  bom  the  5th  of  Mardi  1818  and  Baptized 

in  the  Chim:h 
Margaret  Brown  daughter  of  Wlliam  Sanders  and  Martha  his 

wife  was  bom  September  11th  1818  and  was  baptized  March 

12th  1820  in  the  Church  at  Christ  Church. 
Maria  D.  Hort  daughter  of  the  Rev.  Albert  A.  Muller  and  Frances 

Maria  his  wife  was  bom  September  8th  1819  and  baptized  in 

Christ  Church  parish  Chinch  April  7th  1820.    Sponsors  Rev. 

Wm.  S.  Wilson  Sarah  R.  Hort  and  Mary  Dalcho. 
Washington  Lucas  son  of  John  M.  Phillips  baptized  at  morning 

prayer  in  Christ  Chiuxh  Parish  Church  May  6,  1821. 


14  so.  CA.  mSTOSJCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Theodore  Ddion  son  of  Rev.  Alber  A.  MuDer  and  Frances  Maria 

his  wife  was  bom  March  20th  1821  and  bs^>tized  on  Christmas 

day  1821  in  Christ  Church  Parish  Church.    Sponsors  Frances 

M.  MuDer,  Revd  Andrew  Foi^der  and  James  A.  Ashby. 
Henry  John  son  of  William  Sanders  and  Martha  his  wife  was  bom 

November   29th  1821  bq>tized  March  28th  1822  in  Christ 

Church  Parish  church  at  morning  service. 
Rebecca  Ann  daughter  of  Nicholas  Voming  and  Martha  his  wife 

was  bom  March  15th  1822  bq>tized  April  25th  1822. 
Juliana  Mary  daughter  of  Augustus  De  Gafferdly  and  Eliza  his 

wife  was  bom  July  15th  1819  bq>tized  in  Christ  church  Parish 

Church  November  11,  1819. 
Henry  William  son  of  Henry  William  Findly  and  Rebecca  his  wife 

was  bom  March  6th  1822  bq>tized  March  19th  1822. 
Jonathan  Lucas  son  of  Samuel  Venning  and  Eliza  his  wife  was 

bom  July  22,  1821  and  bq>tized  April  20th  1822. 
Ellas  Rambert  son  of  Charvil  Wingood  and  Hannah  his  wife  was 

bom  August  19th  1819  baptized  April  25th  1822  at  the  residence 

of  James  Dorrill  in  Christ  Church  parish. 
Eleanor  Donnam  daughter  of  Nathaniel  Lebby  and  Elizabeth  his 

wife  was  bora  July  26th  1817  baptized  April  25th  1822. 
William  Richard  Latham  was  bom  Dec.  19, 1817. 

Paul was  bom  April  10, 1819 

Charity  F.  Wilson  was  bom  January  15, 1821 

These  are  Children  of  William  Pritchard  Senr.  and  Elizabeth  his 

wife,  of  Hobcaw,  Christ  Church  Parish;  they  were  b^^tized 

December  13th.  1822. 
Alfred  Rivers,  son  of  the  Revd  Albert  A.  Muller  and  Frances 

Maria  his  wife,  was  bom  August  25th  1822,  baptized  December 

30th  1822.    Sponsors  Parents  and  Mary  G.  Rivers. 
Mary  Abigail  daughter  of  William  Sanders  and  Martha  his  wife, 

was  bom  December  12th  1822;  baptized  January  22,  1823. 
Nicholas  Bailey  son  of  Samuel  Venning  and  Eliza  his  wife  was  bom 

February  5th.  1823,  baptized  on  Sunday  March  2d.  1823. 
Theodore  son  of  James  Gregory  and  Ann  his  wife  was  bora  April 

10,  1821,  baptized  December  14th  1821 
William  Henry  son  of  William  H.  Bonneau  and  Anna  his  wife, 

was  bom  November  30,  1821,  baptized  January  1st,  1822. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  15 

Ann  Lucas  daughter  of  Samuel  Venning  and  Eliza  his  wife  was 

bom  November  10th  1824,  and  baptized  by  the  Rev'd  Francis 

H.  Rutledge  May  18,  1825. 
Sarah  M.  daughter  of  Nicholas  Venning  Junr  and  Martha  his  wife 

was  bom  January  11th  1824  and  baptized  by  the  Rev'd  Mr. 

F.  H.  Rutledge  May  19,  1825. 
Martha  Elizabeth  daughter  of  Nicholas  Venning  Jun'r  and  Martha 

his  wife  was  bom  May  2,  1825  and  baptized  by  the  Rev'd  Mr. 

Rutledge  May  19,  1825.    Sponsors  Rebecca  Sutton,  Eleanor 

Libby  and  N.  Venning  JvmV. 
Caroline  Elizabeth  daughter  of  William  H.  Bonneau  and  Anna 

his  wife;  was  bom  August  28, 1824  and  baptized  at  Christ  Church 

Parish  Church  by  the  Rev'd  Francis  H.  Rutledge,  May  22, 1825. 

Sponsors   Caroline    Swinton,    Anna   Bonneau   and   Amoldus 

Bonneau. 
Nelly  and  Pompey,  slaves,  baptized  January  30th.  1825. 
Chloe,  a  slave,  baptized  April  3, 1825 
Abram  and  Leah,  slaves,  baptized  April  24, 1825 
Peter,  a  slave  baptized  February  19, 1826. 
Julian  Augustus  son  of  Thomas  Barksdale  and  Serena  Maria  his 

wife  was  bom  Febmary  7, 1826  baptized  at  the  church  in  Christ 

church  parish  30th  April  following,  by  Rev.  Francis  H.  Rut- 
ledge, the  Rector. 
Bersheba  Sarah  Daughter  of  John  M.  Phillips  and  Eliza  his  wife 

was  bom  August  4th  1825  baptized  21st  May  1826,  by  Rvd. 

Mr.  Rutledge  Rector  C:C:  Parish. 
Mortimer  Williams  Venning  bom  at  Bermuda  Plantation  Christ 

Church  Parish  September  12th  1816,  son  of  Nicholas  Venning 

Junr  and  Martha  his  wife,  who  was  the  daughter  of  Thomas 

Allen  of  England. 
Charles  son  of  Henry  W.  Findly  and  Rebecca  his  wife  was  bom 

July  19,  1828  Baptized  December  7,  1828  by  the  Rev'd  A. 

Fowler. 
Martha  Washington  daughter  of  John  M.  PhilUps  and  Eliza  S. 

his  wife  was  bom  May  14,  1828  Baptized  December  8,  1828  by 

Rev'd  A.  Fowler. 
Elizabeth  Venning  Daughter  of  Samuel  Simmons  Cooke  and  Mar- 
garet his  wife  was  bom  September  12,  1828  Baptized  May  10, 

1829  Rev'd  Mr.  Fowler. 


16  so.  CA.  HISTOXICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

John  Whitesides  son  of  William  B.  Holmes  and  Sarah  his  wife 

was  bom  July  50,  1828  bq>tized  May  20,  1829  by  the  Revd 

Mr.  Fowier. 
Nathan  Bowling  son  of  Samud  S.  Cooke  and  Margaret  his  wife 

was  bom  December  21,  1831  bq>tized  by  the  Rev'd  A.  Fovder, 

June  30, 1830. 
David,  son  of  Doctor  Robot  S.  Bailey  and  Eliza  Lydia  his  wife 

was  bom  February  14,  1831  baptized  July  24,  1831  by  Rev:  A 

Fowler. 
Andrew  Dehon,  son  of  the  Rev'd  Andrew  Fowler  and  Henrietta 

Harriot  his  wife  was  bom  August  24,  1830  baptized  October  24. 
Mary  Jane  daughter  of  John  Hamlin  and  Ann  his  wife  was  bom 

May  10,  1831  baptized  by  the  Rev'd  A.  Fowler  August  7,  1831 
Samuel,  son  of  Samuel  Venning  and  Eliza  Lydia  his  wife;  was 

bom  October  29,  1829  baptized  by  the  Rev'd  A  Fowler  August 

22,  1821 
Henry  La  Fayette  son  of  John  M.  Phillips  and  Eliza  his  wife 

was  bom  August  4,  1830  baptized  by  the  Rev.  A.  Fowler  Octo- 
ber 16, 1831 
Thomas  Pearce  son  of  Robert  S.  Bailey  and  Eliza  Lydia  his  wife 

was  bom  May  21  1832  baptized  by  Rev'd  Andrew  Fowler 

August  5,  1832 
Sarah  Jane  Daughter  of  Gabriel  Joy  was  bom  February  1st,  1831, 

baptized  Oct  3,  1832  by  Rev'd  Andrew  Fowler,  rector. 
Emma  Henrietta  daughter  of  Albert  R.  Gray  and  Harriet  his  wife 

was  bom  baptized  by  the  Rev'd  Andrew  Fowler, 

Rector,  November  3,  1832. 
Sarah  Elizabeth  daughter  of  Nicholas  Venning  and  Martha  his 

wife  was  bom  18  December  1831.    Baptized  by  the  Rev'd 

Andrew  Fowler  Rector  May  10,  1833. 
Elias  son  of  Robert  Venning  and  Eliza  his  wife  was  bom  January 

9,  1830  baptized  Jan:  30,  1833  by  Rev'd  Andrew  Fowler  Rector. 
Eliza  Isabella  daughter  of  Robert  Venning  and  Eliza  his  wife  was 

born  December  24,  1831;  Baptized  June  2d.  1833,  by  the  Rev'd 

A.  Fowler. 
L.  Milner  son  of  John  M.  Phillips  and  Eliza  his  wife  was  Baptized 

June  22  1836  by  the  Rev'd  Andrew  Fowler  Rector. 
Laura  Eliza  daughter  of  Nicholas  Venning  was  baptized  October 

5th  1836  by  the  Rev  Andrew  Fowler  Rector  of  Christ  Church 

Parish. 


REGISTER  OF  CHRIST  CHURCH  PARISH  17 

Samuel  son  of  Nicholas  Venning  was  baptized  October  5,  1836,  by 
Revd  Andrew  Fowler. 

William  Lucas  son  of  Dr.  R.  S.  Bailey  was  baptized  March  21, 
1843,  by  Rev.  Andrew  Fowler. 

Married  by  the  Rev'd  Andrew  Fowler,  Rector  of  C:C:Parish,  on 
the  18th  March  1830,  Doctor  Robert  S.  Bailey  to  Eliza  L. 
Pearce,  both  of  this  Parish 

Benj:  Perdreau  died  March  15,  1830  and  was  biuied  the  day  fol- 
lowing at  the  Epis:  Church  C:C:  parish  The  Rev  A.  Fowler 
officiating. 

William  R.  Allen  was  buried  at  the  Epis:  Church  August  18, 1831; 
The  Revd.  A:  Fowler  officiated. 

Sarah  Morrell,  Daughter  of  Nicholas  Venning  was  buried  Sep- 
tember 5,  1831.    Rev:  A.  Fowler  officiated. 

Eliza  Lydia  Venning  wife  of  Samuel  Venning  and  daughter  of  the 
late  Jonathan  Lucas  senr.  was  buried  August  4,  1833  at  the 
plantation  of  Mr.  Venning  in  Christ  Church  Parish.  The  Rev: 
A.  Fowler  officiated. 

Laura  Vernon  daughter  of  Nathaniel  Vernon  was  biuied  October 
11,  1833  aged  16  years.    The  Rev.  A.  Fowler  officiated. 

The  above  items  complete  the  earlier  registers  of  Christ  Church 
Parish;  the  Church  Proceedings  cover  from  July  12, 1708,  to  August 
6,  1759;  and  from  May  1,  1797,  to  April  5,  1847.  On  August  6, 
1759,  according  to  the  Journal  of  the  Vestry,  it  was  agreed  to 
have  a  new  book  bought  for  a  Register,  to  conmience  from  that 
date;  this  was  evidently  the  second  of  the  two  old  parchment 
covered  books,  from  which  most  of  the  entries  printed  in  this 
Magazine,  beginning  with  volume  xviii,  and  ending  as  above, 
have  been  taken.  The  second  register  was  used  for  records  only, 
the  first  contained  the  Church  Proceedings  as  well. 

The  church  seems  to  have  been  long  without  a  Rector,  the  Rev. 
Henry  Purcell  being  the  last  one  of  the  Provincial  period.  The 
church  was  burned  by  the  British  in  1782  or  1783,  but  was  rebuilt 
about  1787,  and  was  incorporated  in  the  same  year. 

In  the  Mss.  Journals  of  the  Vestry  for  May  1,  1797,  there  is  a 
letter  to  the  Rev.  Daniel  McCalla,  and  the  members  of  the  Con- 
gregational Church  of  Christ  Church  Parish  [Wappetaw  church] 
stating  that  they  had  been  long  without  a  clergyman,  and  request- 


18  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

ing  that  Dr.  McCalla  give  them  two  services  once  a  month  in  the 
Parish  Church.  After  some  correspondence,  the  request  was 
granted,  and  he  served  until  his  death  in  1809. 

In  February,  1811,  a  report  was  made  to  the  Vestry  concerning 
the  minutes  of  the  Vestry,  and  the  Church  records;  a  chasm  in 
the  minutes  from  August  6, 1759,  to  April,  1797,  was  reported;  and 
the  Register  showed  a  break  in  births  and  baptisms  since  April, 
1750;  marriages,  since  July,  1760,  and  burials  ance  1759. 

The  second  register  was  afterwards  found  and  recopied  by 
Edward  O.  Hall,  Secretary  and  Treasurer  of  the  Vestry,  in  1880, 
and  it  was  from  Mr.  Hall's  copy  that  Mr.  Langdon  Cheves  made 
the  copy  owned  by  this  Society,  which  has  been  used  in  connec- 
tion with  the  two  original  registers. 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

(Coniinued  from  October) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mr.  James  M.  Vandie,  printer,  for- 
merly of  New  York.    (Friday,  July  26,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  evening,  Mrs.  Prevaux,  wife  of  Captain 
Adrian  Prevaux.    (Friday,  August  2,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  Calvin  Keith;  and  on  Saturday, 
Mr.  Rowland  Cookson. 

Died  at  Philadelphia,  on  Saturday  the  28  ult.  Mrs.  Mary  Lear 
the  truly  amiable  and  virtuous  consort  of  Tobias  Lear,  Esq;  sec- 
retary to  the  president  of  the  United  States.  (Tuesday,  August 
13,  1793.) 

Died.  In  St.  Liike's  parish,  on  the  Oaketees,  Mr.  Hezekiah  Rose, 
aged  68 — a  respectable,  honest  man,  and  worthy  member  of  Soci- 
ety; chief  of  his  relations  reside  in  the  state  of  New  York. 

Some  time  since,  in  the  same  parish,  Mr.  Gready,  aged  87 — ^he 
was  a  native  of  Hibemia,  and  came  over  to  Georgia  with  the 
forces  imder  General  Oglethorpe.     (Wednesday,  August  14,  1793.) 

Died.  In  Salem,  Massachusetts,  on  the  17th  of  July,  doctor 
George  Logan,  of  this  city:  a  gentleman  of  a  generous,  amiable 
disp)osition,  and  tender,  sincere  heart.  (Thursday,  August  15, 
1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  James  Williams,  to  Miss 
Nancy  O'Haring,  both  of  this  city.    (Monday,  August  19,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  William  Shield,  of  this  city. 
(Tuesday,  August  20, 1793.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  morning,  Mrs.  Sabina  Elliott,  relict  of  Mr. 
William  Elliott  sen.  deceased,  of  Acabee.  (Wednesday,  August 
21, 1793.) 

Died  Saturday  last,  after  a  short  but  lamentable  sickness.  Dr. 
Frederick  Kreible,  of  Belleville.     (Thursday,  August  22,  1793.) 

19 


20  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died  On  the  20th  instant,  after  a  lingering  iUness  .... 
Mrs.  Martha  Clifford,  su[^x>sed  to  be  about  seventy-five  years  of 
age (Friday,  August  23, 1793.) 

Died  at  Salem,  the  14th  instant,  Dr.  William  Ide,  lately  from 
New-England,  a  young  gentleman  of  af^roved  abOities  and  infor- 
mation, who  promised  much  usefulness  to  mankind.  His  death  is 
much  and  generally  regretted  by  all  who  became  acquainted  with 
him.    (Monday,  August  26,  1793.) 

Died.  Last  Monday  night,  Mr.  Robert  Howard,  sen.  of  this 
dty.    (Wednesday,  Augdst  28, 1793.) 

Died.  At  her  plantation,  at  Dean  swamp,  Miss  Rebecca  Stew- 
art after  a  short  illness.     (Thursday,  August  29,  1793.) 

Died.    On  Wednesday  evening,  Francis  Baker,  sen.  of  this  dty. 

Yesterday  morning  in  the  prime  of  life  and  jrouth,  \^llliam 
Mathewes,  Esq;  only  son  of  the  honourable  John  Mathewes 
....  a  tender  husband,  and  a  dutiful  son.  ....  (Fri- 
day, September  6, 1793.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  the  7th  instant,  in  this  dty,  Mr.  James 
Darby,  of  Charleston  neck.  On  Friday  last,  John  Harleston, 
Esq.  a  wealthy  and  respectable  planter  of  this  state.  Yesterday 
morning,  Mr.  James  Thomson,  taylor,  of  this  dty.  (Monday, 
September  16,  1793.) 

Married,  on  Monday  evening,  Mr.  Thomas  Legare  Jun.  of 
John's  Island,  to  Miss  Ann  Eliza  Berwick,  of  this  dty.  (Wednes- 
day, September  18, 1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  Joseph  WhUden,  taylor, 
of  this  dty.     (Thursday,  September  19,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  evening  last,  of  an  apoplectic  fit,  Mr. 
Nathaniel  Blundell,  of  this  dty.    (Friday,  September  20,  1793.) 

Died.  Yesterday,  Mr.  Cato  Ash,  of  Toogoodoo.  (Tuesday, 
September  24,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening  last,  Mr.  James  Hampdon 
Thompson  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Young,  daughter  of  the  late  Thomas 
Young,  Esq;  of  Goose  Creek.    (Wednesday,  September  25,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  John  Adams  of  Edisto 
Island,  to  Miss  Mary  You,  of  this  dty.  (Friday,  September  27, 
1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  John  M.  Davis,  to  Miss 
Mary  Moncrieffe,  both  of  this  dty.  (Saturday,  September  28, 
1793.) 


KASKIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  21 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  John  Speissegger,  sen.  of  this 
dty.    (Wednesday,  Oct.  2,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  the  29th  ult.  Keating  Simons, 
Esq;  to  Mrs.  Wilson,  widow  of  the  late  Mr.  John  \\^lson,  mer- 
chant.   (Tuesday,  Oct.  8,  1793.) 

Died.  On  the  13th  ult.  at  Mr,  James  Cooper's,  Indian  Town, 
Dr.  Elijah  Farrington,  who  practiced  in  that  part  of  the  country. 
His  death  is  much  lamented  by  all  his  acquaintances.  (Wednes- 
day, Oct.  9, 1793.) 

Married.  I,ast  evening,  Samuel  Beekman,  Esq;  to  Miss  Ann 
Lee,  daughter  of  Major  William  Lee,  of  this  dty.  (Friday, 
October  11,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  William  Robertson,  Esq;  to 
Miss  Susannah  Freer,  daughter  of  John  Freer,  Esq;  of  John's 
Island.    (Saturday,  October  12,  1793.) 

Married.  Last  Thiu'sday  week,  on  Edisto,  in  Orangeburg  dis- 
trict, John  Dantignac,  Esq;  to  Miss  Hannah  Debosque.  (Mon- 
day, October  14,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Dawson,  late  of 
Santee,  merchant,  brother  to  Mr.  John  Dawson,  of  King  St. 
....  A  kind  husband,  an  indulgent  father,  and  a  sincere 
friend.  At  the  Cheraw  Hill,  the  4th  instant,  in  the  bloom  of  life, 
Mr.  Nathaniel  Woodward,  late  of  Plainfidd,  Connecticut.  At 
May  River,  about  the  4th  instant  Mr.  William  White,  aged  about 
95.    (Friday,  Oct.  25, 1793.) 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  the  25th  inst.  Mrs.  Mary  Reynolds, 
aged  68  years.    (Saturday,  October  26,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening,  Rev.  Mr.  Stoughton,  to  Mrs. 
Maria  Hanson,  both  lately  arrived  from  England.  (Monday  Oct. 
28, 1793.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last,  Mrs.  Forrest,  wife  of  Mr.  George  For- 
rest, merchant,  of  this  dty.     (Thursday,  October  31,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  at  his  house  in  King  St.,  Mr.  George 
Frederick  Neumann.    (Monday,  Nov.  4,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last.  Dr.  William  Parker,  to 
Miss Walker,  daughter  of  Mr.  Alexander  Walker,  de- 
ceased.   (Tuesday,  Nov.  5,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Monday  evening,  Wm.  Pressiman,  Esq;  Merchant 
to  Miss  Ann  Cattd,  daughter  of  W.  Cattd,  Esq;  deceased,  Wed- 
nesday, Nov.  6, 1793.) 


22  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

On  Tuesday  last,  a  melancholy  accident  occurred,  during  the 
military  exerdse  of  the  company  of  cadet  artillery: — ^Mr.  Crom- 
bie,  a  gentleman  of  that  corps,  and  of  a  respectable  family  in 
Scotland,  when  ramming  home  the  cartridge,  it  took  fire,  and  he 
was  blown  to  the  distance  of  six  feet  from  the  gun;  one  of  his 
arms  was  totally  carried  off,  and  his  body  so  mortally  wounded 
that  he  expired  a  short  time  afterwards.  He  was  much  esteemed 
by  all  that  were  acquainted  with  hiin,  and  was  respectfully  interred 
yesterday  evening,  with  performance  of  military  honors.  (Thurs- 
day, Nov.  7, 1793.) 

Died.  In  St.  Stephen's  parish,  on  Thursday  the  31st  of  Octo- 
ber, Peter  Porcher  Sen.,  Esq.     (Friday,  Nov.  8,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Thiu-sday  evening,  Samuel  Gourdine,  Esq;  of 
Santee,  to  Miss  Mary  Doughty,  daughter  of  William  Doughty, 
Esq;  of  this  dty.     (Saturday,  Nov.  9,  1793.) 

Died.  At  Coosawhatchie,  on  Saturday,  the  2  ult.  after  a  long 
illness,  Mrs.  Mary  Giles.  She  was  an  affectionate  and  loving  wife, 
a  tender  parent,  a  good  neighbor,  a  sincere  friend,  a  charitable, 
humane  and  truly  virtuous  woman. — ^At  their  plantation  on  Santee, 
in  St.  Mathewes  parish,  on  Wednesday  the  30th  October,  John 
Frierson,  Esq;  aged  46  years. — ^And  on  Thursday  the  31st.,  Mrs. 
Margaret  Frierson,  widow  of  Philip  Frierson,  Esq;  aged  42  years. 
Their  remains  were  interred  the  day  following,  at  the  family  ceme- 
tery, attended  by  their  relations  and  neighbors.  (Monday,  Nov. 
11,  1793.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday  evening.  Savage  Smith,  Esq;  mer- 
chant, of  Georgetown,  to  Miss  Margaret  Dill,  of  this  city,  daughter 
of  Joseph  Dill,  Esq.     (Tuesday,  Nov.  12,  1793.) 

Died.  In  Georgia;  in  Savannah,  Mrs.  Charleton,  widow  of  the 
late  Dr.  Charleton,  of  South  Carolina.  At  White  Bluff,  Mrs. 
Bowen,  wife  of  Mr.  James  Bowen.  Mr.  Lewis  Rose.  At  Sapelo, 
Mr.  Bernard  Lefils,  of  Savannah.     (Wednesday,  Nov.  13, 1793.) 

Married.  On  Monday  last,  Mr.  Daniel  Heyward  to  Miss  Ann 
Trezevant,  daughter  of  Mr.  Theodore  Trezevant,  of  this  city. 
(Thursday,  Nov.  14,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  William  Tunno  Esq.  to 
Miss  Sarah  Champneys,  the  only  daughter  of  Wm.  Champneys, 
Esq;  of  this  city.     (Friday,  November  15,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Isaac  Gleason,  to  Miss 
Elizabeth  Tosusiger,  of  this  city.     (Tuesday,  November  19,  1793.) 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  23 

Married.  Last  evening,  Dr.  George  F.  Habnbaum,  to  Miss 
Eliza  Williman,  second  daughter  of  Mr.  Christopher  Williman, 
both  of  this  city.     (Wednesday,  Nov.  20,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  on  John's  Island,  Mr.  Thomas  Arnold. 
And  on  Sunday,  Mrs.  Menley.    (Thursday,  Nov.  21,  1793.) 

Marriages.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  George  Parker,  of 
Goose  Creek,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Waring,  the  only  daughter  of 
Mr.  John  Waring.  On  John's  Island,  Mr.  Wait,  of  Stono,  to 
Mrs.  Stiles,  of  John's  Island.  [Sic:  see  next  issue.]  (Friday,  Nov. 
22, 1793.) 

Married.  At  Wadmalaw,  Benjamin  Stiles,  jun.  of  Stono,  to 
Mrs.  Sarah  Maxwell  Wait,  of  John's  Island.  (Saturday,  Nov.  23, 
1793.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  last.  Dr.  Samuel  Dwight,  of  George- 
town, to  Miss  Eliza  Esther  Moore,  of  said  place.  And  on  Satur- 
day evening,  Mr.  Andrew  Kerr,  merchant,  to  Miss  Margaret 
Lyon,  of  this  city. 

Died.  At  his  plantation  in  St.  John's  Berkley,  Alexander 
Broughton,  Esq.  whose  virtues  in  domestic  life  shone  in  a  con- 
spicuous degree,  and  endeared  him  to  all  his  connections;  as  a 
father,  a  husband,  and  a  friend,  his  conduct  was  exemplary,  and 
his  character  amiable.  His  death  was  much  regretted,  as  he  was 
in  life  beloved  by  his  relations  and  friends.  (Tuesday,  Nov.  26, 
1793.) 

Died.  At  Augusta,  on  the  16th  instant,  M'Cartan. Campbell, 
Esq;  formerly  of  this  city.  At  the  Round  O,  Mr.  Wilson  Cooke, 
of  that  place.     (Wednesday,  Nov.  27,  1793.) 

Died.  A  few  days  since,  at  Camden,  major  Woodruff,  of  that 
city. 

On  Friday  last,  at  Belle  Ville,  in  the  18th  year  of  his  age,  Mr. 
Charles  Thompson,  yoimgest  son  of  col.  William  Thompson. 
(Thursday,  Nov.  28,  1793.)     [Several  lines  of  verse.] 

Died.  On  the  12th  instant,  at  Swansburg,  North  Carolina,  Mr. 
Thomas  Hinson,  merchant  of  this  city.  And  on  Friday,  in  this 
dty,  Mr.  Mimgo  Finlayson.    (Monday,  December  2,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Samuel  Lane  to  Miss  Mary 
Henrixson.    (Wednesday,  Dec.  24,  1793.) 


24  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening  last,  captain  James  Polstle- 
thwait,  to  Miss  Fanny  DareU,  daughter  of  capt.  Benjamin  Darell, 
of  this  city.     (Wednesday,  Dec.  11,  1793.) 

Died.  At  Columbia  the  6th  instant,  Mrs  Taylor,  wife  of  James 
Taylor,  Esq;  of  that  town;  much  lamented  by  all  who  knew  her. 
(Thursday,  Dec.  12,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  last,  Mr.  Edward  Perry,  jun. 
to  Miss  Ann  Drayton,  daughter  of  John  Drayton,  Esq;  deceased. 
(Thursday,  Dec.  14,  1793.) 

Marriages.  Mr.  David  Haig,  to  Miss  Rebecca  Steedman.  On 
Saturday  evening,  Mr.  Henry  Inglesby,  to  Miss  Ann  Poyas, 
daughter  of  Mr.  John  Ernest  Poyas,  deceased.  Mr.  Towland 
Hazard,  to  Miss  Mary  Peace,  daughter  of  Mr.  Isaac  Peace. 
Captain  William  Conyers,  to  Mrs.  Marston.  Mr.  William  John-  L. 
ston  to  Mrs.  Sarah  Dewees. 

Died.  A  few  days  ago,  owing  to  some  woimds  he  received  by 
being  thrown  from  a  chair,  Nathaniel  Farr,  Esq;  of  Stono.  And 
on  Friday  evening  last,  in  the  47th  year  of  his  age,  Mr.  Robert 
Knox,  a  worthy  citizen (Monday,  Dec.  16, 1793.) 

Married.  Last  Thursday,  Dr.  Isaac  Hayne,  of  St.  Bartholo- 
mew's parish,  to  Miss  Mary  Hopkins,  of  St.  Georges.  (Tuesday, 
December  17,  1793.) 

Died.  In  Christ  Church  parish,  on  Tuesday  last  Mr.  George 
Barksdale.  In  England,  Mrs.  Mary  Milligan,  wife  of  Mr.  Jacob 
Milligan,  of  this  place.     (Friday,  December  20,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening,  Mr.  Wlliam  M'Clure,  mer- 
chant, to  Miss  Sarah  M'Call.     (Monday,  December  23,  1793.) 

Died.  On  Simday  night,  Mr.  James  Gregson,  of  this  city. 
(Tuesday,  December  24,  1793.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  Henry  Todd  Burch,  to  Miss 
Naomi  Todd,  yoimgest  daughter  of  the  late  capt.  Richard  Todd. 
(Friday,  December  27,  1793.) 

{To  be  continued) 


ENTRIES  IN  THE  OLD  BIBLE  OF  ROBERT   PRINGLE 

Contributed  by  Henry  A.  M.  Smith 

Robert  Pringle  the  immigrant  to  South  Carolina  was  the  second 
son  of  Robert  Pringle  of  Symington  in  the  Parish  of  Stow  in  the 
County  of  Edinburgh,  Scotland.  Symington  was  the  name  of 
the  family  estate,  which  still  remains  in  the  possession  of  a  descend- 
ant of  the  name.  The  date  of  his  birth  the  writer  has  never 
ascertained,  exactly,  but  he  seems  to  have  arrived  in  Charles  Town 
in  the  Province  of  South  Carolina  about  the  year  1725,  and  there 
established  himself  as  a  merchant.  On  18  July  1734  he  married 
Jane  the  daughter  of  Andrew  Allen  an  eminent  merchant  of 
Charles  Town.  She  died  3  Jime  1746,  leaving  no  surviving  chil- 
dren. On  16  April  1751  Robert  Pringle  married  Judith  Bull  the 
widow  of  Stephen  Bull  the  eldest  son  of  William  Bull  late  Lieu- 
tenant Governor  of  the  Province.  Her  maiden  name  was  Judith 
Mayrant  and  she  was  the  daughter  of  James  Nicholas  Mayrant 
and  lus  wife  Susanna  Gaillard.  By  her  first  husband  she  had  one 
son  William  Bull  who  was  quite  yoimg  (three  years  old)  at  the 
time  of  his  mother's  second  marriage.  Robert  Pringle  in  1760 
was  appointed  one  of  the  Assistant  Lay  Judges  of  the  Court  of 
Conmion  Pleas  in  the  Province  and  so  continued  until  1770.  He 
was  one  of  the  Judges  who  concurred  in  the  rendition  in  1765  of 
the  famous  order  to  open  the  Court  and  carry  on  its  business  with- 
out the  stamps  required  by  the  Stamp  Act.  In  1741  he  constructed 
a  brick  residence  on  his  property  on  the  North  side  of  Tradd  Street 
— one  lot  West  of  Meeting  Street — ^which  was  taken  down  some 
years  ago  when  the  property  was  sold. 

In  1774  he  constructed  on  the  same  property  a  large  three  sto- 
ried brick  mansion  which  is  still  standing,  the  residence  of  Arthur 
R.  Young,  Esq.  He  died  13  January  1776  aged,  according  to  the 
published  notice,  74  years.  He  left  surviving  him  three  children 
by  his  second  marriage: 

John,  bom  22  July  1753. 

Robert,  bom  4  April  1755. 

Elizabeth  Mayrant  bom  29  March  1757.  In  1783  she  married 
William  Freeman  of  Charleston  and  died  without  surviving 
children. 

25 


I 

■ 

\ 

1 


26  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

John  Pringle  the  eldest  son  of  Robert  Pring^  added  Julius  to 
his  name  and  was  always  known  as  John  Julius  Pringle.  He 
studied  law  in  England  where  he  was  a  student  in  the  Temple. 
After  the  close  of  the  Revolutionary  war  he  practiced  law  in 
Charleston  for  many  years  with  great  success.  In  1789  he  was 
appointed  by  General  Washington  United  States  Attorney  for 
South  Carolina  and  in  1792  he  was  appointed  Attorney  General 
of  South  Carolina  which  office  he  held  for  sixteen  years.  In  June 
1805  he  was  oflFered  by  President  Jeflferson  the  post  of  Attorney 
General  of  the  United  States  which  he  declined,  preferring  to 
remain  in  his  native  State.  He  was  the  owner  of  Runnymede 
plantation  referred  to  in  the  Article  on  the  Ashley  River  and 
its  settlements.  (This  Magazine,  vol.  xx,  p.  98.)  On  1  January  1 784 
he  married  Susannah  Reid  the  youngest  daughter  of  Dr.  James  Reid. 
Dr.  James  Reid  of  St.  Bartholomews  Parish  married  Susannah  May- 
bank  the  daughter  of  Joseph  Maybank  and  his  wife  Ann  Dupuy. 
Susannah  Maybank  married  first  Henry  Michaud  (or  Mashow)  by 
whom  she  had  no  issue  and  second  Dr.  James  Reid  by  whom  she  had 
three  daughters  Elizabeth,  Mary  and  Susannah.  After  Dr.  Reid's 
death  his  widow  married  as  her  third  husband  in  1773  the  Rev.  Ed- 
ward Jenkins  Rector  of  the  Parish  of  St.  Michael,  who  declined  the 
office  of  Bishop  of  South  Carolina.  The  three  Reid  sisters  married, 
Elizabeth,  to  William  Bull  the  stepson  of  Robert  Pringle,  Susannah 
to  John  Julius  Pringle,  and  Mary  to  Robert  Pringle  his  brother — 
the  three  sisters  thus  marrying  the  two  brothers  and  their  half 
brother.  John  Julius  Pringle  died  16  March  1843  in  his  ninetieth 
year.    He  had  children  by  his  wife  Susannah,  viz; 

1st.  John  Julius  Pringle  bom  18  October  1784  married  Mary 
Izard  daughter  of  Ralph  Izard;  died . 

2d.  Robert  William  Pringle  bom  10  October  1786,  died  16  De- 
cember 1790. 

3d.  Susannah  Pringle   born  8   January   1789,   married   Wm. 
Mason  Smith,  died  18  May  1846. 

4th.  Elizabeth  Mary  born  9  May  1791,  married  Robert  Smith, 
died  8  April  1873. 

5th.  Robert  Pringle  bom  28  March  1793,  died  26  October  1860. 

6th.  Mary  Pringle  born  23  August  1795,  died  early  unmarried. 

7th.  Edward  Jenkins  Pringle  born  ,  married   Maria 

Middleton  daughter  of  Govemor  Henry  Middleton,  and  was  lost 


ENTRIES  IN  THE  BIBLE  OF  ROBERT  PRINGLE  27 

with  his  wife  and  two  children  in  the  destruction  of  the  Steamer 
Pulaski  in  June  1838. 

8th.  Charles  James  Pringle  died  young. 

9th.  William  Bull  Pringle  bom  8  July  1800,  married  Mary  Motte 
Alston  daughter  of  Col:  William  Alston,  died  13  December  1881. 

10th.  Enmia  Pringle  bom  23  January  1803,  married  Charles 
Alston,  died  23  April  1889. 

Robert  Pringle  the  second  son  of  Robert  Pringle  the  emigrant 
married  first  Mary  Reid  the  second  daughter  of  Dr.  James  Reid. 
She  died  in  August  1784  leaving  one  child,  James  Reid  Pringle  who 
married  Elizabeth  McPherson  and  died  11  July  1840. 

Robert  Pringle  married  second  in  June  1787  Ann  Amelia  Gar- 
den, daughter  of  Col.  Benjamin  Garden,  and  granddaughter  of 
the  Revd.  Alexander  Garden  generally  known  as  Conmiissary 
Garden.    By  his  second  wife  he  had  children  viz; 

1st  Ann  Amelia  Pringle  bora  22  April  1788  died  unmarried 
about  1860. 

2nd.  Robert  Alexander  Pringle  bom  12  January  1790,  married 
Sarah  Mackewn  Maxwell  died  about  1824. 

3rd.  Mary  Susannah  Pringle  bom  3  Febmary  1792,  died  20 
March  179-. 

4th.  Elizabeth  Freeman  Pringle  bom  18  March  1794,  died  un- 
married in  1873. 

5th.  Benjamin  Garden  Pringle  born  22  March  1799,  died  24 
January  1800. 

6th.  Charlotte  Marianne  Pringle  bom  29  May  1801,  married 
Joseph  Clark  and  died . 

The  following  entries  taken  from  the  old  Bible  are  all  in  the 
handwriting  of  Robert  Pringle  the  emigrant  except  the  six  last 
which  are  in  a  different  hand.  The  entries  made  by  Robert 
Pringle  are  in  a  fine  large  distinct  clear  hand.  The  Bible  itself 
is  a  thick  folio  sized  volume  containing  the  Book  of  Common  Prayer 
and  the  Old  and  New  Testaments  "Printed  and  sold  by  Richard 
Ware  at  y  Bible  &  Sun  on  Amen  Comer"  and  "Oxford.  Printed 
by  John  Baskett,  Printer  to  the  University,  MDCCXXXVIII." 
The  Bible  contains  a  large  number  of  later  entries  from  which  most 
of  the  condensed  information  given  above  as  to  Robert  Pringle's 
descendants  has  been  obtained.    The  entries  which  follow  are 


28  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

valuable  among  other  information  for  the  statements  concerning 
the  Allen  and  Smith  families  they  contain. 

ENTRIES 

South  Carolina 

George  Smith  was  Bom  August  2**.  1693  &  was  Married  to 
Rebecca  Blake  March  IP***:  1716  who  Dyed  Octob'.  20*»»:  1719 
Aged  20  years  &  7  Days 

George  Smith  jun':  Son  to  the  above  was  Bom  April  the  26*** 
1718  &  Dyed  Septem':  30^^:  following 

Elizabeth  Smith  was  Bom  Sept:  8*»»:  1719  &  Dyed  in  5  Weeks 
after,  wanting  2  Days 

George  Smith  &  Elizabeth  Allen  Daughter  to  M':  Andrew 
Allen  Mer*:  in  Charlestown  S**  Carolina  were  Married  the  IS***: 
Decern':  1723,  She  being  Bom  the  13**»:  April  1707, 

Elizabeth  Smith  Daughter  of  the  above  was  Bom  the  4*'»: 
Novem':  1724  &  Dyed  July  14**^:  1725 

Ann  Smith  was  Bom  February  2^:  1725/6  at  3  of  the  Clock  in 
the  morning  being  Wednesday 

Jane  Smith  was  Bom  June  10**»:  1728  at  o  Clock  in  the  After- 
noon being  Sunday 

Sarah  Smith  was  Bom  May  19***:  1730  at  4  o  Clock  aftemoon 
being  Tuesday 

Robert  Pringle  was  Married  to  Judith  Bull  (Widdow  of  the 
Late  Stephen  Bull  Esq')  by  the  Rev^:  Alex':  Garden,  being  his 
second  Wife  on  Tuesday  the  W^:  April  1751,  at  Cha':  Towne  S*> 
Carolina  &  Registered  in  the  Rqfister  Book  of  St.  PhiUps  by  John 
Renmiington  Church  Register 

March  2^:  1752  at  Charlestowne  S**:  Carolina  This  Morning 
about  One  o  Clock  my  Wife  Judith  was  Delivered  of  a  Male 
Child,  Still  Bom,  tho'  at  its  full  time,  &  was  Burried  this  Evening, 
by  Geo:  Sheed  Sexton,  in  the  Church  Yard  of  S*:  Philips  Cha' 
Town  the  South  East  Comer. 

July  22^:  1753  This  Morning  (being  Sunday)  about  Ten  o  Clock 
my  Wife  Judith  was  Happily  Delivered  of  a  Male  Child,  &  this 
day  the  Moon  Enters  into  the  Last  Quarter,  at  Charlestown  S**: 
Carolina 


ENTSIES  IN  THE  BIBLE  OF  ROBERT  PRINGLE  "       29 

October  26***:  1753  This  day  my  son  was  Publickly  Baptized 
by  the  Rev^  Alex':  Garden,  in  the  Church  of  S*:  Philips  Charles- 
town,  &  Named  John,  John  Mayrant  (my  Wife's  Brother)  &  John 
Wragg,  being  the  God  Fathers,  &  M":  Marian  Guerard,  Wife  of 
M':  John  Guerard  Mer*:  God  Mother,  being  3  Months  &  4  Days 
Old,  when  Christened. 

April  ^^\  1755  This  Morning  (being  Friday)  about  Two  a  Clock 
-my  Wife  was  Happily  Delivered  of  a  Male  Child  after  six  Hours 
Moderate  Labour  &  the  Moon  Entered  Yesterday  into  the  Last 
Quarter  at  Charlestown  S**:  Carolina 

December  16***:  1755  This  Day  my  Second  Son  was  Publickly 
Baptized  in  the  Church  of  S*:  Philips  Charlestown,  By  the  Rev**: 
M':  Joseph  Andrews  Curate  or  Afsistant  of  the  said  Church  & 
Named  Robert,  Daniel  Horry  the  Father,  &  Daniel  Horry  jun':  the 
Son,  of  Santee,  being  the  God  Fathers,  &  Ann  Royer  Widow,  stood 
Proxy  for  M":  Sarah  Horry  wife  of  the  said  Daniel  Horry  the 
Godmother,  the  Child  being  8  Months  &  12  Days  old  when  Baptized. 

March  29**»:  1757  This  afternoon,  (Being  Tuesday)  about  half 
an  hour  after  Two  a  Clock,  my  Wue  was  Happily  D|J>vered  of  a 
Female  Child  after  Twelve  Hours  sharp  Labour  the^oon  being 
Entered  into  the  1"*  Quarter  the  27***.  Instant,  at  my  own  House 
in  Tradd  Street,  Charlestown  S*»:  Carolina,  &  the  25  Jan^:  1758 
was  Publickly  Baptized  in  the  Church  of  S*.  PhiUps  by  the  Rev**. 
M':  Rob*.  Smith  Afsistant  to  M':  Clark  &  Nam'd  Elizabeth  May- 
rant  M":  Mary  Seaman  Wife  to  M':  Geo:  Seaman  &  Miss  Sus': 
de  S*:  Julien  my  wife's  Niece  being  Godmothers  &  M':  James  Len- 
nox Mer*:  God  Father  the  Child  being  then  near  10  Months  Old. 

Charlestown  S*»:  Carolina  March  \1^^\  1760 

On  the  11*^:  of  Last  Month  of  February,  All  my  Family  of  White 
People  (Excepting  my  Self)  were  Innoculated  for  the  Small  Pox 
by  D':  John  Moultrie  Senior  viz*.  My  Wife  Judith  &  my  Three 
Children  John,  Robert,  and  Elizabeth,  My  Wife's  Son  Wlliam 
Bull,  &  my  Wife's  Two  Nieces,  Miss  Susanah  &  Judith  De  S*: 
Julien  And  who  are  now  all  Recovered,  &  gott  pretty  Well  Again 
Praised  be  God. 

N:  B:  My  Three  Children  have  had  the  Hooping  Cough,  Mea- 
sles, &  Small  Pox,  all  within  the  compass  of  a  Year.  And  on  the 
13*»*  &  W^\  of  Said  Month  of  February  1760  Five  of  my  House 
Negroes  were  Lmoculated  for  the  Small  Pox  viz*.  Hagar  &  Statyra 


30  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Women,  Mingo  Primus,  &  Dkk  Boys,  and  on  the  1"^:  of  April 
foUowing  my  Negroe  Woman  Maria,  &  Girk  Sarah  ^rere  Likewise 
Innoculated  for  the  Small  Pox,  AU  of  them  by  D':  John  Swint  a 
German,  &  who  all  Recovered  &  Did  Well;  Excepting  Hagar  & 
Maria  who  both  Dyed  by  Innoculation  Maria  the  Last  Dyed  the 
11**»:  (date  torn  out) 

My  Wife's  Son  William  Bull  was  Bom  the  4*»»:  of  June  (Old 
Stile)  1748,  Son  of  Stephen  Bull  Esq':  Dec**  who  was  the  Eldest 
Son  of  W":  Bull  Esq':  Dec**:  Late  Lieu*:  Gov':  of  S*>:  Carolina. 

Feb':  !■*:  1761  This  Day  being  Sunday  Divine  Service  was  per- 
formed for  the  first  Time  in  the  New  Church  of  S*:  Michael  in 
this  Town  of  Charlestown  by  the  Rev**:  M':  Rob*:  Cooper  who  was 
Invited  to  be  Minister  there,  &  preach'd  a  sermon  suitable  to  the 
Occasion  to  a  Crowded  Congregation,  David  Deas  &  my  self 
being  the  Church  Wardens,  &  on  said  occasion  all  my  Family  went 
to  Church  &  took  pofsefsion  of  my  Pew  there  N**:  29  in  said  Church, 

Feb':  2**:  1761  This  Day  being  Monday  Our  New  King  His 
Majesty  King  George  the  Third  was  Prodaim'd  King;  Li  this 
Town  of  Charlestown,  with  Great  Solemnity  and  with  Universal 
Joy  &  Acclamations  &  begun  his  Reign  Octo':  the  25***:  1760. 

My  Wife's  Niece  Miss  Susannah  De  S*:  Julien  Daughter  of  M': 
Joseph  De  S*:  Julien  of  S*:  Johns  Parish  Berkley  Coimty  was  Bom 
the  24*»*:  February  1742,  &  Her  Sister  Miss  Judith  De  S*:  Julien 
was  Bom  the  24**»:  April  1744 

1767  October  25***:  This  Evening  my  Wife's  Niece  Miss  Judith 
De  S*.  Julien  was  Married  at  my  House  by  the  Rev**:  M':  Robert 
Cooper  Rector  of  the  Church  of  S*:  Michael  In  Charlestown  To  M': 
David  Guerard  of  the  Parish  of  S*:  John  Berkley  County,  &  Eldest 
Son  of  John  Guerard  Esq':  Deceased  Merchant  in  Charlestown 

Elizabeth  Mackpherson  was  Bom  Sept':  6***:  1688  &  was  Married 
to  Andrew  Allen  Jan':  !•*:  1705/6  and  Departed  this  Life  the  14 
Jan':  1726/7  Aged  39  Years  at  Charlestown  S*»:  CaroUna 

Elizabeth  Allen  Daughter  of  the  above  was  Bom  April  13***: 
1707 

Jane  Allen  was  Bom  Novem':  16***:  1711  &  Dyed  in  Boston 
New  England  Nov':  16: 171S 

John  Allen  was  Bom  Jan':  16***:  1713/14 

Evan  Allen  was  Bom  Octob':  12***:  1716  &  dyed  June  16:  1717 


ENTRIES  IN  THE  BIBLE  OF  ROBERT  PRINGLE  31 

Jane  Allen  was  Bom  June  8***:  1718  at  Cha*:  town 

Wlliam  Allen  was  Born  Octob':  28^^  1720 

Hannah  Allen  was  Bom  Jan^:  9^^:  1726/7  &  Dyed  the  W^:  of 
same  Month 

Robert  Pringle  was  Married  to  Jane  Allen  on  Thursday  the  18**»: 
July  1734  by  the  Rev^:  Alex':  Garden  at  Charlestown  S**  Carolina 

Elizabeth  Allen  Dyed  Novemb':  4***:  1734  Aged  27  years  6 
Months  &  21  days 

Andrew  Allen  Dyed  Septem':  6***:  1735  Aged  67  years 

Jane  Pringle  my  Dear  Wife,  Dyed  the  3**:  of  June  1746  at  7  a 
Clock  in  the  Morning  being  Tuesday  Aged  28  Years,  wanting  5 
days,  &  was  Burried  the  4***:  in  the  Evening,  in  the  Meeting  Yard, 
by  her  Father,  say  in  the  Independent  Meeting  Yard,  by  the  Rev**: 
M':  Rob*:  Bascimi  having  been  j5rst  carried  into  the  Church  & 
the  Service  of  the  Church  of  Eng**:  said  over  Her  in  S*:  Philips 
Charlestown  S**:  Carolina. 

The  Small  Pox  Broke  Out  in  Charlestowne  S**:  Carolina  In  the 
Month  of  May  anno  1738, 

The  Small  Pox  Broke  Out  again  In  Charlestowne  South  Caro- 
lina In  the  Month  of  January  anno  1760  when  all  my  Family 
were  Innoculated  for  It  viz*:  my  Wife,  and  my  3  Children  &c. 

The  Cherokee  Indians  Broke  out  in  Open  War  against  this 
Province  of  S**:  Carolina,  (By  first  Killing  Our  Indian  Traders 
who  Liv'd  amongst  Them)  In  The  Said  Month  of  January  1760, 
Wlliam  Henry  Lyttleton  Esq':  Being  then  Governor  in  Chief, 
And  in  the  33**  Year  of  the  Reign  of  His  Majesty  King  George  the 
Second;  The  first  Indian  War  Since  the  Settement  of  this  Province 
having  Broke  Out,  anno  1715. 

The  Upper  Creek  Indians  Murdered  some  of  Oiu:  Indian  Traders, 
who  Liv*d  Amongst  Them,  and  Seized  on  Their  Stores,  &  Goods, 
In  the  Month  of  May  1750,  But  Did  not  Break  Out  in  Open  War 
against  This  Province  W":  Bull  Esq':  Being  then  Lieu*:  Governor 
&  Com':  in  Chief  And  on  The  34  Year  of  the  Reign  of  His  Majesty 
King  George  the  Second. 

On  the  15**»:  Day  of  September  1752,  Happened  a  Very  Great 
Hurricane  all  Over  this  Province  of  South  Carolina  in  particular 
at  Charlestown  Where  it  did  a  great  Deal  of  Damage,  &  being 
the  very  Day  on  which  the  New  Stile,  or  Regulat**:  of  Time,  Com^ 
mcnced  &  Took  Plac^  iu  th^  Reign  of  King  George  the  2^; 


32  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

In  the  Year  1755  Hi4>pened  the  Great  &  Terrible  Earthquake 
in  the  City  of  Lisbon  in  Portugal  which  Destroy'd  most  part  of 
that  City. 

In  the  Year  1759  The  City  of  Quebec  was  Taken  from  the 
French,  &  in  the  Year  1760  all  Canada  was  Surendered  at  Montreal, 
to  the  British  Arms  Sir  Jeffrey  Amherst  being  Comm':. 

On  the  4***:  May  1761  About  Three  a  Clock  afternoon  Hap- 
pened at  Charlestown,  a  Most  Terrible  \^olent  &  Most  Shocking 
Tornado,  or  whiriewind  which  Did  Destroy  Several  Ships  in 
Rebellion  Road  then  Outward  Bound,  &  Did  Likewise  a  great 
Deal  of  Damage  in  Severall  Places  in  the  Countrey. 

On  the  25***:  Day  of  October  1760  Dyed  His  Majesty  Kmg 
Geoi^ge  the  Second  Aged  77  years  in  the  34  Year  of  his  Reign  & 
next  Day  was  Proclaimed  His  Present  Majesty  King  George  the 
Third  Our  most  Gracious  Soveraign. 

In  the  Year  1762  The  Island  of  Martinique  the  City  of  Havanna 
in  the  Island  of  Cuba  &  the  Island  of  Manilla  in  the  East  Indies 
were  all  Taken  by  the  British  Arms,  the  Two  last  of  which  were 
Taken  from  the  Spaniards  &  the  Other  from  the  French. 

On  the  22**:  Day  of  February  1763  Peace  was  Proclaimed  in 
London  with  France  &  Spain  the  Late  War  have  broke  Out  in 
the  Year  1756. 

In  the  Year  1765  The  Parliament  of  Great  Britam,  Pass't  the 
Stamp  Act,  for  Stamp  Duties  to  Take  place,  all  Over  British 
America,  &  In  the  next  Year  1766,  The  Said  Stamp  Act  was 
Repealed  again  by  the  Parliament  by  a  Great  Majority  of  Votes 
being  108. 

On  the  16*^:  Day  of  Sept':  1766  Dyed  Ann  Mayrant  Wife  of 
John  Mayrant  aged  27  Years  Daughter  of  M':  W":  Woodrop  & 
Wife  of  my  Wife's  Bro':  Jn*»:  Mayrant  &  Left  behind  her  Three 
Young  Children  &  was  Burried  in  the  Scots  Meeting  Burial 
Ground. 

On  the  26:  Day  of  May  1767  Dyed  John  Mayrant  my  Wife's 
Only  Brother  after  a  Tedious  Sickness  &  has  Left  Two  Young 
Children  viz*:  Two  Sons  nam'd  John  Aged  4|  Years,  &  William 
aged  2  years  &  8  months  &  he  himself  was  Aged  41  Years  &  5 
months  &  by  his  Last  WiU  Left  his  Father  in  Law  M':  W^:  Wood- 
rop &  Coll:  Elias  Horry  his  Executors  &  was  Burried  in  the  Scotch 
M^tin^  Burial  Ground. 


ENTRIES  IN  THE  BIBLE  OF  ROBERT  PRINGLE  33 

[The  following  entries  are  in  a  different  hand] 

James  R.  Pringle  Son  of  Robert  and  Mary 
Pringle  was  bom  August  14*"*:  1782 
Charles  Town      W™:  Bull  Son  of  W"*:  &  Elizabeth  Bull  was  bom 
S^  Carolina,      the  2^  May  1784 

John  Mayant  &  Izabella  Norvil  were  married 
Oc':  1785 
John  Julius  Pringle  and  Susannah  ^Reid  married  the  first  of 
Jan':  in  the  Year  of  our  Lord  1784  ha'  Issue  Pringle  bom  October 
IS^  1784. 
W"  Freeman  married  Eliza*^'  M':  Pringle  Jan'  23^  1782. 
James  Pringle  Son  of  R*:  &  Mary  was  bom  August  19  in  the 
year  of  our  Lord  1782. 


REGISTER   OF    MARRIAGE   LICENSES    GRANTED, 
DECEMBER,  1765,  TO  AUGUST,  1766 

The  marriage  licenses  listed  here  are  taken  from  a  volume  of 
Records  of  the  Proceedings  in  the  Court  of  Ordinary  from  December 
21,  1764,  to  August  28,  1771.  This  volimie  has  recently-  been 
returned  to  South  Carolina  through  the  courtesy  of  the  Overseers 
of  Tufts  College,  Massachusetts,  it  having  been  in  that  Library  of 
that  college  for  many  years. 

Just  why  there  seems  to  have  been  no  systematic  record  kept 
of  the  marriage  licenses  granted,  is  hard  to  explain;  in  the  above 
mentioned  volume,  the  list  is  in  the  back  of  the  book,  upside 
down,  and  only  the  briefest  possible  entries  made,  even  the 
name  of  the  clergyman  is  not  given  in  the  first  few.  So  far  as  the 
Editor  has  found  in  the  records,  this  is  the  only  list  that  attempts 
to  be  chronological;  occasionally  a  stray  record  of  a  license  wiU 
be  foimd. 

TO  WHOM  GRANTED 

1765.  Dec'r.  13.    Rich'd  Stevens  to  Mary  Smith. 

24.    Bell'y:  Crawford  to  Sara  Pepper. 

1766.  Jan'y   2.    Calvert  to Linthwait. 

"       3.    Chas:  Elliott  to Ferguson. 

"       6.    John  Goff  to  Margaret  Cordes. 
"     10.    William  Baker  to  Ann  Sanders. 
.    .    .    .    Jas:  Skirving  Jim'r  to  Sara  Wilson. 
14.    Alex'r:  Tweed  to  Elizabeth  Gunnars. 
16.    Thos:  Fullalove  to  Alice  Graham. 
18.    Chris'n:  Motte  to  Ann  Conrade.    Rev.   Mr. 

Jno:  Tong. 
23.    Thos:  Heyward  to  Ann  Gignilliat.    Rev  Feve- 

rie. 
.    .    Peter  Bocquet  to  Martha  Smith.    Rev.  Mr. 

Wilton. 
28.    Jno:  Barnwell  to  Eliz'a:  Fenwick.    Rev.  Mr. 

Cooper. 
.    .    Rich'd.  Fowler  to  Ann  Jerves.        Do. 

34 


it 


€t 


REGISTER  OF  IIASEIAGE  UCENSES  GRANTED  35 

Feb'y  4.  James  Fraser  to  Ann  Vinson.    Evans. 

"       7.  Thos:  Burt  to  Rachel  Bailey       Do 

"     11.  Peter  Green  to  Cather'n  Rolang  Spin'r.    Tong. 

"     12.  John  Packerow  to  Soph'a:  Harvey,  widow.  Do. 

"     15.  Jno.  Packrow  to  ditto.  Do. 


Mar.    1.     Jams.  Creighton  to  Les'y  Anderson.    Evans. 
"      6.     Benj'n:  Wlepontoux  to  Jane  Dupont.      Do. 
....    Jos:  Dupont  to  Ann  Dupont.  Do. 

'^      7.     Chas.  Odingsells  to  Sarah  Livingston.    Mr. 

Tong. 
**      8.     Hugh  S3rm  to  Sarah  Clark.    Mr.  Cooper. 
.    .    .    .    Geo:  M'Kenzie  to  Mary  Coker.    Mr.  Cooper. 
"    11.     Charles  Jones  to  Sarah  Page.    Mr.  Tong. 
'^    20.     Rob't.  Hume  to  Susannh  Quash.    Mr.  Garden. 
"    29.     Wm.  Skirving  to  Mary  SacheveraL    Mr.  Tong. 
....    Thos  Mills  to  Sarah  Breed.    Mr.  Cooper. 
"    29.     Wm.    Budding    and    Ann    Rotherford.    Mr. 
Smith. 
April   7.     Mathias  Avenson  to  Martha  Ferguson,  widow. 

Mr.  Tong. 
Hugh  Campbell  to  Eliz.  Reyley.      Mr.  Evans. 
Phihp  Smith  to  Eliza:  Stobo.    Mr.  Evans. 
'^    11.     Danl.  Evans  to  Martha  Rippon.    Mr.  Cooper. 
"    14.     James   Stewart   and   Amelia   Perdriau.    Mr. 

Sergant. 
"    17.     Edward  Bowers  and  Mary  Hyatt,  Spin'r.    Mr. 
Evans. 
James  Gignilliatt  and  Charlotte  Pepper.    Mr. 

Fevrier. 
John   Harleston   and   Elizabeth  Faucheraud. 
Mr.  Smith. 
"    19.     Theo're  Trezavant  and  Cath.  Crouch.    Mr. 

Cooper. 
''    21.     Bernard  Elliott  to  Mary  Elizabeth  Elliott.    Mr. 
Tonge. 
Joseph  Wood  to  Mary  Sullivan.    Mr.  Evans. 
"    24.     Jacob  Dohnam  to  Cath'n  Kirk,  Spin'r.    Mr. 
Evans. 


•    .    .    • 


.... 


.... 


.... 


.    . 


36  so.  CA.  mSTOUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGAZINE 

April  26.     James  Butler  to  Elu'a  Rice,  widow.    Mr.  Tong. 
•    •    .    .    George  Smith  to  Barb'a  VeRostic.    Mr.  N: 

Martine. 
'^    28.     Tho's  Barker  to  Elizabeth  Maxwell  widow. 

Mr.  Smith. 
"    30.     Hemry  Pagett  to  Elizabeth  Iflchols  Spm'r. 
May   6.     Wm:  Hamilton  to  Mary  M'Crea  widow.    Mr. 

Smith. 
"     7.     Wm:  Stead  to  Grace  Lindsey  Spin.    Mr.  Sar- 
gent 
"    10.     James  Robertson  to  Mary  Godfrey,  widow.    Mr. 

Martin. 
**    12.     Gabriel  GigniUiatt  to  Elizabeth  Cahusac.    Mr. 

Keith. 
**    13.     Thomas   Dearington   to   Elizabeth   Bordeau. 

Mr.  Garden. 
....    Joseph  Spry  to  Catherine  Tookerman.    Mr. 

Evance. 
'^    21.     Benjamin    Cuming    to    Juliet    Brown.    Mr. 

Evance. 
"    22.     John  Taylor  to  Sarah  Russell.    Mr.  Martyn. 
*^    28.     Richard   King   to   Margaret   Ferguson.    Mr. 

Feverier. 
June   3.     Isaac  Rippon  to  Joanna  Sealy  widow.    Mr. 

Martin. 
"     5.     Thos.  Jones  to  Abigail  Townsend.    Mr.  Cooper. 
"     6.     William  Swinton  to  Sarah  Baron.    Mr.  Tonge. 
"     9.     James  Cavineau  to  Mary  Douglass,  widow. 

Mr.  Evans. 
**    13.     Alexander  Dingle  to  Elizabeth  Hannahan.     Mr. 

Cooper. 
"    16.     Patrick  Cunningham  to  Jane  Tweedy.    Mr. 

Rowan. 
"    17.     Thomas  Poole  to  Jane  Cliflford.    Mr.  Evance. 
"  William  Butler  to  Ruth  Ellis.    Mr.  Smith. 

"  ^AHlliam  Jones  to  Mary  Jones.    Mr.  Smith. 

"  Samuel  Samways  to  Ann  Tinnable.    Do. 

"    26.     Jacob  Stevens  Jun'r  to  Mary  Goff.    Mr.  Evans. 


REGISTER  OF  MARRIAGE  UCENSES  GRANTED  37 

June  28.     John  Harvey  to  Catherine  Rawlins  Spinster. 

Mr.  Cooper. 
July   3.      John   Sharpies   to  Ann   Sleigh  widow.    Mr. 

Evans. 
'^     4.      Anthony  Bonneau  to  Sarah  Shackelford.    Mr. 

Pearce. 
'^     5.      Richard  Cole  to  Sarah  Oswald,  widow.  Mr. 

Lonsdale. 
"     5.      Alex'r  Gillon  to  Mary  Cripps  widow.    Mr. 

Crallon. 
'^   11.      Wm.  Mason  to  Susannah  Fairchild  Spinster. 

Mr.  Smith. 
"   17.      Edward  Splatt  to  Esther  Dean  Spinster.    Mr. 

Tonge. 
"  28.      George   Page   to   Sarah   Eady   widow.    Mr. 

Smith. 


HISTORICAL  NOTES 

THE  MANUSCRIPT  GENEALOGICAL  NOTES  OF  lOL  M.  ALSTON  READ 

The  collection  of  genealogical  notes  gathered  by  the  late  Motte 
Alston  Read,  Esq,,  covering  many  of  the  Coast  families,  in  some 
cases  nearly  complete,  and  numbering  several  thousand  items, 
has  been  carefully  arranged  in  folders,  pages  numbered,  and  in- 
dexed by  the  folders,  by  his  friends  Mr.  D.  E.  Huger  Smith  and 
Miss  Alice  R.  Huger  Smith;  placed  in  metal  cabinets  by  his  sbter, 
Mrs.  Joseph  Hume,  of  New  Orleans,  and  presented  by  her  to  this 
Society.  This  is  a  very  valuable  gift,  which  will  be  of  great  assist- 
ance in  future  genealogical  research. 

LETTERS  OF  JACKSON 

The  Department  of  Historical  Research  in  the  Carnegie  Institu- 
tion of  Washington  is  collecting  the  material  for  an  edition,  in 
several  vdumes,  of  the  correqx>ndence  of  Andrew  Jackson,  to  be 
edited  by  Professor  John  S.  Bassett  of  Smith  College,  Jackson's 
biographer.  All  persons  who  possess  letters  of  General  Jackson 
or  important  letters  to  him,  or  who  know  y/rbsirt  there  are  collec- 
tions of  his  correspondence,  or  even  single  letters,  would  confer  a 
favor  by  writing  to  Dr.  J.  F.  Jameson,  director  of  the  department 
named,  1140  Woodward  Building,  Washington,  D.  C. 


38 


[OCT  13  1921  1 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 


ICAL 


CIETY 


UL,  1921 


PVBUCATION  COMMITTEE 

Joseph  W.  Babhwell^  Henry  A.  M.  SmiHt 

A.  S.  Saixey,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webber. 


CONTENTS 

Izard-Laurens  Correspondence 39 

The  Excommunication  of  Joseph  Ash S3 

Landgrave  Thomas  Smith's  Visit  to  Boston 60 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  The  City  Gazette 65 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  ly  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  EQstorical  Society.  Members  of  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January),  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Society,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 
please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

South  Caiolina  Hiitorical  Society, 

Charietton,  S.  C 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXn  APRIL,  1921  No.  2 


IZARD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE 

Fkom  South  Cahouna  Historical  Socnrry  Collection 

(CanHnued  from  January) 

[henry  LAURENS  TO  RALPH  IZARD] 

Ra^h  Izard,  London.    Per  Miss  Wells,  under  cover  to  Mr.  Wells.^ 

2d  April,  1777* 
Dear  Sir — 

I  have  often  writ  you,  never  favoured  with  a  line  from  you, 
possibly  letters  from  each  have  been  intercepted,  to  be  admitted 
only  as  a  possibility  because  my  Letters  to  other  friends  and 
theirs  to  me  have  been  received  on  each  side. 

I  will  try  once  more  by  the  hands  of  a  Lady  whose  promise  I 
have  to  deliver  Letters  from  me  to  the  parties  to  whom  directed. 


It 


*  Robert  Wells,  then  in  London;  this  letter  and  one  to  Wells  were  sent  by 
Miss  Grissie"  Wells  (Laurens  Letters).  Robert  Wells  (172S-1794)  removed 
from  Scotland  to  Charles  Town  before  1754  (Grissel,  daughter  of  Robert  and 
Mary  Wells,  bom  May  15,  1754;  she  ieind  her  sister,  Louisa  Susanna  were 
baptized  Nov.  1755  by  Rev.  Chas.  Lorimer,  of  the  Scotch  Meeting.  St.  Philips 
Register).  Wells  published  the  S.  C.  and  American  General  Gazette; 
he  went  to  England  at  the  opening  of  the  Revolution,  leaving  his  business  in 
S.  C.  in  the  hands  of  his  son  John.    His  estates  were  confiscated  in  1782. 

'  This  letter  should  have  preceded  that  of  Mr.  Izard's  to  Laurens  on  page 
7,  Jan.  issue. 

39 


40  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

After  an  infinite  deal  of  trouble  and  many  a  personal  \^it 
turning  away  and  transposing  vilanous  Overseers,  some  of  whom 
had  been  wasting  and  other  appropriating  your  Estates  to  their 
own  use,  I  have  put  the  whole  in  tolerable  Order — ^now  I  am  ordered 
to  leave  them  and  my  own  again  to  the  pious  trust  of  Overseers, 
I  am  to  be  sent  to  Philadelphia,  what  effect  my  absence  will  have 
on  your  Estates  I  cannot  tell — ^but  I  mark  down  40  per  cent  loss 
on  some  of  my  own. 

I  yesterday  made  a  return  of  Taxable  Estates  for  you  I  gave 
in  8070  Acres  of  Land  and  508  negroes  the  best  Account  I  could 
get  in  each  case,  and  also  £6000  at  Intrest — I  have  paid  off  the 
sums  borrowed  and  remitted  to  you  in  1775 — and  now  have 
£8000  at  Interest  on  your  accoimt  in  good  hands — £2000  lent 
since  the  above  £6000  above  mentioned.  I  must  continue  to 
improve  money  arising  from  the  Sale  of  your  Rice  in  this  maimer 
because  tis  impossible  to  make  you  remittances  until  next  Winter 
— ^the  Owners  of  Vessells  will  not  take  ffreight  of  Rice  on  board, 
and  Indigo  is  run  up  to  such  prices  as  promise  nothing  less  than 
40  to  50  per  Cent  loss  and  in  many  Instances  more,  for  Instance, 
in  the  case  of  your  own  Indigo  produced  at  Santa  it  was  sold  at 
301  per  lb,  the  Markets  must  be  extremely  high  in  Europe  if  it 
sells  there  at  215  Ster.,  the  ffreight  Insurance  and  Charges  will 
abate  at  least  30  Per  Cent.  Besides  this  I  am  not  Permitted  to 
remit  to  any  person  who  is  not  coming  immediately  to  America 
a  Subject  not  to  be  dwelt  upon — ^Your  Money  will  be  earning 
you  7  Per  Cent  here.  I  hope  you  will  be  able  while  you  do  remain 
yonder  to  live  at  5  Per  Cent. 

I  have  strove  hard  to  Clothe  your  Negroes  two  years  past  even 
to  Stripping  in  part  my  own,  )rou  may  depend  on  this  as  truth  I 
have  Saved  in  the  purchase  of  such  Cloths  as  I  could  give  them  a 
very  large  Sum  of  Money  to  you,  but  it  will  be  incumbent  on  you 
to  take  some  thought  for  them  this  year,  I  shall  probably  not  be 
in  the  way,  and  I  do  not  know  in  whose  hands  I  shall  leave  your 
affairs.  Mr.  Rutledge  seems  reluctant  to  interfere  in  them  again 
and  in  fact  for  your  sake  I  am  reluctant  to  return  them  to  him, 
because  I  perceive  it  will  not  be  in  his  power  to  attend  to  any 
kind  of  business  out  of  Charles  Town  nor  out  of  his  proper  sphere 
— ^his  head  and  his  hands  will  be  crammed  full  of  law  and  politics 
however  I  shall  consult  him  and  do  nothing  against  his  consent — 


IZARD-LAUHENS  CORRESPONDENCE  41 

Mr.  Farr  in  the  most  peremptory  terms  when  I  offered  him  all  the 
Commissions  arising  from  the  Estates  refused  to  have  anything 
to  do  with  it — ^indeed  certain  reasons  offered  for  such  a  refusal 
disgusted  me  so  much  on  your  Accoimt,  I  cannot  with  propriety 
apply  to  him  again — on  such  terms  I  had  engaged  with  Mr. 
Gervais  to  take  charge  of  the  plantations  but  I  found  it  so  little 
in  his  power  to  give  the  necessary  attention  I  was  forced  to  resume 
the  burthen — but  this  I  cannot  promise  to  do  when  I  return  from 
Philadelphia,  hitherto  I  have  acted  from  motives  of  friendship 
but  the  additional  weight  of  your  affairs  has  made  the  general 
burthen  of  business  which  falls  to  my  share  too  heavy — ^besides  I 
do  not  Love  to  do  business  for  a  Man  who  takes  no  care  of  his 
own  Affairs,  such  a  one  can  never  be  a  proper  judge  of  the  endeavors 
of  his  friends  to  serve  him — he  is  too  apt  to  ascribe  ill  success  to 
the  Neglect  of  those  who  have  taken  great  pains  to  promote  his 
Interests.  He  is  too  apt  also  to  assign  wrong  motives  to  the 
Labors  of  his  friends  and  to  think  that  Commissions  are  the  temp- 
tation— ^I  do  not  ^ply  these  remarks  by  any  means  to  you,  but 
from  very  long  experience  of  Mankind  I  am  sure  they  will  apply 
to  most  Men  who  are  careless  of  all  their  own  affairs  their  Estates 
I  mean  except  the  Income — ^when  that  does  not  reach  their  expec- 
tations, which  has  been  strained  to  the  very  upper  line  of  possibility 
and  no  allowance  made  for  casualties,  they  are  dissatisfied  and 
too  often  make  improper  expressions  of  their  displeasure. 

I  have  never  been  able  to  trace  an  accoimt  of  agreements  with 
one  of  your  Overseers — ^not  to  find  an  Inventory  of  your  Household 
Goods  and  effects  at  Goose  Creek  Plantation — consequently  in 
the  former  Case  I  have  been  obliged  to  take  the  words  of  the  Men 
themselves — ^in  the  letter,  the  very  Devil  has  been  played  by 
some  body  or  other,  Negroes  or  Overseers — ^to  save  the  remainder 
which  appeared  to  me,  I  have  already  ordered  part  to  be  sold 
and  shall  make  a  dean  House  for  you — Goods  were  never  dearer, 
perhaps  the  Amoimt  of  what  I  shall  collect  for  fragments  will  be 
equal  to  the  original  value  of  the  whole — ^I  understood  that  you 
had  left  four  pipes  of  Madeira  Wine  here,  these  I  first  learned  of 
when  people  were  moving  their  effects  from  Charles  Town,  then  I 
found  all  that  was  said  to  be  theproduceof  these  four  Pipes  tumbled 
about  in  a  Store  accompanied  by  amazing  breakage — ^the  Net 
quantity  saved  will  not  amount  to  Ninety  dozen,  it  had  been 


42  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

very  badly  managed  was  so  thick  no  body  would  buy  of  it  a  second 
time.  I  had  put  it  into  the  hands  of  a  proper  Man  for  sale  he 
obtained  from  12  to  £15  per  doz.  for  so  much  as  he  did  sell — ^there 
remains  about  75th  which  I  will  order  to  be  sold  next  week. 

Till  that  event  of  the  people's  flying  from  Charles  Town  and 
removing  their  effects  I  had  not  received  either  your  plate  or 
your  chest  of  Papers — Mr.  Rulledge  then  in  Philadelphia — 
one  of  his  clerks  pointed  those  articles  to  me.  I  had  s^lied  a 
himdred  times  before  for  them — but  to  this  hour  I  have  not  received 
the  Key  of  the  Chest — lately  fearing  your  papers  would  have 
been  all  destroyed  by  Vermin  I  caused  the  Lock  of  the  Chest 
to  be  forced  and  a  new  Key  made. 

You  must  not  blame  Mr.  Rutledge  for  anything  amiss  I  dare 
say  from  my  own  experience — ^that  he  was  just  as  careful  of  all 
3^ur  affairs  as  he  has  been  of  his  own,  as  much  this,  as  you  would 
expect  at  my  time — ^fuU  as  much  as  could  have  been  expected 
from  any  Man  in  such  times  as  we  haVe  lived  in  the  past  two  years. 

A  report  has  been  whispered  that  you  had  taken  lodgings  in 
the  King's  Bench*  it  hurts  me  much  to  hear  it — ^I  will  not  believe 
it — ^however  it  had  reached  the  ears  of  your  Negroes,  I  could  not 
contradict  the  story,  but  recommended  strongly  to  them  to  work 
you  out  again — upon  some,  this  had  a  good  effect — others,  who 
think  themselves  more  judicious  than  their  feUows — say  tis  your 
own  fault — ^you  don't  deserve  Negroes. 

I  will  do  everything  while  I  stay  here  to  promote  your  Interest 
but  I  recommend  to  you  to  come  and  take  it  into  your  own  Custody 
and  management,  at  least  for  a  while  or  'till  you  can  sell  it  to 
advantage. 

I  am  &ca 

[same  to  same] 

Ralph  Izard,  Richmond  near  London. 

Goose  Creek,  9th  Jime,  1777.    Copy,  dup. 
Dr.  Sir 

I  am  now  on  my  Journey  to  Congress  halted  at  this 
empty  House  last  night  in  order  to  inquire  into  Plantation  Affairs 
generally  and  to  give  the  needful  Instruction  to  Mr.  I.  Owen  a 

*  Rumor  that  he  was  imprisoned  for  debt. 


IZARD-LAUEENS  COSKESPONDENCE  43 

Gentleman  whom  I  have  prevailed  upon  to  superintend  and 
order  your  Estates  in  this  Country  during  my  absence  or  until 
you  shall  made  a  different  Disposition — I  say  prevailed  upon 
because  I  found  it  a  very  difficult  matter  to  prevail  upon  any 
proper  Man. 

I  have  long  since  informed  you  that  Mr.  Farr  had  peremptorily 
refus'd  to  continue  his  Attention — altho  I  had  endeavored  to 
tempt  him  by  an  offer  of  the  whole  Commission  and  to  add  my 
Advice  and  Assistance  gratis  as  often  as  he  s'd  require — that 
upon  such  terms  I  had  persuaded  Mr.  Gervias  a  very  honest 
sensible  Man  and  well  qualified  for  the  Purpose  to  take  the  Charge 
into  his  hands — ^but  his  Engagements  in  public  and  other  Concerns 
rendered  proper  Attendance  impracticable,  I  was  obliged  to 
resume  the  Task,  not  a  little  to  my  own  Damage. 

In  my  last  Letter  which  I  sent  by  the  hand  of  a  Lady  thro 
France  you  were  told  that  Mr.  Rultedge  had  discovered  a  Reluc- 
tance, this  ended  in  the  most  positive  Denial  to  receive  into  his 
Custody  any  of  your  Estates  or  Effects,  he  thinks  himself  at  best 
unqualified  for  directing  plantation  Affairs  and  at  present  under 
an  absolute  Necessity  of  attending  closely  to  his  own  which  he 
says  and  no  doubt  with  great  Truth  have  been  sadly  shattered 
by  the  times  in  his  absence.  His  advice  upon  every  occasion 
when  applied  for,  he  said  might  be  depended  upon,  but  he  could 
not  promise  anything  more. 

In  this  Dilemma  I  applied  to  Mr.  Owen  who  altho  he  is  not  a 
Planter  I  believe  will  conduct  the  Business  of  all  your  Plantations 
in  their  present  State  and  for  the  remaining  part  of  this  Year  as 
well  as  any  one  Man  in  the  State  could  do — if  indeed  we  could 
prevail  upon  Neighbors  to  attend  specially  each  plantation,  more 
success  might  be  expected  but  this  is  not  even  to  be  hoped  for  in 
these  times  every  Man  finds  his  hands  filled  by  his  own  Affairs, 
and  knows  himself  every  moment  liable  to  be  called  from  them 
to  Public  Duty  in  Camp  in  Committees  in  Assembly  or  some 
other  Branch. 

In  many  respects  Mr.  Owen's  Central  situation  will  give  him 
an  Advantage  in  your  favour,  particularly  in  Procuring  Articles 
important  of  all  must  be  watch'd  with  great  Attention — ^I  have 
contrived  to  conduct  your  Negroes  thro'  two  Winters  Pretty  much 
to  their  satisfaction  and  at  no  great  expense  to  you — as  the  third 


44  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

approaches  they  will  anticipate  sufiFerings,  and  be  very  clamorous 
unless  they  perceive  that  Provision  is  made  for  covering  them— 
it  seems  also  to  be  absolutely  necessary  that  you  sh<^  have  repre- 
sentative in  Charles  Town,  your  Negroes  are  continually  deserting 
the  Plantation  and  going  there  where  I  have  no  doubt  many  of 
them  would  have  embark'd  in  the  Men  of  War  and  other  Vessels 
and  have  been  totally  lost  to  you  if  I  had  not  been  upon  the  spot, 
sometimes  to  shield  them  from  the  Tyranny  and  Villainy  of 
Overseers  and  sometimes  to  restrain  their  own  vicious  Designs — 
nothing  more  troublesome  than  that  branch  of  Plantation 
Business  and  I  have  had  more  of  it  fall  to  my  lot  from  your  Negroes 
within  two  last  years  than  I  have  experienced  in  twenty  years 
of  my  own. 

Mr.  Owen  is  altogether  disengaged  from  Business,  public  and 
private  a  very  honest  Man  and  not  quite  a  novice  in  Country 
Affairs  and  I  am  sure  will  be  frequent  in  visiting  the  Plantations 
and  will  prevent  a  Repetition  of  such  Enormities  as  has  been 
practiced  on  most  of  them,  he  will  also  conserve  and  keep  together 
the  whole,  hence  I  felt  myself  happy  on  your  account  in  having 
prevailed  upon  him.  The  Crops  however  are  all  set  and  all  in 
this  Quarter  very  promising — how  they  are  at  Sante  I  shall  know 
as  I  pass  along  for  I  mean  to  call  at  each  before  the  planting  of 
another  Crop  or  even  before  reaping  the  present.  I  hope  you 
will  be  in  Carolina  and  take  Chiu^ge  personally  of  your  Estates, 
or  you  may  give  such  further  orders  as  you  may  judge  proper. 

Agreeable  to  my  late  Intimation  I  have  ordered  all  the  bed 
Furniture  (one  Feather  Bed  and  one  Mattress  excepted)  which 
remained  in  this  house  to  be  sold,  it  was  highly  necessary  to  realize 
it — the  whole  had  suff'd  exceedingly  by  Vermin  and  Time,  and 
much  of  what  you  had  left,  had  been  plundered  by  the  Negro 
Woman  to  whose  Care  you  left  the  house  and  by  her  Companions 
— and  probably  by  some  whose  interest  it  was  to  impeach  the 
Negroes — Chairs  Glasses  Bedsteads  China  and  Chimney  Furni- 
ture remain — even  these  do  not  seem  to  be  all  you  had  found  use 
for — ^your  Library  had  been  long  closed  up  and  the  Key  lost,  I 
caused  the  Lock  to  be  forced  and  the  Books  dean'd — I  have  never 
been  able  to  get  a  Catalogue  of  these,  an  Inventory  of  your  Effects 
in  this  or  any  other  Plantation,  or  even  Copy  of  former  agree- 
ments with  any  of  your  Overseers — this  Deficiency  may  oblige 


IZARD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  45 

me  to  submit  to  some  very  sad  fellows  almost  upon  their 
Terms,  there  are  no  less  than  three  whom  I  dismissed  for  very 
bad  Behavoiur  whose  Accounts  are  not  yet  settled 

My  Son  informed  me  upon  his  Arrival  here  that  you  expressed 
an  Anxiety  to  have  your  Madera  Wine  preserved,  I  had  previously 
sold  almost  the  whole,  that  Article  had  been  greatly  mismanaged, 
Mr.  Farr  tells  me  Mr.  P.  Manigault's  Negro  had  stolen  the 
greater  part  of  one  out  of  the  four  Pipes.  I  have  already  told  you 
I  had  never  heard  of  the  Article  nor  of  your  Plate  until  the  Inhab- 
itants of  Ch.  Town  were  making  a  general  move  of  their  Effects, 
then  I  was  called  upon  to  take  Charge  of  those,  and  then  your 
Chest  of  Papers,  without  a  Key  was  delivered  to  me,  the  plate 
was  loose,  I  caused  it  to  be  carefully  pack'd — and  with  my  own 
sent  to  one  of  my  Plantations  less  exposed  to  Danger  than  this — 
the  wine  was  tumbled  about  a  Room  by  the  Bursting  of  the  Heads 
of  Barrels,  where  the  whole  Bottles  laiy  like  heaps  of  Bricks  amidst 
the  pieces  of  broken,  which  added  to  the  Robbery  above  mentioned 
had  reduced  the  quantity  to  about  Ninety  Doz.  these  were  of 
very  mix'd  Quality  some  very  good,  but  the  majority  ordinary 
and  all  very  foul — ^part  I  order 'd  to  be  sold  it  yielded  from  £12  to 
£15  per  Doz.  as  many  bottles  as  filled  five  casks  I  had  reserv'd 
and  sent  here,  hoping  you  would  have  drunk  it  last  Winter,  but 
upon  hearing  you  had  taken  a  new  habitation  in  England — seeing 
the  Barrels  again  growing  bad,  and  learning  the  Consequence  of 
leaving  it  exposed  I  ordered  this  also  to  be  sold  from  £15  to  £20 
Pr.  Doz.  and  I  am  persuaded  I  have  done  well  for  your  Interest 
it  was  not  \Wne  that  would  ever  have  been  fit  for  Company  without 
great  Waste — every  Body  who  purchased  complained  of  it. 

The  Quantity  of  Rice  made  of  Crops  1775  and  1776  amount  in 
the  whole  to  about  1910  bbls.  besides  a  pretty  large  Quantity  still 
unbeat  at  Roimd  Savanna  and  Walnut  Hill — Goose  Creek  the 
Camp  and  the  two  Sante  plantations  have  made  very  little,  the 
produce  of  these  three  latter  in  those  two  years  3695  lb.  (?)  of 
Indigo  not  fit  to  have  ship't  to  you,  even  if  I  had  been  permitted, 
no  less  than  three  Barrels  were  said  to  be  stolen  while  the  Over- 
seers were  upon  Militia  duty — two  more  probably  by  one  of  the 
Overseers  himself  which  I  resent  and  refuse  to  pay  him  his  claim 
for  Share  or  Wages — the  other  thro'  the  neglect  of  Streaterwho 
was  Overseer  at  Camp,  which  compFd  me  to  dismiss  him — ^I  w'd 


46  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

willingly  proceed  and  be  very  minute  in  Account  of  all  your  Affairs 
but  the  great  uncertainty  of  reaching  you  intimates  that  generals 
may  be  better. 

I  have  your  Acct  before  me  'tis  too  bulky  to  impose  upon  any 
Friend  who  is  charg'd  with  other  Letters  and  w^  go  very  unsafely 
— ^Let  me  therefore  conclude  by  informing  you  that  the  Debt 
which  I  had  contracted  for  those  Bills  remitted  in  1775  is  paid 
ofif — that  your  Plantations  are  free  from  all  but  small  Curr*  Debts 
and  that  I  have  lent  of  your  Money  at  7  per  cent.,  the  l^al  interest, 
£20100! 

Vid*  Ben  Cattel  and  Wm.  Cattel £6000 

Ben  Huger  and  Thos  Bee 2000 

H.  Boyd  Overseer  at  one  of  your  Sante  Planta* 100 

Public  Treasury  of  this  State 12000 

\diich  brings  your  Accounts  nearly  to  balance  and  leaves  no 
Cash  in  my  hands — ^in  Mr.  Owen's  there  is  one  Boat  Load  of  Rice 
about  23  bbls.  and  97  large  half  bbls.  the  amount  of  which  must 
rest  with  hun  for  the  Purchase  of  Cloths  and  other  necessaires 
for  the  plantations  and  possibly  before  the  Crop  comes  round 
he  may  find  it  necessary  to  borrow  a  little  upon  the  fimd  above 
mentioned — I  am  apprehensive  it  will  require  a  large  sum  for  the 
Article  of  Clothing  alone. 

As  far  as  it  shall  lie  in  my  power  I  will  continue  my  Advice  and 
my  Services  and  while  your  Affairs  remain  without  your  presence 
or  a  new  Appointment,  which  in  these  uncertain  Times  may  spite 
of  all  your  Endeavours  be  very  long,  they  shall  not  be  abandon'd 
to  Waste  and  Ruin. 

The  Voice  is  much  against  you  for  neglecting  the  Public  Call.* 
I  wish  on  that  accoimt  as  well  as  for  the  Amendment  of  your 
Estate  you  w**  attempt  to  appear — li  I  Mrere  near  I  might  whispet 
many  Things  new  to  you  but  I  hate  to  talk  loud  to  a  Friend  when 
People  stand  between  us. 

I  wish  this  may  get  safe  to  your  hand — Be  assured  of  my  Wishes 
for  the  happiness  of  you  and  yours  and  that  I  am  Dr  Sir  your  &c 


*A  resolution  of  the  Provincial  Congress  in  June,  1775;  all  absentees 
holding  estates  in  this  colony,  except  those  who  were  abroad  on  account  of 
their  health,  and  those  above  60  years  of  age,  and  under  21,  ought  forthwith 
to  return."    Drayton's  Memoirs  etc,,  v,  i,  p.  256. 


IZARD-LAU&ENS  CORRESPONDENCE  47 

* 

Your  Goose  Creek  House  reserving  one  Parlour  and  the  use  of 
the  Hall  without  any  part  of  the  Plantation  except  Pasturage  and 
Stable  Rooms  for  2  or  3  Horses  I  rented  in  the  troublous  times  to 
a  Family  at  £150  per  An.  Matthewes's  at  £60  per  An.  these  are 
not  only  so  much  dear  gain,  but  save  the  Building's  from  total 
decay. 

A  British  Man  of  War  a  few  days  ago  carried  off  about  25  Negroes 
who  were  fishing  without  the  Bar,  among  them  your  man  Frank. 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  JOHN  LAXTRENS] 

London,  18th  July,  1777. 
Dear  Sir 

Since  my  last  letter  to  you  I  have  received  one  from  your  father 
which  has  hurt  me  a  good  deal;  and  Mr.  Lloyd*  has  just  sent  me 
from  Nantes  an  extract  of  a  Letter  which  he  received  from  Mr. 
Lowndes,  informing  him  that  ''whatever  may  be  said  by  absentees 
in  excuse  for  their  remaining  out  of  the  State,  suspicions  will  be 
entertained  to  their  prejudice,  and  disadvantage;  and  it  will  be 
imputed  to  a  motive  either  of  avoiding  danger  to  their  persons, 
or  a  disaffection  to  the  cause."  I  am  conscious  that  no  such 
motives  actuate  me;  and  I  had  flattered  myself  that  others  in 
Carolina  would  likewise  have  been  convinced  of  it.  I  can  not 
think  for  a  moment  upon  such  ungenerous  opinions,  and  suspicions 
without  the  greatest  imeasiness;  especially  as  it  is  totally  out  of 
my  power  to  go  over,  and  remove  them  in  person.  In  my  last 
Letter  to  you  I  expressed  a  desire  of  having  some  remittances. 
If  Five,  or  Six  Hundred  Pounds  could  be  sent  to  me  to  France, 
with  the  approbation  of  the  Public,  it  would  make  me  very  happy, 
as  I  should  consider  it  as  the  removal  of  all  misconceptions 
resp>ecting  me.  This  I  hope  to  have,  as  a  matter  of  justice;  not 
of  favour  in  such  times  as  the  present;  and  whoever  is  disaffected 
to  the  cause  of  his  Country,  which  is  the  noblest  that  ever  was 
contended  for,  is  undeserving  of  it.  I  have  received  no  letters 
from  you  since  your  arrival  in  Carolina,  but  I  hope  to  have  one 

*  John  Lloyd,  bom  in  Bristol,  Eng.,  in  1735;  died  in  Qiarleston,  S.  C,  8 
Nov.  1807.  For  several  years  he  was  a  member,  and  president  of  the  Senate 
of  S.  C.  (Tomb  in  St.  Michaels  church  3rard).  His  sister  Judith  married  in 
1764  Richard  Champion,  the  ceramist;  they  removed  to  Camden,  S.  C.  in  1784. 
—Dia.  Nat.  Biog, 


/ 


48  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

soon  in  France,  where  I  expect  to  be  next  week.  I  send  by  this 
opportunity  a  Letter  to  your  Father*  which  I  have  purposely 
left  open  for  your  perusal,  as  I  think  it  very  probable  that  he  may 
be  at  the  Northward  when  it  gets  to  Charles  Town.  I  am  exceed- 
ingly vexed  that  all  my  Letters  to  him  should  have  miscarried. 
One  was  sent  by  way  of  Bristol.  Mr.  Braislford  tells  me  it 
was  put  on  board  a  vessel  that  was  taken  on  the  coast  of  Carolina. 
Another  was  sent  by  a  gentleman  who  was  endeavoring  to  get 
from  Bristol  to  the  Continent  of  America,  so  far  about  as  by  the 
Magdalen  Islands,  in  the  Gulf  of  St.  Laurence.  These  oppor- 
timities  I  heard  of  while  I  was  at  Bath.  I  heartily  wish  you 
success,  and  happiness,  and  am  Dear  Sir, 

Your  Friend,  and  Humble  Servant, 

Ra:  Izard. 

John  Laurens,  Esq**. 
Endorsed:  R.  Izard, 
18  July  1777. 

[rALFH  IZARD  TO  HENRY  LAURENS] 

Paris  21st  Dec:  1777.     Copy. 
Dear  Sir 

I  congratulate  you  on  our  important  success  against  Mr:  Bur- 
g03me,'  and  assure  you  that  our  affairs  in  this  part  of  the  world 
stood  much  in  need  of  some  such  event.  The  conduct  of  the  French 
Ministry  has  for  some  time  past  been  very  equivocal,  and  in 
many  instances  extremely  offensive.  At  present  our  affairs  here 
wear  a  very  pleasing  aspect,  but  I  am  sorry  to  say  that  our  new 
friends  appear  to  me  to  act  so  little  upon  manly,  and  honourable 
Principles,  that  had  the  arms  of  our  enemies  prevailed  against 
us  we  should  have  been  sacrificed  without  any  ceremony.  It  is 
improper  that  this  should  be  generally  known,  but  it  would  be 
more  so  that  the  Members  of  Congress  shou'd  be  ignorant  of  it. 
This  I  mention  to  you  because  I  wish  you  to  be  persuaded  that  our 
salvation  must  depend  upon  our  own  exertions. 

In  my  last  Letter  to  you  I  mentioned  something  of  the  extraor- 

'See  letter  to  Henry  Laurens,  dated  London  16  July,  1777,  on  page  5, 
January  issue. 

'  Burgoyne's  surrender  at  Saratoga  Oct.  15, 1777. 


IZARD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  49 

dinaiy  conduct  of  Mr.  Thomas  Morris^  the  Commercial  Agent 
in  this  Kingdom.  In  truth  I  cannot  help  thinking,  but  the  unpros- 
perous  appearance  of  our  affairs  of  late  at  this  Court  may  have 
been  occasioned  by  this  Gentleman.  The  French  Ministry  have 
long  known  that  his  enormities  have  been  laid  before  Congress 
by  our  three  Conmiissioners  here,  and  yet  they  see  him  continued 
in  his  Office,  and  know  from  unquestionable  authority  that  his 
Brother  was  determined  to  support  him  in  it,  and  had  influence 
enough  in  Congress  to  do  it  in  defiance  of  every  application. 
This  seems  the  more  extraordinary  as  he  has  taken  the  manage- 
ment of  his  own  private  affairs  out  of  his  hands,  being  convinced 
how  imworthy  he  was  to  have  the  care  of  them.  They  were 
inclined  from  this  to  hold  the  Conmiissioners  in  contempt,  and 
their  opinion  of  the  Wisdom  and  \%tue,  even  of  Congress  itself 
was  I  fear  lessened.  So  convinced  am  I  of  the  great  power  and 
influence  of  Mr.  Robert  Morris,  that  I  have  not  a  doubt  were 
he  to  know  of  this  representation  to  you,  that  my  removal 
from  the  appointment  which  I  have  at  present  the  honour  of 
holding  under  Congress  would  be  the  consequence  of  it.  I  wish 
therefore  not  to  be  subjected  to  his  enmity  to  no  purpose.  In 
writing  to  you  on  this  subject  I  have  no  motive  but  public  good. 
I  have  not  the  least  acquaintance  with  the  Gentleman  complained 
of;  even  his  person  is  unknown  to  me.  I  wish  his  character  were 
so  likewise,  but  as  that  is  so  often  spoken  of  by  every  body  who 
comes  from  Nantes,  I  should  think  myself  guilty  of  a  neglect  of 
my  duty  were  I  not  to  mention  it  to  you.  I  will  not  trouble  you 
by  entering  upon  particulars  of  the  Commissioners,  and  especially 
those  of  Mr.  Deane,  you  will  meet  with  full  information.  Let 
the  consequences  be  what  they  will;  Whether  the  grievance  which 
I  have  mentioned  to  you  be  removed,  or  whether  I  be  removed 
myself,  it  will  always  be  a  consolation  to  me  that  I  have  discharged 
my  duty. — ^In  my  Letter  of  the  6th:'  October  I  informed  you  of 
my  having  made  an  engreement  for  a  quantity  of  Blankets  and 

^Thomas  Morris  was  U.  S.  commercial  agent  to  France;  he  was  a  half 
brother  to  Robert  Morris,  who  gives  an  account  of  his  character  in  a  letter  to 
Henry  Laurens  dated  Dec.  26, 1777  (DiplomaHc  Correspondence  of  the  American 
Revolution,  v.  2,  pp.  460-461).  Thomas  Morris  died  in  France  before  Feb.  28, 
1778  (Journals  Continental  Congress,  VXII,  p.  879). 

'  This  letter  of  Oct.  6,  1777,  is  printed  in  the  Izard  Correspondence,  page 
348,  as  are  a  number  of  other  letters  belonging  to  this  correspondence. 


50  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Negro  Cloth  to  be  shipped  from  hence.  One  part  of  the  conduct 
of  die  French  Ministry  which  I  have  mentioned  above  as  oflFensive 
consists  in  their  throwing  considerable  embarassment  in  the  way 
of  the  ships  that  were  loading  in  their  Harbom^  for  North  America. 
At  one  time  they  were  su£Fered  to  get  ready,  at  another  the  Officers 
at  the  di£Ferent  Ports  received  orders  to  put  a  stop  to  all  prepa- 
rations. My  Cloth  was  to  have  been  shipped  by  the  15th  October 
at  farthest.  The  Vessel  that  was  to  have  carried  it  is  not  yet 
sailed  and  I  have  lately  been  informed  by  the  person  ^rtu>  was  to 
have  executed  my  Commission,  that  he  has  not  been  able  to  do 
it  for  the  above  reasons.  Indeed  if  he  could  do  it,  it  seems  now 
too  late.  The  Winter  would  be  nearly  passed  before  it  could 
possibly  arrive  in  Carolina,  and  Mr.  Owen  will  I  hope  have  taken 
care  of  my  Negroes  with  these  necessary  Articles,  let  the  price 
be  what  it  would.  The  Negroes  ought  to  be  comfortably  doath'd, 
if  there  is  a  possibility  of  doing  it  I  cannot  think  of  their  not  being 
so  without  the  greatest  uneasiness,  and  I  would  take  any  chance  of 
borrowing  money  in  Europe  for  the  maintenence  of  my  family, 
and  have  the  whole  of  my  Crop  appropriated  to  that  purpose, 
rather  than  that  they  should  be  subjected  to  that  distress. — 

My  intimacy  with  the  Tuscan  Minister  at  this  Court  has  enabled 
me  to  do  my  business  more  efiFectually  thanif  I  hadbeen  at  Florence;^^ 
he  is  a  man  of  ability,  very  friendly  to  our  cause,  and  in  great 
favour  with  the  Grand  Duke^^  his  master.  By  his  advice  I  have 
delayed  my  joiuney  into  Italy,  and  I  have  reason  to  be  satisfied 
with  it,  though  contrary  to  my  own  wishes.  It  is  certain  that  the 
King  of  Prussia^  has  lately  refused  a  passage  through  his  Dominions 
to  some  German  Troops  intended  to  be  sent  to  America,  and  it 
is  said  to  have  been  done  at  the  desire  of  the  Emperor.^'  This  is 
a  point  that  I  have  continually  pressed  with  my  Florentine  friend, 
and  he  has  repeatedly  assured  me,  that  the  Grand  Duke's  interest 

'^  Ralph  Izard  was  appointed  by  Congress  Commissioner  to  the  Court  of 
Tuscany,  July  1,  1777;  the  state  of  European  politics  became  such  that  he 
did  not  visit  the  Court  to  which  he  was  destined.  Congress  recalled  him  July 
8, 1777,  and  a  few  months  later  he  returned  to  America. 

'^  Leopold  I  of  Tuscany,  son  of  Francis  I,  and  Maria  Thresa;  at  the  death 
of  his  brother  Joseph  11,  he  became  emperor  of  the  Holy  Roman  Empire  as 
Leopold  n. 

"  Frederick  U  1712-1786  sumamed  '*The  Great" 

"  Joseph  n,  1741-1790,  elected  Emperor  1765. 


IZARD-IAUHENS  COSSESPONDENCE  51 

with  his  Brother  might  be  depended  on.  This  is  a  matter  of 
such  a  nature,  that  you  will  of  course  take  care  that  it  be  entre 
nous.  It  is  very  possible  that  the  King  of  Prussia  may  have  been 
induced  to  act  by  motives  that  we  are  not  acquainted  with.  The 
contrary  is  likewise  possible;  and  that  possibility  affords  me  some 
satisfaction. — When  Congress  did  me  the  honour  to  give  me  a 
Commission,  and  Instructions,  they  neglected  furnishing  me  with 
proper  funds  to  execute  them.  This  I  have  avoided  mentioning 
in  my  Letters  to  the  Conmiittee  for  Foreign  Affairs  from  a  point 
of  delicacy.  I  need  have  no  such  scruples  with  you,  and  I  depend 
upon  your  friendship  to  set  this  matter  in  its  proper  light. 
The  public  service  has  not  been  retarded  a  moment  on  this  accoimt; 
nor  shall  it  be.  Mr.  William  Lee^^  who  was  appointed  at  the 
same  time  a  Commissioner  to  the  Court  of  Vienna  is  in  the  same 
situation.  This  seems  extraordinary,  as  the  three  Gentlemen 
at  this  Court,  whose  Commissions  are  exactly  the  same  as  oiurs, 
have  very  ample  appointments.  It  is  proper  that  I  should  inform 
you  of  this.  It  should  be  said  that  it  is  difficult  to  make  remit- 
tances, the  answer  is  very  plain;  a  vote  of  Congress  that  the 
Commissioners  at  this  Court  be  directed  to  pay  such  a  sum  out 
of  any  money  they  have  now,  or  may  hereafter  have  in  their 
hands,  will  be  sufficient.  I  have  had  a  very  severe  fit  of  the  gout, 
which  has  already  confined  me  seven  weeks  to  my  Chamber;  it 
is  considerably  abated,  and  I  hope  my  confinement  will  not  last 
much  longer.  The  weather  however  is  extreamely  cold,  and  of 
course  unfavorable  to  me. 

Mrs.  Izard  desires  her  compliments  to  you. 

I  am  Dear  Sir, 

Yoiu:  friend  and  humble  Servant, 

Ra:Izaiu>. 

"  William  Lee,  1737-1795,  of  Va.,  5th  son  of  Thomas  Lee  and  Hannah 
Ludwell.  He  was  a  merchant  in  London,  and  for  a  time  agent  for  Virginia. 
After  the  outbreak  of  the  American  Revolution  he  accompanied  his  brother 
Arthur  to  France;  in  1777  he  was  appointed  commercial  agent  for  the  U.  S. 
to  Nantes;  he  was  later  appointed  Commissioner  to  the  Hague  and  to  Berlin 
and  Vienna,  but  owing  to  unwillingness  of  the  neutral  powers  to  offend  Great 
Britain,  he  was  obliged  to  remain  chiefly  in  Paris;  in  1779  he  was  concerned 
in  his  brother  Arthur's  quarrel  with  Franklin  at  Paris,  which  ended  in  their 
recaU. 


52  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  IfAGAZINE 

P.  S.  This  letter  will  be  delivered  to  you  by  Mr.  Stevenson, 
who  is  recommended  to  me  by  a  friend  at  Bristol  as  a  very  worthy 
Merchant  of  that  City,  and  as  such  I  present  him  to  you. 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  HENRY  LAURENs] 

Paris  22d  Dec,  1777. 
Addressed  To 

The  Hon'ble  Henry  Laurens  Esq'r 
Member  of  the  Continental  Congress 
in  North  America 
Dear  Sir 

My  friend  Mr :  Carmichael^  will  probably  pay  a  visit  to  whatever 
Town  the  Congress  may  be  sitting  at  upon  his  arrival  in  America. 
As  I  am  sure  that  a  mutual  satisfaction  will  be  the  consequence 
of  your  acquaintance  I  take  the  liberty  of  introducing  him  to  you. 
He  has  been  employed  here  confidentially  on  the  public  service, 
and  nobody  can  give  you  a  better  account  of  the  state  of  affairs 
in  this  part  of  the  World  than  he  can.  You  may  safely  confer 
with  him,  as  he  is  warmly  attached  to  the  cause  of  his  country. 
Mrs.  Izard  desires  her  Compliments  and  I  am  Dear  Sir  with 
great  regard 

Your  friend  and  humble  Servant 

Ra:  Izard 
Endorsed; 

Ralph  Izard  Esquire 
22  Dec'm  1777 
Rec'd  14  June  1778 

[To  be  conHnued] 

1*  William  Carmicfaael  of  Maryland;  died  1795;  a  man  of  means  living  in 
London;  was  one  of  Silas  Deane's  assistants  in  France  for  over  a  year,  and 
later  made  charges  against  Deane.  {Jour,  CorU*l  Cong,,  voL  XII,  page  927.) 
Carmichael's  letters  were  published  in  Spark's  Diplomatic  Corespondence, 


THE  EXCOMMUNICATION  OF  JOSEPH  ASH 

The  case  of  Joseph  Ash  is  recorded  in  the  volume  of  Records 
of  the  Court  of  Ordinary  1764-1771,  recently  returned  to  South 
Carolina  through  the  courtesy  of  Tufts  Collie. 

That  ecclesiastical  excommunication  for  failure  in  dvil  duties 
was  very  unusual  is  apparent  from  the  statement  of  Judge  John 
F.  Grimk6  of  So.  Ca.  in  his  Duty  of  Executors  and  Administrators, 
printed  in  New  York  in  1797,  pp.  VTE-Vni,  in  which  he  laments 
the  lack  of  power  in  the  court  of  ordinary,  now  called  the  court 
of  Probate,  which  at  the  time  he  wrote,  subsequent  to  the  Pro- 
vincial days,  had  no  power  to  punish  persons  for  neglecting  or 
refusing  to  obey  its  process.  He  states  that  "formerly,  indeed, 
the  Ecclesiastical  thunder  was  hurled  at  the  disobedient  .  .  . 
So  much  indeed  were  persons  intimidated  by  these  Ecclesiastical 
censures,  that  I  believe  only  one  occasion  has  been  offered  in  this 
country  from  its  first  settlement  to  the  expiration  of  the  British 
government  in  this  State  for  the  Ordinary  to  proceed  to  the  greater 
exconmiimication." 

The  case  he  then  dtes  is  the  Ash  case.  Excommimication  is  of 
two  kinds.  By  the  lesser,  the  offender  is  deprived  of  the  use  of 
the  sacraments  and  divine  worship,  which  sentence  is  passed  by 
the  ecclesiastical  Judge,  on  such  persons  as  are  guilty  of  obstinacy 
or  disobedience' in  not  appearing  upon  a  citation  or  not  submitting 
to  other  injunctions  of  the  Court.  By  the  greater  exconunimi- 
cation,  in  addition  to  the  above  mentioned  penalties,  the  offender 
is  absolutely  deprived  of  the  benefit  of  the  society  and  conversa- 
tion of  the  faithful.  These  powers  were  vested  in  England  in 
the  Court  of  the  Archbishop  of  Canterbury  which  had  jurisdiction 
over  the  administration  of  estates  of  deceased  persons;  in  the 
province  of  South  Carolina  the  power  was  vested  in  the  Governor. 

From  the  genealogical  notes  collected  by  the  late  M.  Alston 
Read  Esq.,  it  appears  that  Cato  Ash,  who  died  intestate  about 
1757,  was  a  brother  of  Joseph  Ash,  Richard  Cochran  Ash,  John 
Ash,  all  mentioned  as  administrators;  another  brother  was  James 
Ash,  and  his  sisters  Mrere  Portia,  Theodore  and  Prisdlla;  these 
were  the  descendants  of  John  Ash  who  was  sent  to  England  in 

53 


54  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  IfAGAZINE 

1703  by  the  Dissenters  to  lay  their  grievance  before  the  Lords 
Proprietors;  Ash  died  in  England  in  1704.    Sarah,  the  widow  of 
Cato  Ash  married  Henry  Livingston,  and  after  his  death,  she 
married  Charles  OdingselL 
The  proceedings  are  as  follows: 

South  Carolina 

By  the  Honb'le  WiUiam  Bull  Esq.  Lieut.  Governor  and  Com'r 
in  Chief  and  over  the  said  Province  and  Ordinary  of  the  same  to 
Joseph  Ash,  Rich'd  Cochran  Ash  and  John  Ash,  admors  of  all  and 
singular  the  Goods  and  Chattels  Rights  And  Credits  which 
were  of  Cato  Ash  late  of  St.  Pauls  parish  in  the  province  afs'd. 
planter  deceased  Greeting. 

These  are  to  dte  and  admonish  You  the  said  Joseph  Ash, 
Richard  Cochran  Ash  and  John  Ash  at  the  instance  of  Sarah 
Livingston,  and  Charles  Odingsell  in  behalf  of  Theodora  Ash, 
Richiurd  Russel  Ash,  and  Mary  Ash  children  of  the  said  Cato 
Ash  to  -whom  the  said  Sarah  and  Charles  were  by  me  lawfully 
appointed  Guardians  to  appear  before  me  in  the  Court  of  Ordinary 
on  Tuesday  the  21st  day  of  December  instant  to  shew  cause  if 
any  you  can  why  you  should  not  make  and  render  before  me 
then  and  there  a  just  true  and  faithful  accoimt  of  your  said 
admon  and  of  all  and  singular  the  Goods  and  Chattels  as  the 
the  said  Children  as  the  next  of  kin  to  their  said  Father  are  entititled 
to,  and  make  paym't  and  satisfaction  to  the  said  Guardians  in 
behalf  of  the  said  Children.  What  upon  the  Balance  and  settle- 
ment of  your  Accounts  of  your  said  Admon.  they  may  be  entitled 
to  receive;  Hereof  fail  not  as  you  shall  ansMrer  the  Contrary  at 
your  peril.  Given  under  my  Hand  and  seal  at  Chas  Town  this 
tenth  day  of  Decern  *r  in  the  fifth  year  of  His  Majestys  Reign. 

Wm.  Bull 

Rutledge  Proct'r. 
By  His  Honor's 
Command 
Geo:  Johnston  Dep  Secry. 

In  the  Court  of  Ordinary  the  21st  Day  of  December  1764 

The  Foregoing  Citation  Continued  to  4th  January  next  by 
desire  of  the  proctor  for  the  actors  and  as  he  alledged  upon  appli- 
cation of  Mr.  Pinckney  for  the  Defendants. 

Geo:  Johnston, 

R^. 


EXCOlOnTNICATION  OF  JOSEPH  ASH  55 


Court  of  Ordinary  ^  ^ 

AT  <T/:r      Between 

4  January  1765. 


Between 


Livingston  and  Odingsell  Guardians 

and 
Joseph  Ash,  Rich'd  Cochran  Ash 
and  John  Ash,  Defendants. 
On  motion  of  Mr.  Rutledge  Proctor  for  the  actors  and  proof 
of  the  Service  of  the  Citation,  which  issued  in  this  Suit,  the  Defen- 
dants or  any  Proctor  for  them  not  appearing  to  answer  the  same. 
It  is  ordered  that  they  do  appear  on  Friday  next  the  Eleventh 
Instant  in  the  said  Court,  on  Pain  of  being  deemed  and  declared 
Contiunadous  and  proceeded  against  for  their  said  Contumacy 
according  to  the  Law. 

Geo.  Johnston, 
Reg'r. 

In  the  Court  of  Ordinary,  10th  Janr'y,  1765. 
Guardians  of  Theodora  Ash  and  Alt.  Actors 
Joseph  Richd.  Cochran  and  John  Ash  Def 'ts. 
Mr.  Pinckney  moved  to  be  admitted  Proctor  for  the  Defendants. 

Ordered  Accordingly. 
Mr.  Rutledge  Proctor  for  the  Actors  moved  that  the  Defendants 
Produce  and  file  their  Acco'ts  of  their  admon.  of  the  Estates  and 
Effects  of  Cato  Ash  and  the  same  were  produced  but  not  filed 
by  Mr.  Pinckney,  who  alleged  that  the  Court  had  no  jurisdiction 
in  this  matter.  Therefore  moved  that  the  actors  Proctor  might 
Exhibite  and  file  a  Libel  ag't  the  Defendants,  on  or  before  Next 
Tuesday. 

Ordered  accordingly,  and  likewise  that  Mr.  Pinckney  proctor 
for  the  Defendants  do  put  in  his  answer  to  the  same  on  or  before 
Tuesday  the  22d.  instant. 

In  the  Court  of  Ordinary,  8th  February,  1765. 
Odingsell  and  Livingston,  Actors, 
Joseph  Ash  and  others  Def 'ts. 
On  motion  of  Mr.  Rutledge  in  behalf  of  the  Actors  ^o  informed 
his  Honor  that  the  expected  Compromise  had  taken  place.    It  is 
ordered  that  the  Defendants  do  produce  and  deliver  their  acco'ts 
of  the  admon.  of  the  Goods  and  Chattels,  Rights  and  Credits 
of  Cato  Ash  deceased  unto  this  Court  on  Wednesday  next 
the  Thirteenth  day  of  Feb'ry  Instant,  and  that  Service  of  this 
Rule  on  their  Proctor  be  deemed  suflSdent  Notice  thereof  to 
the  sd  Parties. 

G.  Johnston,  Reg. 


Between 


Between  - 


56  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

So.  Carolina  Court  of  Ord'ny 
22  February  1765 

Livingston  and  Odingsell  Guardians 
of  Theodora  Ash  and  Alt.  Actors 

and 
Joseph  Ash  and  Richard  Cochran 
Ash  Defendants. 
Mr.  Rutledge  moVed.that  the  Defendants  not  appearing  in 
Court  this  Day  as  required  by  order  of  the  8th  of  February  instant 
to  render  accon'ts  of  their  admon  upon  Oath  or  upon  the  last 
court  day  or  Wednesday  preceding  might  be  decreed  Contumacious 
and  Excommimicated;  Whereupon  Mr.  Pinckney  prayed  a  further 
Day  to  be  allowed  the  Defen'ts  for  appearing  with  their  said 
acco'ts. 

And  it  is  thereupon  premptorily  ordered  that  the  Defendants 
do  appear  in  person  next  Friday  the  FIRST  Day  of  March  next 
and  Render  their  accounts  &c  upon  Oath  otherwise  that  they 
be  held  contumacious  and  Sentence  of  Excommunication  be 
denounced  against  them  for  their  Contumacy  according  to  Law. 

Geo.  Johnston 
Reg. 

In  the  Court  of  Ordinary  1st  Day  of  March*,  1765. 

Livingston  and  Odingsell  Guardians 
of  Theodora  Ash  &c.  Actors 

and 
Joseph  Ash  and  others  D'ef'ts. 
Mr.  Rutledge  moved  that  Joseph  Ash  not  appearing  as  required 
by  order  of  Court  to  render  his  accot's  of  his  Administration^  that 
he  be  deemed  contumacious  and  Excommunicated  for  such  his 
Contumacy,  and  His  honor  having  fully  heard  the  proctors  for 
both  parties  on  the  said  Motion — Ordered  that  the  said  Jospeh 
Ash  be  thrice  piiblickly  Called,  wbiich  being  done  and  he  not 
appearing,  but  contumaciously  absenting  himself  His  Honor  in 
pain  of  such  his  Contumacy  at  the  petition  of  the  Actors  proctor 
decreed  him  to  be  Excommunicated.  Whereupon  it  was  moved 
by  Mr.  Pinckney,  that  his  General  Protest  against  Sentence  of 
Exconmiunication  being  denounced  might  be  entered  amongst 
the  Acts  of  Court — Ordered  Accordingly,  And  also  Mr.  Rutledge's 
Motion,  That  his  Dissent  to  the  sd  protest  be  also  Entered  apud 
acta — 


Between  ' 


EXCOBOCUNICATION  OF  JOSEPH  ASH  57 

Then  a  Schedule  of  Excommunication  being  tendered  by  the 
Actors  proctor  to  his  Honor,  He  required  the  Reverend  Mr. 
Robert  Cooper  to  read  the  same;  but  he  prayed  (such  an  act 
being  disagreeable  to  him)  that  he  might  have  time  til  next 
friday  to  consider  whether  he  should  do  it;  Whereupon  the  Rev. 
Mr.  Joseph  Darce  Wilton  of  St.  Philip's  parish  in  this  behalf 
lawfully  Authorized  by  reason  of  the  premises  at  the  Uke  petition 
of  the  Actors  proctor,  by  a  Schedule  duly  read  and  signed  by 
him  Entered  amongst  the  acts  of  Court,  Excommunicated  the 
said  Joseph  Ash  by  the  Sentence  of  the  Greater  Excommimication. 
Thereupon. Mr.  Pinckney  moved  that  his  protest  Agt.  the  said 
Act  of  Excommunication  be  duly  Entered  inasmuch  as  there  is 
no  proof  before  the  Court  that  the  order  for  the  said  Joseph  Ash 
appearing  this  day  was  served  on  him  or  any  publick  notice  given 
him  of  the  same. 

Ordered  Accordingly,  And  Also  that  Mr.  Rutledge's  Dissent 
to  the  said  protest  be  also  Entered  in  as  much  as  he  alleges  that 
such  Service  or  notice  was  not  required  or  necessary  under  the 
Circumstances  of  this  case. 

Geo:  Johnstone 

Reg. 
South  Carolina. 

By  the  HonT)le  Wm.  Bull  Esq.  Lieut  Governor  and  Comm'r 
in  Chief  in  and  over  the  said  Province  and  Ordinary  of  the  same. 

To  all  singular  Rectors,  Curates  and  Qerks  whosoever  and 
wheresoever  in  and  throughout  this  sd.  Province  Greeting — 

Whereas  I  rightly  and  duly  proceeding  as  ordinary  aforesaid 
(Rest  of  page  a  blank.) 
Livingston  and  Odingsell 
Guardians  of  Ash  &c. 
agt. 
Joseph  Ash  &  oth's  Def 'ts 

In  the  Court  of  Ordinary  8th  March,  1765. 

Mr.  Pinckney  moved  that  Jos:  Ash  being  unwilling  under  sentence 
of  Exconmiunication,  might  be  absolved  therefrom  which  Mr. 
Rutledge  consenting  thereto  was  ordered  accordingly  on  the  said 
Defendants  paying  the  Fees  Contumacy — 

Then  Mr.  Pinckney  produced  the  said  Defendants  acco't  of  his 
Administration  and  they  were  referred  to  ye  Register  to  be 
examined  and  reported  upon  next  Friday — 


58  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Mr.  Rutledge  moved  also  that  the  sd  Defei^dant  might  also 
produce  aa  Inventory  of  what  the  Intestate's  Estate  at  present 
consists — the  sd.  Defendants  answer  by  his  Proctor  is  that  the 
Estate  consists  only  of  Money  as  mentioned  in  the  sd.  Accoimt. 

Whereupon  Mr.  Rutledge  suggested  that  there  are  Divers 
negroes  Goods  and  Chattels  belonging  to  the  Estate  of  which 
the  Defen't  ought  to  exhibit  an  inventory  and  for  proof  thereof 
refers  to  the  original  inventory  filed  in  the  Secretary's  office  and 
such  other  Evidence  as  he  may  adduce  in  his  Cause  and  Prays 
that  such  Proof  being  made  the  Defendant  may  be  obliged  to 
exhibit  an  Inventory  and  be  accountable  for  such  Articles — 
Mr.  Pinckney  Protested  Generally  to  the  Admission  of  such  proof 
and  Mr.  Rutledge  Dessented  to  the  sd.  Protest. 

[There  follow  a  number  of  other  hearings  on  the  same  case, 
until  it  was  settled.] 

Note,  By  English  laws,  jurisdiction  in  matters  concerning  the 
Probate  of  Wills  and  the  administration  of  the  personal  estates 
of  deceased  persons  including  the  supervision  of  the  acts  and 
accoimts  of  executors  and  administrators  was  vested  in  what  were 
called  the  Ecclesiastical  Courts.  Anciently  these  courts  were  strictly 
ecclesiastical  being  the  courts  of  the  Archbishop  or  Bishop  or  their 
representatives,  as  the  case  might  be. 

Having  no  secular  power,  the  final  sentence  these  Courts  could 
pronounce  upon  a  contumacious  litigant  vrho  refused  to  obey  the 
decree  of  the  Court  was  to  declare  him  "excommunicate."  The 
person  so  excommunicated  was  to  be  turned  out  of  church  by  the 
church  wardens  and  not  to  be  allowed  Christian  burial;  was  dis- 
abled to  be  a  witness  or  to  sue  or  commence  any  action  in  any 
of  the  Courts  of  Justice.  If,  notwithstanding  these  penalties,  the 
party  excommunicated  still  continued  in  his  contumacy,  resort 
could  be  had  to  the  secular  aim,  and  the  ecclesiastical  judge 
certified  to  the  King  that  the  party  excommunicated  had  obstinately 
persisted  in  his  contimiacy  for  more  than  forty  days,  which  cer- 
tificate being  delivered  to  the  Chancellor  in  the  Court  of  Chancery, 
a  writ  styled  the  writ  of  excommunicato  capiendo  issued  directed  to 
the  Sheriff  of  the  County  in  which  the  exconmiunicated  person 
lived,  directing  the  Sheriff  to  apprehend  him  and  keep  him  in  prison 
until  he  satisfy  the  Church  or  ecclesiastical  Cburt  for  his  contempt 
and  be  absolved  from  his  contumacy. 


EXCOlOfUNICATION  OF  JOSEPH  ASH  59 

The  right  to  this  writ  eidsted  at  common  law  but  it  was  recog- 
nized and  directed  to  be  enforced  by  the  Statute  enacted  by  Parlia- 
ment in  the  fifth  year  of  the  Reign  of  Queen  Elizabeth. 

This  Statute  was  never  made  of  force  in  South  Carolina  and  as  no 
ecclesiastical  courts,  properly  so  called,  ever  eidsted  in  that  Province, 
jurisdiction  in  the  matters  of  wills  and  estates  being  exercised  by 
the  Governor  as  ordinary  under  the  Statutes  of  that  Province,  no 
right  to  issue  the  common  law  writ  of  excommunicato  capiendo  seems 
ever  to  have  been  admitted  or  given  by  Statute.  Thus  a  decree  of 
exconmiunication  by  the  Provincial  Court  of  Ordinary  against  a 
contumacious  person  could  not  be  enforced  by  the  secular  process 
of  seizing  the  person  of  the  offender  and  committing  him  to  prison 
until  he  obeyed  and  was  absolved. " — ^Note  by  Judge  Henry  A.  M. 
Smith. 


LANDGRAVE  THOMAS  SMITH'S  VISIT  TO  BOSTON 

Contributed  by  Edwakd  L^dore  Smith  of  Boston, 

Massachusetts. 

In  the  Warrants  for  Lands  in  the  Province  of  South  Carolinai 
1680-1692,  166  is  recorded  a  warrant  for  650  acres  of  land  to  be 
laid  out  to  Mr.  Thomas  Smith  for  the  arrival  of  himself,  and  wife 
Barbara,  sons  Thomas  and  George  Smith,  Matthew  Crosse, 
Philip  Adams,  Joan  Atkins,  Johanna  Atkins,  Elizabeth  Adams, 
Aron  Atkins,  Ellen  and  Mary  Atkins  and  Michael  Peirce.  Dated 
10  July,  1684.1 

In  respect  to  the  name  of  Philip  Adams,  above,  a  mistake  may 
have  been  made  by  the  recorder,  and  it  may  be  fairly  inferred 
that  instead  of  Philip,  it  was  Phillis  Adams  who  was  meant. 

What  was  the  occasion  of  Landgrave  Thomas  Smith's  voyage 
to  New  England?  Cfan  it  be  true,  after  all,  that  the  statements 
of  "The  Octogenarian  Lady,"*  so  flouted  by  some,  had  a  real 
base  of  substantially  true  tradition? 

President  John  Adams,  whose  wife  was  of  the  Charlestown, 
Mass.,  family  of  Smith,  stated  that  she  was  connected  with  the 
family  of  Landgrave  Thomas  Smith  of  Carolina.  And  it  b  a 
matter  of  record  in  our  Middlesex  County  Register  of  Deeds  that 
a  Carolina  Smith  quit  claimed  his  interest  in  property  of  his  grand- 
parents, of  Charlestown,  Mass.,  to  an  unde  there. 

In  working  among  the  files  of  the  Supreme  Judicial  Court, 

_  •  

now  in  Coyrt  Files  of  Suffolk  County,  some  time  ago,  I  discovered 
the  following  papers. 

1  Thomas  Smith  and  his  family  arrived  in  South  Carolina  earlier  in  the 
year  1684  than  July  10,  as  the  following  abstract  shows. 

Indenture  20  June  1684;  Benjamin  Waring  of  Warington  ffort  near  the 
ponds,  Berkeley  County,  merchant,  to  Joan  Atkins  of  Berkeley  county,  Charles 
Town,  widow;  1600  acres  of  land  near  the  Ponds  and  ffort  called  Warington 
fort  .  .  being  measures  out  to  the  said  Waring  by  right  of  himself  and  family. 

Thomas  Smith,  Barbara  Smith,  and  Robert  Hull  witnesses. 

Recorded  June  21,  1684  (Office  Hist.  Commission  of  S.  C.  Misc.  Records, 
unbound  vol.  page  117.) 

«  The  Olden  Times  in  Carolina,  page  17-18. 

60 


ss. 


/ 


LANDGRAVE  SMITH'S  VISIT  TO  BOSTON  61 

(Court  FUes  Suffolk  No.  37394) 

[South]  Carolina 
Coun  Berks 

George  Smith  of  Charlestown  in  Berkeley  County  in  the 
Province  of  South  Carolina  Esq'  Son  of  Landgrave  Thomas 
Smith  late  of  the  Same  place  Esq'  Deced  being  duely  Sworn 
maketh  Oath  that  in  or  About  the  year  of  our  Lord  one  Thousand 
Six  Hundred  and  Eighty  four  to  the  Best  of  this  Dep^'  Reman- 
brance  this  Dep^  Father  the  Said  Landgrave  Smith  Transported 
himself  and  family  from  Dartmouth  in  Great  Britain  into  this 
Province  that  in  this  Dep*"  Fathers  Family  was  at  that  time  two 
Servant  Maids  Named  to  the  best  of  this  Dep*"  Remembrance 
and  belief  Phillis  and  Elizabeth  Adams  that  in  about  a  Twelve 
months  After  their  Arrival  in  this  Province  the  S<»  Dep*-  Father  ^^j^y 
together  with  his  family  went  to  Boston  in  New  England  carrying 
the  Said  Phillis  and  Elizabeth  Adams  with  Hun  and  that  in  Boston 
the  said  Phillis  Adams  was  marryed  to  one  Will™  Arnold  that  Some 
time  after  this  Dep^  Returned  to  Carolina  where  he  afterwards 
to  the  best  of  his  Remembrance  Saw  the  Said  T^lliam  Arnold 
&  Phillis  his  wife  they  having  also  Returned  to  this  Province 
from  New  England  And  fmlher  this  Dep^  Saith  not 

Geo:  Smith. 

Sworn  before  me  the  Words  Dart- 
mouth in  between  the  Seventh  & 
eight  line  being  First  interlined  this 
I2th  June  1735 

A  True  Copy  Exam^' 
C"  Pinckney,  J.  P.  Byfield  Lyde  Cler^' 

South  Carolina 
Coun  Berks 

John  Sheppard  of  Charles  Town  in  Berkeley  County  in  the 
Province  Aforesaid  Merch*  being  duely  Sworn  Saith  that  About 
f oiu:  years  ago  he  was  at  Boston  in  New  England  and  there  Lodged 
at  one  M"  Flints  in  or  about  Queen  Street  over  against  the  Prison  i/ 
and  that  Whilst  he  Loged  there  one  M"  Elizabeth  Duncan  of 
the  said  town  of  Boston  Widow  came  to  this  Depon**  Said  Lodging 
and  enquired  of  Him  whether  he  knew  or  had  heard  of  one  Phillis 
Arnold  in  Carolina  and  (Cancelled)  at  the  Same  time  informed  this 


62  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Dep*  that  the  Reason  of  Her  inquiry  was  [because]  that  the  said 
Arnold  was  her  nearest  Relation  She  had  in  the  World  and  to 
whom  She  intended  to  leave  the  Greatest  part  of  What  she  had 
in  the  World  and  in  Discourse  the  Said  Elizabeth  Duncan  informed 
this  Dep*  that  She  had  one  Sister  many  Years  before  came  over 
to  Boston  Servants  to  Landgrave  Thomas  Smith  and  that  in 
Boston  her  Said  Sister  marryed  one  Arnold  And  Afterward  with 
her  Said  Husband  returned  from  Boston  &  Settled  in  Carolina 
upon  which  Discourse  this  Dep*  informed  the  Said  Elizabeth 
Duncan  that  he  was  not  possitive  Whether  any  Such  Person  as 
She  inquired  about  was  then  Living  in  Carolina  but  when  he 
returned  he  would  enquire  and  Send  her  word  and  this  Dep^ 
fur[ther]   Saith  that  at  his  return  to  this  Province  he  made 

{ ]  for  the  Arnolds  and  was  informed  that  old  M"  Arnold 

the  Sister  of  the  Said  Elizabeth  Duncan  was  dead  and  had  left 
only  two  daughters  to  Say  Lidia  Arnold  &  Elizabeth  Arnold  and 
not  any  other  issue  and  this  [Dep*]  further  Saith  that  he  very 
well  knew  and  was  acquaint[ed]  with  the  Said  Lydia  Arnold  who 
being  a  Widow  mar[ryed]  with  one  John  Arnold*  of  Charlestown 
Shop  keeper  now  de[ad]  And  Which  Said  Lydia  Arnold  is  Also 
dead  without  Issue  as  this  Dep*  is  informed  &  veryly  believes  and 
this  Dep^  further  Saith  that  he  also  knew  Elizabeth  Arnold  the 
Other  Sister  Who  is  now  Living  in  Charlestown  being  a  Widow 
Woman  having  been  Marryed  to  John  Freeman  (since  Deceased) 
And  this  Dep^  further  Saith  when  he  had  Returned  into  this 
Province  as  Aforesaid  &  found  out  upon  enquiry  the  said  Eliza- 
beth Freeman  he  wrote  word  to  the  said  M"  Duncan  informing 
her  thereof  &  that  the  Said  M'*  Elizabeth  Freeman  was  the  only 
surviving  Relation  of  the  said  M"  Arnold  the  Elder  in  this 
Province  (excepting  the  Children  of  the  Said  Elizabeth  Freemans 
being  three  in  Number)  And  this  Dep*  further  Saith  that  Some 
time  after  he  had  wrote  and  acquainted  M"*  Duncan  with  the 
Circumstances  of  her  Sister  Arnolds  Family  as  Aforesaid  he 
Received  a  letter  from  the  Said  M"  Elizabeth  Duncan  dated  in 
Boston  wherein  She  thanked  this  Dep^  for  the  trouble  he  had 
taken  in  the  Said  Affair  and  acquainted  him  that  She  had  by 

'John  Arnold  and  Lidia  Reynolds  married  Nov.  18,  1723;  Mrs.  Lydia 
Arnold  buried  Jan.  6, 1726/7  (St.  Philip's  Regbter), 
Notes  by  the  Editor. 


LANDGRAVE  SMITH'S  VISIT  TO  BOSTON  63 

that  conveyance  Sent  a  present  of  two  Cheeses  and  a  Barrel  of 
flower  to  her  niece  the  said  Elizabeth  Freeman  and  desired  this 
Dep*  to  take  the  trouble  of  conveying  the  same  to  her  which  this 
Dep*  did  and  this  Dep*  further  Saith  that  to  the  best  of  this  Dep** 
Remembrance  M''  Flint  his  Land  lady  in  Boston  and  her  Daur 
M"  Richards  Wife  of  Cap*  Richards  of  Boston  were  in  Company 
with  this  Dep*  when  the  Said  Elizabeth  Duncan  made  the  enquiry 
about  her  Sister  Arnold  as  Aforesaid  and  further  This  Dep* 
Saith  not 

John  Sheppard. 
[Sworn]  before  me  this  13th  June  1735 
[Cas]  Pinkney  J.  P. 

A  True  Copy  Exam^ 

Byfield  Lyde  Cler" 

The  Boston  records  of  Births,  Marriages  and  Deaths  give  only 
the  information  below.  I  have  been  unable  to  find  any  further 
information  of  this  family. 

Lydia,       of  Wm.  and  Phillis     Arnold,  b.  Apr.  22, 1688 

Joseph,  "      "  PhimppiAmald,b.Oct.  2,   1691 

Elizabeth,       "       "  Phillis     AmeU,  b.  Aug.  19, 1694 

"  "       "         "       Arnold  d.  Sept.  8,   1694 

"  "       "         "       Amel     b.  Feb.  4,  1695 

After  this  latest  date  the  family  removed,  it  is  evident  to  Charles- 
ton, South  Carolina. 

As  to  Elizabeth  Adams  the  same  records  show  only  her  second 
marriage. 

Alexander  Duncan  and  EUza.  Tumerr  were  married  by  Mr. 
Miles  July  6, 1698. 

In  the  Rejpstry  of  Probate  for  Suffolk  Co.  are  the  wills  of 
Alexander  Duncan,  and  of  his  widow  Elizabeth  Duncan.  Among 
the  papers  in  the  settlement  of  Alexander  Duncan's  estate  is  a 
petition  from  his  widow  asking  for  an  accounting,  as  the  executors 
had  included  in  the  estate,  the  estate  of  her  former  husband, 
Matthew  Turner.  In  order  to  redeem  the  said  estate,  adminis- 
tration on  the  goods  of  Matthew  Turner,  Joyner,  deceased,  was 
granted  March  23,  1715,  to  Elizabeth  Duncan,  late  Turner, 
widow,  of  Boston,  his  relict. 

Matthew  Turner  was  rated  for  a  tax  in  Boston  in  1692.  After 
which  I  have  no  knowledge  of  him. 


y 


64  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGZINE 

Elizabeth  Turner,  widow,  is  rated  in  Boston  for  a  tax  in  1698^ 
Probably  in  March.  And  on  July  6,  same  year,  she  mairied 
Alexander  Duncan. 

Alexander  Duncan's  will  is  dated  Jan.  26,  1712.  He  gave  his 
wife  Elizabeth  all  of  his  estate  after  his  executors  should  pay  to 
his  "Honored  Mother  Margaret  Sands  £40."  "Loving  sbter  Aima 
Duncan  £20."  "Brother  WiUiam  Duncan  £40."  [All  of  South 
Queen's  Ferry,  Great  Britain.] 

Elizabeth  Duncan  of  Boston,  widow,  made  her  will  Oct.  6, 
1733.  Inventory  dated  November  6,  1733;  she  mentions  the 
ministers  of  the  old  Church  in  Boston,  Thomas  Foxcroft  and 
Charles  Chancey  each  to  have  £10  in  bills  of  public  credit;  to 
Mrs.  Rebecca  Bass  £10;  to  her  executor  Mr.  John  Bassett  £20; 
the  rest  of  her  estate  to  "two  of  my  nearest  kindred  by  blood 
descended  from  my  family  named  Adams  in  Dorsetshire  in  Great 
Britain." 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE 

CITY  GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
(CofUinued  from  January.) 

Died.  In  the  town  of  Orangeburg,  on  the  22d  ult  Capt.  Jacob 
Fitzpatrick  of  the  company  of  Amelia  light  dragoons,  and  was 
buried  on  the  day  following  by  his  corps,  with  the  honors  of  war. 

Died.  At  Philadelphia,  Mrs.  Sarah  Sproat,  widow  of  the  late 
Rev.  James  Sproat,  of  that  dty. 

This  is  the  fifth  death  which  has  taken  place  in  that family 

within  the  space  of  about  two  months.    (Wednesday,  Jan.  1, 
1794.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  Mr.  William  Turpin,  to  Mrs. 
Mary  Savage,  the  widow  of  Dr.  Riclucrd  Savage. 

Died.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  capt.  William  Barker,  late 
master  of  the  schooner  Friendship.    (Saturday,  Jan.  4, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Buist,  Mr. 
Nicholas  Norris,  to  Miss  Kezia  C^y,  of  Brooklyn,  Connecticut. 

On  Sunday  evening  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Walker,  to  Miss  Jean 
Douglas. 

Died.  In  this  dty,  on  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Edward  Hannahan. 
(Tuesday,  Jan.  7, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening  last,  Alexander  Tweed,  Esq;  to 
Mrs.  Ann  Lyon,  both  of  this  dty.    (Monday,  Jan.  13, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening,  Mr.  Alexander  Ross,  merchant, 
to  Miss  Ann  Blakie,  both  of  this  dty. 

Died.  At  Irish  Town,  in  the  parish  of  St.  Thomas  and  St. 
Dennis  the  noted  race  horse,  Flimnap.    (Tuesday,  Jan.  14, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  Edward  Rutledge,  jun.  Esq., 
to  Miss  Jane  Harleston,  daughter  of  John  Harleston,  Esq.  deceased. 
Rev.  William  Hammet,  to  Miss  Catherine  Darrell,  daughter  of 
capt.  Benjamin  Darrell. 

At  Georgetown,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Frost,  Mr.  Benjamin  Clarke 
Cutter  Esq.  of  Boston,  to  Mrs.  Sarah  Heame,  of  this  dty. 

65 


66  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGAZINE 

Died.  At  Stono,  on  Saturday  last,  in  the  bloom  of  life,  Mrs. 
Ann  Rivers,  the  wife  of  Mr.  George  Rivers,  of  that  place;  much 
lamented  by  aU  her  acquaintances.  She  was  a  dutiful  child,  an 
affectionate  wife,  a  tender  mother,  and  a  kind  mistress.  (Thurs- 
day, Jan.  16, 1794.) 

Died.  On  his  passage  from  Guadaloupe,  the  12th  instant,  Mr. 
Walter  M.  Greenland,  a  citizen  of  this  state  ....  a  non- 
commissioned officer  in  a  unifonned  company  of  this  state.  .  .  . 
He  has  left  a  widow    ....    (Monday,  Jan.  29,  1794.) 

Married.  Last  Simday  evening,  Mr.  Daniel  Delany,  to  Mrs. 
Amelia  Meurset,  both  of  this  dty.    (Wednesday,  Jan.  29, 1794.) 

Married.  At  St.  James  Santee,  on  Wednesday  the  15th  instant, 
Mr.  John  Axson  to  Miss  Martha  Arthur,  both  of  the  same  place. 

On  Tuesday  evening,  last,  the  28th  instant,  died  at  Mr.  Timms's, 
on  Charleston  neck,  Jeremiah  Patterson,  Esq;  merchant,  of 
Montego-bay,  in  Jamaica;  and  yesterday,  his  remains  were 
deposited  in  St.  Philips  church  yard,  attended  by  a  number  of 
respectable  inhabitants. 

Died.  Suddenly,  on  Tuesday  evening,  with  an  apoplectic  fit, 
Mr.  Daniel  Cobea,  of  this  city.    (Friday,  Jan.  31, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday,  the  28th  ult.  Mr.  C.  Bladden,  of  St. 
Matthew's,  to  Miss  Mary  A.  Miller,  of  St.  John's,  youngest 
daughter  of  major  Stephen  Miller,  deceased.  And  on  Sunday 
evening  last,  Mr.  Ebenezer  Porter,  to  Miss  Charity  Stevens,  Mr. 
Frederick  Borrows,  to  Mrs.  Polly  Tory.    (Tuesday,  Feb.  4, 1704.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  in  St.  Gorge's  parish,  Mr.  Joseph 
Treston  of  this  dty,,  to  Miss  Mary  Ever,  of  Dorchester.  (Wed- 
nesday, Feb.  5,  1794.) 

Married.  Oii  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Brown,  of 
fiorse-Shoe,  to  Miss  Mary  Johnstone,  of  the  same  place.  (Thurs- 
day, Feb.  6, 1794.) 

Died.  At  Santee,  Mr.  Janies  Screven,  eldest  son  of  gen.  James 
Screven,  of  Georgia,  deceased.  In  this  city,  on  Tuesday  last, 
Hopson  Pinckney  Esq.  of  St.  Thomas's  parish,  in  the  45th  year 
of  his  age. 

The  respective  duties  of  husband,  father,  friend  and  patriot 
he  discharged  with  so  much  exactness,  as  to  leave  a  pattern 

worthy  of  imitation "Alas!  Poor  Pinckney! 

"If  we  lament  thee 

"  Sure  thy  worth  was  great."    (Friday,  Feb.  7, 1794.) 


1CA1URIAGE  AMD  DEATH  NOTICES  67 

Died.  In  this  City,  on  Saturday  last,  Mr.  James  Cook.  (Mon« 
day,  Feb.  10, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Joseph  Latham,  watch- 
maker, to  Miss  Martha  Rolain,  both  of  this  dty.  (Tuesday, 
Feb.  11, 1794.) 

On  the  7th  inst.  departed  this  life,  at  her  residence  on  Daniel's 
Island,  Mrs.  Esther  Bourdeaux,  relict  of  Mr.  James  Bourdeaux, 

deceased,  a  native  of  this  state  in  her  74th  year 

Interred  in  the  family  cemetery,  at  her  former  residence  in  St. 
Thomas's  parish  (Wednesday)  Feb.  12,  1794. 

Died.  On  the  8th  instant,  on  Edisto  Island,  in  the  bloom  of 
life,  Christopher  Jenkins,  Esq.  His  remains  were  conducted  to 
the  "house  prepared  for  all  living"  by  the  Unity  Lodge  or  no.  26 
of  the  Ancient  York  Masons,  of  which  he  was  a  member;  and 
followed  by  a  numerous  train  of  relations,  friends  and  acquain- 
tances, whose  mournful  deportment  strongly  evidenced  their 
regret.  He  was  a  dutiful  son,  an  afiFectionate  husband,  a  tender 
and  indulgent  parent,  a  kind  master,  a  firm  friend,  and  a  real 
lover  of  mankind. 

''No  farther  seek  his  merits  to  disdose. 

Or  draw  his  frailties  from  their  dread  abode. 
There  they  alike  in  trembling  hope  repose, 
The  bosom  of  his  father  and  his  God." 

(Friday,  Feb.  14, 1794.) 

Died.  In  St.  John's  parish,  lamented  by  all  who  knew  her, 
Mrs.  Susanna  Brickell,  wife  of  doctor  James  Brickell.  (Thurs- 
day, Feb.  20, 1794.) 

Savannah.  Married,  last  Thursday,  John  Peter  Ward,  Esq. 
to  Miss  Hetty  MTntosh,  daughter  of  gen.  Lachlan  MTntosh. 
Yesterday,  Dr.  Levi  Meyers  of  George  Town  South  Carolina,  to 
M&s  Frances  Minis,  second  daughter  of  the  late  Philip  Minis, 
Esq.    (Friday,  Feb.  21, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  John  Whitney,  of  Boston, 
to  Mrs.  Mary  Somers,  of  this  dty.    (Saturday,  March  1, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  George  Banfield,  of  this 
dty,  to  Miss  Sarah  Tart,  daughter  of  Nathan  Tart,  Esq.  of  St. 
Thomas's  parish.    (Monday,  March  3, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Calvert,  to  Miss 
Judith  Elsenore,  both  of  this  dty.    (Tuesday,  Mar.  4, 1794). 


^  \ 


68  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening,  the  1st  instant,  the  rev.  doctor 
Henry  Purcell,  rector  of  St.  Michaele's  to  Miss  Blake,  daughter 
of  Edward  Blake,  Esq.  And  at  Coosawhatchie,  on  Thursday 
last,  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Gourlay,  Mr.  James  Scrimzour,  merchant, 
to  Miss  Mary  Morgandollar,  both  of  that  place.  (Wednesday, 
March  5,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last,  in  St.  James's  Goose  creek,  Mr.  Peter 
Tamplet,  aged  67  years.  ...  On  James  Island,  Mr.  John 
(5roskeys  jun.  of  that  Island.  On  Monday  morning,  Mr.  John 
Cannon  of  this  dty.    (Thursday,  March  6, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mrs.  Abrahams,  consort  of  Emanuel 
Abrahams.    (Friday,  March  7,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  night,  Nicholas  Harleston,  Esq.  to 
Miss  Sommers,  daughter  of  Hiunphrey  Sommers,  Esq.  deceased. 

On  the  5th  instant,  departed  this  life,  in  this  dty,  Mrs.  Jane 
Ewing,  consort  of  Mr.  Adam  Ewing,  merchant.  This  lady 
discharged  the  various  duties  of  wife,  mother  and  friend  with 
distinguished  fideUty  and  tenderness.  (Saturday,  March  8, 
1794.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  last,  Mr.  William  Simmons,  to  Miss 
Molsey  Cutflin,  both  of  this  dty.     (Tuesday,  March  10, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  capt.  John  Moore  to  Miss 
Ann  Stoll  Milligan,  both  of  this  dty.    (Friday,  Mstrch  14, 1794.) 

Married.  William  Johnson  Junr.  Esq.  to  Miss  Sarah  Bennett. 
(Thursday,  March  20, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Mrs.  Sawyer,  daughter  of  capt.  Edward 
Blake — Mr.  John  Boomer,  of  Wadmalaw. — ^At  Waccamaw, 
Thomas  Allston,  Esq.  of  that  plaee. — ;Mrs.  Wilson,  wife  of  Mr. 
Leightoti  Wilson. — ^In  this  dty,  l^r.  Thomas  Meyers.  (Monday, 
March  24, 1794.) 

Died.  At  Dr.  M'Cormick's  in  St.  John's  parish,  on  the  24th 
instant.  Dr.  Adam  Craig,  of  the  state  of  New  York.  (Thursday, 
March  27, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  William  Mathews,  of  St. 
James's  Santee,  to  Miss  Mary  Barksdale,  daughter  of  George 
Barksdale,  Esq.  deceased,  of  Christ  church  parish.  (Saturday, 
March  29, 1794.) 

Married.  At  Wilton,  on  Thursday  evening  the  13th  ult. 
Benjamin  James  Esq.  to  Miss  Jane  Stobo,  youngest  daughter  of 
Richard  P.  Stobo,  Esq.  deceased.    (Wednesday,  April  2,  1794.) 


liAlUEOAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  69 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  John  Long  to  Miss 
Mary  Thomas,  daughter  of  Mr.  Stephen  Thomas,  of  this  dty. 
(Thursday,  April  3,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening  last,  Jonah  Horry,  Esq.  to 
Miss  Lucretia  Sarrazin,  youngest  daughter  of  Jonathan  Sarrazin, 
Esq. — Mr.  Simon  Magwood,  of  this  city,  to  Miss  Molsy  Holman, 
of  Ashley  River. 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Moore,  of  this  dty. 
(Monday,  April  7,  1794.) 

Married.  Lately  in  St.  Thomas's  parish,  William  Harleston, 
Esq.  to  Miss  Sarah  Quash,  eldest  daughter  of  Robert  Quash,  Esq. 
Last  Thiu^day  evening  Robert  Young,  Esq.  of  Waccamaw,  to 
Miss  Eliza  Maria  Haig. 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  Charles  D.  Parker,  of  Goose  Creek. 
(Tuesday,  April  8,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Isaac  Neufville,  to  Miss  Ann 
Simons,  eldest  daughter  of  Mr.  Benjamin  Simons,  deceased. 
(Thursday,  April  10,  1794.) 

Died.  Rev.  James  Edmonds,  72  years  of  age,  SO  of  which  he 
had  spent  in  Carohna.  He  formerly  offidated  as  minister  of  the 
Independent  church  in  this  dty,  and  since  his  release  from  that 
charge  usually  travelled  many  himdred  miles  to  preach  the  gospd 
to  destitute  congregations.  When  age  and  infirmities  rendered 
him  incapable  of  that  hard  duty,  he  found  a  comfortable  retreat, 
and  all  the  conveniences  of  a  comfortable  home,  under  the  hospit- 
able roof  of  Josiah  Smith.    .    .    .    (Friday,  April  11, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  in  Christ  church  parish,  Mr. 
Hugh  Paterson,  of  this  dty  merchant,  to  Miss  Catherine  Capers, 
daughter  of  Gabriel  Capers,  Esq.    (Monday,  April  14, 1794.) 

Married.  In  St.  John's  parish,  on  Thiursday  last,  Mr.  Peter 
Porcher  of  St.  Stephen's  parish,  to  Miss  Susanna  Charlotte  Ravend 
second  daughter  of  Daniel  Ravenel,  of  St.  John's  parish,  deceased. 
On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  John  S.  Haabowiski,  merchant, 
to  Miss  Ann  Swanson,  of  Belville.     (Tuesday,  April  IS,  1794.) 

Died.  In  the  prime  of  life,  on  the  15th  inst.  after  a  short  but 
painful  illness  (which  he  sustained  with  firm  patience)  Mr.  Michael 
Lindauer,  only  son  of  the  late  Mr.  Henry  lindauer  of  this  dty. 
(Thursday,  April  17,  1794.) 

Married.  Henry  Grey,  Esq.  of  Goose  Creek,  to  Mrs.  Jolly, 
of  this  dty. 


70  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGAZINE 

Died.  Last  Saturday  morning,  in  the  bloom  of  youth,  George 
P.  Cox,  of  this  dty,  attorney  at  law,  and  member  of  the  incorpo- 
rated ancient  artilleiy.    His  remains  were  deposited  last  evening 

with  the  usual  honors,  in  St.  Philip's  church  yard 

(Monday,  April  21,  1794.) 

Married.  Francis  Bremar,  Esq.  Surveyor  general  of  this  state, 
to  Miss  Eliza  Elliott  Darby,  daughter  of  James  Darby,  Esq. 
deceased.    (Wednesday,  April  23,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  last,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Buist,  Mr.  William 
Bailis,  to  Mrs.  Eliza  Galloway,  both  of  this  dty. 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  in  this  dty,  Mr.  John  MTarland, 
formerly    of  Philadelphia.     (Thursday,  April  24, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening,  Citoyen  Julien  Desmoulins, 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Berry,  of  this  dty.     (Friday,  April  25, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  the  17th  instant,  Mr.  George  Parker, 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  R.  Daniel,  daughter  of  the  late  Robert  Daniel, 
Esq.  of  St.  Thomas's  parish.  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Joseph 
Watson  to  Miss  Mary  Lahisse,  daughter  of  Mr.  Maurice  Lahisse, 
of  this  dty.     (Saturday,  April  26,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  last,  in  the  70th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Mary 
St.  John,  widow  of  Mr.  Audion  St.  John,  deceased.  (Thursday, 
May  1, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  James  Zealy,  sen.  aged  54  years. 
....    (Monday,  May  5, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  George  Forest,  to  Mrs. 
Charity  Lushington.  (Both  of  this  dty.  Saturday,  May  10, 
1794.) 

Married.  On  Saturday  evening,  Mr.  James  Kay,  to  Miss  Mary 
King,  both  of  this  dty. 

Died.  In  Christ  diurch  parish,  on  Saturday  last,  Mrs.  Eden, 
aged  73.  On  Thursday  following,  Mrs.  Whilden,  aged  68;  and  on 
Friday,  Mr.  Darr,  aged  78— making  together,  induding  the  odd 
months,  about  220  years.  The  two  former  were  natives  of  this 
state,  the  latter  of  Germany.    .    .    .    (Tuesday,  May  13, 1794.) 

Died.  After  a  short  illness,  Mr.  Ballard  Finch,  a  son  of  Edward 
Findi,  Esq.  of  Newbury  county,  aged  19  years  and  6  months. 
(Wednesday,  May  14, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last  O'Neil  Gough  Stevens,  Esq.  to  Miss 
Ann  Palmer,  daughter  of  Capt.  John  Palmer,  of  St.  Stephens. 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  71 

Died.  On  the  17th  inst.  Mr.  Henry  Naser,  only  son  of  Mr. 
Philip  Naser,  of  this  city,  aged  27  years,  10  mos.  and  7  days. 
....    a  member  of  the  German  Fusiliers 

Mrs.  Ann  Berwick,  widow  of  John  Berwick,  Esq.  deceased. 
(Tuesday,  May  20,  1794.) 

Lately  died  in  England,  at  the  Hotwells,  deservedly  lamented, 
after  a  lingering  illness,  Mrs.  Vanderhorst,  wife  of  Elias  Vander- 
horst,  Esq.  American  consul  at  Bristol.  (Wednesday,  May  21, 
1794.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  in  the  67th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs. 
Badderly  of  this  city.  Yesterday,  Mrs.  Robertson,  the  widow 
of  John  Robertson.    (Thursday,  May  22, 1794.) 

Married.  In  London,  February  4th,  James  Heyward,  Esq.  of 
South  Carolina,  to  Mrs.  Edge,^  of  Devonshire  street,  Portland 
Place.    (Tuesday,  May  27,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Friday  last,  Mr.  John  Tarver,  to  Miss  Mary 
Watson,  of  Hampstead. 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  in  the  prime  of  life,  Mr.  John  Will 
of  this  dty,  eldest  son  of  Mr.  Philip  Will,  deceased,  late  of  Monck's 
comer.    (Wednesday,  May  28,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening,  Thomas  Somersall,  Esq.  to 
Miss  Maria  Stevens,  daughter  of  Daniel  Stevens,  Esq.  both  of 
this  city. 

Died.  On  the  26th  instant,  at  his  plantation  in  St.  Thomas's 
parish,  Thomas  Dearington,  Esq.  an  old  and  respectable  inhabi- 
tant of  that  place.    .    .     (Thursday,  May  29,  1794.) 

Died.  On  the  19th  ult.  in  Beaufort  district,  near  Cooswatchie 
Mrs.  Margaret  Allison,  widow  of  Mr.  George  Allison,  in  the  68th 
year  of  her  age.  On  Thursday  last,  in  this  dty,  Mrs.  Elizabeth 
Rivers,  84  years,    (Monday,  June  2, 1794.) 

*  James  Heyward  bom  at  "Old  House"  plantation,  Granville  Co,  April  13, 
1764;  died  Oct.,  4  1796;  was  a  son  of  Daniel  Heyward  and  Elizabeth  Gignilliat 
his  wife;  Susan  (Cole)  Edge,  was  bom  in  Wales,  Sept.  22,  1763,  and  died  at  Flat 
Rock,  N.  C,  Sept.  5,  1846;  buried  in  the  church  of  St.  John's  in  the  Wfldemess, 
Flat  Rock,  N.  C.  After  the  death  of  James  Heyward,  she  married  Charles 
Baring,  Esq.,  of  Exeter,  England,  and  Flat  Rock,  N.  C.  Mrs.  Heyward  had  a 
life  interest  in  the  estates  of  her  first  husband,  consisting  of  many  negroes,  and 
valuable  lands;  she  was  an  elder  sister  of  Mrs.  Mary  Cole,  or  Tudor,  Lady 
Berkeley,  concerned  in  the  Berkeley  Peerage  Case,  heard  before  the  Committee 
of  Privileges  of  the  House  of  Lords,  1811. 


72  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENBALOGtCAL  MAGAZINE 

Died.  On  Wednesday  last,  in  the  (67th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs. 
Ann  Hinds,  the  wife  of  Mr.  Patrick  Hinds.  Mr.  Wilkinson, 
keeper  of  Livery  stables.    (Saturday,  June  21, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  morning,  at  Oak  Forest,  near  Dorchester, 
Mrs.  Elizabeth  Wright,  daughter  of  John  Izard,  Esq.  deceased, 
and  wife  of  A.  Wright,  Esq.  of  Jan)[aica.  (Tuesday,  June  24, 
1794.) 

Married.  On  the  14th  instant,  at  Georgetown  Mr.  ^^Uiam 
Inglesby,  of  this  city,  to  Mrs.  Screven,  of  that  town.  (Wednesday, 
June  25, 1794.) 

Died.    On  Monday,  Mr.  Richard  Saltus  (shipwright)  late  of 

Philadelphia,  after  a  few  days  illness Left  a  wife  and 

three  children.    .    .    .    (Thursday,  June  26, 1794.) 

(To  be  continued) 


(MUTilw)    USlUOS.20 

THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
CHARLESTON,  S.  C. 


VOLUME  XXII,  No.  3 


iiaie  in  Vnitti  Statu  of  Ameriat 


PUBUCATION  COMMITTEE 

Joseph  W.  BAsmivxiXy  Henry  A.  M.  SioiHy 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OF  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webber« 


CONTENTS 

Izard-Laurens  Correspondence 73 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  The  City  Gazette 89 

Abstracts  of  Records  of  the  Proceedings  in  the  Court  of 

Ordinary,  1764r-1771 94 

ICstorical  Notes 99 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  If  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  Historical  Society.  Members  of  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January) ,  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
receiving  the  Magaanes,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Sodety,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer- 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

South  Carolina  Hbtoncal  Society, 

Ghailefton,  S.  C, 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXn  JULY,  1921  No.  3 


IZARD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE 

From  South  Casouna  Histosical  Society  Collections 

(Continued  from  April) 

[kalph  izabd  to  cohmittee  of  congress  for  foreign  affairs] 

Paris  25th  July  1778.* 

Copy 
Gentlemen 

I  was  on  the  9th  Instant  honoured  with  your  Letters  of  5th. 
February,  and  14th  May,  which  are  the  first  that  I  have  ever 
received  from  you. 

The  death  of  the  Elector  of  Bavaria,*  which  happened  on  the 
30th  of  last  December,  has  produced  a  war  between  the  Empress 
Queen  and  the  King  of  Prussia.  This  will  not,  I  hope,  materially 
affect  America;  but  it  has  occasioned  an  imlucky  circumstance. 
The  Empress  Queen  before  this  event  was  very  well  disposed 
towards  us;  and  the  King  of  Prussia  expressly  declared  that  he 
would  be  the  second  Power  in  Europe  to  acknowledge  our  Inde- 
pendency. The  death  of  the  Elector  of  Bavaria  has  made  an 
alteration  in  the  political  sentiments  of  both  of  those  Powers. 

*  This  letter  was  laid  before  Congress  by  the  Committee  of  Foreign  Affairs, 
and  read  Monday,  December  7,  1779  {Jour,  Cont.  Cong,,  vol.  XII,  p.  1198) 
The  letters  printed  here  do  not  appear  in  Wharton's  Diplomatic  Correspondence 

^  Maximilian  Joseph,  with  his  death  the  electorate  of  Bavaria  came  to  an 
end. 

73 


74  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

As  soon  as  the  Austrian  Troc^  had  taken  possession  of  part  of 
Bavaria,  the  King  of  Prussia  applied  to  the  Court  of  France  as 
one  of  the  quarantees  to  the  succession  of  the  Elector  of  Barvaria, 
in  case  of  the  failure  of  male  issue  in  the  latter,  settled  at  the 
Peace  of  Westphalia  in  1640.  The  French  Ministry  declined 
giving  any  succours  to  the  King  of  Prussia,  which  has  diqx)sed 
him  to  look  towards  England.  The  Troops  of  Hanover,  Hesse, 
and  Brunswick,  together  with  several  other  German  Princes  in 
friendship  with  England,  may  be  of  considerable  service  to  him, 
and  therefore  he  is  very  unwilling  at  present  to  offend  that  Crown. 
On  the  other  hand  the  Empress  Queen  applied  to  the  Court  of 
France  for  24,000  Men  to  assist  her  against  the  King  of  Prussia 
by  virtue  of  the  Treaty  of  Versailles,  concluded  in  1756;  but  the 
French  Ministry  declined  likewise  affording  her  any  assistance. 
France  in  that  Treaty  guaranteed  the  Dominions  which  the 
Empress  Queen  was  at  that  time  poss'ed  of;  and  the  24,000  Men 
therein  stipulated  to  be  furnished,  could  not  have  been  intended 
to  assist  her  in  encreasing  them.  The  refusal  has  however  offended 
her;  and  in  consequence  of  what  I  have  related,  the  Courts  of 
Berlin,  and  Vienna  have  both  refused  to  receive  Mr.  Lee.  The 
Grand  Duke  of  Tuscany  is  unfortimately  obliged  to  regulate  his 
proceedings,  by  those  of  the  Court  of  Vienna.  Had  his  conduct 
depended  upon  himself,  I  should  have  gone  to  Florence  several 
months  ago;  but  in  the  present  situation  of  affairs  I  have  the 
mortification  of  not  being  received  by  the  Prince  to  whom  I  am 
appointed,  when  I  know  that  he  is  desirous  of  receiving  me,  and 
will  do  it  as  soon  as  it  is  in  his  power.  I  have  been  invited  to  reside 
at  Florence  as  a  private  Gentlemen,  and  have  been  assured  that  it 
would  be  agreeable  to  the  Grand  Duke.  If  any  circumstances 
should  happen  to  make  it  probable  that  by  going  there,  I  may 
be  able  in  any  manner  to  accomplish  the  wishes  of  Congress,  I 
shall  set  out  immediately.  I  hoxe  hitherto  acted  as  appeared 
to  fne  most  likely  to  meet  with  their  approbation,  and  shall  continue 
to  do  so;  it  will  make  me  very  happy  to  be  informed  that  I  have 
not  been  mistaken.  The  Abbe  Niccoli  is  the  person  whom  I 
mentioned  in  my  Letter  of  18th  December.'  He  is  the  Tuscan 
Minister  at  this  Court,  and  I  am  well  assured  he  is  in  great  favour 

» Letter  addressed  to  Committee  of  Foreign  Affairs,  printed  in  Diplomatic^ 
Correspondence y  vol.  2,  p.  455. 


IZAKD-LAU&ENS  CORRESPONDENCE  75 

at  his  own.  Every  thing  in  his  power  I  am  convinced  has  been 
done,  to  serve  our  cause.  I  enclose  you  two  Letters  which  I 
have  written  to  him  on  the  subject  of  money,  but  am  sorry  to 
say  that  the  situation  of  affairs  in  Germany  does  not  allow  me  to 
have  very  flattering  expectations  at  present.  I  have  thought  it 
proper  to  state  these  facts,  that  Congress  may  be  enabled  to  judge 
of  them,  and  give  me  their  instructions  accordingly;  which  I 
shall  follow  to  the  best  of  my  ability. 
I  have  the  honour  to  be  Gentlemen, 

Your  most  obed:  hble  Servant 

Ra:  Izard. 
The  Honble  the  Committee 
of  Congress  for  foriegn  affairs. 

P.S.  I  have  received  the  first  volume  of  the  Journals  of  Congress, 
and  hope  soon  to  be  favoured  with  the  second. 
Endorsed:  July  25,  1778 
R.  Izard  Esq'r. 
rec'd  Dec.  5. 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  HENRY  LAURENS] 

Paris  16th  Jan'y  1779 
Copy 
Dear  Sir, 

I  have  waited  with  the  utmost  anxiety  for  Letters  from  you, 
and  the  Committee.  Your  Letter  of  19th  May  is  the  only  one 
that  I  have  been  favoured  with  since  your  arrival  at  Congress. 
I  have  frequently  informed  you  of  my  reasons  for  staying  here, 
and  of  the  impossibility  of  borrowing  money  according  to  the 
Resolution  of  Congress  of  4th  last  February.*  Genoa  is  the  only 
part  of  Italy  where  it  is  possible  to  procure  any  money;  and  even 
there  it  will  not  be  lent  without  the  Court  of  France  would  become 
security  for  the  repayment  of  it.  I  have  repeatedly  applied  to 
the  Ministry  for  their  assistance,  which  has  been  refused.  I  have 
informed  myself  of  the  nature  of  Loans  in  Genoa,  and  find  that  if 

*  Resolutions  empowering  the  commissioners  at  the  Court  of  Tuscany  to 
obtain  a  loan  not  exceeding  one  million  Sterling,  at  the  usual  rate  of  interest, 
on  the  faith  of  the  thirteen  United  States  of  America,  for  a  term  not  less  than 
ten  years  (Jour.  Cont.  Cong.j  vol.  X,  p.  120). 


76  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

the  Court  of  France  would  have  agreed  to  become  our  security, 
I  should  notwithstanding  have  met  with  great  embarrassment. 
Each  sum  of  money  procured,  must  have  been  deposited  in  the 
public  Bank,  without  my  having  the  power  of  touching  a  farthing 
of  it,  till  the  engagement  entered  into  upon  the  occasion  should 
return,  ratified  by  Congress.  The  interest  however,  must  com- 
mence as  soon  as  the  deposit  should  be  made;  which  would  be  at 
least  Six  per  Cent,  besides  the  charges.  These  terms  appear 
totally  inadmissible. 

As  the  Resolution  of  Congress  does  not  limit  me  to  any  place, 
I  was  desirous  of  going  to  Holland,  and  endeavoured  to  borrow 
the  money  there.  The  Commissioners  at  the  Court  of  France 
have  opened  a  Loan  in  Holland  which  has  not  hitherto  proved  suc- 
cessful. It  has  been  begun  two,  or  three  Months,  and  yet  there  has 
not  been  more  than  between  Fifty,  and  and  Sixty  Thousand  Florins 
received;  which  shews  that  there  would  be  no  probability  of  my 
accomplishing  the  wishes  of  Congress  there.  If  the  Court  of  France 
would  exert  themselves,  they  might  supply  America  with  several 
Millions  Sterling.  Some  difficulties  would  certainly  occur  but  they 
could  be  surmounted,  and  when  the  great  advantages  which  this 
Kingdom  will  derive  from  what  America  has  already  done  is 
considered,  every  exertion  ought  to  be  made,  and  every  assist- 
ance afforded  us  in  their  power.  From  the  Letters  that  have 
been  sent  you,  you  will  judge  how  extremely  disagreeable  my 
situation  for  some  time  past  must  have  been.  It  was  my  duty 
to  take  notice  of  the  scandalous  proceedings  of  Dr.  Franklin;*  and 
as  he  is  not  very  remarkable  for  having  a  forgiving  temper,  he  has 
been  constantly  watching  for  an  opportunity  of  shewing  his  re- 
sentment. You  have  been  informed  that  I  had  received  the  Two 
Thousand  Louis  D'Ors  from  the  Commissioners  for  my  support. 
This  sum  I  managed  with  the  utmost  frugality  which  is  evident, 
from  my  having  maintained  my  family  with  it  for  Fifteen  Months, 
from  September  1777,  the  time  when  I  was  informed  of  the  ap>- 
pointment,  with  which  Congress  had  honoured  me,  to  December 
1778.  This  sum  is  considerably  less  than  I  had  ever  been  able  to 
maintain  my  family  with  in  England,  when  it  was  much  smaller 
than  it  is  at  present;  and  there  does  not  appear  to  be  any  diflPer- 

•  For  Izard's  disputes  with  Franklin,  see  Dip,  Correspondence,  vol.  1. 


IZA1U)-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  77 

ence  in  point  of  expense  between  Paris  and  London.  I  wrote  to 
the  Commissioners,  and  informed  them  that  the  money  which  I 
had  received  from  them  was  spent,  and  desired  to  know  whether 
they  chose  to  renew  my  credit  at  the  Public  Bankers,  or  that  I 
should  draw  on  them  for  what  money  I  might  have  occasion  for. 
Dr.  Franklin  wrote  me  that  they  would  supply  me  with  no  more 
money.  This  Letter  he  desired  his  Colleagues,  Mr.  Lee,  and  Mr. 
Adams,  to  concur  in;  which  they  both  refused  to  do.  The  unrea- 
sonableness of  this  proceeding  was  pointed  out  to  him.  He  was 
desired  to  consider  how  improper  it  was  to  create  new  causes  of 
dispute  at  so  dangerous  a  time  as  the  present.  He  was  reminded 
of  the  Resolution  of  Congress  of  9th  May,  1778,  which  directs 
"that  the  Commissioners  at  the  other  Courts  of  Europe  be  em- 
powered to  draw  Bills  of  Exchange  from  time,  to  time,  for  the 
amoimt  of  their  expences,  upon  the  Commissioners  at  the  Court 
of  France."  He  was  base  enough  to  quibble  about  words,  and 
said  that  the  instruction  set  forth  that  those  Commissioners  who 
were  ai  the  other  Courts  of  Europe  should  be  supplied  with  money; 
but  that  as  I  was  not  (U  Florence,  nor  Mr.  William  Lee  at  Vienna, 
it  should  not  extend  to  us. 

As  soon  as  I  was  informed  of  this  matter  I  drew  a  Bill  for  Five 
Himdred  Louis  D'Ors,  in  favour  of  the  public  Banker,  and  waited 
on  the  Commissioners  at  Passy  with  it  myself.  I  was  fortunate 
enough  to  meet  them  all  three  together  and  presented  the  Bill 
to  Dr.  Franklin  first,  as  the  eldest.  He  refused  to  accept  it,  re- 
peated the  conversation  which  he  had  had  with  his  Colleagues 
on  the  subject,  and  in  addition  to  it  said  that  the  sum  which  I 
had  already  had  was  so  extravagantly  great,  that  he  was  sure  I 
could  not  have  spent  it;  and  if  I  had  he  saw  no  reason  why  the 
Congress  should  maintain  my  family.  It  will  be  unnecessary  to 
trouble  you  with  the  whole  of  the  conversation,  which  was  full 
of  insolence,  falsehood,  and  brutality.  I  reminded  him  of  the 
impropriety  of  my  going  into  Italy;  of  my  staying  in  Paris  being 
in  consequence  of  the  advice  received  from  the  Court  of  Florence, 
and  from  the  Commissioners  at  this  Court,  himself  being  included 
among  them.  All  arguments  with  him  were  fruitless.  He  had 
taken  his  Resolution,  and  could  not  be  dissuaded  from  attempting 
to  gratify  his  revenge  whatever  might  be  the  consequence.  Mr. 
Lee,  and  Mr.  Adams  totally  disapproved  of  the  proceeding,  and 


78  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  Al«>  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

accepted  the  Bill.  I  can  not  express  to  you  how  much  this  afiFair 
has  shocked  me,  from  every  consideration  Public  and  private; 
and  I  call  upon  you  as  a  man  of  honour,  and  a  friend  to  your 
Coimtry  to  set  your  face  against  iL  It  can  not  possibly  be  con- 
ceived that  Congress,  who  have  upon  the  most  virtuous  principles 
opposed  the  Tyranny  of  the  King,  and  Parliament  of  England, 
should  calmly  suffer  their  authority  to  be  insulted,  their  instruc- 
tions evaded  by  a  contemptible  quibble,  and  these  Gentlemen 
whom  they  have  honoured  with  their  confidence,  to  be  ill  treated 
for  doing  their  duty,  by  any  haughty,  and  Tyrannical  Individual 
whatever. — It  was  strongly  reported  here  sometime  ago,  that 
you  were  coming  over  as  Minister  at  the  Court  of  France,  I  am 
extremely  sorry  to  find  that  this  report  is  not  confirmed,  and  can 
with  truth  assure  you  that  every  friend  to  America  would  rejoice 
at  such  an  event.  It  is  a  misfortune  that  it  has  not  taken  place; 
and  so  essential  is  it  to  have  a  man  of  ability,  and  honour  in  that 
office,  that  I  think  it  a  duty  you  owe  your  Coimtry  to  obtain  it, 
if  it  be  possible.  Our  interests  at  the  different  Courts  of  Europe 
are  so  intimately  connected  with  the  proceedings  of  the  Court  of 
France,  that  it  is  of  the  greatest  importance  they  should  be  well 
conducted  here;  and  I  am  most  thoroughly  convinced  that  no 
man  of  honour  can  do  his  duty,  and  serve  his  Country  properly, 
who  has  any  connexion  with  Dr.  Franklin.  It  is  a  painful  part 
of  my  duty  to  write  to  you  in  this  manner,  and  I  hope  it  will  be 
properly  attended  to.  It  is  said  here  that  Mr.  Deane  is  to  come 
over  to  Europe  in  a  public  character,  that  his  interest,  and  Dr. 
Franklin's  are  triumphant  in  Congress,  and  that  those  Gentlemen 
are  to  have  the  entire  management  of  the  afifairs  of  America  in 
Europe.  If  so,  it  will  be  high  time  for  every  honest  man  to  retire, 
as  the  only  possible  means  of  avoiding  embarrassment,  and  dis- 
grace.'^ The  public  dispatches  from  Congress  are  daily  expected; 
and  till  they  confirm  this  report,  I  can  not  believe  it  to  be  true. 

There  has  been  no  great  change  in  the  Politics  of  Europe,  since 
I  wrote  to  you  last.  The  war  in  Germany  still  continues;  but  the 
Courts  of  Versailles,  and  Petersburgh  are  endeavouring  to  bring 
about  an  accommodation,  which  many  people  think  will  be  effected 
before  the  opening  of  another  Campaign.  The  Spanish  naval 
Armaments  still  continue  to  be  carried  on  with  vigor;  and  though 
no  declaration  has  yet  been  made  by  the  Court  of  Madrid,  to  that 


IZAKD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  79 

of  London,  every  appearance  seems  to  indicate  an  intended  coop- 
eration with  France.  The  English  amuse  themselves  in  expect- 
ing to  derive  some  advantages  from  the  divisions  among  our 
General  OflScers  in  America,  in  which  I  hope  they  will  be  mistaken. 
Their  own  Admirals  and  Generals  are  at  the  same  time  tearing 
one  another  to  pieces.  Sr.  Hugh  Palliser  has  brought  Admiral 
Keppel  to  a  Court  Martial  for  misconduct,  and  neglect  of  duty  on 
the  27th  and  28th  of  last  July;  and  the  proceedings  of  the  two 
Howes  are  to  imdergo  Parliamentary  investigation  as  soon  as  the 
vacation  is  over.  The  whole  nation  is  divided  about  these  matters, 
and  it  is  likely  that  some  important  consequences  may  be  produced 
by  them.  Would  to  God  that  the  Peace  of  America  could  arise 
from  the  divisions  among  her  enemies  I  My  Wife  desires  her 
Compliments  to  you,  and  we  both  oflFer  them  to  your  Son.  She 
has  very  lately  received  a  Letter  from  Mrs.  Laurens,  who  is  very 
well,  and  writes  that  little  Fanny  is  grown  a  fine  healthy  Child. 
When  you  communicate  this  intelligence  to  the  Colonel,  be  so 
good  as  to  present  him  at  the  same  time  with  the  dutiful  respects 
of  his  Godson  George,  who  is  a  least  as  fine  a  Boy  as  any  in  France. 

I  am  Dear  Sir 

Your  most  ob't  Hble  Serv't 

Ra:  Izard. 

His  Excellency 

Henry  Laurens  Esq. 

Endorsed:  R.  Izard 

16  Jan'y  1779.  Rec'd  25  July 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  S.  C.  DELEGATES  IN  CONGRESS] 

Paris  6th  FebV  1779 
Copy 
Gentlemen 

I  had  the  honour  of  writing  to  the  Committee  for  foreign  Affairs 
on  28th  of  last  month,  desiring  that  they  would  obtain  leave  from 
Congress  for  me  to  return  to  America.  This  I  did  because  it 
appeared  impossible  for  me  to  be  of  any  service  to  my  Country  in 
the  present  situation  of  affairs.  The  interests  of  America  have 
already  suffered  too  much  by  the  disagreements  among  the  Serv- 


80  so.  CA.  raSTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

ants  of  Congress  in  this  part  of  the  world,  and  an  immediate  stop 
should  be  put  to  them  if  possible.  I  see  no  way  of  doing  this  but  by 
recalling  that  party  who  have  it  least  in  their  power  to  be  of  service 
to  America  in  Europe.  I  am  willing  to  suppose  m)rself  one  of 
them,  and  therefore  request  that  you  will  be  good  enough  to  move 
for  me  to  return  to  America.  As  soon  as  this  is  procured  I  must 
beg  the  favour  of  you  to  transmit  me  several  copies  of  it  in  hopes 
that  one  of  them  may  get  to  my  hands  time  enough  for  me  to 
avoid  a  winter's  passage. 

I  should  be  obliged  to  you  if  you  would  at  the  same  time  procure 
a  particular  order  from  Congress  that  my  expenses  may  be  paid 
me,  as  you  will  find  what  an  attempt  has  been  made  to  evade  the 
Resolution  of  7th  May  1778. 

I  beg  your  pardon  for  the  trouble  I  am  giving  you,  and  am  with 
great  regard 

Gentlemen, 

Your  Countryman 

and  very  humble  Servant 

Ra:  Izard, 
To  the  Delegates  from  the  State 
of  South  Carolina,  at  Congress. 
Endorsed:  Ra:  Izard  6th  Feb'y  1779 
Rec'd  July. 

[same  to  same] 

Paris  26th  April  1779. 
Gentlemen 

The  Reverend  Mr.  Ford*  has  been  a  considerable  time  in  France, 
and  I  have  every  reason  to  believe  him  an  honest  man,  and  a 
friend  to  his  Country.  He  will  have  the  honour  of  delivering  this, 
and  I  take  the  liberty  of  introducing  him  to  you — Our  enemies 
appear  to  be  making  every  preparation  against  us  in  their  power. 
The  Hostilities  in  Europe  will  prevent  their  sending  any  great 
reinforcements  to  America.    Germany  has  however  been  ran- 

•  Hezekiah  Ford,  Arthur  Lee's  second  Secretary;  his  first  being  Thornton, 
a  British  Spy;  Ford  was  also  under  suspicion,  it  being  claimed  that  he  was  a 
lory  and  a  British  Spy.  He  passed  for  a  Church  of  England  Clergyman,  and 
was  Chaplin  to  the  5th  N.  C.  Regt.  (Continental)  enlisted  20  April  1777  (JV.  C. 
State  Records,  vol.  16,  p.  1056  and  Wharton,  Dip.  Corresp,  vol.  1,  pp.  539-541). 


IZA£D-LAUR£NS  COKRESPONDENCE  81 

sacked,  and  may  probably  afford  about  Three  Thousand  Men. 
These  added  to  what  are  expected  to  be  sent  from  England,  and 
Scotland,  may  amoimt  to  about  Seven,  or  Eight  Thousand  Men. 

We  have  been  long  without  receiving  any  News  here  directly 
from  America,  and  are  very  anxious  to  know  the  event  of  the 
Campaign  in  Carolina  and  Georgia.  Comodore  Gillon  has  done, 
and  is  still  doing  every  thing  in  his  power  to  accomplish  the  ob- 
jects of  his  Commission;  but  I  am  sorry  to  say  that  I  have  no  very 
sanguine  hopes  that  he  will  meet  with  that  assistance  from  our 
Allies,  which  our  necessities  require,  and  their  abilities  can  well 
afford.  The  State  of  South  Carolina  could  not,  I  think,  have 
chosen  a  fitter  person  for  this  business,  than  the  Commodore. 
M..  Garard  is  to  be  inmiediately  recalled,  and  replaced  by  the 
Chevalier  de  la  Luzerne  who  was  formerly  Minister  Plenipoten- 
tiary from  the  Court  to  the  Elector  of  Bavaria.  He  is  a  very 
worthy  Gentlemen,  and  will  do  the  business  of  his  Court  with 
fidelity;  and  will  not  concern  himself  with,  nor  enter  into  the  party 
views  of  any  Individual  whatever,  to  the  dishonour  of  his  own 
Country,  and  confusion  of  ours. — 

I  have  the  honour  to  be  with  great  regard 
Gentlemen 
Your  most  obedient  himible  Servant 

R:  Izard. 

To  the  Delegates  from  the  State  of  South  Carolina  at  Congress. 

Endorsed: 

Ralph  Izard,  26th  April  1779 

Reed  25th  August. 

[iZAKD  TO  HENRY  LAURENS] 

Addressed: 
To  The 

Honourable 

Henry  Laurens  Esq. 
North  America 

Paris  18th  FebrV  1779 
Dear  Sir 

I  enclose  you  two  papers  which  I  received  on  the  13th  instant, 
a  day,  or  two  after  the  arrival  of  the  Marquis  de  la  Fa)rette  in 


82  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

this  City.  They  were  directed  to  me  under  the  same  cover,  to 
the  care  of  Mr.  Grand,  our  public  Banker  here.  As  soon  as  I 
received  them  I  called  on  Mr.  Grand,  and  enquired  of  him  who 
delivered  the  Letter  thus  addressed  to  him.  He  informed  me  that 
Colonel  Gimat,  one  of  the  Marquis  de  la  Fayette's  Aids  de  Camps 
brought  it  to  his  House.  I  wrote  to  the  Colonel,  and  begged  to 
know  from  whbm  he  received  it.  His  answer  was  that  it  was  given 
to  him  at  Passy,  by  young  Mr.  Franklin.  This  last  Gentleman 
informed  me  that  it  was  put  into  his  hands  by  the  Marquis  de 
la  Fayette.  I  then  waited  on  the  Marquis,  and  begged  that  he 
would  let  me  know  how  it  came  into  his  possession.  He  told 
me  that  he  brought  many  Letters  from  America,  but  as  he  had 
made  no  list  of  them,  it  was  impossible  for  him  to  tell  if  the  one 
I  shewed  him  was  among  the  niunber  or  not.  I  shewed  him  the 
contents  of  the  Letter,  pointed  out  to  him  the  intentions  of  the 
writer,  and  hoped  that  he  would  assist  me  in  discovering  so  wicked 
a  person.  He  seemed  to  feel  the  matter  very  properly,  and 
promised  that  he  would  do  everything  in  his  power  observing  at 
the  same  time  that  it  was  very  possible  that  some  artful  person 
might  have  contrived  the  means  of  conveying  the  Letter  among 
those  which  he  sent  to  Passy. 

No  1,  and  2  were  not  written  by  the  same  hand.  The  writing 
of  No.  1  is  extremely  like  that  of  Dr.  Bancroft.^  I  shewed  it  to 
Mr.  Pringle,  and  Mr.  Lee,  and  asked  them  whose  writing  they 
thought  it,  without  giving  them  my  opinion  about  it.  They  are 
well  acquainted  with  Dr.  Bancroft's  hand,  and  are  both  fully  of 
the  opinion  that  it  was  written  by  him.  The  papers  No.  1,  and  2 
had  both  been  dipped  in  water  that  the  writing  might  be  blotted, 
and  have  the  appearance  of  having  been  wet  at  Sea.  But  the 
cover  which  contained  them  was  clean,  and  the  direction  had 
evidently  not  been  wet.  Perhaps  the  writer  thought  that  if  he 
had  wetted  the  cover,  it  must  have  given  it  so  remarkable  an 
appearance,  that  the  Marquis,  upon  having  it  shewn  him,  must 
have  known  that  no  such  Letter  had  been  brought  by  him.  I 
am  unable  to  express  to  you  how  this  villainy  has  shocked  me. 
It  is  evident  from  the  paper  No.  2  that  most  of  my  Letters  to  you 

» Edward  Bancroft,  M.D.,  F.R.S.  1744-1821,  naturalist  and  chemist; 
secret  agent  for  Franklin  (DipL  Corrcsp.,  vol.  1,  pp.  621-641). 


IZARD-LAURENS  CORRESPONDENCE  83 

have  been  opened,  and  copied  before  they  got  to  your  hands.^ 
You  will  see  what  use  is  intended  to  be  made  of  this,   by  the 
infamous  misrepresentations  contained  in  that  paper.    Mr.  Deane, 
and  his  adherents  know  that  both  you,  and  I  are  likely  to  prove 
formidable  opponents  to  them,  and  therefore  think  it  would  be 
very  serviceable  to  their  views  if  they  could  make  a  break  between 
us.    The  enclosed  papers  were  thought  likely  to  produce  that  eflFect 
I  have  too  good  an  opinion  of  you  to  have  a  moments  doubt  about 
the  falsehood  of  the  charge  laid  against  you,  or  to  suspect  that  my 
confidence  in  you  has  been  ill  placed.   After  having  read  Mr.  Deane's 
Address  in  November  last  to  the  people  of  America,  I  shall  be 
surprised  at  nothing  that  he  or  his  p)arty  are  capable  of  doing. 
If  the  Congress,  and  the  People  do  not  unite  in  punishing  so  out- 
rageous, and  daring  an  attack  upon  their  Liberty,  and  Independ- 
ence, the  friends  of  America  in  Europe  will  be  seriously  alarmed 
for  the  continuance  of  them.    The  wisdom  of  the  Congress  has 
withstood  every  effort  of  the  enemy,  and  I  can  not  believe  that 
Mr.  Deane  will  be  allowed  to  effect  that  ruin  to  our  Country  which 
Great  Britain  has  in  vain  attempted.    The  Congress  is  our  Centre 
of  Union;  and  our  safety  depends  upon  the  confidence  of  the 
Public  in  that  Body,  which  Mr.  Deane  has  exerted  himself  to 
destroy.    Mr.  Lee  will  give  the  most  satisfactory  answer  to  the 
charges  which  have  been  made  against  him  in  Mr.  Deane's  publica- 
tion, and  I  doubt  not  but  Congress  will  do  justice  to  a  faithful, 
and  able  Servant  of  the  Public,  who  has  been  most  cruelly  injured. 
Our  dispatches  from  Congress  of  28th  October  inform  us  that  Dr. 
Franklin  is  appointed  Sole  Minister  Plenipotentiary  at  the  Court. 
In  my  last  Letter  to  you  of  16th  January,  I  acquainted  you  with 
his  having  refused  to  furnish  me  with  money  for  my  support  in 
defiance  of  the  order  of  Congress.    The  Grand  Duke  of  Tuscany 
has  it  not  in  his  power  to  receive  me  publicly;  and  I  think  it  would 
be  injurious  to  the  dignity  of  Congress  if  I  were  to  reside  at  his 
Court  in  a  private  Character.    My  Commission  therefore  does 
not  enable  me  to  render  any  service  to  my  Country;  and  I  think 
of  endeavouring  to  get  to  America,  especially  as  I  have  not  the 
means  of  maintaining  my  self  long  in  Europe.   As  I  have  repeatedly 
acquainted  you,  and  the  Committee  of  my  situation  respecting 

*  Izard  mixed  his  private  and  public  correspondence  to  Laurens  in  the 
same  letters,  Laurens  giving  out  to  Congress  the  public  matter  only. 


84  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Italy,  I  hope  my  next  dispatches  will  be  so  explicit,  as  to  enable 
me  to  determine  on  what  I  ought  to  do.  I  shall  most  truly  rejoice 
if  they  contain  leave  for  me  to  return  home.  I  shall  continue  my 
endeavours  to  get  to  the  bottom  of  the  affair  respecting  the  Letter 
above  mentioned,  said  to  be  brought  by  the  Marquise  de  la  Fayette; 
but  I  fear  it  will  prove  as  difficult  a  matter  as  the  rcbbery  of  the 
dispatches  that  were  intrusted  to  Folgier,* 

My  Wife  has  lately  presented  me  with  another  Daughter/® 
and  is  as  well  as  possible.  She  desires  her  G>mpliments,  and  I 
am  Dear  Sir 

Yours  friend,  and  hble  Servant 

Ra:  Izard. 

Honble  Henry  Laurens,  Esq. 
Endorsed:  Ralph  Izard  18  Feb'y 
1779.  Reed  August 

(Endosiu^  No.  1,  mentioned  in  the  above  letter) 

[anon.,  SIGNED  S.   A.  TO  R.   IZAED] 

Philadelphia.  OctV  22,   1778. 

Copy 

Sir/ 

Though  a  perfect  Stranger  to  you  personally,  yet  I  think  it  my 
duty  to  inform  you,  that  all  your  Letters  to  the  President  have 
been  read  in  Congress;  Copies  have  been  given  out  to  Mr.  Deane,  and 
to  the  friends  of  Dr.  Franklin — that  many  observations  have  been 
made  much  to  your  disadvantage,  while  your  Friends  can  only  say 
''those  Letters  were  never  designed  to  be  made  public,  and  that 
you  suffer  in  consequence,  of  an  ill  placed  confidence;  be  it  as  it 
will  you  must  be  sensible  that  you  suffer,  when  I  assure  you  that 
the  enclosed  is  handled  about  among  the  Members  of  Congress, 
and  Gentlemen  out  of  doors,  as  containing  in  plain  English  the 

•  Capt.  John  Folger,  who  claimed  to  have  been  sent  by  the  comissioners 
at  Paris,  with  dispatches  to  Congress,  the  packet  when  opened  contained  only 
blank  papers;  Capt.  Folger  was  for  a  time  imprisoned  (Jour,  Cant.  Cong,, 
vols.  X  and  XI,  also  N.  C,  State  Records,  vol.  13,  p.  22). 

*•  Anne,  who  married  Wm.  Allen  Deas;  she  edited  a  volume  of  her  father's 
correspondence. 


IZA1U>-LAT7K£NS  CORRESPONDENCE  85 

Sense  of  your  Letters;  I  learn  further  that  a  Copy  of  your  Letters 
with  these  enclosed,  are  actually  sent  to  the  Press  to  be  published. 
It  is  not  for  a  Stranger  to  advise  you,  but  one  who  wishes  you  well, 
can  not  help  acquainting  you  with  the  above  Facts. 

I  remain  most  disinterestedly, 

Your  real  tho',  unknown  friend,  and 
very  humble  Servant 

Signed  S.  A. 

Honble  Mr.  Izard. 
[Second  leaf]    Copy. 

Paris  February  IS,  1779.  We  do  certify  that  we  have  frequently 
seen,  and  are  well  acquainted  with  the  hand  writing  of  Dr.  Edward 
Bancroft,  and  do  believe  the  preceding  Letter  directed  to  the 
Honble  Mr.  Izard  dated  oct.  22,  1778,  and  signed  S.  A.  to  be 
written  by  him. 

Signed.         H.  Ford. 

J.  J.  Pringle. 

Ludwell  Lee. 

[Of  the  two  enclosures,  niunbered  1  and  2,  and  endorsed  by 
Laurens,  "Traits  of  the  infamous  practices  of  party  in  Congress," 
No.  2,  is  a  copy  of  a  parody,  not  without  force  and  cleverness,  on 
Izard's  letters  to  Henry  Laurens  denoimcing  Deane  and  Franklin. 
It  is  printed  in  full  in  Wharton,  Revolutionary  Diplomatic  Cor- 
respondence,  vol.  1,  page  590-591  also  to  be  foimd  in's  Materials 
for  History,  so  we  will  not  reprint  it  here.] 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  S.  C.  DELEGATES  IN  CONGRESS] 

Paris  3d  June  1779 
Gentlemen 

I  had  the  honour  of  writing  to  you  on  the  5th  February;  a 
Copy  of  which  is  enclosed. 

It  is  said  that  Mr.  Laurens  is  gone  to  Carolina;  I  enclose  there- 
fore an  extract  of  a  Letter  which  I  wrote  to  him  on  16th  January. 

Wishing  as  much  as  possible  to  avoid  disputes  with  Dr.  Franklin, 
I  desired  Mr.  Grand  the  Public  Banker  to  speak  to  him,  and  to 
endeavour  to  prevail  upon  him  to  comply  with  the  order  of  Congress 
of  7th  May  1778.    This  application  proved  fruitless;  and  when  I 


86  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

found  that  Dr.  Franklin  was  determined  at  all  events  to  gratify 
his  revenge  by  distressing  me,  I  wrote  Mr.  Grand,  and  desired  him 
to  advance  me  such  a  sum  of  money  on  account  of  Congress  as 
might  be  necessary  for  my  expense  until  the  pleasure  of  Congress 
should  be  known.  My  letter  reminded  him  that  there  was  a 
peculiar  propriety  in  my  making  the  application  to  him  as  the 
Banker  of  the  Congress;  that  if  I  should  be  compelled  to  leave 
Europe  without  the  permission  of  my  Constituents  they  might 
know  that  it  was  not  come  without  my  having  taken  such  steps 
as  appeared  the  most  likely  to  put  it  in  my  power  to  avoid  it. 
Mr.  Grand  in  very  civil  terms,  declined  complying  with  my  request. 
Indeed,  as  his  employment  of  Banker  to  the  Congress,  is  profitable 
to  him,  it  would  have  been  dangerous  for  him  to  have  attempted 
to  render  Dr.  Franklin's  designs  toward  me  ineffectual.  Dr. 
Franklin  pretended  to  Mr.  Grand  that  if  the  order  of  Congress 
was  complied  with,  the  Bills  which  were  drawn  on  him  from 
America,  must  be  protested.  I  do  not  doubt  but  this  will  appear 
to  you,  as  it  does  to  me,  a  most  frivolous  excuse  for  his  conduct. 
My  Letters  to  Mr.  Laurens,  which  I  understand  have  been  laid 
before  Congress,  show  very  clearly  how  unfit  this  person  is  to  be 
entrusted  with  the  management  of  their  affairs.  The  mischief 
he  has  already  done  is  irreperable;  and  I  am  convinced  that  if  he 
is  not  removed,  the  affairs  of  America  in  Europe  will  grow  from 
bad  to  worse — It  has  been  shown  that  he  disobeyed  the  directions 
of  Congress,  respecting  the  conununication  of  the  Treaties  to  me, 
to  answer  some  private  purpose,  that  he  endeavoured  to  lay  his 
Country  under  a  very  improper,  and  unequal  restraint  in  the  11th 
and  12th  Articles  of  the  Treaty  of  Commerce,  and  that  some  other 
parts  of  the  Treaties  may  prove  troublesome  to  America  by  his  con- 
duct. Congress  have  never  signified  their  disapprobation  to  him 
that  I  have  known  of.  On  the  contrary,  they  have  put  it  in  his 
power  to  distress  such. of  their  Servants  as  have  fallen  under  his 
displeasure  for  having  done  their  duty  to  their  Country.  I  am  in 
daily  expection  of  receiving  Letters  from  the  Committee,  which 
I  hope  will  put  it  in  my  power  to  return  to  America,  as  Congress 
have  long  known  the  reasons  of  my  not  going  to  Italy.  I  have 
the  honour  to  be 

Gentlemen 

Your  most  obed't  hble  Servant 

Ra.  Izard. 


IZAIUVLAU&ENS  CORRESPONDENCE  87 

To  the  Delegates  from  the 

State  of  SouUi  Carolina  at  Congress. 

Endorsed: 

Ralph  Izard  3d.  June 

1779  Reed.  23  Aug't. 

[RALPH  IZARD  TO  JOHN  LAURENS] 

Philadelphia  27th  March  1781 

Dear  Sir 

You  will  by  this  time,  I  hope,  be  safe  arrived  in  France;  and 
before  this  gets  to  your  hands,  I  hope  that  you  may  have  executed 
the  business  that  has  been  intrusted  to  you,  with  advantage  to 
your  Country,  and  honour  to  yourself.  The  greatest  exertions  have 
been,  and  are  now  making  by  our  Countr3anen  to  the  Southward. 
Immediately  after  the  defeat  of  Colonel  Tarleton,  on  the  17th 
January,  Lord  Comwallis  made  a  rapid  March,  with  3000  Regulars, 
after  General  Morgan,  in  hope  of  recovering  the  Prisoners,  amount- 
ing to  between  five  and  six  hundred,  which  he  had  taken.  This 
pursuit  was  made  through  North  Carolina,  even  to  the  borders 
of  Virginia.  His  Lordship  lost  his  object,  and  the  Prisoners  are 
secured.  His  next  attention  was  to  General  Greene,  who  made  a 
very  masterly  retreat,  with  an  inferior  niunber  of  Men,  chiefly 
Militia.  Lord  Comwallis  has  since  retreated  as  far  as  Guilford 
Court  House,  about  40  miles  to  the  Southward  of  Hillsborough, 
in  North  Carolina.  General  Greene  followed  him  immediately, 
and  the  two  Armies  are  now  very  near  each  other.  Frequent 
skirmishes  have  happened,  with  various  success.  On  the  15th  of 
this  Month  a  considerable  part  of  both  Armies  engaged,  with 
much  loss  on  both  sides.  There  is  no  Letter  from  Gen'l  Greene 
about  it,  but  Congress  received  one  yesterday  from  Governor 
JeflFerson  which  mentions  what  I  have  just  related.  Gen'l  Greene 
has  been  considerably  reinforced;  but  his  Army  are  badly  armed, 
badly  Cloathed,  and  in  want  of  almost  every  necessary.  We  are 
yet  at  a  loss  to  know  here  why  the  cloathing  and  arms  which  have 
been  so  long  lying  in  France,  have  not  been  sent  to  this  Country. 
Captain  Jones  has  not  given  any  satisfactory  accoimt  of  this 
affair;  and  it  is  a  matter  that  merits  the  attention  of  the  Court  of 
France.    Congress  will  soon,  I  hope,  have  Letters  from  you  on 


88  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

that  subject;  and  I  doubt  not  but  you  will  have  got  such  infonna- 
tion  as  to  enable  you  to  be  very  explicit  about  it.  Arnold  has  been 
doing  a  great  deal  of  mischief  in  Virginia.  He  has  been  a  con- 
siderable time  fortified  with  about  Fifteen  Hundred  Men  at 
Portsmouth.  General  Washington  has  been  at  Rhode  Island 
and  concerted  with  M:  de  Rochambeau,  and  M:  Destouches  a 
most  excellent  plan  for  the  relief  of  our  G)untry.  The  whole 
Squadron,  with  Twelve  Hundred  French  Troops  on  board,  sailed 
from  Rhode  Island  on  the  Evening  of  the  8th  of  this  Month 
against  Arnold.  Admiral  Arbuthnot  followed  on  the  morning  of 
the  10th  and  arrived  at  the  Capes  of  Virginia,  before  M:  Des- 
touches had  got  in.  An  engagement  happened  on  the  16th  in  which 
two  of  the  French  Ships,  and  as  many  of  those  of  the  Enemy  were 
greatly  damaged.  Unfortimately  Arbuthnot  with  his  Squadron 
has  got  into  the  Capes  of  Virginia,  and  Arnold  is  relieved.  The 
Marquis  delaFayette,  who  is  now  in  Virginia  was  to  have  co- 
operated with  the  French  Troops.  Twelve  Hundred  of  the  Light 
Infantry  from  Genl.  Washington's  Camp,  are  now  at  Annapolis, 
and  were  to  have  gone  down  the  Bay  immediately  upon  M:  Dcs- 
touche's  getting  into  it.  Five  himdred  Maryland  Troops  arc 
with  them  at  Annapolis.  This  force  added  to  a  considerable  body 
of  Militia,  which  Baron  Stuben  has  near  Arnold's  Lines,  would 
not  only  have  secured  success  against  that  Traitor,  but  also  have 
given  such  assistance  to  General  Greene  as  would  have  enabled 
him  in  one  Campaign  to  recover  the  whole  of  the  Southern  States, 
which  would  soon,  I  think,  have  given  Peace,  Independence  and 
happiness  to  our  Country.  We  are  in  daily  expectation  of  hearing 
of  the  arrival  of  a  considerable  reinforcement  of  ships,  and  Troops 
from  France.  God  grant  that  we  may  not  be  disappointed  and 
that  something  effectual  may  be  done  before  the  Enemy  get  re- 
inforced likewise.  Captain  Lavacher  who  has  been  exchanged, 
and  is  lately  arrived  here  from  CharlesTown,  gives  a  melancholy 
Picture  of  the  sufferings  of  our  friends  in  that  unhappy  Country. 
If  the  reinforcement  arrives  soon  from  France,  I  think  that  Genl. 
Washington's  first  object  will  be  to  relieve  them.  I  am  with 
great  regard 

Dear  Sir 
Yours  friend,  and  hble  Servant 

Ra:  Lsard 
John  Laurens,  Esq. 


MARRIAGE  AND   DEATH  NOTICES   FROM  THE    CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 
(Continued  from  April) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  John  Poaug,  Esq.  to  Miss 
Harriet  Smith,  youngest  daughter  of  Thomas  L.  Smith,  Esq. 
deceased.     (Thursday,  July  3,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening,  Mr.  Samuel  Rogers,  to  Miss 
Susannah  Baker,  daughter  of  Mr.  John  Baker,  deceased.  (Saturday, 
July  5,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  morning  last,  Peter  Noble,  a  free  black 
man,  and  a  native  of  this  place,  aged  103  years  and  7  months, 
(Tuesday  July  8,  1794.)  Married.  Lately  at  New  York,  Charles 
Edmund  Genet,  late  minister  plenipotentiary  for  the  republic 
of  France  to  the  United  States  of  America,  to  Miss  Clinton, 
daughter  of  George  Clinton,  governor  of  New  York.  (Thursday, 
July  10,  1794.) 

Died.    Robert  Gibbes,  Esq,  of  John's  Island.    As  a  husband, 

father  friend,  and  master,  his  virtues  were  pre-eminent 

(Friday,  July  11, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  night  last,  Mrs.  Gairdner,  the  amiable 
consort  of  Mr.  James  Gairdner,  merchant,  of  this  city, — ^A  few 
days  ago,  in  the  bloom  of  life.  Miss  Elizabeth  Gibbes  Carson, 
daughter  of  the  deceased  James  Carson,  Esq.  of  John's  Island. 
(Saturday,  July  12,  1794.) 

Married.  Near  Orangeburg,  on  the  7th  inst.  William  Dunbar, 
Esq.  of  Winton  County,  to  Mrs.  Sarah  Myddleton,  widow  of  the 
late  col.  Ch.  S.  Myddelton,  deceased. 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  Mr.  Jonathan  Gardner,  of  North 
Kingstown,  Rhode  Island.     (Wednesday,  July  16,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  Mr.  Joseph  Hankins,  of  New  York. 
(Thursday  July,  17,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  morning,  much  lamented,  at  his  house  in 
Hasell-street,  Mr.  Robert  Pearce,  bricklayer.  (Monday,  July  21, 
1794.) 

89 


90  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  John  Gillard,  of  the  French 
privateer  Industry,  to  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Neuman,  relict  of  Mr. 
George  Neuman,  late  of  this  dty  deceased.  (Tuesday,  July  22, 
1794.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  Mr.  Joseph  Whitfield,  formerly  of 
New  Bedford  in  Massachusetts  state.  His  remains  were  decently 
interred  in  St,  Philip's  chiu-ch-yard.     (Wednesday,  July  23,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday,  aged  23  years,  Mr.  Marshus  Buckley,  of 
a  very  respectable  family  in  Colchester,  Connecticut.  In  his 
relative  sitiiations  he  deported  himself  as  a  dutiful  son,  and  affec- 
tionate brother;  as  an  artisan  was  diligent  and  industrious.  .  .- 
.  .  His  remains  were  decently  deposited  in  the  New  Indq)en- 
dant  church  yard.     (Thursday,  July  2,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Wednesday  evening  Ray  Green,  Esq.  attorney- 
general  of  the  state  of  Rhode-Island,  to  Miss  Flagg,  only  daughter 
of  George  Flagg,  Esq.     (Friday,  July  25,  1794.) 

Death.  On  Friday  last  Mrs.  Mary  Rivers,  the  wife  of  Thomas 
Rivers,  Esq.     (Monday,  July  28,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  the  28th  inst.  Master  Joseph  Glover, 
son  to  Wilson  Glover,  Esq.     (Wednesday,  July  30th.  1794.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  night,  Daniel  Wilson,  Esq.  in  consequence 
of  a  wound  received  in  a  duel  fought  on  the  27th.  ult.  (Friday, 
August  1,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Friday-morning,  in  the  prime  of  life,  Mr.  Daniel 
Thomson,  of  New  York;  on  the  evening  following  his  remains  were 
decently  interred  in  the  Presbytvian  church  yard,  attended  by 
a  number  of  respectable  citizens.     (Monday,  August  4, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  morning,  2  instant,  Mr.  Thomas  R.  Smelie, 
a  young  man  held  in  high  estimation  by  his  friends.  (Wednesday, 
August  6,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Wednesday  night,  Mr.  Henry  Tucker,  son  of  Dr. 
Thomas  Tudor  Tucker. — Capt.  Lierson  of  the  ship  Nordische- 
Lowe,  very  suddenly.     (Friday,  August  8,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Henry  Balfoiu",  lately  from  Edin- 
burgh.    (Monday,  August  11,  1794.) 

Died.  At  Mrs.  Riddlesberger's,  on  the  road  between  Charleston 
and  Orangeburg,  James  Green  Hunt,  Esq.  one  of  the  chancelors 
of  this  State.  Mr.  Hunt  left  Charleston  on  Tuesday  last, 
in  company  with  Mr.  Harper,  for  Columbia,  but  was  seized  on  the 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  91 

way  with  a  violent  attack  of  the  fever  which  terminated  in  his 
death  on  the  Sunday  morning  following.  Every  possible  assist- 
ance was  given  him  by  doctors  Waring  and  Prentice,  who  very 
obligingly  and  humanely  went  to  his  immediate  relief.  His 
disorder  however,  was  so  violent,  as  to  ba£9e  the  effects  of  medicine, 
and  the  skill  of  his  ph3^icians.  The  public,  in  the  death  of  this 
gentleman,  has  sustained  the  loss  of  an  able  and  upright  judge; 
and  his  friends,  of  a  polite  and  agreeable  companion.  He  died 
in  the  belief  of  the  great  truths  of  Christianity,  and  evinced  a 
well  groimded  hope  of  a  happy  immortality.  (Tuesday,  August 
12,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Tuesday  morning  last,  Mr.  Charles  Otis,  in  the  18th 
year  of  his  age,  son  of  brigadier-general  Joseph  Otis,  of  Barnstable, 
state  of  Massachusetts.  He  was  sensible  of  his  approaching  end, 
and  died  with  a  fortitude  becoming  a  Christian,  and  uncommon 
in  a  youth  of  his  age. 

On  Monday  evening  died,  that  celebrated  and  pleasing  comedian 
Mr.  John  Bignall.  By  his  death,  the  conmiunity  have  lost,  not 
only  the  principal  ornament  of  the  stage,  but  an  agreeable  member 
of  society  and  his  family  an  afiFectionate  relative.  His  funeral 
was  attended  by  the  fraternity  of  Ancient  York  Masons  (of  which 
he  was  a  member)  in  masonic  procession,  and  a  numerous  assem- 
blage of  respectable  citizens.  (Tuesday,  August  14,  1794.)  [The 
paper  for  August  IS  gives  the  committee  appointed  to  confer  on 
the  subject  of  the  yellow  fever  then  prevalent,  and  also  gives  an 
account  of  a  benefit  given  by  West  and  Bignall  for  the  Orphan 
House,  and  the  letter  from  the  Conmiissioner  of  the  Orphan  House 
upon  the  death  of  Bignall.] 

Died.  On  Wednesday  morning  last,  after  a  short  illness,  at 
Mr.  Wood's  tavern,  in  St.  John's  parish,  on  his  way  from  Charles- 
ton, major  Joseph  ^Lyons,  inspector  of  the  brigade  of  militia  of 
Pinckney  district.     (Sarutday,  August  16,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  morning,  the  17th  instant,  Mr.  Edward 
M'Crady  who  endured  a  long  and  painful  illness  without  a  murmur. 
Sincerity  and  warmth  of  heart  invariably  characterized  his  friend- 
shq>s;  and,  next  to  the  welfare  of  his  family,  it  seemed  his  most 
cordial  delight  to  relieve  the  imfortimate,  and  aid  the  friendless 
stranger;  nor,  in  his  breast,  did  the  cause  of  liberty,  of  his  country 
and  of  himianity,  lack  a  firm  and  strenous  advocate.  (Monday, 
August,  13,  1794.) 


92  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Deaths.  Mrs.  Hutchins,  the  wife  of  Mr.  W.  B.  Hutchms, 
schoohnaster.  Mr.  Thomas  Philips,  sadler.  (Tuesday,  August 
19,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  evening,  after  a  short  and  painful  illness, 
Mr.  Samuel  Baker,  lately  from  Brigthamiston,  Sussex,  in  England. 
(Wednesday,  August  20,  1794.) 

Deaths.  The  19th  inst.  at  Mrs.  Nott's  in  Church  Street, 
Joseph  Hutchinson,  Esq.  after  a  short  and  severe  illness,  which 
he  bore  with  much  Christiah  fortitude.  He  was  educated  at 
Dartmouth  University,  in  New-Hampshire,  and  afterwards 
graduated  at  Yale  College;  since  which  he  has  practiced  the  law 
in  Georgia,  and  lately  came  to  settle  on  this  state.  His  lady  and 
children  had  gone  to  visit  their  friends  in  New  England.  His 
father  is  pastor  of  the  congregation  at  Coventry,  Connecticut, 
and  brother  to  governor  Huntington.     (Friday,  August  22,  1794.) 

Died.  On  the  20th  instant.  Mathias  Leopoldus  Stupich,  doctor 
of  Physic:  being  perfectly  sensible  of  his  approaching  dissolution, 
he  resigned  to  his  creator's  will  with  that  fortitude  becoming  a 
christian.  His  remains  were  deposited  according  to  the  Roman 
Catholic  rites,  of  which  denomination  he  was  a  worthy  member, 
in  the  Roman  Catholic  church-yard. — On  Thursday  night,  Mr. 
Robert  Jones,  of  New- Jersey. — ^And  Mr.  James  Wakefield,  of  this 
dty.    (Saturday  August  23, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  Dr.  George  Pugson,  nephew  of  the 
rev.  Henry  Pursell,  D.  D.  of  this  city,  and  rector  of  St.  Thomas's 
parish.    (Charleston,  August  26, 1794.) 

Died.  Early  on  Monday  Morning,  much  lamented  by  all 
who  knew  him,  rev.  William  Jones,  minister  of  the  Episcopal 
church  at  Georgetown.    (Tuesday,  September  2,  1794.) 

Married.  By  the  rev.  Mr.  Gallaher,  Louis  Nicholas  Allard, 
Esq.  to  the  accomplished  Mrs.  Gaultier,  relict  of  Pierre  Joseph 
Gaultier,  Esq.  deceased,  both  of  St  Domingo.  (Wednesday, 
September  3,  1794.) 

Tuesday  the  2d.  instant,  were  interred  in  her  family  vault, 
the  remains  of  Mrs.  Murray,  of  Wentworth  street  .... 
(Thursday,  September  4, 1794.) 

Deaths.    On  Thursday  night  last,  in  the  22d  year  of  his  age 

Mr.  Thomas  Taylor,  of  James  Island He  was  a 

tender  and  aflFectionate  son,  a  loving  brother,  and  a  kind  master. — 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  93 

Also  Mr,  James  Nelson,  fonnerly  an  eminent  merchant  of  this 
dty. — ^Mr.  William  Snowden.    (Saturday,  September  6,  1794.) 

Died.  James  M'Cauley,  senator  for  the  election  district  of 
Clarendon  and  Claremont,  and  lieut.-colonel  commandant  of  the 
Clarendon  comity  regiment  of  militia.  (Tuesday,  September  9, 
1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  William  Adams,  Esq.  to  Miss 
Elizabeth  Muncrieff,  daughter  of  Richard  Muncrieff,  Esq.  of 
Wadmalaw. 

Died.  At  his  plantation  in  St.  Bartholomew  Mr.  Peter  Young- 
blood,  one  of  the  members  for  the  election  district  of  St.  Bartholo- 
mew, in  the  house  of  represntative  of  this  state,  and  lieutenant- 
colonel  commandant  of  Colleton  county  regiment  of  militia. 
(Wednesday,  September,  10  1794.) 

Departed  this  life  the  2d.  instant,  in  the  parish  of  St.  James 
Santee,  Miss  Sarah  Bell,  niece  of  Alexander  Chovin,  Esq.  .  .  . 
(Tuesday  September  16,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  last,  Mr.  George  Petrie,  lieutenant  of 
Fort  Johnson,  to  Miss  Mary  Simons  Swinton. 

Died.  At  his  plantation,  near  the  Eutaw,  in  St.  John's  parish, 
Robert  M'Kelvey,  a  major  in  the  Eastern  regiment  of  militia  for 
Charleston  district.    (Wednesday,  September  17, 1794.) 

Died.    On  the  10th.  of  last  month,  in  Chester  county  in  this 
state.  Dr.  James  Knox,  a  member  of  the  legislature,  a  judge  of 
.  county  court,  and  master  of  Lodge  No.  28,  Ancient  York  Masons. 
(Thursday,  September  18,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Monday  last,  Mr.  Josiah  Payne,  lately  from  Ireland. 
(Friday,  September  19,  1794.) 

Lately  died  at  his  plantation  at  Oakatee-creek,  soon  after  his 
return  from  this  city,  colonel  John  Lewis  Bourquin,  a  firm  sup- 
porter to  the  establishment  of  American  independence,  an  affec- 
tionate husband  and  father,  and  a  sincere  friend.  (Monday, 
September  22,  1794.) 

Departed  this  life,  on  the  ISth  of  September,  in  the  Slst  year 
of  her  age,  Mrs.  Magdalen  Fripp,  consort  of  Mr.  William  Fripp, 
senior,  of  St.  Helena.  .  .  .  She  was  a  tender  and  affectionate 
wife,  indulgent  parent,  and  a  loving  sister.  (Tuesday,  September 
23,  1794.) 

{To  be  continued) 


ABSTRACTS  OF  RECORDS  OF  THE  PROCEEDINGS  IN 
THE  COURT  OF  ORDINARY,  1764r-1771* 

South  Carolina 

By  the  Honble  Wm.  Bull  Esq.  Lieut.  Gov.  and  Commander  in 
Chief  in  and  over  the  said  Province  and  Ordinary  of  the  same. 

To  Hugh  Wilson  of  Wadmelaw  Island  Planter  Exor.  of  the  last 
Will  and  Testament  of  William  Forgison  late  of  Wademelaw 
Island  Dece'd. — ^These  are  to  cite  and  admonish  you  at  the  Instance 
of  William  Forgison  of  St.  Paul's  Parish,  Son  and  Legatee  of 
the  said  Deceased  to  Appear  before  me  in  the  Court  of  Ordinary 
on  Friday  the  Fourth  day  of  January  next  ensuing  to  shew  Cause 
if  any  you  have,  why  you  should  not  make  and  render  a  just  true 
and  faithful  account  of  you  said  Exorship  .  .  .  and  to  deliver 
to  the  said  William  Forgison  Jun.  so  much  of  the  sd.  Goods  and 
Chattels  as  he  is  entitled  unto  by  the  said  Wm.  Forgison's  Last 
Will  and  Testiment.  .  .  .  Hereof  fail  not  as  you  shall  answer 
the  contrary  at  your  peril. 

Given  under  my  hand  and  Official  seal  at  ChasTown  this 
Twenty-first  day  of  December  Anno  Dom  1764  in  the  fifth  Year  of 
His  Majesty's  reign. 

Wm.  Bull 
By  His  Honor's  Command 
Geo.  Johnson  Dep  Sec. 
January  1,  1765. 

Citation  to  Mary  Ladson  of  St.  Andrew's  parish,  spinster 
to  administer  on  the  Estate  and  effects  of  Thomas  Ladson  and 
John  Ladson  planters  her  Brothers  as  next  of  kin, 
January  4,  1765. 

Dedimus  granted  to  John  Skene  and  George  Johnston  to  Ex- 
amine the  witnesses  and  qualify  the  Executrix  of  the  Last  Will 
and  Testament  of  Robert  Miller  late  of  St.  George's  parish,  planter. 
January  9,  1765. 

Citation  to  John  Givens  of  St.  Helena's  parish  in  Granville 
County  Executor  of  the  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Philip  Givens 

^  This  volume  was  returned  to  S.  C.  by  Tufts  College. 

94 


RECORD  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  95 

planter  to  account  at  instance  of  John  Green  and  Margaret 
his  wife,  daughter  and  legatee  of  Philip  Givens, 

January  9, 1765. 

Citation  to  Jacob  Hooflfer  of  Prince  Frederick's  parish  to  admin'r 
on  the  Estate  and  Effects  of  John  Hooflfer. 

Citation  to  Jonah  Woodberry  to  admin,  on  the  Estate  and  Eflfects 
of  John  Woodberry  late  of  Prince  George  parish. 

January  10, 1765. 

Citation  granted  to  Sabina  Burnett  of  Prince  Fred'k  paiisb, 
Craven  County  widow,  to  administer  on  the  Estate  and  Eflfects 
of  Doctor  Andrew  Burnet. 

January  14,  1765. 

Citation  to  Nathaniel  OflFutt  of  the  Three  Runs  to  admin'r  on 
the  Estate  and  Eflfects,  of  William  Oflfutt  late  of  Long  Canes 
planter  deceased. 

January  11,  1765. 

In  the  Court  of  Ordinary.  Letters  of  guardianship  to  Henry 
Furthy,  to  be  Guardian  of  the  person  and  Estate  of  John  Furthy 
of  the  age  of  eleven  years,  son  of  Hercules  Furthy  late  of  Prince 
Frederick's  parish  deceased  in  Common  form. 

January  17,  1765. 

Citation  to  Christopher  Simpson  to  adm'n  on  the  Estate  and 
Eflfects  of  Alexander  Gibson  late  of  Charlestown  Merch't  de- 
ceased as  Greatest  Creditor. 

January  8,  1765. 

Citation  to  Joseph  Brown  to  administer  on  the  Estate  and 
Eflfects  of  Nicholas  Bryant  of  Prince  George's  parish. 

January  23,  1765. 

Citation  to  William  Proctor  of  St.  Georges  parish  Taylor  to 
administer  on  the  Estate  and  Eflfects  of  Maurice  Delay  late  of 
the  said  parish  Schoolmaster. 

January  25,  1765. 

Citation  granted  to  Mary  Parkinson  and  Nicholas  Parkinson 
of  St.  John's  Parish  Berkley  County  to  admin,  on  the  Estate  and 


96  so.  CA.  mSTOlUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

££Fects  of  Jonathan  Westbury  late  of  St.  Andrew's  pari^  planter 
her  former  husband. 

January  29,  1765. 

Citation  to  John  Marion  of  St.  Tho's  and  St  Den's  in  Berkley 
County  to  admin,  on  the  Estate  and  EfiFects  of  John  Sanders  late 
of  the  said  pari^  left  unadmin.  by  Mary  Marion  late  Mary  Sanders 
widow  of  the  said  Deed. 

February  1,  1765. 

Citation  to  Richard  Weatherly  of  St.  John's  Colleton  County 
to  admin'r  on  the  Estate  and  Efifects  of  William  Waylie  Shoemaker 
as  Greatest  Creditor. 

Citation  to  Mary  Hajme  of  St.  George's  parish  widow  to  admin'r 
on  the  Estate  and  Effects  of  William  Ha3aie  late  of  the  Parish  of 
St  Michael's  ChasTown  planter. 

February  8,  1765. 

Citation  to  Peter  Coustiel  of  St.  Bartho:  parish  to  admin'r, 
on  the  Estate  and  Effects  of  Alex  Coustiel  late  of  St  Philq>'s 
parish. 

Citation  to  John  Jennins  of  St.  James  Santee  to  adm'r  the  Estate 
and  Effects  of  Edward  Jennins  late  of  the  said  p)arish. 

Letters  of  Guardianship  granted  to  John  Marion  father  in 
Law  to  Mary  Sanders,  Ann  Sanders  and  William  Sanders. 

Proved  Will  of  John  M'Gowen  by  Thos.  Pamor  one  of  the 
Subscribing  witnesses  thereto  and  duly  Qualified  Sarah  M'Gowen 
Exrx.  and  James  McCrackan  Exor. 

Proved  will  of  Margaret  Oliver  by  John  Calvert  Subscribing 
witness  and  duly  qualified  Margaret  Oliver  Extrix  and  John  Oliver 
Executor. 

February  8,  1765. 

Proved  will  of  Edward  Jennens  by  Susannah  Snow  Subscribing 
witness  At  the  Same  time  was  produced  a  renunciation  from  the 
Exor  of  the  said  will,  which  was  ordered  to  be  filled  and  recorded — 
and  that  a  Citation  to  issue  to  John  Jennens  Bro. 

February  9,  1765. 

Citation  to  Newman  Swallow  of  ChasTown  Merchant  to  adminr. 
on  the  Estate  and  Effects  of  Arthur  Godin  late  of  Chastown 
Marriner, 


RECORD  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  97 

February  14,  1765. 

Citation  to  John  Perdreau  and  John  Fabre  of  ChasTown  to 
adminr.  on  the  Estate  and  Effects  of  Robert  Minors  late  of  St 
Philips  Parish  ship  Carpenter. 

February  17,  1765. 

Citation  to  Alexander  Deen  of  Prince  George's  parish  to  adminr. 
on  the  Estate  and  Effects  of  William  Renerson  late  of  sd.  parish 
Gent 

February  15,  1765. 

Citation  granted  to  Gideon  Gibson  Guardian  of  John  Peter  Mary 
and  Hester  G — eys  of  Prince  George's  parish  planter  to  adminr. 
on  the  Estate  and  effects  of  John  Herring  late  of  the  said  parish 
planter. 

February  21,  1765. 

Citation  to  William  Skinner  to  adminr.  on  the  Estate  and  Effects 
of  Mary  Skinner  late  of  Prince  George  Winyaw  widow  deceased  his 
mother. 

February  22,  1765. 

Citation  ...  to  Job  Rothmahler  of  Prince  George  parish 
planter  to  adminr.  on  Estate  and  Effects  of  Joseph  Westcote. 

February  22,  1765. 

Citation  to  Mary  Bennet  of  Christ  Church  parish  widow  to 
adminr.  on  the  Estate  ...  of  Thomas  Bennett  late  of  the 
said  parish  planter. 

In  the  Court  of  Ordinary  22  Febry  1765.  Proved  the  Last  Will 
and  Testament  of  Jane  Boisseau  of  St.  Stephens  parish  widow 
deceased,  by  the  affidavit  of  Rene  Peyre  one  of  the  subscribing 
witnesses  to  the  same,  and  duly  qualified  Isaac  Dubois  Executor. 

Proved  the  Will  of  Henry  Livingston  Jimr.  of  St.  Paul's  parish 
planter,  by  Mary  Riley  one  of  the  subscribing  witnesses  to  same 
and  duly  qualified  Chas.  Odingsell  Exor. 

Proved  the  Will  of  Amoldus  Vanderhorst  late  of  this  Province 
deceased,  by  William  Hamlin  .  .  •  qualified  Elias  Vander- 
horst and  Henry  Bonneau  Exors. 

February  23,  1765. 

Citation  ...  to  George  Bedon  to  adminr.  on  Estate 
...  of  Guerard  Keane  late  of  St.  Philip's  parish  Charles- 
town  Cooper  as  greatist  creditor    •    •  . 


98  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  G£NEALO(»CAL  MAGAZINE 

Fcbniary  26,  1765. 

CitatioD  ...  to  Ann  Fendin  ci  St  Hdena's  parish  Widow 
to  adminr.  on  the  Estate  and  ££Fects  d  Jdm  Fendin  late  of  the 
sd  parish  planter  deceased  her  husband. 

Citation    ...    to  Jas.  Hamilton  of  Long  Canes  to  adminr. 
on  the  Estate    ...    of  Charies  Hamilton  late  of  Long  Canes 
in  Granville  County  planter. 
February  28,  1765. 

Dedimus  granted  to  Patrick  Calhoun  and  William  Calhoun 
to  prove  the  last  will  and  Testament  of  Chas.  Hamilton  late  of 
Long  Canes  deceased  and  qualify  the  Exrix.  and  Exor.  tharein 
named. 

28  Febry  1765 

Geo;  Johnstcm  D.  Sec 

(To  be  coniitmed.) 


HISTORICAL  NOTES 

ICAIDEN  NAME  OF  GOVERNOR  GIBBES'S  FIRST  WIFE 

A  power  of  attorney,  dated  January  12,  1688,  was  executed  by 
Capt.  William  Davis,  of  Barbadoes,  gent.,  to  "my  Trusty  & 
loveing  son  in  law  Cap**  Rob*  Gibbs  of  the  province  of  Carolina" 
to  "aske  demand  require  and  recover  and  receive  of  and  from 
y  right  Hon****  James  CoUetion  of  Carolina  Esqr  full  satisfaction 
for  one  full  Quarter  part  of  a  Ketch  formerly  Called  y  Mary  Ketch 
of  Carolina  of  About  fifty  Tuns."  It  is  recorded  on  page  117  in 
a  volume  of  "Records  of  the  Court  of  Ordinary  of  the  Province 
of  South  CaroUna,  1672-1692,"  in  the  office  of  the  Historical 
Commission  of  South  Carolina  at  Columbia.  This  would  seem  to 
establish  the  fact  that  Capt.  (afterwards  Governor)  Gibbes  had 
married  the  daughter  of  Capt.  William  Davis. — ^A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 

CRACKER 

The  South  Carolina  and  American  General  Gazette  for  August 
7,  1767,  gives  an  early  example  of  the  use  of  the  term  "Cracker" 
as  applied  to  the  uneducated  classes. — "CharlesTown,  August  7. 
Letters  from  Silver  BluflF,  on  Savannah  river,  dated  on  tuesday 
last  week,  inform  us,  that  a  number  of  the  people  called  Crackers, 
who  live  above  Augusta,  in  the  Province  of  Georgia,  had  gone  in 
a  hostile  manner,  to  the  Indian  town  and  settlement  at  Okenee, 
where,  on  their  arrival  finding  only  one  old  Indian  man,  all  the 
others  being  out  hunting,  they  plundered  the  village  of  everything 
of  any  value  that  they  could  carry  of,  and  then  burnt  every  house 

in  it "    This  item  in  detail  was  reprinted  in  the  London 

Chronicle,  Oct.  27,  1767,  according  to  information  furnished  by 
A.  B.  Andrews,  Esq,  of  Fayetteville,  N.  C,  long  a  member  of 
this  Society. 

The  South  Carolina  Gazette  for  September  26,  1778  gives  another 
article  in  which  the  word  is  used  in  the  same  sense.  It  is  to  be 
found  in  a  long  communication  addressed  to  "Every  Freeholder 
in  the  Province,"  and  is  signed  "A  Freeholder  of  Goose  Creek," 
to  which  has  been  added  in  ink  the  initials  "  J:M:k:e",  probably 

99 


100  so.  CA.  mSTQRICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

intended  for  John  M^enzie.  In  disnissing  the  Legislature's 
attempt  to  deal  with  the  Regulators  the  writer  says:  ''There  is 
an  absurdity  in  the  bill  which  must  strike  the  brain  df  a  CnLtker" 

PORTRAITS  OF  LYNCH,  GADSDEN  AND  RUTLEDGE 

"  The  honorable  the  commons  House  of  Assemble  <rf  this  Province 
have  requested  of  Thomas  Lynch,  Christopher  Gadsden  and  Jdm 
Rutkdge  Esqs  that  they  will  sit  for  their  pictures;  which  are  to 
be  drawn  at  full  length  and  preserved  in  the  assembly  room  as  a 
testimony  of  public  regard  for  those  gentlemen,  and  that  the 
rememberance  of  the  signal  service  they  have  done  their  country, 
as  a  committee  from  this  province  at  the  congress  held  at  New  York 
in  October  last  may  be  transmitted  to  and  remembered  by  pos- 
terity; the  expence  whereof  is  to  be  defrayed  by  the  province." — 
SoiOh  Carolina  CazeiU,  June  P,  1766. 


(JUN     1   1922) 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 
HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 


HB 
SOU'  SOCIETY 


TOBER,  1921 


Uadt  in  Uniud  SUila  tf  Amria 


PUBLICATION  COMMITTEE 

JbmH  W.  Baihwxli^  QDonr  A.  li.  Shuh, 

A.  S.  Sallbt,  Je. 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabet*  L*  Wibbxr. 


CONTENTS 

Hyme  Famfly 101 

Marriages  and  Death  Notices  from  the  City  Gazette 119 

Abstracts  of  Records  of  the  Proceedings  in  the  Court  of 

Ordinary,  1764-1771 124 

Historical  Notes 130 

Index 135 


N.  B.— These  Magazmes,  with  the  ezcepticm  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  If  are  tl2S  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  Qstorical  Society.  Members  of  the  Society  receive 
them  free.  The  Memberdiip  fee  is  $4.00  per  annum  (the  fiscal 
year  being  from  January  to  January),  and  members  can  buy 
back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each.  In  addition  to 
recdving  the  Magaanes,  members  are  allowed  a  discount  of  25 
per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Society,  and  have  the 
free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Tteasurei- 

Mabd  L.  Webber, 

South  CuoBna  Hbtorfml  Sodety, 

Chailettaii.  S.  C 


JUN    ^  1922 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXn  OCTOBER,  1921  No.  4 


HYRNE  FAMILY 
CoiiPiLED  BY  Mabel  L.  Webber 

Li  compiling  this  tentative  genealogy,  for  there  are  numerous 
gaps  and  no  attempt  is  made  to  extend  it  beyond  the  bq^inning 
of  the  nineteenth  century,  the  notes  of  the  late  M.  Alston  Read, 
Esq.,  have  been  used  in  addition  to  the  researches  of  the  compiler. 
Mr.  A.  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  has  also  been  of  great  assistance  in  making 
abstracts  from  documents  in  the  Office  of  the  Historical 
Commission. 

There  were  seemingly  two  families  here  in  South  Carolina,  with 
the  name  of  Heame,  Hem,  Heam,  or  Hyme,  spelled  indifferently 
in  the  records,  but  with  a  careful  distinction  made  wherever  a 
signature  is  found. 

The  earliest  mention  of  the  name  yet  found  is  that  of  Peter 
Heame,  who  was  a  member  of  the  parliament  elected  by  the  free- 
men of  Carolina  April  20, 1672^  and  who  received  a  warrant  for  400 
acres  of  land  October  26,  1672.'  He  had  a  grant  for  land  near 
James  Town;  and  December  30,  1676  had  warrant  for  780  acres; 
March  3, 1677,  he  had  a  warrant  for  one  town  lot  in  Oyster  Point; 
May  18, 1678,  another  warrant  for  140  acres;  as  Peter  Heame,  Sr., 
he  had  a  warrant  for  10  acres  near  Jamestown  Sth  October  1681, 
and  continued  to  receive  warrants  as  late  as  9th  June  1688.* 

>  S.  C.  Hist.  Soc.  Collections,  v.  5,  p.  390. 

•  Printed  WanarUsfor  Land, 

^Ibid. 

101 


102         so.  CA«  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

July  9, 1681,  CapL  William  Davis  of  Barbadoes,  executed  a  power 
of  attorney  to  his  "trusty  friend  Mr.  Peter  Heame  Gent,  of  the 
Province  of  Candina"  (Misc.  records,  Office  Hist.  Commission). 

Peter  Heame,  Jr.,  Mary  Heame,  Bridget  Heame,  and  Richard 
Heame  had  warrants  for  280  acres  of  land  in  September  1677. 
Jonathan  Drake  and  John  Heame  had  warrant  for  500  acres  in 
August  1709.* 

George  Heame  had  several  warrants  between  1699  and  1706, 
and  was  called  Capt  George  Heame  in  1711;  he  is  apparently  the 
Capt.  Heame  who  commanded  a  company  during  the  Spanish  and 
French  invasion  in  1706.* 

Peter  Heame,  Sr.,  of  James  Island  made  his  will  (now  missing), 
in  December,  1688,  and  appointed  his  wife  Jane  and  his  seven 
chfldren  executors;  he  died  before  January  17, 1694/5,  for  on  that 
date  an  act  of  ^Lssembly  was  passed,  enabling  Edward  Drake  and 
James  Witter,  both  of  James  Island,  in  right  of  their  wives,  two 
of  the  executors  of  Peter  Heame  deceased,  to  sell  a  town  lot  in 
CharlesTown,  no.  15.*  The  executors  of  the  will  being  incapaci- 
tated for  "want  of  age."  James  Witter  seems  to  have  been  a 
Quaker. 

Peter  Heame,  late  of  "Carolina  beyond  the  seas"  died  on 
board  the  Royal  ship  Monmouth^  and  administration  was  granted 
January  2,  1695/6  to  his  relict  Joane  Heame.^ 

Bridget  Martin  of  St.  Giles,  Cripplegate,  widow,  appoints 
Edward  Loughton  of  Carolina  her  attomey  to  receive  from  John 
Chfld  of  Carolina,  carpenter,  and  his  wife  Jone,  formerly  known 
as  Jone  Heame,  all  money  which  said  Jone  Child  alias  Heanre 
had  received  for  52  gross  of  buttons  being  the  goods  of  the  above 
Bridget  Martin  received  for  her  use;  dat^  March  5th  1700/1.* 

An  Edith  Hyme  was  a  witness  to  the  will  of  Mary  Cross,  the 
Quaker  preacher,  August  28,  1696.*  Thomas  Hasfort  was  ap- 
pointed guardian  of  John  Heame,  minor  son  of  John  Heame 
deceased  5th  Febmary,  1718/9;  and  John  Heame,  minor  son  of 

^Ihid, 

•  Cal,  StaU  Papers,  Am.  and  W.  /.,  1706-S,  517L 

•  Registrars  Records,  1675-96,  p.  384,  Office  Hist.  Commission. 
»  This  Magasine,  v.  DC,  p.  287. 

•  Probate  Court,  Charleston,  1694-1704,  p.  345. 

•  This  Magasiney  vol.  DC,  p.  52. 


HYRNE  FAMILY  103 

John  Heame  deceased  aged  14  years  and  upwards,  petitioned 
12  January,  1724,  that  Thomas  Fairchild  be  made  his  guardian.^® 
John  Hem  had  a  grant  August  28,  1701,  for  225  acres  in  Berkley 
County,  formerly  laid  out  to  Peter  Hem  deceased,  bounding  on 
Wm.  Chapman,  James  Witter,  Edward  Westberry  and  Joane 
Pulford,  now  in  possession  of  James  Markiss,  and  on  Wm.  Carlisle 
(Grant  book,  1694-1739  Hist  Comm.)  John  Heame  of  James 
Island,  hat-maker,  aged  68  years,  '  'oath  according  to  the  form 
his  profession"  made  his  deposition  concemig  Mrs.  Eleanor 
Wilkins  and  her  children  27  February,  1745;  this  John  Heame, 
of  James  Island,  hat-maker,  ''being  aged"  made  his  will  27 
September,  1743,  proved  27  November,  1745;  mentions  son 
Peter  Heame;  grandson  John  Heame,  son  of  Peter;  daughter 
Elizabeth  Witter  deceased;  son-in-law  Thomas  Witter;  grand- 
children, Elizabeth,  Thomas,  James  and  Mary  Witter;  daughter 
Mary  Holmes  alias  Frier  and  her  children,  William,  John,  Peter, 
and  Daniel  Holmes,  and  Ruth  Fryer  (sic);  grand-daughter  Ann 
Heame.^ 

There  has  not  been  enough  data  found  to  show  the  exact  rela« 
tionship  of  the  people  mentioned  above,  but  they  seem  to  have 
consistently  spelled  their  name  Heame,  some  of  them  were  Quakers, 
and  they  seem  to  have  lived  on  James  Island  or  in  that  neighbor- 
hood; there  has  been  nothing  found  which  shows  any  connection 
with  the  family  of  Hyme  with  which  we  are  now  dealing. 

HYSNE 

Edward  H3me,  Esq.,  was  commissioned  by  the  Lords  Pro- 
prietors to  be  Naval  officer  of  the  Province  of  Carolina,  Uth 
December,  1708.^  He  does  not  seem  to  have  come  out  to  serve 
in  that  office,  for  Nathaniel  Sale  or  Sayle,  was  appointed  his 
deputy  Febmary  9,  1709/10.  On  February  28,  1710/11,  a  letter 
from  Arthur  Middleton  was  received  by  the  Proprietors,  requesting 
a  commission  as  Naval  officer;  inquiry  was  ordered  to  be  made 
of  Mr.  Hyme,  "if  he  can  go  for  Carolina,"  if  not  then  Mr.  Middle- 
ton  to  have  the  appointment;  Middleton  was  appointed  June  13, 
1711." 

»•  Probate  Court,  1711-17,  p.  154. 

"  Ibid,  1740-47,  p.  406. 

^  Commissions  and  Instructions,  1685-1715,  p.  219. 

w/Wrf,  234;  246;  also  5.  C.  H,  CoU.,  v.  1,  p.  182. 


104         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

On  Januaiy  14, 1709/10,  Mr.  Edward  Hyrne  of  London,  Gentle- 
man and  Elizabeth  his  wife,  constituted  Richard  Berresford  and 
Nathaniel  Sale,  Esqrs.  of  South  Cardina,  to  be  their  attorneys 
in  said  province  of  South  Carolina.  (Book  1709-19,  page  82-^, 
WsU  Comm.) 

An  Edward  Heame,  or  H3rme,  was  in  South  Carolina  hdart 
1703,  for  in  that  year  John  Bonee  had  a  warrant  for  land  bounding 
on  Edward  Heam,  and  in  1706,  Arthur  Middleton  had  a  warrant 
lor  440  acres  between  John  Bonee,  Edward  Heame,  George  Smith, 
Nicholas  Bennett,  and  John  Berrenger.^^  On  6th  May,  1704, 
Ralph  Izard  made  a  motion  that  the  House  take  into  consideration 
the  loss  Mr.  Edward  Heame  had  lately  sustained  by  his  house 
being  burned,  and  motions  was  made  that  certain  concessions  be 
made  him  (Journal  Common  House  Assembly  Mss.).  There  has 
not  been  enough  material  found  to  show  if  this  Edward  Heame, 
was  the  Edward  Hyrne,  naval  officer,  who  was  in  London  in  1709, 
nor  just  when  the  family  we  are  dealing  with,  arrived. 

Edward  Hyrne  of  the  county,  of  Norfolk,  merchant,  is  said, 
from  a  record  found  in  a  Hyrne  family  bible,  imprint  date  1706, 
to  have  married  Elizabeth,  daughter  of  Sir  Drayner  Massingberd 
of  the  County  of  Lincoln,  knight;  this  is  supported  by  the  names 
found  in  the  Hyrne  family  in  South  Carolina.  According  to 
Burke,"  Sir  Drayner  Massingberd,  of  Ormsby,  County  of  Lincdn, 
married  first  an  heiress  of  the  Burrell  family,  had  no  issue  by  her, 
inherited  her  estate,  and  his  son  by  his  second  marriage  was 
Burrell  Massingberd,  sheriff  of  Huntington  in  1707,  who  in  turn 
had  sons  Willismi  Burrell  Massingberd,  who  succeeded  his  father 
in  1728,  and  died  in  1802;  also  Francis  Burrell  Massmgberd;  these 
two,  William  Burrell  Massingberd,  and  Francis  Burrell  Massing- 
berd, are  mentioned  as  cousins  in  the  will  of  Burrell  Massingberd 
Hyrne  of  S.  C,  dated  1758.    (Probate  Court,  Charleston,  S.  C.) 

No  will  or  inventory  of  the  elder  Edward  Hyme  has  yet  been 
found  here,  nor  any  for  his  wife  Elizabeth,  who  apparently  lived 
after  1725,  for  in  that  year  Henry  Hyme,  and  Elizabeth  Hyme 
¥ddow,  purchased  lands,  as  will  be  shown  further  on;  an  Edward 
Hyme  was  a  member  of  the  assembly  in  1716,^*  but  this  was 
probably  Capt.  Edward  Hyme,  a  son  of  Edward  Hyme,  Esq. 

»<  Printed  Warrants. 

**  Burke's  Commoners,  v.  1.  p.  662. 

*•  Jour.  Gen'l.  Assembly,  mss.  Off.  Hist.  Comm. 


HYSNE  FAMILY  105 

Edward  Hyme  had  issue,  so  far  as  we  have  found: 

2.  i.  Mary  Hyme,  bom  either  1690  or  1697,  died  November, 

1776;  married  in  1713,  Thomas  Smith  (1669P-1738) 
for  his  second  wife. 

3.  ii.  Col.  Edward  Hyme,  of  South  Carolina  and  of  Hymeham, 

New  Hanover  County,  North  Carolina;  he  was  bom 
1694  or  earlier;  died  between  1750  and  1758;  married 
Barbara  Smith  (1696-17—)  daughter  of  Thomas 
Smith,  Second  Landgrave  and  his  first  wife,  Anna 
Comelia  [van  Myddah?];  said  Barbara  had  appar- 
ently died  before  1738,  for  she  is  not  mentioned  in 
the  will  of  her  father,  who  there  calls  CoL  Edward 
Hyme  his  son-in-law.^^ 

4.  iii.  Burrell  Massingberd  Hyme,  bom  1706  or  earlier;  died 

without  issue  between  October  1, 1757,  and  January 
2, 1758. 

5.  iv.  CoL  Henry  Kymt,  bom  June  29, 1704,  died  January  27, 

1764;  married  (1)  1733,  Susannah  Bellinger  mar- 
ried (2)  1751,  Elizabeth  Clark,  widow  of  Joshua 
Sanders.  Married  (3)  1759,  Mary  Butler,  widow  of 
Culcheth  Crolightly. 


Mary  Hyme,  (Edward  1)  wife  of  Thos.  Smith  according  to 
Mrs.  Poyas,  died  in  1777,  aged  80;^*  according  to  the  Hayne 
Record,**  "Mary  Smith  of  Goose  Creek,  died  November,  1776, 
aged  86."  She  married  about  1713,  Thomas  Smith,  second 
Landgrave  (bom  1669?  died  May  9,  1738.)** 

Mary  Smith  of  St.  James  Goose  Creek,  widow,  made  her  will 
9th  September,  1769.  Requests  to  be  buried  in  a  plain  cedar 
coffin  and  to  be  interred  in  a  plain,  decent  and  Christian  like 
manner.  / 

Mentions  eldest  son,  Henry  Smith;  grand-daughter  Ann  Smith, 
daughter  of  said  Henry;  son  Thomas  Smith;  son  Benjamin  Smith, 

>'  Probate  Court,  1736-40,  p.  308. 
'*  Olden  Times  in  Carolina. 
"  This  Magazine,  v.  X,  p.  224. 

**  Ibid,  V.  Xn,  p.  140;  he  was  buried  at  his  plantation  at  Goose  Creek,  but 
there  is  no  remaining  tombstone. 


106         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

four  grand-children,  Thomas  Screven,  James  Screven,  Martha 
Baker  and  John  Screven;  grand-daughters,  Elizabeth  Dixon, 
(needle  work  picture,  history  of  Judith  and  Holifemes  and  other 
items);  Rebecca  Dixon  and  Mary  Dixon,  Anna  Taylor,  daughter 
of  Andrew  and  Sabina  Taylor,  Sons  Henry,  Thomas  and  Benjamin, 
appointed  executors,  Samuel  West,  John  Bowles  and  Thomas  C. 
Hamilton  witnesses;  no  date  of  proof.^ 

Mrs.  Poyas,  in  Olden  Time  in  Carolina^  page  107,  gives  a  differ- 
ent will  evidently  made  at  a  later  date  1776,  and  not  properly 
executed  since  it  was  not  recorded,  the  devisees  are  the  same,  but 
she  mentions  them  by  their  married  names,  and  adds  Barbara 
Screven  to  her  list  of  grand-children; 

Mary  Hyme  and  Thomas  Smith  had  issue: 

1.  Edward  Hyme  bom  August  24, 1714,  died  young. 

2.  James  Smith  bom  August  13,  1715;  died  January  3,  1736. 

3.  Mary,  bom  October  9,  1717,  married  James  Screven,  and 

had  issue. 

4.  Margaret,  bom  April  1,  1720;  married  Benjamin  Coach* 

man,  issue. 

5.  Elizabeth,  bom  January  6, 1722;  died  September  26, 1756; 

married  March  21, 1745,  Thomas  Dixon  (1720-1769) 
of  James  Island;  was  his  first  wife:  had  issue. 

6.  Josiah,  bom  July  10, 1725;  died  young. 

7.  Henry,  bom  August  6,  1727;  died  December  8,  1780; 

married  September  27,  1753,  Ann  Filbein  (1736- 
1762)  married  (2d)  December  13,  1764,  Elizabeth 
Ball  (1746-1787)  issue  by  both  wives. 

8.  ThomasbomJanuary26,1729;died— 1782;  married— 1751, 

Susannah  Walker;  had  issue. 

9.  George,  1732-1738. 

10.  Benjamin,  bom  September  15,  1735;  died  July  22,  1790; 
married  1st.  December,  1759  Elizabeth  Ann  Harleston 
(1742-1769),  issue,  married  2d:  April  8, 1773,  Cath- 
erine  Ball  (1751-1774);  married  3d.  August  8, 1775, 
Sarah  Smith,  daughter  of  George  Smith  and  Eliza- 
beth Warii^;  she  died  August,  1785,  issue.  Mar- 
ried 4th — 1787  Rebecca,  [Singleton]  the  widow  of 
Benjamin  Coachman,  Esq.;  she  died  January  7, 1814, 
aged  62  years. 

»  Probate  Court,  1774-78,  p.  349. 


HYSNE  FAMILY  107 


Edward  Hyrae  (Edward  1),  bom  1694  or  earlier;  died  between 
1750  and  1758;  married  before  1715,  Barbara  Smith,  bom  July  6, 
1697,  daughter  of  Thomas  Smith  second  Landgrave,  by  his  first 
wife,  Anna  Comelia,  thus  being  a  sister-in-law  to  her  step-mother, 
Mary  Hyme  Smith.  The  will  of  James  Lawson  "late  of  Carolina, 
now  of  Maryland"  dated  4  Febmary,  1715/16'*  mentions  his 
'*knavy"  John  Lawson,  his  "cozen"  Ann  H)me,  wife  Ann  Lawson, 
father-in-law  Landgrave  Thomas  Smith,  Executors,  relations  and 
friends  Landgrave  Thomas  Smith,  Mr.  Edward  Hyme,  and 
Mr.  George  Smith;  the  witnesses  were  James  Strawbridge,  Samuel 
Morris,  Mary  Smith,  Barbara  Hyme,  Justina  Smith,  and  Thomas 
Smith;  proved  by  Landgrave  Thomas  Smith,  and  Mary  his  wife. 
James  Lawson  seems  to  have  married  Ann  Smith,  a  daughter  of 
Landgrave  Thomas  Smith  by  his  first  wife,  and  after  Lawson's 
death,  she  married  Benj.  Waring. 

Justina  Moore,  a  daughter  of  Thomas  Smith  and  his  fiirst  wife, 
full  sister  to  Barbara  Smith  H3me,  made  her  will  in  Philadelphia, 
14  April,  1743;  she  describes  herself  as  the  relict  of  Mr.  John 
Moore,  late  of  Cape  Fear;  mentions  sons  James  and  John,  and 
daughter  Rebecca  Moore;  her  late  father  Landgrave  Thomas 
Smith  of  South  Carolina;  her  brothers-in-law  Maurice  Moore, 
Roger  Moore,  and  Edward  Hyme;  sisters-in-law  Mary  Clifford 
and  Rebecca  Dry;  niece  Elizabeth  H3me;  Aunt  Sarah  [Smith?], 
Brothers-in-law  Maurice  Moore,  Roger  Moore,  Edward  Hyme 
and  eldest  son  James  Moore,  all  of  Cape  Fear  to  be  executors. 
Proved  at  Philadelphia,  August  20,  1743."  We  have  no  date  for 
the  death  of  Barbiuu  Hyme,  wife  of  Col.  Edward  Hyme;  in  Olden 
Times  in  Carolina,  page  85,  there  is  a  letter  from  Col.  Henry 
Hyme  dated  Hymeham,  August  1,  1738,  written  to  his  sister 
Mary  Smith  after  the  death  of  her  husband;  in  it  he  mentions  the 
recent  death  of  his  son  Edward  in  his  prime,  the  illness  of  his 
son  Henry;  gives  advice  about  the  management  of  the  plantations, 
and  speaks  of  his  sons  but  not  by  names;  there  is  no  mention  of 
his  wife  who  lived  after  1720,^  but  we  do  not  know  how  much 
later. 

**  Probate  Court 

**  From  Mi.  Read's  notes. 

^  Mesne  Conveyance  Office,  Charleston,  C,  p.  14. 


108         so.  CA«  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Edward  Hyme  was  probably  the  Edward  Hyme,  member  of 
Assembly  1716,  and  lived  in  South  Carolina  until  after  1724;  on 
2Sth  October,  1720,  Edward  H)Tne,  Elizabeth  H)Tne,  and  Bar- 
bara Hyme  witnessed  a  transfer  of  land  from  Landgrave  Thomas 
Smith  and  Mary  his  wife  to  their  son-in-law  John  Moore,  all  of 
St.  James  Goose  Creek"  On  12th  June,  1724,  Capt.  Edward 
Hyme  was  one  of  the  appraisors  of  the  estate  of  CoL  Thomas 
Smith  of  Goose  Creek.  (Probt  Ct  1722-24,  p.  250.)  Edward 
Hyme  was  a  Justice  of  the  Peace  North  Carolina  in  1734,  1736, 
1739  and  1750;  apparently  from  the  title  he  is  mentioned  by,  he 
was  also  a  Colonel  in  the  militia." 

James  Ellerton,  the  schoolmaster  in  the  Smith  family,  at  St. 
James  Goose  Creek,  whose  journal  Mrs.  Foyas  quotes  in  Olden 
Times  in  Carolina,  (p.  183),  mentions  that  on  'Tuesday  November 
5,  1745,  Col.  Edward  Hyme's  horses  came  here  from  Cape  Fear 
10th,  He  came  himself  and  there  was  a  joyful  meeting.  Decem- 
ber 2,  Madam  went  to  town.  [Mrs.  Smith]  5th.  She  came  up. 
7th.  Her  Brother  Col.  Edward  Hyme  came  again  from  town,  not 
meeting  with  a  passage  to  go  home  to  Cape  Fear.  22  Col. 
Edward  Hyme  went  to  town  in  order  once  more  to  go  home,  and 
was  to  sail  the  next  day — he  came  alone  it  was  many  years  since 
he  left  us  " 

CoL  Edward  Hyme  was  dead  in  1758,  when  his  brother  Burrell 
Massingberd  Hyme  made  his  will. 

We  have  no  accurate  list  of  his  children;  so  far  as  we  have  found, 
they  were  as  follows,  order  unknown: 

1.  Edward  Hyme  died  1738,  near  maturity,  unmarried. 

2.  Ann  Hyme,  bom  before  1716,  called  "Cozen"  in  the  will 

of  James  Lawson,  who  liiarried  her  aunt,  Ann  Smith. 

3.  Elizabeth  Hyme,  mentioned  as  niece  in  the  will  of  her 

aunt,  Justina  Moore  in  1743;  married  January  26, 
1747/8,  Daniel  Britton  of  Craven  County  (Parish 
Register  of  Pr.  Frederick),  Daniel  Britton  made  his 
will  8  June,  1748,  proved  16  June,  1749;  mentions 
his  wife  Elizabeth  and  unbom  child;  mentions  in 
list  of  negroes  one  at  "the  ferry"  and  one  at  Cape 
Fear;  leaves  Capt.  Francis  Britton,  George  Hyme 

»M.C.O. 

••  Colonial  Records  of  N.  C, 


Hinune  family  109 

and  wife  Elizabeth,  his  executors.*^  The  child  was 
a  son,  Daniel  Britton,  who  died  in  infancy  before 
July  24,  1751." 

The  Britton  nephews  and  niece,  mentioned  in  the 
will  of  Henry  Hyme  below,  were  apparently  the 
children  of  Capt.  Francis  Britton  who  died  in  1766, 
since  they  are  the  same  as  named  in  his  will  *•  Ap- 
parently there  was  another  Hyme-Britton  marriage 

4.  George  Hyme  died  before  1772,  apparently  without  issue, 

5.  Henry  Hyme,  of  New  Hanover,  Province  of  North  Caro- 

lina; he  made  his  will  29  September,  1773,  proved 
26  October,  1773;  Henry  Walters,  plantation  in 
New  Hanover  County  called  Hymham,  with  ad- 
ditional lands  "devised  me  by  my  honoured  Father 
Col.  Edward  Hyme,"  also  land  which  came  to  said 
Henry  Hyme  by  the  death  of  his  brother  George; 
niece  Elizabeth  Walters;  nephews  Joseph  and  George 
Walters;  nephew  Moses  Britton;  niece  Mary  Britton; 
nephews  Henry  Britton  and  Francis  Britton;  ex- 
presses appreciation  of  the  kindness  of  the  above 
nephews  in  coming  to  see  him  and  staying  with  him; 
states  that  for  12  years  he  has  been  prevented  by 
illness  from  attending  to  his  affairs,  his  good  friend 
Frederick  Jones,  having  attended  to  same  for  him; 
speaks  of  having  gone  to  Philadelphia  for  his  health; 
mentions  god-daughter  Elizabeth,  daughter  of  Fred- 
erick Jones;  rest  of  estate  to  niece  Mary  Britton,  and 
nephews  Moses,  Francis,  and  Henry  Britton;  his 
negro  man  Cato,  to  be  sent  with  news  of  his  death 
to  nephews  Moses  and  Francis  Britton,  and  his  will 
not  to  be  opened  until  they  have  such  notice.  Fred- 
erick Jones,  Moses  Britton  and  Francis  Britton  to 
be  executors. 
Signed,  Henry  Hyme  (seal  with  arms).'^ 
6, H)me,  who  married Walters? 

"  Probate  Court,  1747-52,  p.  199. 
"Probate  Court  Inventories. 
*»  Probate  Court  Book,  "R.  R.,"  p.  232. 
wi\r.  C.  WiUs. 


110         so.  CA«  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 


Burrell  Massingberd  Hyme  (Edward^  1)  was  bom  1702  or 
earlier;  he  witnessed  11th  March,  1725/6,  a  deed  from  George 
Atchison  of  CharlesTown,  merchant,  which  conve3red  to  Elizabeth 
Hyme  of  CharlesTown,  mdow  and  Henry  Hyme  of  the  same  place 
merchant,  500  acres  in  Colleton  County.*^  The  Memorial  of  the 
above  Henry  and  Elizabeth  Hyme,  states  that  the  above  men- 
tioned 500  acres  were  in  St  Paul's  parish,  on  a  branch  of  Toobedoo 
Creek,  bounding  southwest  on  lands  of  Proprietor  Blake;  the 
memorial  registered  April  27,  1733." 

Burrell  Massingberd  Hyme  died  without  leaving  issue;  no 
record  of  a  marriage  for  him  has  been  found.  He  made  his  will 
October  1, 1757,  as  Burrell  Massingberd  Hyme  of  Colletcm  County, 
Gentleman;  mentions  sister  Mary  Smith  widow;  each  of  the 
children  of  his  Brother  Edward  H3rme,  late  of  Cape  Fear  deceased. 

To  John  Cumberlege,  Gentleman,  of  Newgate  Street,  London, 
£20,  of  which  he  is  to  give  to  ''my  cousin  William  Burrell  Massing- 
berd, Esq;  of  South  Ormsby  in  the  County  of  Lincoln"  a  mourning 
ring  valued  at  25  or  30  shillings,  and  to  cousin  Francis  Burrell 
Massingberd  of  the  city  of  London,  a  ring  of  the  same  value, 
"if  they  please  to  accept  them". 

To  brother  Henry  Hyme  all  estate  not  otherwise  disposed  of, 
and  said  brother  Henry  to  be  sole  executor. 

Signed,  Burrell  M.  H3rme. 

Proved  2d  January,  1758,  when  Henry  H3rme  qualified.** 


CoL  Henry  Hyme  (Edward  1),  bom  June  29,  1704;  died  Janu- 
ary 27,  1764.  The  following  is  taken  from  the  pq>ers  and  notes 
of  the  late  Bamwell  Rhett  He}rward,  Esq;  now  in  the  South 
Carolina  Historical  Society,  and  is  stated  to  be  an  exact  copy  of 
a  record  on  parchment,  found  in  a  Hsrme  family  bible,  imprint 
date  1706. 

"Henry  H)rme  Son  of  Edward  Hyme  of  the  County  of  Norfolk, 
Merchant  and  Elizabeth  his  wife.  Daughter  of  Sir  Drayner  Massing- 

«  M.  C.  O.  F,  44. 

»Memoriak,  Office  Hist.  Com.  Columbia. 
•Probate  Court,  1761-77,  p.  520. 


HYKNE  FAMILY  111 

herd  of  the  County  of  Lincoln^  Knight,  was  bom  June  29thy 
A.D.  1704. 

Susannah  Bellinger,  daughter  of  Landgrave  Edmund  Belhnger 
and  Elizabeth  his  wife,  Daughter  of  William  Baker  both  of  the 
Province  of  Carolina,  was  bom  1st  September,  1715.  The  said 
Henry  Hyme  and  Susannah  Bellinger  were  married  May  8th, 
1733,  and  had  issue  as  follows. 

[6.  i]  Henry  Hyme  bom  Friday  October  18th,  1734. 
[ii]  Ann  Hyme  bom  Thursday  February  19th,   1736; 

died  June  23,  1737. 
[iii]  Ann  Hyme  bom  Monday  October  24,  1737;  died 

October  26, 1743. 
[iv]  Edward  Hyme  bom  Thursday  March  6th,  1739; 

died  April  1st,  following, 
[v]  Edward  B.  Hyme  bom  Thursday  November  19th, 

1741;  died  November  19th  (sk\  1743. 
[vi]  Ann  Massingberd  Hyme,  bom  Tuesday  January  10th, 
1743;  died  August  22, 1745. 

[vii] Hyme,  bom  Monday  October  27,  1746,  died 

same  evening. 
[7.  viii]  Edmund   Massmgberd   Hyme   bom   Friday   noon, 
January  14th,  1748. 
Susannah  Hyme  died  April  25th,  1749,  aged  33  3rears,  7  months 
and  25  days. 

Henry  Hyme  was  married  to  his  second  wife  Elizabeth  Clark 
Sanders  daughter  of  Mr.  Alexander  Clark,  and  relict  of  Capt. 
Joshua  Sanders,  25th  December,  1751,  and  had  issue: 

[ix]  Elizabeth  Hyme,  bom  30th  October,  1752.    [She  mar- 
ried in  September,  1779;  Daniel  Tucker,  Esq;  (1752- 
1797),  of  Georgetown,  she  died  May  25, 1790;  issue.] 
[8.  z]  William  Alexander  Hyme,  bom  16th  December,  1754. 
Elizabeth  Clark  Hyme  died  25th  October,  1752, 
aged  41  years.    Henry  Hyme  was  married  to  his 
third   wife   Mary    Golightly,    relict   of   Culcheth 
Grolightly,  Esq;  20th  June,  1759." 
Most  of  the  dates  in  the  bible  can  be  checked  by  newspaper 
notices  and  church  registers;  printed  in  this  Magazine. 


112         so.  CA.  HISTORiaiL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

The  second  wife  of  Henry  Hyme,  Elizabeth  QaiiL,  was  the 
daughter  of  Alexander  dark,  of  Colleton  County*^  and  his  wife 
Elizabeth, — who  afterwards  married — ^Hunt;  Elizabeth  Hunt  died 
in  December,  1766,  aged  73  years  (Hayne  record).  She  made  her 
will  30th  April,  1757,  as  Elizabeth  Hunt  of  Charies  Town,  widow; 
mentions  her  grand-daughters  Mary  Ann  Clark  Sanders,  and 
Elizabeth  Elliott;  [These  were  the  daughters  of  Elizabeth  Clark 
and  her  first  husband,  Joshua  Sanders.  Elizabeth  being  the  wife 
of  Samuel  Elliott]  Grand-daughter  Elizabeth  H3rme  under  16; 
grand-son  William  Alexander  Hyme.  Executors,  Samuel  Elliott 
and  his  wife  Elizabeth.  Proved  16th  January,  1767.*  Mrs. 
Himt  was  a  practicing  mid-wife,  and  was  present  according  to  a 
record  kept  by  her,  at  the  birth  of  nearly  4000  children.  (This 
Magazine^  voL  XVI,  p.  35.) 

Mary  Butler  Crolightly,  the  third  wife  of  CoL  Henry  Hjrme, 
was  the  daughter  of  Richard  Butler;  she  married  first  in  1738, 
Thomas  Elliott,  Jr.;  their  issue  died  young.  She  married  second 
in  April,  1746,  Culcheth  Golightly,  Esq.,  by  whom  she  had  two 
daughters,  Dorothy,  who  married  Ben.  Huger,  and  Mary,  who 
married  Wm.  Henry  Drayton.  Mrs.  Crolightly  married  CoL 
Henry  Hyme  for  her  third  husband,  June  26,  1759,  and  they 
had  issue: 

viiL  Harriet   Hsrme,   bom   October  9th,    1760;   married 

Richard  Bohun  Baker  and  had  issue* 
ix.  Sarah  H3rme,  bom  February  16,  1763;  Married  about 

September,  1788  (Marriage  Settlement  No.  1,  p.  377, 

Office    Hist'l.    Com'n.))   CoL  James  Simons  and 

had  issue. 
X.  Benjamin  H3me,  bom  April  2,  1764,  after  the  death 

of  his  father,  and  died  April,  1770.    (St  Andrew's 

Register.) 

CoL  Henry  Hyme  was  a  Justice  in  the  Commission  of  the  Peace 

in  1737,  (This  Magazine^  V.  XI,  p.  189)  is  mentioned  in  various 

deeds  as  Colonel  by  1751;  was  a  major  on  Gov.  Lyttleton's  Staff 

in  October,  1756,  in  the  expedition  against  the  Cherokees;  (Mc- 

*«M.  C.  O.,  book  O.O.,  p486;  deed  of  confinnation  dated  28  March  1754, 
recites  will  of  Alexander  Clark,  17  March  1718;  his  daughter  Elizabeth,  married 
to  Joshua  Sanders,  and  daughter  Jane,  married  to — ^Jackson. 

•»  Probate  Court,  1760-67 


HYSNE  FAMILY  113 

Crady)  was  a  member  of  Assembly  from  St.  Bartholomew's  parish 
in  1754  (Gaz.f  November  14,  1754),  and  a  Justice  of  the  Peace 
for  Colleton  Cpunty  in  1756  (this  Magaune  v.  20,  p.  74).  He 
made  his  will  26th  January,  1764;  proved  14th  February,  1764; 
wife  Mary;  son  Henry  Hyme,  silver  hilted  sword;  surveying 
compass  and  chain  together  with  his  Mother's  [torn]  grand- 
mother's wedding  ring. 

To  son  Ed — (torn)  silver  hilted  sword,  watch,  seal. 

To  daughter .    Son  William  Alexander  silver  watch,  "I 

dont  mean  that  that  was  his  Uncles." 

Daughter-in-law  Mary  Ann  Qark  Sanders  chest  of  drawers 
standing  in  the  longest  chamber  at  ''my  house  at  Ashepoo." 

Son  Henry  plantation  of  three  tracts  on  South  Side  Ashepoo 
River,  1004  acres  also  little  Island  of  River  Swamp,  20  acres 
between  North  and  South  branch  Ashepoo  River. 

Sons  Edmund  and  William  plantation  on  Congarees,  1500  acres. 

Rest  of  estate  to  all  his  children;  wife  enciente;  son  Edmund 
imder  21.  James  Skirving,  James  Postell,  Esq.;  Cousin  Thomas 
Smith,  merchant,  Brother  to  Benjamin  Smith  Esq;  Samuel 
Elliott  and  sons  Henry  and  Edmund  when  21,  to  be  executors.^ 

Mary  Hyme,  of  St.  Andrew's  parish,  widow  of  Col.  Henry 
Hyme,  made  her  ¥^11  3  November,  1789;  proved  September  25, 
1795;  plantation  where  she  lived  called  Tipseboo  in  two  equal 
parts,  part  with  house  to  daughter  Sarah  Simons,  other  part  to 
daughter  Harriet  Baker.  Lot  near  Ashley  Ferry  to  daughter 
Mary  Drayton;  all  money  and  certain  named  slaves  to  daughter 
Harriett  and  daughter  Sarah. 

Grand-son  John  Drayton;  grand-son  Benj.  Huger,  grand- 
daughter Mary  Golightly  Rutledge,  grand-son  Richard  Bohun 
Baker,  grand-daughter  Mary  Butler,  niece  Elizabeth  Butler,  and 
sister  Sarah  Butler,  estate  of  deceased  Brother  Elisha  Butler. 
Friends  Charles  Cotesworth  Pinckney,  John  Parker,  Jr.,  Thomas 
Parker  and  grand-son  John  Drayton  to  be  executors. 

Codicil  dated  9  January,  1791,  leaves  daughter  Sarah  Simons 
all  marsh  land  between  plantation  called  Clear  Spring  and  Mrs. 
Martin's  plantation  and  Mr.  Lindower;  grand-son  Henry  Hyme 
Baker,  grand-daughter  Mary  Butler  Simons,  cousin  Mrs.  Sarah 
Minott.  Second  Codicil  26  December,  1791,  grand-daughter 
Mary   Butler   Simons   then   to  grand-daughter   Mary   Parker. 


114         so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Thiid  Codicil  10  March,  1794.  Plantation  called  Upseboo  has 
been  divided  in  her  life  time  by  Mr.  Jos.  Purodl  between  daoghtecs 
Harriett  Baker  and  Sarah  Simons.**  Mrs.  Mary  Hyme  died  in 
October,  1794,  in  her  seventy-fourth  year.*' 


Henry  Hyme  (Henry  2,  Edward  1)  of  St.  Barthdomew's  parish, 
bom  October  18, 1734;  married  April  8, 1756,  Mary  Ann  Girardeau 
spinster  of  the  same  parish  (Hayne  Record),  he  was  a  obtain  horn 
the  district  of  Chehaw,  in  CoL  Joseph  Glover's  Regt.  of  Foot, 
Cdleton  County,  August  5, 1775;  was  captain  of  militia  December, 
1775;  was  lieutenant  in  5th  South  Carolina  Regiment  (Continental) 
resigning  his  conmiission  29th  November,  1779.  He  received  a 
bounty  grant  of  land  for  his  services.** 

Henry  Hyme  died  about  1785,  leaving  a  will  dated  January  4, 
1784,  proved  27  May,  1785;  mentions  wife  Mary  Ann  Hjrme; 
sons  Henry  and  Peter  Girardeau  Hyme,  daughter  Mary  Ann. 
Executors,  Wife,  Brother  Wm.  Alexander  Hyme,  and  Sons  Henry 
and  Peter  Girardeau  Hsrme. 
He  had  issue: 

L  Mary  Ann,  bom  March  6,  1757;  married  January,  1785, 

William  Basquen. 
iL  Henry  Hjrme,  bom  October  14, 1760;  married  at  Ashepoo, 
March  7,  1790,  Ann  Pinckney  Webb,  daughter  of 
Dr.  William  Webb.    Issue:  Henry  Hyme. 
iiL  Susan  Bellinger  Hyme,  bom  November  18,  1761;  died 

July  22,  1780. 
iv.  Peter  Girardeau  Hyme,  bom  December  6,  1763;  married 

Elizabeth ;  he  died  about  1792  without  issue; 

made  his  will  13  November,  1791,  proved  March  24, 
1792;  mentions  wife  Elizabeth,  property  she  had 
before  marriage,  for  life,  then  to  his  brother's 
children,  if  none,  then  to  sister's  children,  Cousin 

^  Ibid.,  Book  A. 

*'  S.  C.  Gag.,  January,  1794.  Died  in  her  74th  year  at  her  seat  at  Clear 
Spring,  Mrs.  Mary  Hyme,  relict  of  Col.  Henry  Hyme,  for  14  years  afflicted  with 
a  cancer  in  her  nose. 

•»  ColL  S.  C.  Hist.  Soc  v.  HI,  p.  114;  this  Magadne,  v.  H,  p.  6;  v.  VII,  p. 
220andv.XVU,p.  119. 


HYBNE  FAMILY  115 

Peter  Bohun  Girardeau,  son  of  Peter  Bohun  Girar- 
deau, and  his  brother  John  Girardeau.  Mother  for 
life,  sister  £20  sterling  each  year  until  she  "again 
enjoys  her  own  property."  Wife,  William  Webb, 
and  Daniel  D'Oyley  to  be  executors.  Daniel 
D'Oyley,  William  Webb  and  Henry  Hyme  (sic) 
qualified. 

Elizabeth,  the  widow  of  Peter  Hyme  married 
about  November,  1795,  Peter  Bohun  Girardeau;  her 
marriage  settlement  states  that  she  is  entitled  to 
one-fourth  of  an  imdivided  tract  of  land,  in  St. 
Bartholomew's  parish,  left  to  her  by  her  father, 
(name  not  given),  boimding  on  lands  of  John  Bel- 
linger, William  Cothsworth  Pinckney,  and  the  public 
road  from  Edmundsbury  to  Salkehatchie  Bridge, 
and  15  negroes.  Dated  18  November  1795;  Daniel 
D'Oyley  trustee.  (Mg.  Settlements  Columbia.) 
V.  Edmund  Massingberd  Hyme,  bom  October  20,  1765; 
died  young. 

7 

Edmund  Massingberd  Hyme  (Henry  2,  Edward  1),  bom 
January  14,  1748;  died  of  apoplexy  December  11,  1783 
(GazOte  of  State  of  S.  C,  December  11, 1783). 

He  was  Captain  First  South  Carolina  Continental  Regiment 
17  June,  1775;  Major  12  May,  1779.  Aide-de-Camp  to  General 
Greene  in  1781.  Deputy  Adjuant-General  17  November,  1778, 
to  end  of  the  war.  By  act  of  Congress  29  October,  1781,  Major- 
General  Greene  was  desired  to  present  the  thanks  of  Congress  to 
Major  H3me,  his  Aide-de-Camp,  in  testimony  of  his  particular 
activity  and  good  conduct  during  the  whole  action  at  Eutaw 
Springs,  S.  C.  (Heitman). 

Major  H3me  was  wounded  in  the  action  near  Gibbes'  farm, 
March  30th,  1780  (McCrady,  v,  3).  He  rendered  important 
services  in  the  exchange  of  prisoners  in  1781  (Garden's  Anecdotes). 
Was  member  of  Assembly  from  St.  Bartholomew's  parish  in  1782. 

Major  Hyme  died  intestate;  Daniel  Tucker  of  Georgetown  and 
Henry  Hyme  of  St.  Bartholomew's  parish  administered;  his 
plantation  in  St  Bartholomew's  parish  was  called  Ormsby.'*    He 

**  Inventories,  Probate  Court. 


116         so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

seems  to  have  died  without  issue,  since  the  marriage  settlement 
of  his  sister  Sarah  with  James  Simons  recites  property  which  she 
possessed  as  one  of  the  co-heiresses  of  Edmund  M.  Hyme^  Esq. 

8 

Dr.  William  Alexander  Hyme  (Henry  2,  Edward  1)  bom — 16th, 
1754;  died  at  Island  of  St.  Thomas  where  he  had  gone  for  his 
health,  about  April,  1784  (SkUe  Gazette  of  S.  C,  May  6,  1784). 
He  lived  in  Prince  George's  parish,  and  married  there,  at  the  house 
of  Mr.  Benjamin  Young,  on  the  3rd  June,  1779,  Sarah  Mitchell 
(Parish  Reg.  St.  James  Santee).  His  will  is  dated  13  January, 
1784;  he  describes  himself  as  a  physician;  leaves  to  any  child 
he  may  have  by  his  wife  Sarah,  the  plantation  called  Umbria, 
purchased  from  Mr.  John  Cordes,  together  with  the  negroes 
known  as  the  Umbria  negroes  (named),  all  lots  in  Georgetown  and 
the  family  Bible  given  to  him  by  his  grand-mother  also  pew  in 
St.  Michaels  church,  Charleston,  which  he  claims  as  heir  to  his 
grand-mother  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Hunt.  Residue  to  wife  Sarah 
Hyme  with  right  of  residence  on  said  plantation  and  profit  of  the 
negroes  for  her  widowhood,  and  if  she  have  no  child,  or  such  child 
die,  then  wife  Sarah  sole  use  of  said  plantation  called  Umbria  for 
life,  and  at  her  death,  said  plantation  and  negroes  to  such  child  of 
his  sister  Elizabeth  Tucker  as  shall  first  attain  21  years;  in  failure 
of  such  issue,  then  to  sisters  Harriet  and  Sally  Hyme  and  their 
heirs. 

To  wife  in  case  of  death  of  any  child  which  may  be  bom,  lots 
in  Georgetown  for  life.  Sister  Elizabeth  Tucker,  if  he  has  no 
child,  to  have  the  family  bible  and  pew  in  St.  Michael's  church, 
which  he  claimed  as  heir  to  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Hunt. 

Friends  Daniel  Tucker,  Thos.  Mitchell,  Maurice  Simon  and 
good  wife  Sarah  Hyme  to  be  executors.  No  date  of  proof;  this 
abstract  was  made  by  Mr.  M.  Alston  Read  from  a  copy  of  the 
original.) 

Henry  Hyme  and  Ann  Pinckney  Webb  had  issue,  besides  several 
who  died  young:** 

Henry  Hyme,  born  February,  1797,  died  April  4, 1861;  married 
(1)  Henrietta  Ann  Freeman  (1819-1835);  married  (2)  Eliza  Earle 

*^  Data  furnishtd  by  William  Godfrey  Hyme,  Esq.,  of  Savannah,  Georgia. 


HYKNE  FAMILY  117 

Basquelin,  daughter  of  Richard  Earle  and  widow  of  Peter  Bas- 
quelin;  no  issue  by  the  last  marriage. 
Henry  Hyme  and  Henrietta  Ann  Freeman  had  issue: 

1.  Ann  Margaret,  bom  and  died  1820. 

2.  Henry  Hyme,  bom  June  21,  1821;  died  August  29, 1861; 

married  (1)  February,  1843,  Ann  Glover,  daughter 
of  Moses  Wilson  Glover  and  Mary  Witter  Holmes; 
no  issue  by  this  marriage.  Married  (2)  July  17, 
1845,  Mary  Elizabeth  Wilson,  daughter  of  James 
Joseph  Wilson  and  Rebecca  Ann  Thompson;  she 
died  September  28,  1852;  issue  given  farther  on. 
Married  (3)  November  17,  1853,  Elizabeth  Zahler, 
daughter  of  James  Tatnall  Zahler  and  Hannah 
Carleton  (1826-1913);  issue  given  farther  on. 

3.  Peter  Girardeau  Hyme,  1823-1824. 

4.  Peter  Girardeau  Hyme,  1825-1826. 

5.  Ann  Webb  Hyme,  1826-1827. 

6.  Carob'ne  Lowery  Hyme,  1828-1900;  married  July,  1848, 

Andrew  Smoak,  and  had  issue. 

7.  William  Webb  Hyme  (1829-1899),  married  1866  Elizabeth 

Zaler  H3rme,  widow  of  Henry  Hyme;  no  issue. 

8.  Mary  Susan  Hyme,  twin  to  no.  7;  died  young. 

9.  Margaret  Webb  Hjrme,  bom  November,  1832;  married 

William  Fripp  Prentiss;  has  one  daughter. 
Henry  Hyme  (1821-1861)  and  his  second  wife,  Mary  Elizabeth 
in^lson,  had  issue: 

1.  Henrietta  Massingberd  Hyme,  bom  1846;  married  Decem- 

ber, 1872,  Samuel  Sinuns  and  had  issue. 

2.  Henry  Hyme  (1847-1916)  married  Elizabeth  Woodward. 

Issue:  Wm.  Henry  Hyme,  died  young,  and  Pauline 
Hyme,  who  married  Earle  Vemon  Hagood. 

3.  Edmund  Webb  Hyme   (1852-1918),  married  Harriett 

Woodward;  no  issue. 
Henry  Hyme  (1821-1861)  and  his  third  wife,  Elizabeth  Esther 
Zahler  has  issue: 

4.  Clare  Elizabeth  Hyme,  bom  1854;  married  Lucius  Bel- 

linger Lariscy,  and  has  issue. 

5.  William  Jacob  Hyme  (1855-)  married  (1)  1883,  Maria 

Glover  Grant,  she  died  1899;  issue,  i;  Mary  Esther 


118         so.  CA«  mSTOBICAL  AMD  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGAZINE 

Hyrne,  bom  1884,  married  1912,  George  B.  Grant 
and  has  issue;  ii,  Cardton  Henry  Hyme,  bom  1886; 
iii,  William  Wyman  Hyme,  bom  1888;  married  1917, 
Mamie  P^due;  iv,  Annie  Elizabeth  1891-1921;  mar- 
ried 1916,  Jas.  E.  Morgan,  <Hie  son;  v,  Edmund 
Webb  Hyme,  bom  1895.  William  Jacob  Hyme 
married  (2)  — 

6.  Bohun  Girardeau  Hyme  bom  July  24,  1857;  married 

February  9, 1880,  Eliae  Ladson  Godfrey,  daughter  <tf 
William  Godfrey  and  Martha  Pressfey  (McCauley) 
Came  widow;  issue:  i,  Elsie  Godfrey  Hyme  (1887- 
1890);  ii,  ^K^lliam  Godfrey  Hyme,  Ixmi  December  24, 
1888;  married  June  27,  1917,  Famda  Lucas,  and 
has  issue;  iii,  Esther  Pressky  Hyme,  bom  1890 
married  1916,  John  H.  Peurifoy,  and  has  issue 
iv,  Bohun  Girardeau  Hyme,  bom  October  29,  1892 
V,  Mary  Cam  Hyme  189S-1897;  vi,  Lallah  Lucas 
Hyme,  1896-1901;  vii,  Henry  Hyme,  1899-1902. 

7.  Edward  Drayner  Hyme,   1859-1897,   married  Emma 

Francis  Grant.  Issue:  i,  Henry  Herbert;  ii,  Annie 
Elizabeth,  married  Dr.  H.  W.  Knighton;  iii,  Edward 
Drayner,  married;  iv,  Clarence  F.;  v.  MaricA  C; 
vi,  Harold  K. 

8.  Caroline  Jeanette  Hyme,  bom  1861;  married  1894  Robert 

Lee  Sanders;  no  issue. 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  July) 

Died.  On  Monday  morning  last,  Mrs.  Mary  Simmcms  Petriei 
the  wife  of  Lieut.  George  Petrie.  (Wednesday,  September  24, 
1794.) 

Departed  this  life  on  Thursday  the  25th  instant  Capt.  Henry 
WiUiSy  son  of  Cd.  Lewis  Willis,  of  Fredericksburg,  Virginia,  late 
a  obtain  in  the  fourth  regiment  of  Pennsylvania  light  dragoons 
commanded  by  Col.  Stephen  Moylan;  a  man  of  the  most  dis- 
tinguished philanthropy,  honor  and  integrity,  and  who  fulfilled  all 
the  offices  of  a  private  life  as  well  as  he  acquitted  himself  in  a 
military  character,  with  universal  applause.  The  few  friends  and 
familiar  acquaintances  of  the  decreased,  in  this  dty,  feel  them- 
selves particularly  obliged  to  the  officers  of  the  Charleston  Eastern 
Regiment,  who  honored  his  funeral  by  their  attendance;  a  drcum* 
stance  which,  as  often  as  reflected  on  will  renew  a  sense  of  obliga- 
tion.   (Saturday,  September  27,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  in  the  57th  year  of  hisage, 
Mr.  John  Hughes,  house  carpenter;  a  tender  husband,  an  indulgent 

father,  and  a  kind  master (Monday,  September  29, 

1794.) 

Departed  this  life,  on  the  29th  September  in  the  55th  year  of 
her  age,  Mrs.  Mary  Cox,  after  a  long  and  painful  illness;  her  re- 
mains were  intered  in  the  Catholic  church.  (Wednesday,  October 
1, 1794.) 

Died.  Last  week,  after  a  short  illness,  Mr.  John  Woodbury,  of 
James  Island,  in  the  48th  year  of  his  age,  formerly  of  the  house  of 
Woodbury  and  Lord,  merchants,  of  this  city.  For  industry, 
honesty  and  sobriety,  few,  if  any,  exceed  him.  (Thursday, 
October  2,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Daniel  Bruce,  to 
Miss  Susannah  Smith,  daughter  of  Thomas  Smith,  Esq.^  late  of 
\Wnyah,  gentleman  planter.    (Saturday,  October  4,  1794.) 

119 


120         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died.  In  the  25  th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Mary  Eleanor  Pinckney, 
wife  of  the  late  Governor  Giarles  Pinckney,  Esq.  .  .  •  (Tues- 
day, October  7, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Monday  night  last,  Mr.  inHlliam  Lenox,  merchant, 
to  Miss  Mary  Greebage,  both  of  this  city.  (Thursday,  October  9, 
1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  the  2d  inst.  Mr.  John  Smith  of  this 
dty,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Cameron,  of  Christ  Church  parish.  (Fri- 
day, October  10, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Chitty,  to 
Miss  Ann  Cole,  both  of  this  dty.    (Satiurday,  October  11,  1794.) 

Died.  At  his  seat  on  the  Congaree,  on  Monday  the  6th  insL 
Commodore  Alexander  Gillon,  one  of  the  representatives  of  thb 
state  in  the  congress  of  the  United  States.  (Monday,  October  13, 
1794.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  the  11th  inst.  Mrs.  Sarah  Sanders,  aged  82. 
(Long  eulogy.)    (Wednesday,  October  IS,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  \^lliam  Gray,  to 
Miss  Elizabeth  Clarke,  both  of  this  dty.  (Saturday,  October  18, 
1794.) 

Died  of  a  putrid  fever,  at  the  High  Hills  of  Santee,  on  Wednes- 
day the  15th  instant,  in  the  73d  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Radiel 
Furman,  relict  of  the  late  Wood  Furman,  Esq.  the  first  ordinary 
of  Camden  district    .    .    .    (Wednesday,  October  22, 1794.) 

Died.  In  England,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Pinckney,  wife  of  Thomas 
Pinckney,  Esq.,  ambassador  to  the  court  of  Great  Britain. 

On  Saturday  11th,  in  this  dty,  Mrs.  Martha  Roper,  wife  of  Mr. 
Joseph  Roper.    (Thursday,  October  23, 1794.) 

Died.  Latdy  in  Philadelphia,  Mr.  Edgar  Wdls,  Jr.,  son  of 
Mr.  Edgar  Wells,  merchant  of  this  dty.  (Friday,  October  24, 
1794.) 

Died.  On  Satiurday  last,  the  18th  inst.  at  James  IsIand,Mrs. 
Mary  Chapman,  aged  84  years.    (Saturday,  October  25,  1794.) 

On  Sunday  the  19th  instant,  died  in  the  bloom  of  life,  Mrs. 
Charlotte  Peters,  the  consort  of  Williiam  B.  Peters,  Esq.,  of  Will- 
town    ....    a  tender  mother  an  affectionate  sister.    .    .    • 

Died.  On  Saturday  evening  last,  James  Down,  Esq.,  a  notary 
public  and  justice  of  the  peace  for  the  district  of  Charleston. 
(Monday,  October  27,  1794.) 


IfAKKlAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  121 

Died.  At  his  plantation  near  Beaufort,  George  RoupeIl,£sq., 
for  many  years  deputy  postmaster  general  of  the  southern  depart- 
ment of  ^nerica.    •    .    .    (Tuesday,  October  28, 1794.) 

Died.  In  the  74th  year  of  her  age,  at  her  seat  at  Clear  Spring, 
on  Thursday  morning,  Mrs.  Mary  Hyme,  relict  of  CoL  Heniy 
Hyme.  For  14  years  was  this  amiable  lady  afflicted  with  a  cancer 
in  her  nose,  which  latterly  caused  her  excruciating  pain;  but  she 
bore  her  misfortunes  not  only  with  Christian  fortitude,  but  with 
cheerf ullness.  By  her  family  she  was  venerated  and  adored  as  a 
tender  parent,  and  a  most  agreeable  companion (Fri- 
day, October  31,  1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Benjamin  Langstaff, 
to  Miss  Ann  Howard,  daughter  of  Mr.  Robert  Howard,  deceased. 
(Saturday,  November  1, 1794.) 

Married.  Edward  Tonge,  Esq.,  of  St  Paul's  to  Miss  Ann 
Stewart,  of  St  George's,  Dorchester.  (Tuesday,  November  4, 
1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  John  Drayton,  Esq.,  to 
Miss  Tidyman.    (Monday,  November  10, 1794.) 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  in  St.  Paul's  parish,  in  the  prime  of  life, 
much  regretted  by  all  his  acquaintances,  Mr.  George  Fickling, 
planter. 

Departed  this  life,  on  the  4th  of  November,  and  in  the  64th 
year  of  his  age,  Mr.  William  Fripp,  sen,  of  St  Helena.  The  loss 
of  his  affectionate  wife,  soon  bore  him  to  his  grave.  He  was  uni- 
versally beloved  by  all  who  knew  him,  and  his  death  is  equally 
regretted;  he  was  a  tender  and  affectionate  husband,  an  indulgent 
parent,  and  a  loving  brother.    (Friday,  November  14,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Friday  last  (October  31)  after  a  short,  but  painful 
illness,  Mrs.  Harriet  Hampton,  the  toiiable  consort  of  CoL  Wade 
Hampton,  of  Columbia.    (Saturday,  November  15, 1794.) 

Married.  Last  Tuesday  evening.  Dr.  Chichester,  to  Miss  Mary 
Beatrix  PowelL    (Tuesday,  November  18,  1794.) 

Departed  this  life,  on  the  28th  of  August  last,  Mr.  William 
Darby,  merchant,  at  Fair  Forest,  of  a  disorder  in  his  bowels,  which 
he  had  been  subject  to  from  his  youth;  the  country  has  lost  in 
him  a  truly  honest  man.    (Thursday,  November  20, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Martin  Miller,  to 
Miss  Catherine  Bounight.    (Saturday,  November  22, 1794.) 


122         so.  CA.  HISTOfilCAL  AND  GENEALOCHCAL  MAGAZINE 

Died.  On  Friday  last,  moch  regretted  by  all  his  friends,  Dr. 
Christopher  Hahnbaum,  whose  benevolent,  humane  and  charitaUe 
disposition,  endeared  him  to  all  who  knew  him. 

Died.  Suddenly,  yesterday  morning,  Mrs.  Eliza  Elisham,  an 
elderly  Moor,  for  several  years  resident  in  this  dty.  (Tuesday, 
November  25,  1794.) 

Married.  Last  evening,  Monsieur  Jean  Zdbius,  miniature 
painter,  to  Miss  J.  Sully,  daughter  of  Mr.  M.  Sully,  sen.  both  of 
this  dty.    (Wednesday,  November  26, 1794.) 

Died.  Last  Wednesday  morning,  Mrs.  Eliza  Chalmers,  widow 
of  Dr.  Lional  Chalmers.  ...  On  James  Island,  Mrs.  Sarah 
Croskeys,  widow  of  Mr.  William  Croskeys,  jun.  deceased.  (Satur- 
day, November  29,  1794.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  last,  Mr.  David  Hamilton,  ship  carpenter. 
(Monday,  December  1,  1794.) 

Died.  Wednesday  last,  Mr.  George  Holmes,  of  James  Island, 
planter  son  of  John  Holmes,  sen.  At  his  seat  near  Princeton 
(N,  J.)  on  the  15th  ult  in  the  72d  year  of  his  age,  the  Rev.  Dr.  John 
Witherspoon,  president  of  the  college  of  New  Jersey.  (Tuesday, 
December  2, 1794.) 

Nassau.  November  11,  died.  On  Friday  evening,  in  the  69th 
year  of  his  age,  Col.  Richard  Pearis,  formerly  of  South  Carolina. 
Yesterday,  Mr.  John  Butler,  master  of  the  schooner  Neptune,  of 
Boston.  This  morning,  Mr.  James  Hobdy,  of  YorkTown,  in 
\^ginia.    (Wednesday,  December  3, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last,  Johnston  Hagood,  Esq., 
to  Miss  O'Hear,  both  of  this  dty.    (Saturday,  December  13, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Tuesday  evening  last.  Dr.  James  Brickell,  to 
Miss  Elizabeth  White,  daughter  of  Mr.  Blake  Leay  White,  of 
this  dty.    (Thursday,  December  18, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Thursday,  the  11th  instant,  George  Taylor,  jun., 
of  Coosawhatchie,  attorney  at  law,  to  Miss  Eliza  Ladson,  second 
daughter  of  the  late  Major  Thomas  Ladson,  deceased. 

Died.  On  Sunday  last,  in  the  81st  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Eliza- 
beth Johnson,  an  old  inhabitant  of  Charleston.  (Friday,  Decem- 
ber 19,  1794.) 

Died,  in  this  dty,  on  Thiursday  evening,  Mr.  Thomas  Telfair, 
of  Exuma,  Bahama,  merchant.    (Satiurday,  December  20, 1794.) 


MASSIAGB  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  123 

Died.  On  Tuesday  the  16th  instant,  in  the  61st  year  of  his  age, 
after  a  long  and  painful  illness,  which  he  bore  with  great  fortitude. 
Dr.  Adam  Fetch,  an  eminent  chemist  and  apothecary  of  this  city. 
(Monday,  December  22, 1794.) 

Married.  Last  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Jacob  Yoer,  to  Miss 
Catherine  Harrall,  both  of  this  city. 

Mr.  Thomas  B3rthewood,  to  Miss  Sarah  Mallery.  (Tuesday, 
December  23, 1794.) 

Married.  On  Sunday  evening,  Mr.  Jeremiah  Smith  Thomson 
to  Miss  Beatrix  Fleming,  both  of  this  city.  (Wednesday,  Decem- 
ber 24, 1794.) 

Died.  The  26th  inst.  on  James  Island,  in  the  45th  year  of  his 
age,  Mr.  Christopher  Chapman,  planter.  (Tuesday,  December 
30, 1794.) 

{To  he  conHnued) 


ABSTRACTS  OF  RE(X)RDS  OF  THE  PROCEEDINGS  IN 
THE  COURT  OF  ORDINARY,  1764-1771 

CompQed  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  July) 

Citadon  to  John  in^Ison  of  Prince  George's  parish  planter  to 
admr.  on  estate  of  Richard  Moore  of  said  parish  planter  as  greatest 
creditor.    4th  March,  1765. 

Citation  to  James  Harry  of  St.  Mark's  parish  in  right  of  hb  wife 
Mary,  widow  of  John  Jones  late  of  same  parish,  to  admr.  on  estate 
of  said  John  Jones.    4th  March,  1765. 

Citation  to  George  Strother  to  admr.  on  estate  of  Robert 
Inman  late  of  Edisto  in  St  George's  parish  as  greatest  creditor. 

Dedimus  to  Stephen  Bull,  Esq.,  to  prove  will  of  Elizabeth 
Bowery  late  of  Prince  inniliam's  parish  and  qualify  ezors.  9th 
March,  1765. 

Dedimus  to  Benjamin  Yoimg,  Esq;  to  prove  will  of  Hannah 
Proctor  of  Prince  George's  parish  and  qualify  the  ezors.  13th 
March,  1765. 

Citation  to  Mary  Kirk  to  admr.  estate  of  IK^Oiam  Kirk  of  Prince 
William's  parish  overseer,  his  widow  as  next  of  kin.  14th  March, 
1765. 

Portroyall,  15  March,  1765 

Dear  Sir,  I  hope  this  W3l  Find  you  and  all  your  Good  family 
in  Good  health  as  We  are  at  Present  blessed  be  God  for  it  tho  not 
with  out  Some  Truble  as  Sir  Tom  is  about  Gitting  out  Lisins  to 
Git  Marryed  to  the  Widdow  Crawford  Which  has  made  his  Mother 
and  ey  Very  uneasy  I  have  Got  a  Stop  Put  to  that  but  I  Expect 
that  they  will  proseed  for  a  Nother  there  fore  I  beg  the  favour  of 
you  to  Enter  a  Cavet  in  the  offis  a  Ganst  him  Gitting  any  Lisens 
tell  you  Can  here  from  me  as  he  is  under  aged,  Mrs.  Bowman 
Joyne  me  With  our  Loves  to  you  and  the  Rest  of  yoiu:  family — 
from  Sir  your  Very  Humb.  Servt.  and 

Well  wisher 

Thos  Bowman. 
124 


KECOSD  OF  COUKT  PROCEEDINGS  125 

PS«  Pray  Dent  neglect  entering 
acavit  as  sune  as  posable. 
Addressed  To  Mr.  George  Livingston 
in  Giarlestown 
these 

George  Livingston  entered  a  Caveat  against  a  Licence  being 
granted  to  Thomas  Bowman  &  —  Crawford  widow  until  above 
named  Thos.  Bowman  is  heard  before  the  Governor.  18th 
March,  1765. 

Dedimus  to  George  Johnston  and  Elijah  Prioleau  to  prove  will 
of  John  Mikell  and  qualify  the  exors.    15th  March,  1765. 

Court  of  Ordinary,  15th  March,  1765. 
Odingsell  &c.  Vs.  Joseph  Ash  &c.  (1) 

[Long  report  from  the  attome3rs  of  Joseph  Ash  and  of  Odingsell 
by  his  attorney  concerning  the  estate  of  Richard  Cochran  Ash.] 

Citation  to  Robert  Mackenzie,  Sr.,  and  George  Thomson  of 
CharlesTown  merchants  to  admr.  on  estate  of  Isaac  Adams  of 
Edito  Island  planter,  as  greatest  creditors.    March  22,  1765. 

Citation  to  John  Clunie  &  Chas.  Brown  of  Prince  IXniliam's 
parish  merchants  to  admr.  on  estate  of  Elias  Couturier  of  said 
parish  as  greatest  creditors.    22  March,  1765. 

Citation  to  Melichior  Gamer  of  St.  Paul's  parish  planter,  to 
admr.  on  estate  of  Robert  Glass  of  said  parish  planter  with  copy 
of  his  will  annexed  in  so  far  as  the  same  was  left  unadmr.  by  Ann 
Glass,  widow  of  said  Robert,  also  deceased,  as  guardian  to  Ann 
Glass  daughter  of  the  sd.  dec's.    28  March,  1765. 

Thos.  Stock  enters  caveat  against  above  admr'n.  being  granted. 
2  April,  1765. 

Dedimus  to  Stephen  Bull,  Esq;  to  prove  will  of  John  Tobler 

late  of and  to  qualify  the  Ezor's.  there  in  named.    3  April, 

1765. 

In  Court  of  Ordinary  6th  day  of  April,  1765 

Odingsell  &c  vs.  Ash.  Ordered  by  the  consent  of  the  Proctors 
on  both  sides  that  the  further  hearing  in  this  cause  be  postponed 
till  Fryday,  Nineteenth  April. 

It  being  suggested  that  there  was  an  executor  to  the  estate  of 
Robert  Glass  still  alive,  ordered  that  letters  of  Admn.  de  bonis  nan 
prayed  for  by  Melichor  Gamer  be  not  granted  until  further  infor- 
mation be  had. 


126         so.  CA.  mSTOfilCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Citation  to  Samuel  Huey  of  St.  Paul's  planter  to  admimr.  on 
estate  of  Hugh  Magarradi,  in  right  of  his  wife,  Jennet  Cousin 
to  the  deceased  as  next  of  kin.    19  April,  1765. 

Citation  to  Sarah  and  George  Russell  of  St  Andrew's  parish 
to  admin,  on  estate  of  Stephen  Russell  planter  of  same  parish,  as 
daughter  and  son  of  the  deceased.    22  April,  1765. 

Citation  to  Ann  Bolton  and  Allen  Bolton  of  Christ  Church  to 
adminr.  on  the  estate  of  Edward  Bolton  of  said  parish  planter, 
Ann  as  widow  and  Allen  as  son  of  the  deceased.    23  April,  1765. 

Citation  to  Thomas  Lynch,  Esq;  and  Robt.  Gibb  to  adminr. 
on  the  estate  of  Dr.  Jas.  Crokatt  late  of  Peedee,  said  Thomas 
Lynch  his  brother-in-law,  Robt.  Gibb  as  next  of  kin.  26  April, 
1765. 

In  Court  of  Ordinary  26  April,  1765 

Thomas  Stock  produced  renounciation  from  the  siurviving  exors. 
of  Robt.  Glass  and  prayed  admr.  be  granted  to  him  upon  est.  of 
deceased,  with  will  annexed  as  next  of  kin,  notwithstanding  the 
application  of  Melichor  Gardner.    Stock  was  qualified  as  admir. 

Citation  to  Francis  Oram  to  adminr.  on  the  Estate  of  Joseph 
Oram  of  St.  Thomas'  parish  as  next  of  kin.    3  May,  1765. 

Citation  to  Ann  Lewis  widow  to  administer  on  estate  of  James 
Lewis  of  St.  Philip's  parish  Tavern-keeper  her  husband.  4  May, 
1765. 

John  Rutledge  in  behalf  of  Robert  Gibb,  enters  a  caveat  against 
letters  administration  being  granted  to  Thomas  Lynch  of  the 
estate  of  Dr.  James  Crokatt  late  of  Peedee. 

Philip  Pledger  one  of  the  securities  for  Sarah  Bird  admts.  of 
Richard  Bird  enters  a  caveat  against  Richard  Hans  (?)  obtaining 
letters  of  guard,  of  the  child'n  and  estate  of  sd.  Richard  Bird* 
13  May,  1765. 

Court  of  Ordinary  8  May,  1765 

A  Business  of  Proving  the  will  of  Hugh  M'Garrach  deed.  Mr. 
Parsons  proctor  for  John  Poaug  one  of  the  Exors.  produced  the 
will  and  moved  that  it  might  be  admitted,  and  filed  a  renouncia- 
tion of  the  execution  of  the  sd.  will  from  John  Mitchell  the  other 
exor. 

Ordered  Accordingly  John  Poaug  qualified  and  it  was  ordered 
that  the  Letters  of  Admn.  granted  to  SamL  Huey  be  revoked. 


RECORD  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  127 

Adam  Cusack  enters  caveat  for  himself  and  in  behalf  of  Frances 
Chusack  against  letters  admin,  being  granted  to  Frances  Oram 
of  estate  of  Joseph  Oram  of  St.  Thomas'  parish  planter  until  they 
are  heard  before  the  Gov'r  in  the  Court  of  Ordinary.    9  May,  176S. 

ChasTown  Friday  10th  May,  1765 

By  virtue  of  Dedimus  from  His  Honor  Lieut.  Gov.  to  me  direct- 
ing me  to  prove  wills  and  qualify  admors.  &c.  during  his  absence 
from  ChasTown. 

Proved  the  last  will  of  Richard  Duckies  of  St.  Bartho.  parish 
by  aflSdavit  of  Robt.  Ballingall,  qualified  Mary  Duckies  Extrix. 

Will  of  Jacob  Henry  Jennerette  of  Purysburgh  by  affidavit  of 
John  Linder,  qualified  Ursalla  Jennerette  Extrx. 

Will  of  Joseph  Smith  of  ChasTown,  taylor,  by  affidavit  of  James 
Bad|s:er,  qualified  Christopher  Rodgers  and  Wm.  Williams  exors. 

Qualified  Ann  Lewis  of  ChasTown  widow  admix,  estate  of  James 
Lewis  same  place  Tavern  Keeper. 

Geo:  Johnston. 

Dedimus  to  David  Fulton  and  James  McCants  to  prove  will 
of  John  McCree  and  qualify  the  Extrx.  and  Exors.    15  May,  1765 

Citation  to  Peter  Manigault,  Esq.  of  ChasTown  to  adminr. 
on  estate  of  Achibald  Stobo  late  of  St.  Paul's  parish  planter  in 
trust  and  as  Attorney  of  Sarah  Nickleson  and  Isaac  £^ing  of  London 
merchts;  principal  creditors  of  said  deceased.     16th  May,  1765 

ChasTown  17  May,  1765 

By  virtue  of  a  Ded's  from  His  Honor  Lieut.  Gov.  proved  will 
of  Levi  Durand  late  of  St.  John's  Berkley,  by  affidavit  of  Michael 
Hackett  and  qualified  Susannah  Durand  Exectx. 

Qualified  Gideon  Gibson  admor.  of  estate  of  John  Harring  of 
Prince  George's  parish. 

Dedimus  to  Stephen  Bull  of  Sheldon  and  Benj.  Garden,  Esqrs. 
to  prove  will  of  John  Broadbelt  and  qualify  the  exors.  30  May, 
1765 

ChasTown  31st  May,  1765 

Proved  will  of  John  Blamyer  of  ChasTown  by  affidavit  of  Peter 
Hall,  qualified  Elizabeth  Blamyer  Exetrx. 


128       so.  CA.  histokk:al  and  oenealogical  icagazine 

Qualified  John  Clunie  Admr.  of  estate  of  Elias  G>uturie  late  of 
Prince  Wm's.  parish. 

Citation  to  Evan  Prothio  of  Prince  George's  parish  planter  to 
adminr.  on  estate  of  James  Prothro  of  sd.  parish  planter,  his  father 

5  June,  1765 

Citation  to  James  Laroche  of  St  John's  parish  planter  to  admr. 
on  estate  of  Benjamin  Laroche  of  sd.  parish  planter,  his  brother. 

6  June,  1765 

7  June,  1765 

Proved  will  of  John  Bruce  of  Christ  Church  parish  by  affidavit 
of  Thomas  Guerin,  qualified  Stephen  Miller  and  Isaac  Legare 
Exors. 

Proved  will  of  David  Brown  of  ChasTown  by  affidavit  of  John 
Remington,  qualified  James  Haig  and  Edward  Beal  Exors. 

Citation  to  Michael  Cockran  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  Thomas 
Parkerson  of  St  James  Santee  planter  as  greatest  creditor.  13 
June,  1765 

CharlesTown  14th  June,  1765 

Proved  last  will  of  Elizabeth  Plunket  by  affidavit  of  Jonathan 
Sarrazin  and  qualified  ^KHlliam  Scott  ezor. 

Proved  will  of  Alexande  Shaw  by  affidavit  of  John  Hughs, 
qualified  Martha  Shaw  eztrz.  and  Wnu  McTier,  Thos,  Filput,  and 
John  Newmann  exors. 

Citation  to  John  Tuke  to  adminr.  on  the  estate  of  Josq>h  Tod- 
hunter  of  St  Philip's  parish,  wharfinger  as  greatest  creditor. 
18  June,  1765 

Citation  to  James  Sharp  and  Moses  Darquin  (?)  of  St  Bartho. 
parish  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  John  Smith  of  said  parish  Peruke- 
maker,  as  greatest  creditors.    21  June,  1765. 

Qualified  James  Laroche  adminr.  estate  of  Benjamin  Laroche 
his  brother  deceased. 

Dedimus  to  John  Alran  (?)  to  qualify  the  exors.  of  will  of 

Dedimus  to  Alex.  Mackintosh  and  Thomas  Wade,  Esquires  to 
prove  will  of  Robert  Hicks  late  of  Craven  county  planter,  and  to 
qualify  the  exors.    27  June,  1765 

Citation  to  William  Williams  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  George 
\miiam  Hext  late  of  ChasTown  his  son.    27  June,  1765 


RECORD  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  129 

Citation  at  the  instance  of  IXniliam  Bellinger  and  Elizabeth  his 
wife  against  Andrew  Deveanx  of  Prince  Wm's.  parish  planter 
ezor.  qualified  on  will  of  George  Cussings,  to  appear  at  court  of 
Ordinary,  Friday  12,  July  next  to  shew  cause  why  he  should  not 
make  account  of  his  exorship  of  goods  &c  which  were  of  said  George 
Cussings  late  of  St  Paul's  parish  planter  and  to  deliver  to  said 
Elizabeth  and  Wm.  Bellinger  so  much  of  the  said  estate  as  the 
said  Elizabeth  is  entitled  unto  by  said  will.    26  June,  1765 

{To  be  continued) 


HISTORICAL  NOTES 

mSTOSIC  HOUSES  OF  SOUTH  CAKOUNA 

This  Society  has  received  for  reviewing,  from  the  publishers, 
J.  B.  lippincott  Coiiq)any,  through  Hamm<Hid's  Book  Store,  a 
copy  of  Historic  Houses  of  South  Carolina^  by  Hariette  Kershaw 
Leiding. 

The  book  is  handsomely  finished  in  the  same  style  as  the 
Smith  book,  Dwdling  Houses  of  Charleston,  and  contains  one 
hundred  full  page  illustrations,  most  of  them  photographs.  The 
pictures  constitute  one  of  its  permanent  values;  several  of  them 
being  from  old  prints  or  paintings  of  houses  of  interest,  now  no 
longer  in  existence. 

The  book  contains  a  great  deal  of  material  of  interest  and 
entertainment,  and  adds  in  many  ways  to  the  literature  about  the 
State,  especially  the  coast  country.  The  style  is  easy  and  anec- 
dotal; the  necessary  historical  details  are  interspersed  with  many 
personal  stories  long  current  in  print  and  conversation,  and  well 
worth  preserving.  The  material  is  taken  chiefly  from  printed 
sources  and  family  tradition.  Unfortunately  much  of  it  was  not 
verified,  and  the  book  will  have  to  be  very  carefully  used  as  an 
authority,  for  it  contains  many  errors,  some  of  them  concerning 
historical  characters,  which  could  have  been  avoided  by  consulting 
easily  accessible  authorities. 

Most  of  the  genealogy  and  personal  accounts  should  not  be 
taken  as  they  stand  without  verifying;  even  in  the  case  of  persons 
who  have  lived  so  recently  as  Major  Theodore  G.  Barker  and 
his  wife,  formerly  Miss  Louisa  King,  daughter  of  Judge  Mitchell 
King,  the  error  is  made  of  stating  that  Major  Barker  married 
^^Miss  Louisa  Fitzsimmons;"  Major  Barker's  sister  married 
Dr.  Christopher  FitzSimons,  which  probably  caused  the  confusion. 

The  house  now  used  as  the  residence  of  the  bishop  of  the  Roman 
Catholic  Church  is  stated  (p.  10)  to  have  been  built  by  a  Mr.  Bel- 
linger; the  records  show  that  it  was  begun  by  Ralph  Izard  of 
Fair  Spring,  was  unfinished  at  the  time  of  his  death;  in  the  division 
of  his  estate,  it  fell  to  his  daughter  Louisa  Charlotte,  who  died 
unmarried  in  1825;  it  was  sold  in  1829  to  Col.  Thomas  Pinckney, 

130 


mSTOSICAL  NOTES  131 

and  in  1866,  his  daughter  Rosetta  Ella,  the  widow  of  Ralph  Stead 
Izard  sold  it  to  the  Rt  Rev.  Patrick  N.  Lynch.  (Dwdling  Houses 
of  Charleston,  p.  250.) 

The  account  of  Henry  Laurens  (pp.  42-44)  is  woefully  mixed; 
the  dates  concerning  Laurens  and  those  of  James  Crokatt  as 
given  by  Dr.  Wallace  in  his  fffMT)^  Laurent  seems  to  have  exchanged 
places;  from  Mrs.  Leiding's  book,  it  would  appear  that  Henry 
Laurens  was  a  merchant  in  London  in  1739,  when  according  to 
the  birth  date  which  is  given,  he  was  only  five  years  old!  Other 
dates  are  also  given  which  make  him  seem  even  more  wonderfully 
precocious.  As  a  matter  of  fact,  he  was  bom  in  1724.  A  correct 
account  of  the  escape  from  being  buried  alive,  when  an  infant  of 
one  year,  of  Martha,  daughter  of  Henry  Laurens  and  afterwards 
the  wife  of  Dr.  David  Ramsay,  will  be  found  in  the  Wallace  life 
of  Laurens,  and  also  in  detail  in  Dr.  Ramsay's  memoir  of  his  wife. 

On  page  76,  Josia  Quincy,  Jr.,  of  Massachusetts,  who  visited 
here  in  1773,  and  kept  a  journal  often  quoted,  and  several  times 
printed,  recently  in  full  by  the  Massachusetts  Historical  Society, 
is  given  as  "Sir  Joshua  Quincy." 

The  date  of  the  settlement  of  South  Carolina  is  frequently 
anticipated  by  several  years,  as  on  page  132,  when  Anthony 
Cordes  is  made  to  arrive  and  settle  on  French  Santee  in  1665,  some 
twenty  years  before  his  actual  arrivaL 

In  the  account  of  Boone  Hall,  long  in  hands  of  the  descendants 
of  Major  John  Boone,  who  came  out  with  the  first  fleet,  and 
received  a  grant  to  the  Boone  Hall  land  before  1695,  the  state* 
ment  is  made  that  a  Daniel  Boone  is  buried  in  the  family  burying 
grounds.  There  is  an  unmarked  brick  tomb  on  this  plantation, 
and  the  parish  register  of  Christ  Church  shows  that  Major  Thomas 
Boone  was  buried  on  his  plantation  in  1749,  but  the  name  of 
Daniel  does  not  appear  in  any  line  of  the  family  so  far  as  the 
records  show. 

On  page  207,  Middkton  Place,  under  the  head  "Middleton 
Gardens"  is  diqx>sed  of  in  four  lines  as  the  ''old  Pinckney  place;" 
it  had  several  owners  before  Henry  Middleton  married  in  1741, 
the  only  child  of  John  Williams,  who  had  acquired  the  lands 
composing  it  Thus  it  came  into  the  Middleton  family,  and  has 
remained  in  the  hands  of  Middleton  descendants  ever  since,  but 
at  no  time  in  its  history,  was  it  ever  owned  by  a  Pinckney. 


132         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Tbe  accounts  <rf  the  Pmckney  famfly  is  also  confused.  Charles 
Pmckney  1757-1824^  who  was  Govunor  of  South  Carolina,  minister 
to  Spain,  and  who  made  a  draft  of  the  Constitution,  was  fu4  a 
son  of  Chief  Justice  Pinckney  and  Eliza  Lucas,  but  was  a  grand- 
nephew,  being  a  son  of  Colonel  Charies  Pinckney  (1731-1784) 
and  Frances  Brewton,  a  grandson  of  Major  William  Pinckney 
(1703-1766)  and  Ruth  Brewton.  Major  Wm.  Pinckney  was  a 
brother  of  Charles  Pinckney,  the  Chief  Justice.  General  Thomas 
was  not  the  author  of  the  much  quoted  "millions  for  defence" 
phrase,  but  his  brother  General  Charles  Coatesworth  Pinckney, 
on  whose  tombstone  in  St  Michael's  churchyard  the  sentence  is 
to  be  found. 

The  account  of  the  Middleton  family  is  as  OHifused  as  that  of 
the  Pinckneys.  On  page  24,  John  Middleton  should  be  given 
as  the  owner  of  Crowfield,  not  his  brother  Thomas.  Page  25, 
Henry  A.  Middleton  and  Henry  Middleton  of  Ashville,  North 
Carolina,  were  wholly  different  persons,  first  cousins  once  re* 
moved.    Henry  Middleton  had  no  connection  with  Crowfield. 

Arthur  Middleton  was  the  father^  not  the  grandfather  of  Gov- 
ernor Henry  Middleton,  and  Henry  Middleton  of  the  Revolution 
was  his  grandfather,  not  his  great  grandfather. 

Thomas  Ferguson  of  the  Revolution  (p.  54),  was  the  son  of 
James  Ferguson  of  Goose  Creek  by  his  wife  Ann  Barker,  daughter 
of  Thomas  Barker  and  half-sbter  of  John  Parker.  He  was  thus 
of  one  of  the  best  families  which  then  existed  in  the  low  country  and 
went  to  Parkers  Ferry  with  his  unde  John  Parker.  His  subse- 
quent life  shows  that  he  was  a  man  of  education  and  by  no  means 
the  poor  unlettered  boy  to  be  inferred  from  Dr.  Johnson's  account. 

Thomas  Ferguson  of  the  Revolution  (p.  56),  was  not  the  founder 
but  the  grandson  of  Thomas  Ferguson,  the  founder  of  the  family. 

Among  further  errors  to  be  noted,  are  the  following: 

The  statement  that  McDuffie  fought  a  duel  with  ''Colonel 
Cunningham,"  should  be  "Colonel  Cumming."  It  is  well  known 
that  he  fought  two  duels  with  Colonel  Camming  of  the  well  known 
family  of  Augusta,  Georgia.  Again,  General  Gonzales  did  not 
marry  "Mary  Elliott,"  but  her  sister  "Harriet  Rutledge  Elliott" 
daughter  of  Hon.  WDliam  Elliott  Mary  married  Mr.  Andrew 
Johnstone.  Thomas  Rhett  Smith,  the  father  of  Mrs.  William 
Elliott,  was  bom  in  1769  and  not  in  1800.    We  have  never  heard 


HISTOSICAL  NOTES  133 

of  any  brother  of  Mrs.  Elliott  who  grew  to  manhood  named 
^'Thomas  Rhett  Smith,  Jr.''  Again  what  is  known  now  as  ''The 
Point''  at  Beaufort,  South  Carolina,  at  one  time  called  ''Blacks 
Point"  was  not  built  upon  imtil  after  the  death  of  'Tuscarora 
John  Bamwdl"  and  Washington  and  Carteret  Streets  do  not  extend 
to  the  Point.  The  "John  Barnwell"  who  married  Sarah  Bull,  was 
the  great-grandson  not  grandson  of  "Tuscarora"  John.  The 
oldest  house  in  Beaufort  was  certainly  not  built  in  1690,  as  the 
town  was  not  directed  to  be  built  until  1712.  Only  a  part  of 
Beaufort  District  was  known  as  the  "Indian  Land."  The  house 
built  by  Captain  Edward  Barnwell,  now  occupied  by  Mrs.  O'Dell, 
so  far  from  being  built  "with  substantial  wings"  and  a  "very  large 
piazza"  to  accommodate  his  large  family,  did  not  receive  those 
additions  until  many  years  after  his  death.  Mr.  James  Elliott, 
never  became  a  bishop,  it  was  his  brother,  Stephen  Elliott  who 
became  bishop  of  Georgia.  No  smoking  dinner  was  left  by  any 
famfly  at  Beaufort  at  the  time  of  its  evacuation  in  November, 
1861,  and  was  devoured  by  the  incoming  army,  for  no  part,  either 
of  the  navy  or  army  of  the  United  States  came  to  the  town  until 
several  days  after  the  evacuation. 

In  spite  of  the  many  errors,  some  of  them  serious,  the  book 
serves  a  very  valuable  piupose;  it  will  awaken  an  interest  and 
pride  in  the  old  places,  and  help  to  preserve  the  personal  and 
traditional  accounts  of  many  communities. 

The  type  of  early  country  house  which  remains,  show  that  the 
plantation  homes  as  a  rule,  were  not  as  handsome  or  as  stately 
as  those  of  Virginia;  possibly  because  Charleston  was  the  social 
center,  and  most  of  the  low-country  planters  had  houses  in  town, 
and  for  the  provincial  and  later  period,  Charleston  houses  were 
very  fine.  Very  many  of  the  best  of  the  early  country  houses 
were  destroyed  during  the  later  period  of  the  War  between  the 
States,  those  along  the  Ashley  River  having  been,  from  all  accounts, 
very  handsome,  most  of  them  built  of  brick,  but  enough  remain 
to  show  the  general  type  of  the  coimtry  house,  which  seems  to 
have  been  chiefly  built  of  wood,  and  to  have  been  a  plain  square 
house  of  from  four  to  eight  rooms  with  a  central  hall. 


INDEX 


Abrahams,  Mis.,  68. 

Abrahams,  Emanud,  68. 

Adams,  Elizabeth,  60,  61. 

Adams,  Isaac,  125. 

Adams,  John,  20,  60. 

Adams,  Phillis,  60,  61. 

Adams,  WHliam,  93. 

Allard,  Louis  Nicholas,  92. 

Allen,  Andrew,  25,  28,  30,  31. 

AUen,  Elizabeth,  28,  30,  31. 

Allen,  Evan,  30. 

AUen,  Hannah,  31. 

AUen,  Jane,  25,  30,  31. 

AUen,  John,  30. 

AUen,  Rebecca,  12. 

Allen,  Thomas,  15. 

AUen,  WUUam,  12,  31. 

AUen,  WUUam  R.,  17 

AlUsoa,  George,  71. 

Allison,  Maigerette,  71. 

Alran,  John,  128. 

Alston,  Charles,  27. 

Allston,  Thomas,  68. 

Alston,  Mary  Motte,  27. 

Alston,  Col.,  WUUam,  27. 

Anderson,  Lesly,  35. 

Andrews,  A.  B.,  of  Raleigh,  N.  C. 

99. 
Andrews,  Rev.  Joseph,  29. 
Arnold,  EUzabeth,  62,  63. 
Arnold,  John,  62. 
Arnold,  Jfoseph,  63. 
Arnold,  Lvdia,  62,  63. 
Arnold,  Phillis,  63. 
Arnold,  Thomas,  23. 
Arnold,  M^Uam,  61, 62,  63. 
Arthur,  Martha,  66. 
Ash,  Cato,  20,  53-59. 
Ash  James,  53. 
Ashi  John,  53-59. 
Ash,  Joseph,  125. 
Ash,  Joseph,  Excommunication  of, 

53-59. 
Ash,  Marjr,  54. 
Ash,  Portia.  53. 
Ash,  Priscilla,  53. 
Ash,  Richard  Cochran,  53-59, 125. 
Ash,  Richard  Russell,  54. 
Ash,  Sarah.  54. 
Ash.  Theoaora,  53,  54. 
Ashby,  James,  A.,  14. 
Atkins,  Aaron,  60. 
Atkins,  EUen,  60. 


Atkins,  Joan,  60. 
Atkins,  Tohanna,  60. 
Atkins,  Mary,  60. 
Avenson,  Mathias,  35. 
Azson,  John,  66.    * 

Badfler,  James,  127. 

Badderiy,  Mrs.,  71. 

BaUey,  David,  16. 

BaUey,  EUza  Lydia,  16  (2). 

BaUey,  Rachel,  35. 

BaUey,  Robert  S.,  16, 17  (2). 

BaUey,  Thomas  Pearce,  16. 

BaUey,  William  Lucas,  17. 

BaUis,  WUUam,  70. 

Baker,  EUzabeth,  HI. 

Baker,  Francis,  Sr.,  20. 

Baker,  Harriet,  113. 

Baker,  Henry  Hyme,  113. 

Baker,  John,  89. 

Baker,  Martha,  106. 

Baker,  Richard  Bohun,  112, 113. 

Baker,  Samuel,  92. 

Baker,  Susannah,  89. 

Baker,  WUUam,  34,  111. 

Balfour,  Henry,  90. 

Ball,  Catherine,  106. 

BaU,  EUzabeth,  106. 

BaUingaU,  Robert,  127. 

Bancroft,  Edward,  82. 

Banfield,  George,  67. 

Baring,  Charles,  71. 

Barker,  Maj.  Theodore  G.,  130. 

Barker,  Thomas,  36. 

Barker,  Capt.  William,  65. 

Barksdak,  George,  24,  68. 

Barksdale,  Julian  Augustus,  15. 

Barksdale,  Mary,  68. 

Bariodale,  Serena  Maria,  15. 

Barksdale,  Thomas,  15. 

BamweU,  John,  34,  133. 

Baron,  Sarah,  36. 

Bascum,  Rev.  Robert,  31. 

Basquen,  WUUam,  114. 

Basquelin,  Eliza  Earle,  117. 

Beal,  Edward,  128. 

Bedon,  George,  97. 

Bee,  Thomas,  46. 

Beech  HiU,  plantation,  7. 

Beekman,  Samuel,  21. 

BeU.  Sarah,  93. 

Bellmger,  Edmund,  Landgrave,  111. 

BeUinger,  EUzabeth,  129. 


135 


136 


INDEX 


Belliiigery  John,  115. 
BdUnger,  Susannah,  105,  111. 
BemQger,  William,  129. 
Bennett,  Mary,  97. 
Bennett,  Nicholas,  104. 
Bennett,  Sarah,  68. 
Bennett,  Thomas,  97. 
Berkeley,  Mary,  Countess  of,  71. 
Berrenger.  John,  104. 
Berresford,  Richard,  104. 
Berr^r,  Elizabeth,  70. 
Berwick,  Ann,  71. 
Berwick,  Ann  Eliza,  20. 
Berwickjohn,  71. 
Bewicke,  Benjamin,  6. 
Bignall,  John.  91. 
Bird,  Richard,  126. 
Bird,  Sarah,  126. 
Bladden,  C,  66. 
Blake,  Miss,  68. 
Blake,  Edward,  68  (2). 
Blake,  Rebecca^  28. 
Blakie,  Aim,  65. 
Blamyer,  Elizabeth,  127. 
Blamyer,  John,  127. 
Blundell,  Nathaniel,  20. 
Bonneau,  Anthony,  37. 
Bonneau,  Amoklus,  13, 15. 
Bocquet,  Peter,  34. 
Boisseau,  Tane,  97. 
Bolton,  Allen,  126. 
Bolton,  Ann,  126. 
Bolton,  Edward,  126. 
Bonneau,  Aima.  14,  15. 
Bonneau,  Caroline  Elisabeth,  15. 
Bonneau,  Henry,  97. 
Bonneau,  Martha,  13. 
Bonneau,  Peter  Porcher,  13. 
Bonneau,  William  Henry,  14, 15. 
Bonee,  John,  104. 
Boomer,  Tolm,  68. 
Boone,  Elizabeth  Gibbes,  13. 
Boone  Hall,  131. 
Bordeau,  Elizabeth,  36. 
Borrows,  Frederick,  66. 
Bounight,  Catherine,  121. 
Bourdeauz,  Esther,  67. 
Bourdeauz,  James,  67. 
Bourquin,  John  Lewis,  93. 
Bowen,  Mrs.,  22. 
Bowen,  James,  22. 
Bowers,  Edward,  35. 
Bowery,  Elizabeth,  124. 
Bowles,  John,  106. 
Bowman,  Thomas,  124, 125. 
Boyd,  H..  6,  46. 
Brailsford., — ,  48. 
Breed,  Sarah,  35. 
Bremar,  Francis,  70. 


Brickell,  Dr.  James,  67, 122. 

Brickell,  Susannah,  67. 

Britton,  Daniel,  108, 109. 

Brittcm,  Elizabeth,  109. 

Britton,  Frands,  109. 

Britton,  Capt.  Frauds,  108, 109. 

Brtton,  Henry,  109. 

Britton,  Mary,  109. 

Britton,  Moses,  109. 

Brodabdt,  John,  127. 

Broughton,  Alexander,  23. 

Brown,  Charks,  125. 

Brown,  David,  128. 

Brown,  Joseph,  95. 

Brown,  Juliet,  36. 

Brown,  Thomas,  66. 

Bruce,  Daniel,  119. 

Bruce,  John,  128. 

Bryant,  Nicholas,  95. 

Buckley,  Marshus,  90. 

Buddii^,  William,  35. 

Buist,  Kev. — ,  65. 

Bun,  Judith,  25,  28. 

Bull,  Stephen,  25,  28, 124, 127. 

Bull,  ^TiUiam,  25,  26,  29,  30,  31,  33, 

94. 
Buich,  Henry  Todd,  24. 
Burnett,  Dr.  Andrew,  95. 
Burnett.  Sabina.  95. 
Burt,  Thomas,  35. 
Butler,  Elisha,  113. 
Butler,  Elizabeth,  113. 
Butler,  James,  36. 
Butler,  |ohn,  122. 
Butler,  Mary,  105, 113. 
Butler,  Richard,  112. 
Butler,  Sarah,  113. 
Butler,  William,  36. 
Bythewood,  Thomas,  123. 

Cady,  Kezia,  65. 
Cahusac,  Elizabeth,  36. 
Calhoun,  Patrick,  98. 
Calhoun,  William,  98. 
Calvert, — ,  34. 
Calvert,  John,  96. 
Calvert,  William,  67. 
Camden,  23. 

Cameron,  Elizabeth,  120. 
Camp,  (plantation),  3. 
Campbell,  Hugh,  35. 
Campbell,  M'Cartan,  23. 
Cannon,  John,  68. 
Capers,  Catherine,  69. 
Capers,  Gabriel,  69. 
Capers,  Bishop  William,  13. 
Carlisle,  William,  103. 
Carmichael,  WHliam,  52. 
Came,  Martha  Pressley,  118. 


INDEX 


137 


Carson,  Elizabeth  Gibbes,  89. 

Canon.  James,  89, 

Catholic  Church,  119. 

Cato,  a  Negro,  109. 

Cattel,  Ann,  21. 

Cattell,  Benjamin,  46. 

Cattel,  William,  21, 46. 

Cavineau,  Tames,  36. 

Chalmers,  Eliza,  122. 

Chalmers,  Lionel,  122. 

Champne3r8,  Sarah,  22. 

Champneys,  William,  22. 

Chapman,  Christopher,  123. 

Chapman,  Mai^,  120. 

Chapman,  William,  103. 

Charleston  Eastern  Regiment,  119. 

Charieston  Library  Soc.,  5. 

Charleton,  Mrs.,  22. 

Charleton,  Dr.,  22. 

Cherokee  war,  31. 

Cheves,  Langdon,  12, 18. 

Chichester,  Dr.,  121. 

Child,  Joan,  102. 

Child,  John,  102. 

Chittjr,  WilUam,  120. 

Chovm,  Alexander.,  93. 

Christ  Church  Parish,  Register,  12. 

CUy  duetUf  Marriage  and   Death 

Notices  from  19, 65, 89, 119. 
Clark,  Alexander,  HI,  112. 
Clark,  Elizabeth,  105, 120. 
Clark,  Joseph,  27. 
Clark,  Sarah,  35. 
Clear  Spring  plantation,  113, 121* 
Cleiland,  Ann,  12, 13. 
Cleiland,  Hester  Guerin,  13. 
Oeiland,  William,  13. 
Cleiland,  William  Bamet,  13. 
Clifford,  Jane,  36. 
Clifford,  MarUia,  20. 
Clifford,  Mary,  107. 
Clinton,  Miss,  89. 
Clinton,  George,  89. 
Clunie,  John,  125, 128. 
Coachman,  Benjamin,  106. 
Coachman,  Rebecca,  106. 
Cobea,  Daniel,  66. 
Cobb,—,  102. 
Cobb,  John.  50. 
Cockran,  Michael,  128. 
Coker,  Mary,  35. 
Cole,  Ann,  120. 
Cole,  Mary,  71. 
Cole,  Richard,  37, 
Cole,  Susan,  /I. 
Colleton,  James,  99* 
Conrade,  Ann,  34. 


ConsideraUons  on  Certain  Transact 
tions  of  the  Province  of  South 
Carolina,  and  the  Answer  to 
same,  3,  6. 

Convers,  Capt.  William,  24. 

Cook,  James.  67. 

Cooke,  Elizabeth  Venning,  15. 

Cooke,  Margaret,  15,  16. 

Cooke,  Nathaniel,  Dowling,  16. 

Cooke,  Samuel  Simmons,  15, 16. 

Cooke,  Wilson,  23. 

Cookson,  Rowland,  19. 

Cooper,  Rev.  Robert,  30,  34,  57. 

Cooper,  James,  21. 

Cordes,  John,  116. 

Cordes,  Margaret,  34.  ^^^ 

Comwallis,  Lord,  87. 

Court  of  Ordinary,  Abstract  of 
Record,  94,  124. 

Coustiel,  Alexander,  96. 

Coustiel,  Peter,  96. 

Couturier,  Elias,  125, 128. 

Cox,  George  P.,  70. 

Cox,  Mary,  119. 

Crackers,  99-100. 

Craig,  Dr.  Adam,  68. 

Cralion,  Rev,  37. 

Crawford,  Mrs.,  124. 

Crawford,  Bellamy,  34. 

Creek,  Indians,  31. 

Crei^ton,  James,  35. 

Cripps,  Mary,  37. 

CrokaU,  Dr.  James,  126. 

Crombie,  Mr.,  22. 

Croskeys,  John  Jr.,  68. 

Croskeys,  Sarah,  122. 

Croskevs,  William,  122. 

Cross,  Mary,  102. 

Cross,  Matthew,  60. 

Crouch,  Catherine,  35. 

Crowfield  plantation,  4. 

Cumberle^,  Jfohn,  110. 

Cuming,  Benjamin,  36. 

Cunningham,  Patrick,  36. 

Cusack,  Adam,  127. 

Cussings,  George,  129. 

Cutflin,  Molseyj  68. 

Cutter,  Benjamm  Clarice,  65. 

Dalcho,  Mary,  13. 
Daniel,  Elizabeth  R.,  70. 
Daniel,  Robert,  70. 
Dantignac,  John,  21. 
Darby,  Elizabeth  Elliott,  70. 
Darby,  James,  20,  70. 
Darby^  WilUam,  121. 
Darqum,  Moses,  128. 


138 


INDEX 


Darr,  Mr.,  70. 

Darrell, — ,  13. 

Darrell,  Capt.  Benjamin,  65. 

Darrell,  Catherine,  65. 

Darrell,  Fanny^  24. 

Dartmouth  Umversity,  92. 

Davis,  John  M.,  20. 

Davis,  Capt,  William,  99, 102. 

Dawson,  John,  21. 

Dawson,  Thomas,  21. 

Dean,  Alexander,  97. 

Dean,  Esther,  37. 

Dean  Swamp  Plantation,  20. 

Deane,  Silas,  49. 

Dearington,  Thomas,  36,  71. 

Deas,  David,  30. 

Debosque,  Hannah,  21. 

DeGanerelly,  Augustus,  14. 

DeGafferelly,  Eliza,  14. 

DeGafferelly.  Juliana  Mary,  14. 

Delancey,  Alice,  5. 

Delany,  Daniel,  66. 

Delay,  Maurice,  95. 

Desmoulins,  Julien,  70. 

Dewees,  Sanu),  24. 

Deveauz,  Andrew,  129. 

Dickson,  Martha  Elizabeth,  13. 

Dill,  Joseph,  22. 

Dill,  Marsaret,  22. 

Dingle,  Alexander,  36. 

Dixon,  Elizabeth,  106. 

Dixon,  Mary,  lOiS. 

Dixon,  Rebecca,  106. 

Dixon,  Thomas,  106. 

Donnam,  Jacob,  35. 

Doughty,  Mary,  22. 

Doughty,  WiUiam,  22. 

Douglas,  Jean,  65. 

Douglas,  Mary,  36. 

Down,  James,  120. 

D'Oyley,  Daniel,  116. 

Drake,  Edward,  102. 

Drake,  Jonathan,  102. 

Drajrton,  Ann,  24. 

Drayton,  Tohn,  24,  113, 120. 

Drayton,  Maiy,  113. 

Drayton,  William  Henry,  3, 112. 

Dry,  Rebecca,  107. 

Dubois,  Isaac,  97. 

Dubose,  Benjamin,  12. 

Duckies,  Mary,  12/. 

Duckies,  Robert,  127. 

Duels,  90. 

Dunbar,  William.  89. 

Duncan,  Alexander,  63,  64. 

Dimcan,  Elizabeth,  61--64. 

Duncan,  William,  64. 

Dupont,  Ann,  35. 

Dupont,  Jane,  35. 


Dupont,  Jos.,  35. 
Dupuy.  Ann,^  26. 
Durana,  Levi,  127. 
Durand,  Susannah,  127. 
Dwight,  Dr.  Samuel,  23. 

Eady,  Sarah,  37. 
Eden,  Mrs.,  70. 
Edge,  Mrs.,  71. 
Edmonds,  James,  69. 
Elesnore,  Judith,  67. 
EUerton,  James.  108. 
Elliott,  Bernard,  35. 
Elliott,  Charles,  34. 
Elliott,  Elizabeth,  112. 
EUiott  Family,  132, 133. 
EUiott,  Sir  GUbert,  8. 
Elliott,  Mary  Elizabeth,  35. 
Elliott,  Sabina.  19. 
Elliott,  Samuel,  112,  113. 
Elliott,  Thomas,  Jr.,  112. 
Elliott,  William  Sr.,  19. 
Ellis,  Ruth,  36. 
Rlisham,  Eliza,  a  Moor,  122. 
Ellsworth,  William  H.,  12. 
Elms  plantation,  3. 
Evance, — ^36. 
Evans,  Rev.,  3^. 
Evans,  Daniel,  35. 
Ever,  Mary,  66. 
Ewing,  Adajin,  68. 
Ewing,  Jane,  68. 

Excommunication  of  Joseph  Ash,  53- 
59. 

Fabian,  Harriet  Rivers,  12. 
Fabre,  Tohn,  97. 

Fairchifd,  Susaimah,  37.  . 

Fairchild,  Thomas,  103. 
Farr,— .  1.  41. 
Farr,  Nathaniel,  24. 
Farrington  Dr.  Elijah,  21. 
Faucheraud,  Elizabeth,  35. 
Fenwick,  Elizabeth,  34. 
Fendin,  Ann,  98. 
Fendin,  John,  98. 
Ferguson,  Miss,  34. 
Ferguson  Family,  132. 
Ferguson,  Margaret,  36. 
Ferguson,  Mardia,  35. 
Ferrell,  Bernard,  13. 
Ferrell,  Elizabeth,  13. 
Ferrel,  Mary  Catherine,  13. 
Feverie,  Rev.  34. 
Fielding,  George,  121. 
Filbein,  Ann,  106. 
Fmch,  Ballard,  70. 
Finch,  Edward,  70. 
Findly,  Charles,  15. 


INDEX 


139 


Findly,  Rebecca,  14,  IS. 
Findly,  Hennr  William,  14, 15. 
Finlayson,  Mungo,  23. 
Fit^Mitrick,  Jacob,  65. 
FitzSimons,  Dr.  Christopher,  130. 
Flagg,  Miss,  90. 
Flagg,  George,  90. 
FUtkock,  N.  C,  71. 
Fleming;  Beatrix,  123. 
Flimnap,  race  horse,  65. 
Flint,  Mrs.,  61. 
Folger,  Capt.  John,  84. 
Ford,  Hezekiah,  80. 
Foreign  Affairs,  Conmiittee  of  Con- 
gress for,  73. 
Forgison,  William,  94. 
Forgison,  William  Jr.,  94. 
Forrest,  Mrs.,  21. 
Forrest,  George,  21,  70. 
Fowler,  Rev.  Andrew,  12, 16. 
Fowler,  Andrew,  Dehon,  16. 
Fowler,  Henrietta  Harriot,  16. 
Fowler,  Mary  13. 
Fowler,  Richard,  13,  34. 
Fowler,  William  Roach,  13. 
Franklm — Izard  Controversy,  81-85. 
Fraser,  James,  35* 

Franklin,  Benjamin,  77.  78,  81-88, 
Freeman,  Elizabeth,  62. 
Freeman,  Henrietta  Ann,  116. 
Freeman,  John,  62. 
Freeman,  William,  25,  33. 
Freer,  John,  21. 
Freer,  Susannah,  21. 
Frier,  Mary,  103. 
Frierson,  John,  22. 
Frierson,  Margaret,  22. 
Frierson,  Phillip,  22. 
Fripp,   Magdalen,  93. 
Fripp,  William,  93,  121. 
Fryer,  Ruth,  103. 
Fullalove,  Thomas.  34. 
Fulton,  David,  127. 
Furman,  Rachel,  120. 
Furman,  Wood,  120. 
Furthy  Henry,  95. 
Furthy,  Hercules,  95. 
Furthy,  John,  95. 

Gadsden,  Christopher,  100. 
Gaillard,  Susanna,  25. 
Gairdner,  Mrs.,  89. 
Gairdner,  James,  89. 
Galloway,  Eliza,  70. 
Garden,  Rev.  Alexander,  27. 
Garden,  Ann  Amelia,  27. 
Garden,  Benjamin,  27, 127. 
Gardner,  Jonathan,  89. 
Gamer,  Melichior,  125,  126. . 


Garth,  Charles,  3. 

Gaul  tier,  Mrs.,  92. 

Gaultier,  Pierre  Joseph,  92. 

Genet,  Edmund,  89. 

Georgetown,    Episcopal    Church 
92. 

German  Fusiliers,  71. 

Gervais,  John  Lewis,  3,  7,  43. 

Gibbes,  Robert,  89. 

Gibbes,  Gov.  Robert,  his  first  wife, 
99 

Gibb,  Robert,  126. 

Gibson,  Alexander,  95. 

Gibson,  Gideon,  97,  127. 

Gignilliat,  Aim,  34. 

Gignilliatt,  Gabriel,  36. 

Gignilliatt,  James,  35. 

Gillard,  John,  90. 

Gillon,  Alexander,  37,  81, 120. 

Gimat,  Col,  82. 

Girardeau,  — ,  5 

Girardeau,  Tonn,  115. 

Girardeau,  Mary  Ann,  114. 

Giardeau,  Peter  Bohun,  115. 

Givens,  John,  94. 

Givens,  PhiUp,  94,  95. 

Glass,  Ann,  125. 

Glass,  Robert,  125,  126. 

Gleason,  Isaac,  22. 

Glover,  Ann,  117. 

Glover,  Joseph,  90. 

Glover,  Col.  Joseph,  114. 

Glover,  Moses  Wilson,  117. 

Glover,  Wilson,  90. 
Godfrey,  Elise  Ladson,  118. 
Godfrey,  Mary,  36. 
Godfrey,  William,  118. 
Godin,  Arthur,  96. 
Goff,  John,  34. 
GofT,  Mary,  36. 
Golightly,  Culcheth,  105,  IIL 
Golightly,  Dorothy,  112. 
GoUghUy.  Mary,  111,  112. 
Golightly,  Mary  Butler,  105. 
Goose  Creek,  1,  3. 
Gourdine,  William,  22. 
Gourlay,  Rev.,  68. 
Graham,  Alice,  34. 
Grant,  Emma  Francis,  118. 
Grant,  George  B.,  118. 
Grant,  Maria  Glover,  117. 
Gray,  Albert  R.,  16. 
Gray,  Emma  Henrietta,  16. 
Gray,  Harriet,  16. 
Gray,  William,  120. 
Gready,  Mr.,  19. 
Greebage,  Mary,  120. 
Green,  John,  95. 
Green,  Margaret,  95. 


140 


nn>£x 


Green,  Peter,  35. 
Green,  Ray,  90. 
Green.  Gen.,  87. 
Greenland,  Walter  M.,  66. 
Gregory,  Ann,  14. 
Gregory,  James,  14. 
Gregory,  Theodore,  14. 
GiegBon.  James,  24. 
Grey,  Albert  H.,  12. 
Grey,  Henry,  69. 
Grimkie,  Judge  John  F.,  53. 
Guerard,  David,  30. 
Guerard,  John,  30. 
Guerin,  Thomas,  12S. 
Gimnars,  £]izabeth,  34. 

Haabowiski,  John  S.,  69. 
Hahnbaum,  Dr.  Christopher,  122. 
Habnbaum,  George  F.,  23. 
Haig,  David.  24. 
Haig,  Eliza  Maria,  69. 
Haig,  James,  128. . 
Ha^xxi,  Earle  Vernon,  117. 
Hagood,  Johnston,  122. 
HaU,  Edward  O.,  18. 
Hall,  Peter,  127. 
Hamilton,  Charles,  98. 
Hamilton,  David,  122. 
Hamilton,  James,  98. 
Hamilton,  Thomas,  C,  106. 
Hamilton,  William,  36. 
Hamlin,  Ann,  16. 
Hamlin,  John   16. 
Hamlin,  Mary  Jane,  16. 
Hamlin,  William,  97. 
Hammet,  Rev.  William,  65. 
Hampton,  Harriet,  121. 
Ham{>ton,  Col.  Wade,  121. 
Hankin,  Joseph,  89. 
Hannahan,  Edward.  65. 
Hannaban,  Elizabeth,  36. 
Hans,  Richard,  126. 
Hanson,  Maria,  21. 
Harleston,  Elizabeth  Ann,  706. 
Harleston,  Jane,  65. 
Harleston,  John,  20,  35,  65. 
Harleston,  Nicholas,  68. 
Harleston,  William,  69. 
Harper — ,  90. 
Harrall,  Catherine,  123. 
Harring,  George,  127. 
Harry,  James,  124. 
Harry,  Mary,  124. 
Harvey,  John,  37. 
Harvey,  Sophia,  35. 
Hasfort,  Thomas,  102. 
Hayne,  Dr.  Isaac,  24. 
Hayne,  Mary,  96. 


Hayne.  William,  96. 

Hazard,  Towland,  24. 

Heame  Ann.  103. 

Heame,  Bridget,  102. 

Heame,  George,  102. 

Heame,  Jane,  102. 

Heame,  Joan,  102. 

Heame,  John,  102,  103. 

Heame,  Mary,  102. 

Heame,  Peter  Jr.,  102. 

Heame,  Peter,  101-103. 

Heame,  Sarah,  65. 

Henrizson,  Mary,  23. 

Herring,  John,  97. 

Hezt,  George  T^lOiam,  128. 

Heyward,  CoL  10. 

Hesrward,  BamweU  Rhett,  110. 

Heyward,  Daniel,  22,  71. 

Heyward,  J^unes,  71. 

Heyward,  Thomas,  34. 

Hicks,  Robert,  128. 

Hinds,  Ann,  72. 

Hinds,  Patrick,  72. 

Hinson,  Thomas,  23. 

Historic  Houses  of  South  Carolina^ 

130-133. 
Holman,  Molsy,  69. 
Holmes,  Daniel,  103. 
Holmes,  George,  122. 
Hohnes,  John,  103,  122. 
Holmes,  John  Whitesides,  16. 
Holmes,  Mary,  103. 
Hohnes,  Mary  Witter,  117. 
Holmes,  Peter,  103. 
Holmes,  Sarah,  16. 
Holmes,  WilUam,  103. 
Hohnes,  William  B.,  12, 16. 
Hoofiter,  Jacob,  95. 
Hoofiter,  Tohn,  95. 
Hopkins,  Mary,  24. 
Horry,  Danid,  28. 
Horry,  Elias,  32. 
Horry,  Jonah,  69. 
Horry,  Sarah,  29. 
Hort,  Sarah,  R.,  13. 
Hort,  William,  13. 
Howard,  Robert,  Sr.,  20. 
Howard,  Ann,  120,  121. 
Howard,  Robert,  120  121, 
Huey,  Jennet,  126. 
Huey,  Samuel,  126. 
Huger,  Benjamin,  46,  112, 113. 
Huger,  Thomas,  46. 
Hughes,  John,  119. 
Hull,  Robert,  60. . 
Hume,  Mrs.  Joseph,  35. 
Hume,  Robert,  35. 
Hunt,  Elizabeth,  112,  116. 


INDEX 


141 


Huntj  James  Green,  90,  91. 
HuntiDgton,     Joseph,     (mia-pzinted 

Hutdnson),  S^. 
Hutchins,  Mrs.,  92. 
Hutchins,  W.  B.,  92. 
Hyatt,  Mary,  35. 
Hynie,  Ann,  107, 108,  111 
Hyrne,  Ann  Marj^aret,  117. 
Hyme  Ann  Massingberd,  111. 
Hyme,  Ann  Pinckeny,  116. 
Hyrne,  Ann  Webb,  11/. 
Hyme,  Annie  Elizabeth,  118. 
Hyme,  Barbara,  107,  108. 
Hyme,  Benjamin,  112. 
Hyme,  Bohun  Giardean,  118. 
Hyme,  Burrell  Massingberd,  105, 108, 

110. 
Hyme,  Carelton  Henry,  118. 
Hyme,  Caroline  Jeanette,  118. 
Hyme,  Caroline  Lowery,  117. 
Hyme,  Clare  Elizabeth,  117. 
Hyme,  Clarence  F.,  118. 
Hyme,  Edith,  102. 
Hyme,  Edmund  Massingberd,  111, 

113, 115, 116. 
Hyme,  Edmund  Webb,  118. 
Hyme,  Ed^RranL  103-118. 
Hyme,  CoL  Edward,  105,  107,  106, 

109. 
Hyme,  Edward,  B.,  111. 
Hyme,  Edward  Dra3mer,  118. 
Hyme,  Elsie  Godfrey,  118. 
Hyme,  Elizabeth  104,  107,  108,  110, 

HI.  112,  113,  115. 
Hyme,  Elizaberh  Clark,  111,  112. 
Hyme,  Elizabeth  Zahler,  117. 
Hyme,  Esther  Pressley,  118. 
Hyme,  Harold  K.,  118. 
Hyme,  George,  108, 109. 
Hyme  Famay,  101-118. 
Hyme,  Harriet,  112. 
Hyme,  Henrietta  Massingberd,  117. 
Hyme,  Henry,  109, 114-118. 
Hyme,  Col.  Henry,  105,  110,  111- 

118,  120. 
Hyme,  Henry  Herbert,  118. 
Hyme,  LaUa  Lucas,  118. 
Hyme,  Mar^jaret  Webb,  117. 
Kyme,  Manon  C,  118. 
Hyme,  Mary,  105-106, 108, 121. 
Hjnme,  Mary  Ann,  114. 
Hyme,  Mary  Cam,  118. 
Hyme,  Mary  Esther,  118. 
Hjnme,  Pauline,   117. 
Hyme,  Peter  Girardeau,  114,   115, 

117. 
Hyme,  Sarah,  112. 
Hjnme,  Susan  Mary,  117. 
Hyme,  Susannah,  111. 


Hyme,  William  Alexander,  111,  112, 

113,  114,  116,  117. 
Hyme,  William  Godfrey,  116, 118. 
Hyme,  \^^lliam  Henry,  117. 
Hyme,  ^Tilliam  Jacob,  117, 118. 
Hyme,  William  Webb,  117. 
Hyme.  William  Wyman,  118. 
Hymeham,   109. 

Ide,  Dr.  William,  120. 

Indians,  31. 

Indigo  plantation,  6. 

Inglesby,  Henry,  24. 

In^by,  William,  72. 

Inman,  Robert,  124. 

Inoculation  for  small-pox,  29,  30. 

Irish  Town,  65.    • 

Izard-Franklin  Controversy,  81-85. 

Izard-Laurens  Correspondence,  1,  39, 

73. 
Izard,  John,  71. 
Izard,  Mary,  26. 

Izard,  Ralph,  1-11,  26,  39-52, 104. 
Izard,  Ralph,  Parody  on  his  letters. 

to  Heniy  Laurens,  81-85. 
Izard,  Mrs.  Ralph,  2. 

Fack  Savanna,  3. 
Fackson,  Jane,  112. 
fames,  Benjamin,  68. 
Tames  Town^  101. 
Fenkins,  Christopher,  67. 
fenkins.  Rev.  Edward,  26. 
fennens,  Edward,  96(2). 
fennens,  John,  96(2). 
fennerette,  Jacob  Heniy,  127. 
fennerette,  Ursalla,  12/. 
Ferves,  Ann,  34. 
fohnson, — 9. 
fohnson,  Elizabeth,  122. 
fohnson,  William  Jr.,  68. 
Johnston,  George,  54,  59,  94,  125. 
Johnston,  William,  24. 
Johnstone,  Mary 
Jolly,  Mrs.,  69. 
Jones,  Capt.,  87. 
Jones,  Charies,  35. 

Jones,  John,  124. 
ones,  Mary,  36. 
Jones,  Robert,  92. 
Jones,  Thomas,  36. 
Jones,  William,  36. 

{ones.  Rev.  William,  92. 
6y,  Gabriel,  16. 
Joy,  Sarah  Jane,  16. 

Kay,  James,  70. 
Keane,  Guerard,  97. 
Keith,  Rev.,  26. 


142 


INDEX 


Keith,  Cahrin,  19. 
Keppelf  Admiral,  79. 
King,  Isaac,  127. 
King,  Louisa,  130. 
King,  Mary,  70. 
King,  Richard,  36. 
Kirk,  Catherine,  35. 
Kirk,  Mary,  124. 
Kirk,  William,  124. 
Kni^ton,  Dr.  H.  W.,  118, 
Knox,  Dr.  James,  93. 
Knox,  Robert,  24. 
Kieible,  Dr.  Frederick,  19. 

Ladson,  Eliza,  122. 

Ladaon,  John,  94. 

Ladson,  Mary,  94. 

Ladaon,  Thomas,  94. 

Ladson,  Maj.  Thomas,  122. 

La  Fayette,  Marquis  de,  81. 

Lahaisse,  Marjr,  70. 

Lahisse,  Maurice,  70. 

Lane,  Samuel,  23. 

Langstafit,  Benjamin,  121. 

Lariscy,  Lucius  Bellinger,  117. 

Laroche,  Benjamin,  128. 

Laroche,  James,  128. 

Latham,  Joseph,  67. 

Laurens,  Henry,  1-11,  39-52, 131. 

Laurens,  James,  2. 

Laurens,  John,  3,  47,  48. 

Laurens,  John,  Izard  Letter  to,  87. 

Laurens,  Martha,  131. 

LawBon,  James,  107. 

Lawsouv  John,  107. 

Lear,  Mary,  19. 

Lear,  Tobias,  19. 

Lebby,  Eleanor,  15. 

Lebby,  Eleanor  Donnam,  14. 

Lebby,  Elizabeth,  14. 

Lebby,  Nathaniel,  14. 

Lee,  Ann,  21. 

Lee,  Arthur,  3,  51,  80,  82. 

Lee,  William,  51,  77. 

Lee.  Maj.  William,  21. 

Leiding,  Hariette  Kershaw,  130. 

Lefids,  Bernard,  22. 

Legare,  Isaac,  128. 

Le^re,  Thomas,  Jr.,  20. 

Leigh,  Sir  Egerton,  3. 

Lennox,  James,  29. 

Lenox.  William,  120. 

Leo|X>ld  I  of  Tuscany,  50. 

Lewis,  Ann,  126, 127. 

Lewis,  James,  126, 127. 

Lierson,  Capt.,  90. 

Lindauer,  Henry,  69. 

Lindauer,  Michael,  69. 

Linder,  John,  127. 


Linthwait — ,  34. 
Lindsey,  Grace,  36. 
Lisbon  earthquake,  32. 
Livingston,  George,  125. 
Uvingstoo,  Henry,  54,  97. 
liviiupston,  Sarah,  35. 
Lloyd,  John,  47. 
Loguk,  Geoige,  19. 
Long,  John,  69. 
Long  Canes,  98. 
Lonsdale,  Rev.;  37. 
Lorimer,  Rev.,  Charles,  39. 
Loughton,  Edward,  102. 
Lucas,  Jonathan,  17. 
Lucas,  Pamela,  118. 
Lushington,  Charity,  70. 
Lynch,  Thomas,  3,  6,  8, 100, 126. 
Lyon,  Ann,  65. 
Lyon,  Margaret,  23. 
Lyons,  Major  Joseph,  91. 

M'Call,  Sarah,  24. 

McCalla,  Rev.  Daniel,  17, 18. 

McCants,  James,  127. 

M'Carrach,  Hugh,  126(2). 

M'Cauley,  James,  93. 

M'Qur,  William,  24. 

M'Cormkk,  Dr.,  68. 

McCrackan,  James,  96. 

M'Crady,  Edward,.  91. 

M'Crea,  Mary,  36. 

McCrec,  John,  127. 

M'Farland,  John,  76. 

M'Gowen,  John,  96. 

M'Gowen,  Sarah,  96. 

Mackintosh,  Alexander,  128. 

M'Intosh,  Hetty,  67. 

M'Intosh  Gen.  Lachlan,  67. 

M'Kelvie,  Major  Robert,  93. 

M'Kenzie,  George,  35. 

M'Kcnzie,  John,  100. 

Mackenzie,  Robert,  125. 

McPherson,  — ;,  5. 

McPherson,  Elkibeth,  27,  30. 

McTier,  William,  128. 

Maderia  wine,  7,  41. 

Maj^wood,  Simon,  69. 

Mame,  — ,  4. 

Mallery,  Sarah,  123. 

Manigault,  Gabriel,  2. 

Manigault,  Peter,  45, 127. 

Manning,  W.,  3. 

Marchand,  Caroline,  12. 

Marion,  John,  96(2). 

Marion,  Mary,  96. 

Markiss,  James,  103. 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  the 

City  Gasetie,  19,  65,  89, 119. 
Marriage  Licenses,  34-37. 


INDEX 


143 


Marston,  Mrs.,  24. 

Martyn,  Rev.,  36. 

Martin,  Bridget,  102. 

Marshow,  See  Michand, 

Mason,  William,  37. 

Masons,  Ancient  York,  67,  91,  93. 

Massingberd,  Burrell,  104. 

Massingbeid,  Sir  Drayner,  104,  110, 

111. 
Massingberd,  Elizabeth,  104. 
Massingberd,  Francis,  Burrell,  104, 

110. 
Massingberd,  William  Burrell,  104. 

110. 
Mathewes,  John,  20. 
Mathewes,  William,  20,  68. 
MajdmHiam      Joseph,     Elector     of 

Bavaria,  73. 
Maxwell,  Elisabeth,  36. 
Maxwell.  Sarah  Mackewn,  27. 
May,  John  Henry,  12. 
May  River,  21. 
Maybank,  Joseph,  26. 
Maybank,  Susannah,  26. 
Mayrant,  Ann,  32.' 
Mayrant,  James  Nicholas,  25. 
Mayrant,  John,  29,  32,  33. 
Mayrant,  Judith,  25. 
Mayrant,  William,  32. 
Menley,  Mrs.,  23. 
Meurset,  Amelia,  66. 
Meyers,  Levi,  67. 
Meyers,  Thomas,  68. 
Michand,  Henry,  26. 
Middleton,  Arthur,  103, 104. 
Middleton  Family,  132. 
Middleton,  Maria,  26. 
Middleton  Place,  131. 
Middleton,  William,  5. 
Mikell,  John,  125. 
Miller,  Martin,  121. 
Miller,  Mary  A.,  66. 
Miller,  Robert,  94. 
Miller,  Stephen,  66, 128. 
Milligan,  Ann  Stall,  68. 
Milligan,  Jacob,  24. 
Milligan,  Mary,  24. 
Mills,  Thomas,  35. 
Minis,  Frances,  67. 
Minis,  Philip,  67. 
Minors,  Robert,  97. 
Minott.  Sarah,  113. 
Mitchell,  Sarah,  116. 
Mitchell,  Thomas,  116. 
Moncriefit.  Mary,  20. 
Moore,  Eliza  Esther,  23. 
Moore,  James,  107. 
Moore,  John,  107. 
Moore,  Capt.,  John,  68. 


Moore,  Tustina,  107. 
Moore,  Maurice,  107. 
Moore,  Rebecca,  107. 
Moore,  Richard,  124. 
Moore,  Roger,  107. 
Moore,  Thomas,  69. 
Morgan,  James.  E.,  118. 
Mor^mdoUar,  Mary,  68. 
Morris,  Robert,  49. 
Morris,  Samuel,  107. 
Morris,  Thomas,  49. 
Motte,  Christian,  34. 
Moyland,  Col.  Stephen,  119 
Muller,  Rev.  Albert  A.,  12, 13, 14. 
Muller,  Alfred  Rivers,  14. 
Muller,  Frances  Maria,  13, 14. 
Muller,  Maria  D.  Hort,  13. 
Muller^  Theodore  Dehon,  14. 
MuncnefiT,  Elizabeth,  93. 
Muncriefit,  Richard,  93. 
Murray,  Mrs.,  92. 
Myddleton,  Charles  S.,  89. 
Myddleton,  Sarah,  89. 

Naser,  Henry,  71. 
Naser,  PhiUp,  71. 
Nelson,  James,  93. 
Neufville,  Isaac,  69. 
Neuman,  Elizabeth,  90. 
Neuman,  George,  90. 
Neumann,  George  Frederick,  21. 
Newmann,  John,  128. 
Nicholi,  Abe,  74. 
Nichols,  Elizabeth,  36. 
Nickelson,  Sarah,  127. 
Noble,  Peter,  a  free  black,  89. 
Norris,  Nicholas,  65. 
Norvell,  Isabella,  33. 
Nott  Mis,,  92. 

Oakatee  Creek,  93. 

Odingsells,  Charles,  35, 54, 97, 125. 

CMFutt,  Nathaniel,  95. 

Oflfutt,  William,  95. 

Oram,  Francis,  126, 127. 

Oram,  Joseph,  126,  127. 

O'Haring,  Nancy,  19. 

O'HearTMiss.  122. 

Okenee,  99. 

Oliver,  John,  96. 

Oliver,  Margaret,  96. 

Ormsby,  Co.  Lincoln,  Eng,  104. 

Ormsby  plantation,  115. 

Oswald,  Sarah,  37. 

Otis,  Charles,  91. 

Otis,  Brig.  Gen.  Joseph,  91. 

Overseers,  40,  45 

Owen,  —  43; 


144 


INDEX 


Fwckxow,  John.  35. 

Pftge,  George,  37. 

Pt0e,  Sarmh,  35. 

Paoety  Henry,  36. 

PftUiser,  Sir  Hnc^,  79. 

Palmer,  Ann,  70. 

Palmer,  Capt.  John,  70. 

Pamor,  Thomas,  96. 

Parker,  Charles,  69. 

Parker,  George,  23,  70. 

Parker,  John  Jr.,  113. 

Parker,  Mary,  113. 

Parker,  Thomas.  113. 

Parker,  Dr.  William,  21. 

Ptrkerson,  Thomas,  128. 

Parkinson,  Mary,  95. 

Parkinson,  Nkholas,  95. 

Patenon,  Hugh,  69. 

Patterson,  Jeremiah,  66. 

Payne,  Josu^  93. 

Peace,  mac,  24. 

Peace,  Mary,  24. 

Pearce,  Ann,  12. 

Pearce,  Eliza  L.,  17. 

Ptearis,  CoL  Richard,  122. 

Peirce,  Mkhael^  60. 

Pennsylvania  Light  Dragoons,  119. 

Pepper,  Charbtte,  35. 

Pepper,  John,  13. 

Pepper,  Sara,  34. 

Peroreau,  Amelia,  35. 

Perdreau,  Benjamin,  17. 

Perdreau,  John,  97. 

Perrv,  Edward,  24. 

Petch,  Dr.  Adam,  123. 

Peters,  Charlotte,  120. 

Peters,  William  B.,  120. 

Petrie,  George,  93, 119. 

Petrie,  Mary  Simmons,  119. 

Peurifoy,  John  H.,  118. 

Pe)rre,  Rene,  97. 

Pledger,  Phiiip,  126. 

Philips,  Thomas,  92. 

Phillips,  Bersheba  Sarah,  15. 

PhiUps,  Eliza,  15(2),  16(2). 

Philhps,.  Henry  LaFayette,  16. 

PhilUps,  John  M.,  13, 15(2),  16(2). 

PhiUips,  L.  Miker,  16. 

Phillips,  Martha  Washington,  15. 

Phillips,  Washington  Lucas,  13. 

Pinckney,  Charles,  54,  63. 

Pinckney,  Gov.  Charles,  120. 

Pinckney,  Elizabeth,  120. 

Pinckney  family,  132. 

Pinckney,  Hopson.  66, 

Pinckney,  Mary  Eleanor,  120. 

Pinckney,  Thomas,  120. 

Pinckney,  William  Cotesworth,  115. 

Pluncket,  Elizabeth,  128. 


Poauc,  John,  89, 126. 

PokUethwmit,  James,  24. 

Pompey,  a  slave,  14. 

Poole,  Thomas,  36. 

Porcher,  P^ter,  69. 

Pofcher,  Peter,  Sr.,  22. 

Porter^  Ebeneser,  66. 

Portraits  of  Lynch,  Gadsden,  and 

Rutledge,  100. 
Postell,  James,  112. 
Powell,  Beatrix,  121. 
Poyas,  Mrs.,  105,  106. 
Poyas,  Ann,  24. 
Pbyas,  John  Ernest,  24. 
Prentice,  Dr.,  91. 
Prentiss,  William  Frii^,  117. 
Piessiman,  WiDiam,  21. 
Preveauz,  Mrs.,  19. 
Preveauz,  Capt.  Adrian,  19. 
Prince,  Clement  L.,  13. 
Prince,  Mary,  13. 
Prince's  Point,  13. 
Prin^,  Ann  Amelia,  27. 
Prin^,  Benjamin  Garden,  27. 
Prins^,  Charles  James,  27. 
Pringle,  Charlotte  Marianne,  27. 
Pringle,  Edward  Jenkins,  26. 
Pringle,  Elizabeth  Freeman,  27. 
Pringle,  Elizabeth  Mary,  26. 
Pringle,  Elizabeth  Mayrant,  25, 29. 
Prin^,  Emma,  27. 
Pringle,  James,  33. 
Prjn^,  James  Reid,  27,  33. 
Pringle,  Jane,  31. 
Pringle,  John,  25,  26,  29. 
Prin^,  John  Julius,  26, 33, 82, 85. 
Pringle,  Tudith,  28,  29,  30. 
Pringle,  Mary,  26,  33. 
Pringle,  Mary  Susannah,  27. 
Prins^,  Robert,  25-33. 
Pringle,  Robert  Alexander,  27. 
Pringle,  Robert  William,  26. 
Pringle,  Robert,  Bible  Entries,  25-^33. 
Pringle,  Susannah,  26. 
Pringle,  William  Bull*  27 
Prioleau,  Elijah,  125 
Pritchard,  Charity  F.  Wilson,  14. 
Pritchard,  Elizabeth,  14. 
Pritchard,  Paul,  14. 
Pritchard,  William,  14. 
Pritchard,  Latham,  William  Richard, 

14. 
Proctor,  Hannah,  124. 
Proctor,  William,  95. 
Prothro,  Evan,  128. 
Prothro,  James,  128. 
Pugson,  Dr.  George,  92. 
Pulaski,  steamer,  27. 
Pulford,  Joane,  103. 


INDEX 


145 


Puicell,  Rev.  Henry,  17, 68,  9  2. 

Quakers,  102,  103. 
Quash,  Robert,  69. 
Quash,  Sarah  69. 
Quash,  Susannah,  35. 

Race  Horse  Flimnap,  65. 

Ravenel,  Daniel,  69. 

Ravend,  Susanna  Qiarlotte,  69. 

Rawlins,  Catherine,  37. 

Read,  Motte  Alston,  38,  53,   101, 

116. 
Reid,  Elizabeth,  26. 
Reid,  Dr.  James,  26. 
Reid,  Mary,  26,  27. 
Reidj  Susannah,  26,  33. 
Remington,  John,  128. 
Renerson,  mlliam,  97. 
Reyley,  Elisabeth,  35. 
Reynolds,  Lydia,  63. 
Remolds,  Mary,  21. 
Rice,  6. 

Rice,  EUatbeth,  36. 
Richards,  Capt,  63. 
Richards,  Mn.,  63. 
Riley,  Mary,  97. 
Rippon,  Isaac,  36. 
Rippon,  Martha,  35. 
Rivers,  Ann,  66. 
Rivers,  Elizabeth,  71. 
Rivers,  Jane  Elizabeth  13. 
Rivers,  George,  66. 
Rivers,  Mary,  90. 
Rivers,  Thomas,  90. 
Robertson,  James,  36. 
Robertson,  John,  71. 
Robertson,  William,  21. 
Rodgcfrs,  Chrbtopher,  127. 
R<M;ers,  Samuel^  89. 
Roumg,  Cathenne,  35. 
Rolain,  Martha,  17. 
Roman  Catholic  Chxirch  yard,  92. 
Roper,  Joseph,  120. 
Roper,  Martha,  120. 
Rose,  Hezekiah,  19. 
Rose,  Lewis,  22. 
Rose,  Alexander,  65. 
Rotherford,  Ann,  35. 
Rothmahler,  Job,  97. 
Round  O,  23. 
Round  Savanna,  3. 
Roupell,  George,  121. 
Roman,  Rev,  36. 
Royer,  Ann,  29. 
Runnymede  plantation,  26. 
Russell,  George,  126. 
Russell,  Sarah,  36,  126. 
Russell,  Stephen,  126. 


Rutledge,  Edward,  1,  2,  3,  6,  9,  40, 

55. 
Rutledge,  Edward  Jr.^  65. 
Rutledge,  Rev.  Francis  H.,  15. 
Rutlege,  John,  100. 

Sacheveral,  Mary,  35. 

St.  John  Audion,  70. 

St  Jfohn,  Mary,  70. 

St.  Julian,  Josiei^  de,  30. 

St  Julian,  Judith  de,  29,  30. 

St  Julian,  Susannah  de,  29, 30. 

St.  Michaers  church,  116,  first  service 

in,  30. 
Salley,  Alexander  S.,  Jr.,  101. 
Saltus,  Richard,  72. 
Samwa3rs,  Samuel,  36. 
Sanders,  Ann,  34,  96. 
Sanders,  Elizabeth  Clark,  105,  111. 
Sanders,  Henrv  John,  14. 
Sanders,  John,  96. 
Sanders,  Joshua,  105,  111,  112. 
Sanders,  Mars^iret  Brown,  13. 
Sanders,  Martha,  13, 14(2). 
Sanders,  Mary,  12, 96(2). 
Sanders,  Mary  Ann  Clark,  112. 
Sanders,  Mary  Abigail,  14. 
Sanders,  Robert  Lee,  118. 
Sanders,  Sarah,  120. 
Sanders,  William,  13, 14(2),  96. 
Sands,  Marcaret.  64. 
Sarrazin,  Johnathan,  128. 
Sarrazin,  Lucretia,  69, 
Savage,  Mary,  65. 
Savage,  Dr.  Richard,  65. 
Sawyer,  Mrs.,  68. 
Sayle,  Nathaniel,  103, 104. 
Sayre,  — ,  10. 

Scotch  Meeting  Burial  Ground,  32. 
Scott,  ^^Olliam,  128. 
Screven,  Mrs.,  72. 
Screven,  Barbara,  106. 
Screven,  James,  66, 106. 
Screven,  John,  106. 
Screven,  Thomas,  106. 
Scrimzour,  James,  68. 
Sealey,  Joanna,  36. 
Seaman,  George,  29. 
Seaman,  Mary,  29. 
Sergeant,  Rev.,  35. 
Shackelford,  Sarah,  37. 
Sharp.  James,  128. 
Sharpies.  John,  37. 
Shaw,  Alexander,  125. 
Shaw.  Martha,  128. 
Sheed,  George,  28. 
Sheppiard,  John,  61. 
Shield,  WiUiam,  19. 
saver  Bluff,  99. 


146 


INDEX 


SImms,  Stmuel,  117. 

SimmoDS,  Wflliam,  68. 

Simmons,  Ami^  69. 

Simmons,  Benjamin,  69. 

Simmons,  Rev.  Dewar,  13. 

Simons,  Col.  James,  112. 

Simons,  Keating,  21. 

Simons,  Mary  Butler,  113. 

Simons,  Maurice,  116. 

Simons,  Sarah,  113, 114. 

Simpson.  Christopher,  95. 

Skene,  John,  94. 

Skinner,  Marv,  97. 

Skinner,  William,  97. 

Curving,  James,  113. 

Curving,  James  Jr.,  34. 

Skirving,  William,  35. 

Slaves  baptiaed,  15. 

Slaves,  40. 

Sleii^,  Ann,  37. 

Small-pcKC.  29,  30.31. 

Smelie,  Thomas  K.,  90. 

Smith,  Alice  R.  Htunr,  38. 

Smith,  Ann,  28, 1(^.  107. 

Smith,  Anna  Cornelia,  107. 

Smith,  Barbara,  60.  105. 

Smith,  Ben|amin,  105.  106. 

Smith,  D.  £.  Huger,  38. 

Smith,  Edward  Hyrne,  106. 

Smith,  Edward  Laidore,  60. 

Smith,  Elizabeth,  28,  106. 

Smith,  George,  28,  36,  60,  61,  104, 

106,  107. 
Smith,  Harriet,  89. 
Smith,  Henry,  105, 106. 
Smith,  Henry  A.  M.,  59. 
Smith,  James,  106. 
Smith,  fane,  28. 
Smith,  John,  120. 128. 
Smith,  Joseph,  127. 
Smith,  Tosiah,  69, 106. 
Smith,  Margaret,  106. 
Smith,  Martha,  34. 
Smith,  Mary,  34, 105, 106, 108, 110. 
Smith,  PhiUp,  35. 
Smith,  Robert,  26. 
Smith,  Sarah,  29, 106. 
Smith,  Savage,  22. 
Smith,  Susannah,  119. 
Smith,  Thomas,  1, 4, 106, 113, 119. 
Smith,  Landgrave  Thomas  Visit  to 

Boston,  60-64. 
Smith,  Thomas  2d.  Landgrave,  105, 

106, 107,  108. 
Smith,  Capt.  Thomas,  108. 
Smith,  Thomas  L.,  89. 
Smith,  Rev.  Whiteford,  13. 
Smith,  William  Mason,  26. 
Smoak,  Andrew,  117. 


Snow,  Susannah,  96. 

Snowden,  Willis^,  93. 

Sonuners,  Miss,  68. 

Sommers,  Humphrey,  68. 

Somers,  Mary,  67. 

Somersall,  ThouMs,  71. 

S.  C.  Delegates  m  Congress,  Isard's 

Letter  to,  79,  80,  81,  85. 
Speissegger,  John  Sr.,  21. 
Sproat,  Rev.  James,  65. 
Sproat.  Sarah,  65. 
Spry,  Joseph,  36. 
Stamp  Act,  32. 
Stead,  William,  36. 
Steed  man,  Rebecca,  24. 
Stevens,  Charity,  66. 
Stevens,  Danid,  71. 
Stevens,  Jacob,  Jr.,  36. 
Stevens,  Maria,  71. 
Stevens,  O'Neil  Gough,  70. 
Stevens,  Richard,  34. 
Stevenson,  —  52. 
Stewart,  Ann,  121. 
Stewart,  James,  35. 
Stewart,  Rebecca,  20. 
Stiles,  Mrs.,  23. 
Stiles,  Beni.  Jr.,  23. 
Stobo,  Archibald,  127. 
Stobo,  Elizabeth,  35. 
Stobo,  Jane,  68. 
Stobo,  Richard  Park,  68. 
Stock,  Thomas,  125, 126. 
Storms,  31,  32. 
Stou^ton,  Rev.,  21. 
Strawbridge,  James,  107, 
Strother,  George,  124. 
Stupich,  Mathias  Leopoldus,  92. 
Sullivan,  Mary  35. 
SuUy,  J..  122. 
Sullv,  M.,  122. 
Sunbury,  Ga.,  3. 
Sutton,  Benjamin,  12. 
Sutton,  Rebecca,  15. 
Swallow,  Newman,  96. 
Swansburg,  N.  C,  23. 
Swanson,  Ann,  69. 
Swint,  Dr.  John,  30. 
Swinton,  Caroline,  15. 
Swinton,  Mar^  ^mons,  93. 
Swinton,  William,  36. 
Sym,  Hugh,  35. 
Synington,  Parish  of  Stow,  25. 

Tamplet,  Peter,  68. 
Tart,  Nathan,  67. 
Tart,  Sarah,  67. 
Tarver,  John,  71. 
Taylor,  Andrew,  106. 
Taylor,  Anna,  106. 


INDEX 


147 


Taylor,  George,  122. 
Taylor,  James,  24. 
Taylor,  John,  36. 
Taylor,  Sabina,  106. 
Tavbr,  Thomas,  92. 
Tefiair,  Thomas,  122. 
Thomas,  Mary,  69. 
Thomas,  Stephen,  69. 
Thompson,  James  Hampdon,  20. 
Thompson,  Col.  William,  23. 
Thompson,  Charles,  23. 
Thompson,  Daniel,  90. 
Thomson,  George,  125. 
Thomson,  Terexniah  Smith,  123. 
Tidpian,  Miss,  121. 
Timms,  —  66. 
Tinnable,  Ann,  36. 
Tipseboo  plantation,  113, 114. 
Tobler,  John,  125. 
Todd,  Naomi,  24. 
Todd,  Capt.  Richard,  24 
Tong,  Rev.  Jno.,  34. 
Tonge,  Edward,  121. 
Tookerman,  Catherine,  36. 
Tory,  Pony,  66. 
Tosusiger.  Elizabeth,  22. 
Townsena,  Abigail,  36. 
Treston,  Joseph,  66. 
Trezevant,  Ann,  22. 
Trezevant,  Theodore,  35. 
Tucker,  Daniel,  111,  115, 116. 
Tucker,  Henry,  90 
Tucker,  Dr.  Thomas  Tudor,  90. 
Tucker,  Elizabeth,  116. 
Tufts  Collese,  34,  53,  94. 
Tunno,  Wiuiam,  22. 
Tuke,  John,  128. 
Turner,  Elizabeth,  63,  64. 
Turner,  Mathew,  63. 
Turpin,  ^^^lUam,  65. 
Tweed,  Alexander,  34,  65. 
Tweedy,  Jane,  36. 

Umbxia  plantation,  116. 

Vanderhorst,  Mrs..  71. 
Vanderhorst,  Amoldus,  13, 97. 
Vanderhorst,  Elias,  71,  97. 
Vandie,  James  M.,  19. 
Van  Myddah,  Anna  Cornelia,  105. 
Venning,  Elia^,  16. 
Venning,  Eliza,  14, 16. 
Venning,  Eliza  Lydia,  16, 17. 
Venning,  Elizabeth,  16. 
Venning,  Jonathan,  Licas,  14. 
Venning,  Laura  Eliza,  16. 
Venning,  Martha,  14,  15(3),  16. 
Venning,  Martha  Elizabeth,  15. 
Venning,  Mortimer  Williams,  13, 15. 


Venning,  Nicholas,  14, 16(2),  17(2). 
Venning,  Nicholas  Jr.^  15(3). 
Venning,  Nicholas  Bailey,  14. 
Venning,  Rebecca  Ann,  14. 
Venning,  Robert.  16. 
Venning,   Samuel,    12,    13,   14,    15, 

16,  17(2). 
Venning,  Sarah,  Elizabeth,  16. 
Venning,  Sarah  H.  15. 
Venning,  Sarah  Morrell,  17. 
Vernon,  Laura,  17, 
Vernon,  Nathan,  17. 
Verostic,  Barbara,  36. 
Ville  pontoux,  Benjamin,  35. 
Vinson,  Ann,  35. 

Wade,  Thomas,  128. 

Waight,  Sarah  Maxwell,  23. 

Wainwnght,  Samuel,  4,  5. 

Wait,  Mr.,  23. 

Wakefield,  James,  92. 

Walker,  Alexander,  21. 

Walker,  Susannah,  106. 

Walker,  Thomas,  65. 

Wabiut  Hill,  3. 

Walter,  — ,  5. 

Walters,  Elizabeth,  109. 

Walters,  George,  109. 

Walters,  Henry,  109. 

Walters,  Joseph,  109. 

Wappetaw  Church,  17. 

Ward,  John  Peter,  67. 

Waring,  Dr.,  91. 

Waring,  Benjamin,  60, 107. 

Waring,  Elizabeth,  23, 106. 

Waring,  Geoise,  23. 

Washington,  George,  26. 

Watson,  Joseph,  70. 

Watson,  Mary,  /I. 

WayUe,  William,  96. 

Weatherly,  Richard,  96. 

Webb,  Ann  Pinckeny,  114. 

Webb,  Williams,  115. 

Webb,  Dr.  William,  114. 

Webber,  Mabel  L.,  12 ,19, 65,  89, 101, 

119,  124. 
Wells,  —  9. 
Wellsl  Edgar,  120. 
Wells,  Grissei,  39. 
Wells,  John,  39. 
Wells,  Louisa  Susanna,  39. 
WcUs,  Mary,  39. 
Wells,  Robert,  39. 
West,  Samuel,  106. 
Westberry,  Edward,  103. 
Westbury,  Jonathan,  96. 
Westcote,  Joseph,  97. 
Whildon,  Mrs.,  70. 
Whildon,  Joseph,  20. 


148 


White,  Bkke  Leay,  122. 
White  Bluff,  22. 
White,  Elizabeth,  122. 
White,  Wimam,  21. 
Whitfield,  Joseph,  90. 
Whitesides.  Saiah,  12. 
Whitney,  John,  67. 
IMllkins,  Eleanor,  103. 
M^lkinion,  —  72. 
Win,  John,  71. 
Wllj  Philip,  71. 
^^^lliams,  James,  19. 
Williams,  William,  127, 128. 
WilUman,  Christopher,  23. 
Williman,  Eliza,  23. 
Willis,  Capt.  Henry,  119. 
Willis,  Col.  Lewis,  119. 
Wlson,  — 1. 
WOson,  Mrs.,  21. 68. 
Wilson,  Daniel,  90. 
Wilson,  Huc^,  94. 
^^^Ison,  James  Joscf^  117. 
Wilson,  John,  21,  124. 
Wilson,  Leighton,  68. 
Wilson,  Muy  Elizabeth,  117. 
Wilson,  Sara,  34. 
Wilson,  Rev.  Wm.  S.,  13. 
M^ton,  Rev.  Joseph' Darce,  34,  57. 
^^^ngood,  CharvQ,  14. 
Wingood,  Elias  Rembert,  14. 
Wingood,  Hannah,  14. 


Withenpoon,  Dr.  John,  122. 
Witter,  Elizabeth,  103. 
Witter,  Tames,  102, 103. 
Witter,  Mary,  103. 
Witter,  Thomas,  103. 
Wood,  Joseph,  35. 
Woodberry,  Jonah,  95. 
Woodberry,  John,  95, 119. 
Woodrop,  William,  32. 
Woodruff,  Major,  23. 
Wood's  Tavern,  91. 
Woodward,  Elizabeth,  117. 
Woodward,  Harriet,  117. 
Woodward,  Nathanid,  21. 
Wridit,  Alexander,  71. 
Wright,  Elizabeth,  71. 

Yoer,  Jacob,  123. 
You,  Mary,  20. 
Yale  College,  92. 
Young,  Arthur,  R.,  25. 
Young,  Benjamin,  124. 
Young,  Elizabeth,  20. 
Young.  Robert,  69. 
YoungUood,  Peter,  93. 
Young,  Thomas,  20, 116. 
Yowart,  Capt.  3. 

Zahler,  Elizabeth,  117. 
Zahler,  James  Tatnall,  117. 
Zolbius,  Jean,  122. 


U  "S    l<1S"o5-. -2.0 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
CHARLESTON,  S.  C. 


VOLUME  XXIII,  No.  1  JANUARY,  1922 


Unit  UVttiitd  sunn  e/  Amtrico 


PUBLICATION  COMMITTEE 

Joseph  W.  Basmwbix^  Hmmy  A.  M.  Smur, 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabsl  L.  Wsbbbr« 


CONTENTS 

Grimball  of  Edisto  Island 1 

St  Helena's  Parish  Register 8 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  City  Gazette 26 

Abstracts  of  Records  of  the   Proceedings   in   the  Court  of 
Ordmary,  1764-1771 34 


N.  B. — These  Magazmes,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
Vol.  If  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  ffistorical  Society.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per 
annum  (the  fiscal  year  being  from  January  to  January),  and 
members  can  buy  back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  eadi« 
In  addition  to  receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a 
discount  of  25  per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Sodety, 
and  have  the  free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

Sooth  CaroliiiA  Hbtoiicsl  Society, 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 
SOUTH   CAROLINA   HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 


VOLUME  XXIII 


:'/ic   ^'  ^^'  '^'<  -i->c.'^ 


OFFICERS 

OF  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  H ISTORI CAL  SOCIETY 

January,  1922— January,  1923. 

Hon.  Joseph  W.  Baenwell. 

ls%  Vice-PresidefU, 

Hon.  Henry  A.  M.  Smith. 

2nd  Vice-President, 

Hon.  Theodore  D.  Jervey. 

3d  Vice-President, 

Hon.  F.  H.  Weston. 

4th  Vice-President, 

Hon.  John  B.  Cleveland. 

Secretary  and  Treasurer  and  Librarian, 

Miss  Mabel  Louise  Webber. 

Curators: 

Langdon  Cheves,  Esq.,  D.  E.  Huger  Smith,  Esq., 

Prof.  Yates  Snowden,  Charles  W.  Kollock,  M.D., 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  Esq.,  Frank  R.  Frost,  Esq., 

John  Bennett,  Esq.,  C.  Bissell  Jenkins,  Esq., 

Rev.  Wm.  Way. 

Board  of  Managers, 

ALL  07  THE  FOREGOING  OFFICERS. 

Publication  Committee, 
Henry  A.  M.  Smith,  Joseph  W.  Barnwell, 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXIII  JANUARY,  1922  No.  1 


GRIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND 
Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

Paul  Grimball,  an  English  merchant,  came  to  the  Province  of 
South  Carolina  in  Feb.  1682;  on  April  10,  1681,  Lord  Shaftesbury 
and  two  others  of  the  Lords  Proprietors,  address  a  communica- 
tion to  the  Governor  and  Council,  containing  among  other  things, 
a  commission  to  grant  3000  acres  of  land  to  "Mr.  Paul  Grimball, 
Merchant  bound  for  Ashley  River  to  settle  there.  "^ 

In  March  1682/3  he  had  a  warrant  for  land  on  Cooper  River 
bounding  on  land  already  purchased  by  him  from  Samuel  Bos- 
wood*  and  in  October  1683,  he  received  a  warrant  for  600  acres 
due  him  for  arrival  of  self  and  servants;  he  became  a  Proprietor's 
deputy  in  1683;'  settled  on  Edisto  Island,  where  in  1686  his  house 
with  that  of  Governor  Morton,  was  sacked  by  the  Spaniards*. 

He  was  Secretary  of  the  Province  by  1683  and  in  October  1688 
was  appointed  Receiver  General  and  Escheator;*  was  a  member  of 
the  committee  to  consider  the  modification  of  the  Fundamental 
Constitution  in  July.  1687;  was  disqualified  by  Seth  Sothell  from 
holding  ofiice  in  1690,  and  was  sent  to  jail  and  forcibly  dispossessed 
of  the  records  intrusted  to  him  because  he  would  not  deliver  the 

» S.  C.  Hist.  Soc.  ColL  v.  1,  p.  104. 
•  Warrants  for  Lands  in  5.  C. 
» McCrady,  1671-1719,  p.  210. 
« Ibid,  p.  216. 
•5.  C.  H.  Soc.  Coll.  V.  1,  p.  120. 

1 


2  so.  CA«  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENBALOdCAL  MAGAZINE 

seal  used  for  granting  lands,-*  Grimball  in  his  petition  to  the  Govo*- 
nor  and  Council^  recites  the  outra^  committed  by  Sothell  and 
his  followers,  and  among  other  things  states  that  William  Chap- 
man, the  constable  at  CharlesTown  with  seven  others  from 
Berkley  County  went  to  the  petitioners  house  on  "Edistoh" 
Island  Colleton  County  "forty  miles  by  water"  on  February  3, 
1691,  entered  his  house  with  dubs,  frightening  Mrs.  Grimball  and 
the  family,  making  the  search  upon  the  pretence  of  hunting  for 
public  papers  and  records,  from  there  they  went  to  the  house  of 
Mr.  John  Hamilton  "your  Petr's  sonn  in  Law"  a  mile  distant,  and 
searched  his  house  under  the  same  pretense.* 

The  Proprietors  granted  Grimball  a  new  commission  in  May 
1691.*  In  April  1693  they  wrote  to  Col.  Ludwell  transmitting  to 
Mr.  Grimball  a  power  to  appoint  and  remove  Judges  or  Sheriffs  of 
the  counties  at  pleasure;  they  also  stated  that  Mr.  Grimball  com- 
plained that  he  was  obliged  to  stay  in  town  longer  than  is  needful, 
and  requested  that  the  duties  of  his  office  be  made  as  little  irk- 
some as  possible.**  The  Proprietors  wrote  to  Mr.  Grimball  June 
28,  1695  concerning  the  appointment  of  Archdale  as  Governor, 
and  Grimball  in  his  will,  proved  February  20,  1696,  requests  that 
a  ring  be  given  to  Gov.  Archdale  as  a  token  of  respect. 

Paul  Grimball  made  his  will  December  13,  1696,  as  Paid  Grim- 
ball Esq;  of  Edisto  Island,  Colleton  County;  a  full  abstract  was 
printed  in  this  Magazine,  vo.  XI,  page  55.  He  mentions  his  wife 
Mary,  sons  Thomas  and  John,  daughter  Providence  Grimball, 
daughters  Mary  Hamilton  and  Ann  Linkley;  son-in-law  Christo- 
pher Linkley;  the  lands  mentioned  in  his  will  were  on  Edisto; 
1600  acres  to  his  wife  for  life,  and  then  to  his  son,  Thomas; 
400  acres  to  his  daughter  Linkley;  there  is  no  mention  of  lands  to 
any  of  his  other  children.  He  had  formerly  owned  lands  on 
Cooper  river  the  plantation  known  later  as  Wraggs  or  Marsh- 
land," but  sold  during  his  life  time. 

Mary  Grimball,  wife  of  Paul,  mentioned  several  times  in  the 
records  and  Statutes  at  large  as  Madam  Mary  Grimball,  was 

» Ibid,  p.  125. 

» Warrants  for  Lands,  1692-1711,  p.  198. 

» Ibid,  p.  200. 

•  S,  C.  H,  Soc.  CoU.  V.  1,  p.  126. 

"Ibid.,  p.  131. 

"  This  Magazine,  v.  XIX,  p.  54. 


II 


GRDIBALL  07  EDISTO  ISLAND  3 

living  in  1711,  when  she  was  made  guardian  of  her  grand-son 

Christopher  Linkley,"  but  was  dead  by  1720,  when  her  son  Thomas 

made  his  will;  Mary  Grimball  left  a  will  but  it  is  now  missing. 

Paul  Grimball  the  first  and  his  wife  Mary  had  issue: 

2.  i.    Mary    Grimball,    married    to   John   Hamilton,    deputy 

Secretary  of  the  Province,  and  had  three  children 

by  1695,  when  John  Hamilton  of  Edisto  Island 

registered  a  stock  mark  for    them;  Hamilton  was 

a  member  of  the  House  of  Assembly  in  1696,  and 

1698,    and  is  mentioned  in   1696  as  Capt.  John 

Hamilton.    There  is  some  evidence  that  he  was 

the  John   Hamilton   who   came  out   with   Lord 

Cardross   and   William    Dunlap,  but  this   would 

have  to  be  proved.^    Mary  Hamilton  died  before 

her    husband,    and    he    married    next    Dorothy 

,    who    administered    upon    his    estate 

November  6,  -1707;  after  his  death  she  married 
Thomas  Ogle  of  Edisto  Island,  survived  him  also, 
and  died  leaving  a  will  dated  1719  which  mentions 
among  others,  her  son-in-law  Paul  Hamilton.^* 

Of  the  children  of  John  Hamilton,  only  three  are 
known  to  be  by  Mary  Grimball:  i.  Mary  Hamilton, 
bom  before  1695,  married  first  about  1705,  John 
Wlkins,  who  died  in  1730,  she  then  married  Archi- 
bald Neal,"  John  Wilkins  and  Mary  Hamilton  had 
issue  several  children,  among  them  Paul  Wilkins, 
mentioned  in  the  will  of  his  uncle  Paul  Hamilton, 
ii.  Paul  Hamilton,  bom  before  1695,  married 
Martha  Bower,  daughter  of  William  Bower  and  his 
wife  Martha  Hext;  Paul  Hamilton  died  about 
March  1738/9  when  his  will  was  proved,  his  wife 
had  predeceased  him;  their  children  were  Paul, 
John,  Archibald,  daughters  Martha  and  Dorcas; 
Paid  was  a  Tory,  and  died  in  England  about 
1799,  leaving   no  issue;  Dorcas  and  John  seem 

"  Probate  Court,  1687-1710,  p.  175. 

"5.  C.  H.  Soc.  Coll,  V.  1,  p.  93,  Art.  30, 35, 37. 

"  Probt  Ct  1722-24,  p.  57. 

"5/.  Andrews  Reg. 


so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

to  have  died  young,  Martha  married  Rev.  John 
McLeod,  and  Archibald  (1736-1766)  married 
Rebecca  daughter  of  Ezekial  Branford,  and  was 
the  father  of  Paul  Hamilton,  Governor  of  S.  C, 
and  Secretary  of  the  Navy.  iii.  Ann  EEamilton, 
bom  before  1695;  married  first  before  1713,  David 
Loughton,  no  issue;  married  2d.  George  Bamet, 
one  daughter  Ann  Bamet;  married  3d.  before  1717, 
David  Hext,  and  had  five  daughters^*;  her  daughter 
Ann  Bamet  married  in  1731,  Charles  Codner"  and 
had  Richard,  bom  1732,  Grace,  bom  1742,  married 
John  Ash,  Charles,  bom  1734,  Sabina,  bom  1735, 
married  William  Elliott,  Providence  married  1761, 
Joseph  Eddings,  Ann. 
3.  ii  Ann  GrimbaU  daughter  of  Paid  and  Mary,  married  first 
Christopher  Linkley^*  who  died  in  1699,  for  in  that 
year  his  Mother  Mary  Linkley,  in  England,  gives 
power  of  attomey  to  collect  a  legacy  left  her  by  her 
son.**  Christopher  Linkley  and  Ann  Grimball  had 
at  least  one  child,  Christopher,  a  minor  in  1706,  when 
Lawrence  Dennis  and  Thomas  Grimball  were 
appointed  his  guardians;  this  second  Christopher 
Linkley  married  Sarah  Jones  and  died  before  1719, 
for  his  widow  made  her  will  in  that  year^* 
mentioning  children,  but  not  by  name;  Christopher 
Linkley  3d.  married  Mary  Holman  in  1735'*  and 
died  in  1740.  Ann  Grimball  widow  of  Christopher 
Linkley,  married  second  before  1699  Charles  Oding- 
sell,  deputy  secretary  of  the  Province  under  Paul 
Grimball;  their  children,  so  far  as  known,  were,  1, 
Mary  married  first  Samuel  Jones  and  had  issue, 
married  second  Capt.  Ebenezer  Simmons,  no  issue 
2,  Ann  Odmgsell   1706-1754,  married  first  1724, 

*•  This  Magazine,  v.  VI,  p.  36,  37. 

"  SL  PkUips  Reg, 

*•  Will  of  first  Paul  Grimball,  see  above. 

>•  Probate  Court,  1697-1710. 

••Ibid.  1671-1727,  p.  119. 

**  St.  Andrews  Reg, 


GRIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  5 

John  Smith,  an  English  merchant,  and  second 
Benjamin  D 'Harriett,  also  a  merchant^  no  issue 
by  either  husband;  3,  Charles  Odingsell,  minor  in 
1718,  when  his  half-brother  Christopher  Linkley  was 
appointed  his  guardian^*  died  on  a  trip  to  Savannah 
about  1740  leaving  issue,  Charles,  Mary,  and  possi- 
bly others.^  Ann  Grimball  seems  to  have  married 
for  a  third  husband,  Lawrence  Dennis,  who  after- 
wards married  her  sister  Providence.^ 
4.  iii.  Providence  Grimball,  daughter  of  Paul  and  Mary,  un- 
married when  her  father  made  his  will  in  1695;  she 
married  first  Lawrence  Dennis,**  and  second,  Novem- 
ber 25,  1733,  Ribton  Hutchinson;  she  had  no  issue. 
Lawrence  Dennis  left  a  will  now  missing,  but  from 
recitals,  we  find  that  he  left  land  to  Paul  Grimball, 
his  nephew  by  marriage. 

Providence  Hutchinson  made  her  will  9  Jan- 
uary, 1755,  proved  27  February,  1756;  mentioning 
many  of  her  friends  and  relations;  she  speaks  of  her 
husband  Ribton  Hutchinson  and  marriage  settle- 
ment with  him;  the  Antopedo  Baptist  church, 
400  Pounds,  and  her  silver  tankard,  nephew  John 

^  SL  PkiUps  Reg. 

"Probate  Ct.  1711-1718,  p.  91. 

***',  .  .  .  Mr.  Odingsell,  who  was  an  Inhabitant  of  Carolina,  and 
had  been  a  great  Benefactor  to  the  infant  Cobny  of  Georgia  ....  hav- 
ing come  to  Savannah  to  see  how  the  Colony  succeeded  ....  being 
abroad  some  time  after  it  was  Night,  as  he  was  going  to  his  Lodgings  was  taken 
up  in  the  Street  for  a  Stroller,  carried  to  the  Guard  House,  and  threatened  with 
the  Stocks  and  Whipping-Post;  the  Terror  and  Fright  of  which  .... 
threw  him  into  a  high  Fever  ....  he  was  carried  aboard  his  Boat  in 
order  to  be  sent  Home,  and  died  in  the  Way  some  where  about  Dawfuskee 
Sound."  Narrative  of  the  Colony  of  Georgia,  Charles-Town:  P.  Timothy,  1741, 
p.  35. 

**  Mesne  Conveyance  Off.  F,  p.  100,  31  Dec.,  1726:  Lawrence  Dennis  and 
Providence  his  wife,  deed  of  gift,  lot  no.  35  in  Chas*tn.  to  Benjamin  d'Harriett 
Jr.  and  Ann  his  wife  "our  daughter."  Mrs.  Providence  Dennis  afterwards 
mentions  Benj.  d'Harriett  and  his  wife  and  nephew  and  niece.  As  we  know 
that  d'Harriett  married  Anne  Odingsell,  widow  of  John  Smith,  the  explana- 
tion seem  to  be  that  Lawrence  Dennis  had  first  married  Anne  Odingsell,  widow, 
sister  of  Providence  Grimball,  and  thus  Anne  d'Harriett  was  his  step  daughter. 

»•  Will  of  first  Paul  Grimball. 


6  SO.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Jones,  neices  Elizabeth  Baynard,  and  Providence 
Grimball  "who  lives  with  me'*  daughters  of  her 
nephew  Paul  Grimball  deceased.  Nephew  Joshua 
Grimball;  ndce  Mary  Simmons  now  wife  of  Capt. 
Ebenezer  Simmons  and  her  four  children^  Samuel 
Jones,  Mary  Broughton,  John  Jones  and  Charles 
Jones;  neice  Mary  Simmons  and  then  her  daughter 
Mary  Broughton,  the  mourning  ring  "I  had  for  my 
Mother;"  Sister  Sarah  Pitman,  in  Manchester  New 
England,  and  her  daughter  Elizabeth  [a  sister  of 
Lawrence  Dennis] 

Late  nephew  Paul  Grimball  and  his  eight  children 
not  named;  Nephew  Thomas  Grimball  and  his  four 
children  [not  named]  Nephew  Joshua  and  his  five 
children;  neice  Rebecca  Grimball;  children  of 
nephew  Isaac  Grimball  deceased,  all  under  age; 
neice  Sabina  Elliott,  wife  of  William  Elliott;  three 
neices  Ann  Codner,  Providence  Codner,  and  Grace 
Codner;  Mrs.  Mary  Baker,  widow  of  Capt.  Francis 
Baker;  kinsman  Thomas  Hutchinson;  nephew  Ben- 
jamin D*Harriett,  ^'mourning  ring  I  had  for  my  late 
husband"  and  500  pounds;  residue  to  all  the  chil- 
dren of  three  nephews,  Paul  Grimball  Esq;  deceased. 
Thomas  Grimball,  and  Isaac  Grimball  deceased. 

5.  iv.    John  Grimball,  mentioned  in  the  will  of  his  father;  John 

Grimball,  of  Charlestown,  Hatter,  made  his  will 
11  Feb.  1722/3,  leaving  James  Ellis  his  sole 
executor;  Benjamin  Cotell  to  have  all  his  hat- 
makers  tools.  Sons  Samuel  and  John  Grimball  to 
have  all  his  property  if  they  come  to  Carolina  within 
a  year  and  a  day;^^  the  records  show  nothing  further 
concerning  John  Grimball's  descendants. 

6.  V.    Thomas  Grimball,  son  of  Paul  and  Mary,  and  the  ancestor 

of  all  the  Grimball's  of  the  name  in  South  Carolina; 
he  married  first  before  1707,  Elizabeth,  daughter  of 
William  Adams;^®  married  second,  August  8,  1722, 
Sarah,  widow  of  William  Pert,  a  Baptist  minister; 

"  Probt.  Ct.  1722-24,  p.  110. 
"  This  Magazine,  v.  XIU,  p.  58. 


GRDCBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  7 

no  issue  by  this  marriage;  she  married  next,  in 
1724,  Samuel  Scriven,  and  after  his  death,  Dr. 
George  Smith,  a  son  of  the  second  Landgrave,  and 
died  in  Philadelphia. 
Thomas  Grimball  and  his  wife  Elizabeth  Adams  has  issue 

7.  i.    Paul  Grimball,  died  about  1750 

8.  ii.    Thomas  Grimball,  died  after  1783 

9.  iii.    Joshua  Grimball,  died  1757 
10.  iv.  Isaac  Grimball,  died  1752. 

Thomas  Grimball  of  Edisto  Island  left  a  will, 
dated  26  October,  1721,  proved  Feb.  7,  1722;  leaves 
wife  Sarah  for  widowhood,  use  of  his  plantation 
where  he  lives;  personal  estate  in  to  three  equal 
parts,  one  third  to  wife  for  life,  then  to  all  his  sons. 
The  other  two  thirds  to  his  four  sons,  Paul,  Thomas, 
Joshua  and  Isaac,  when  the  younger  sons  are  21, 
son  Paul  to  receive  his  share  inmiediately  three 
yoimger  sons  to  be  maintained  out  of  labor  of  their 
respective  slaves,  stock  of  horses,  cattle  &c. 

"All  possible  Endeavours  be  used  to  give  each  of 
my  Children  a  competent  measure  of  learning  and 
education,  at  least  that  they  may  be  taught  to  read 
perfect  English,  write  a  legible  hand  fitt  for  public 
business  or  office,  and  Arithmetick  through  the 
rule  of  Fellowship. " 

Son  Paul,  after  death  of  Wife  Sarah,  plantation 
where  testator  lived,  1000  acres;  to  son  Thomas, 
500  acres  on  Port  Royal  island; 

Son  Joshua  remaining  part  of  the  tract  where  he 
lived,  situated  on  Burned  House  Creek;  to  son 
Isaac  Grimball  land  on  Edisto  Island,  290  acres 
adjoining  Lawrence  Dennis  and  Thomas  Parmenter, 
a  grant  from  Gov.  Moore;  wife  Sarah  and  son  Paul 
to  be  executors.  Joseph  Sealey,  Edmond  Puysley, 
Chas.  Odingsell,  Joseph  Sealey  Jr.  and  Daniel  McFar- 
land,  witnesses.^' 

»» Probt.  Ct.  1722-24,  p.  79. 

{To  be  continued) 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER 

Copied  and  arranged  for  printing  by  Joseph  W.  Babxwell  and 

Mabel  L.  Webber 

The  register  for  St.  Helena's  parish  which  we  are  now  printing, 
is  a  compilation,  begun  in  1752,  by  William  Gough;  the  volimie  in 
which  it  was  recorded  is  a  large  folio,  boimd  in  parchment;  the 
first  page  is  elaborately  illuminated  in  colored  floral  designs,  and 
ornate  lettering  which  reads  as  follows: 

"St.  Helena  Parish /P.  Register  Containing  /  the  Marriages, 
Births,  Baptisms  /  and  Buriab  which  have  happened  in  the  said 
Parish,  being  transcribed  from  the  old  Register  &  from  the  /  pri- 
vate Minutes  of  the  late  Rev'd  Lewis  Jones  Deed." 

"Minister  /  Rev.  Wm.  Peasely  /  Church  Wardens  /  ,  Mr. 
Andrew  Bell  /  Mr.  Wm.  Waight  [bad  break  here] 

"Vestry  Coll.  Nath'l  [Barnwell]  /  Coll.  Tho's:  [Wigg?]  /  Coll: 
M[ulryne  ?]  Capt:  Jno:  G  [break]  /  Mr.  Jno:  [Barnwell  ?]  / 
Mr.  Chas. ,  Mr. " 

Between  the  list  of  the  wardens  and  the  vestry  is  the  Royal 
Coat  of  Arms,  and  just  below  it  appears  the  following: 

"Done  at  Beaufort  in  the  25th  year  of  the  /  Reign  of  his  Majesty 
George  H,  and  is  most /humbly  inscribed  unto  the  Revd:  the 
minister,  the  church  /  wardens  and  Gentlemen  of  the  Vestry  and 
the  other  /  the  Gentlemen  Freeholders  of  the  Said  Parish  /  by 
their  most  humble  and  oblg.  Servant  /  William  Gough,  St. 
George,  1752." 

The  old  register  is  in  very  bad  condition;  fortimately  a  copy 
was  made  over  twenty-five  years  ago,  and  this  copy  is  now  the 
property  of  this  Society. 

The  register  is  a  rather  complicated  compilation,  arranged  in 
tabular  form,  running  across  the  double  page,  and  there  is  an 
elaborate  system  of  abbreviations  and  cross  references  by  niunbers, 
too  confusing  and  cumbersome  to  reproduce.  Since  it  has  not 
been  practicable  to  reproduce  the  exact  form  of  the  original,  the 

8 


ST.  HELENA'S  PAMSH  REGISTER  9 

subject  matter  has  been  put  into  a  new  form;  the  copy  is  used, 
after  having  been  carefully  verified  with  the  original,  loaned  by 
the  parish  for  this  purpose:  Mr.  Joseph  W.  Barnwell  andMiss 
Webber  have  done  the  verifying,  and  have  again  checked  the 
copy  after  the  new  compilation  was  made. 

With  the  completion  of  the  printing  of  the  St.  Helena  register 
all  of  the  Provincial  Church  of  England  registers,  which  now 
remain,  will  have  been  printed  with  the  exception  of  the  second 
part  of  St.  Philip's  register,  beginning  1754.  This  Society  has 
printed  to  date,  St.  Andrews,  St.  James  Santee,  and  Christ  Church 
besides  a  fragment  in  the  Independent  Congregational  (Circular) 
Church.  St.  Thomas  and  St.  Dennis,  Prince  Frederick's  and  the 
first  part  of  St.  Philips  have  been  printed  by  others.  The  other 
parish  registers  have  long  been  missing;  in  a  few  cases  the  minutes 
of  the  vestry  remain  where  the  registers  are  gone. 

The  William  Gough  who  began  the  compilation,  the  form  of 
which  was  used  until  the  register  was  full,  was  bom  in  London  in 
1703,  and  died  in  Beaufort  in  May  1758;  he  has  the  schoolmaster 
and  auctioneer.  The  register  records  the  usual  details  concerning 
his  family;  They  seem  to  have  come  out  to  Georgia  in  1733,  and 
to  have  shortly  after  come  over  to  Beaufort.  There  is  no  apparent 
connection  between  this  William  Gough  and  John  Gough,  who 
came  to  Carolina  from  Barbadoes  about  before  1709,  and  left  de- 
scendants here. 

Adams,  WilUam  bachelor,  son  of  William  and  Catherine  [married 

by  Jones  Dec.  20  1739  EUzabeth  Fendm] 
Adams,  Martha  dau.  William  and  Elizabeth  bom  24  Sept  1740 

bapt  Jan.  19, 1740 
Adams,  William  son  of  same  bora  9  Dec.  1743  bapt.  May  28  1744 
Adams,  Natham'el  bach.  St.  Helena  [married  by  Jones  Aug  14, 

1740  Mary  Capers  spinster.] 
Do.  wid'r  [married  by  same  6  Sept.  1744  Margaret  Ellis] 
Adams,  David  son  Nathaniel  and  Margt.  born  2  Sept.  1745 
Adams,  Nathaniel  sn.  of  same  born  Dec.  20, 1747 
Adams,  Edmund  son  of  same  born  27  Dec.  1749 
Adams,  Thomas  son  of  William  Senr  and  Martha  bora  Dec.  19, 

bapt.  13  June  1743 
Albergotti,  Ulss.  Anthony,  bom  in  Florence  Italy  [rest  missing] 
Allen,  John,  soldier  [rest  missing] 


10  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

AUen,  William,  soldier 

Allison,  Ann  daiL  George  and  Margaret  of  Indian  Land  bom  18 

Sept,  1739  bapt  10  Nov.  1739 
Allison,  Sarah  dau.  same  bom  1  Dec.  1741  bapt  13  Jan.  1741 
Allison,  Margt.  dau.  same  bom  June  11, 1744,  bapt  1  July  1744 
Allison,  Anne,  dau.  same  bapt.  22  April  1750 
Arnold,  George,  a  stranger  [rest  missing] 
Mary,  dau.  Thomas  and  Sarah  bom  S  Nov.  1749  bapt 

19  Nov.  1749 

Wm.  Henry,  sn.  Thomas  and  Mary  from  Georgia  [misdng] 

^Mary  wife  to  Thomas  [missing] 

Margt.  dau.  O^t  Jos.  and  Margt.  bom  24  Sept  1738  bapt  14 

Oct  1738 

-Anne  da.  Benjamin  and  Anne  bom  16  Dec;  1742  bi^t  6  Mar. 


1742 

Andrews,  Hannah,  spinster  [missing] 

Adams,  Mary  wife  to  Nathaniel  [missing] 

Albergotti,  Magdalen  spinster  dau.  Anthony  and  Prudence 
[missing] 

Adams,  Elizabeth  dau.  William  and  Elizabeth  bom  20  Dec  1749 
bapt  7  July  1751 

of  Nath'l  and  Margt.  bom  July  2  1752  bapt  26  Sept 

1752  [Here  there  are  two  pages  missing] 

[Askew,  Thomas]  married  by  Peasley  13  Nov.  1752  to  Ann  Hogg, 
Spinster 

[Aggnew,  Andrew]  married  by  same  17  Dec.  1752  to  Mary  Alber- 
gotti spinster 

[Albergotti,  Mary  spin,  married  by]  same  17  Dec.  1752  to  Andrew 
Aggnew.  Buried  4  April  1762  aged  35  yr.  21  da.  Beaufort 
Ch.  yd. 

[Adams,  David  Widow'r]  married  by  same  1  Feb.  1753  Catherine 
Grimball,  spin. 

[Ackarman,  Albert  bachelor]  married  by  Langhora  30  April  1752 
Sarah  Walker,  spin. 

Peasley.    Anthony  Albergotti,  Mrs.  Morgan  and  the  father 

surities.  Buried  18  Oct.  1757  aged  3  yr.  19  mo.  24  da.  Beau- 
fort ch.  yd. 

Buried  9  Mar.  1754  aged  19  yr. 

Bur.  by  Peasley  19  May  1767  aged  12  Beaufort  ch. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  11 


bur.  at  St.  Helena  13  Jan.  1756 
bur.  at  Enhaws.    1 756 


[Adams,  John]  married  by  Lewis  6  Dec.  1787  Mary  Wilkinson. 
[Albergotti,  Anthony  bach.]  married  by  same  28  Mar.  1757  Amy 

Re)aiolds.    S. 

bur.  1756 

A.  Baron  clergy  man;  Jos.  Tattnel,  Tim'y  Morggridge  and 

Ann  Morgan  sureties,    buried  10  Dec.  1758  Beaufort  ch.  yd. 

married  Marg't  Clancy  of  Prince  Williams  Parish,  wid. 


[Aggnew,  Andrew,  widow'r]  married  by  Green  Nov.  8,  1762  Mary 

Wlliams  spinster.    Buried  11  Feb.  1776  Beaufort. 
Appleton,  Thomas,  bur.  by  Green  Nov.  3, 1763. 
Adams,  Elizabeth,  dau.  William  and  bom  22  May  1769; 

bapt.  Aug.  13,  by  Rev.  Mr.  Streaker. 
Aggnew,  Archibald,  sn.  of  Andrew  and  Mary,  Beaufort.    Born 

13  Dec.  1764  bapt.  July  16  1765  by  Duncombe;  bur.  Nov.  17, 

1774  aged  9  yr.  11  mos  1  da.  Beaufort  Ch. 
Aggnew,  Alexander,  son  of  same,  bom  25th  Jime  1767  bapt. 

Aug  25  1767  by  Rev.  Mr.  Tongue. 
Aggnew,  Moses,  son  of  same  bom  8th  January  1769;  bapt  Jan  18 

1769.    By  Mr  Frinck  bur.  Feb  19, 1771  aged  2  yr  1  mo.  11  da. 

Beaufort  ch. 
Adams,  Jane,  dau.  \^lliam  Jimr  and  Elizabeth  bom  23  Sept. 

1770  bapt.  27  Jan.  1771  by  Rev.  Mr.  Peirce 
Aggnew,  Ann,  dau.  Andrew  and  Mary  of  Beaufort  bom  1  Sept. 

1770  bapt  6  Oct.  1770  by  Rev.  Mr.  Peirce. 
Aggnew,  Dorothy,  dau:  of  Andrew  and  Mary  of  Beaufort;  born 

9th  March  1772;  bapt.  May  2,  1772  by  Rev.  Mr.  Smith;  bur; 

Sept.  18, 1786,  aged  14  yr.  6  mo.  9  days.    Beaufort  ch: 
Aggnew,  Charles  John,  son  of  same,  bom  17  Feb.  1774,  bapt. 

March  22,  1774,  by  Rev.  Mr.  Moreau,  F.  Moreau,  J.  M. 

Rhodes  and  Mr.  Tucker  sureties.    Bur:  July  31,  1791  aged 

17-5-18;  Beaufort  ch  yd.  Fever. 
Aggnew,  And'w  James,  son  of  same;  bom  17  Jan.  1776;  bapt. 

Jan.  28. 1776  by  Rev.  Mr.  Moreau. 
Aggnew,  Andrew,  widower,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Graham,  2  Nov. 

1777,  Mary  Nelson,  Spinster;  died  Dec  23, 1788,  aged  31-0-20. 

Beaufort  Ch. 


12  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Aggnew,  Mary,  dau;  Andrew  and  Mary,  of  Beaufort,  bom  26  Oct., 

1778  bapt.  Dec.  27, 1778,  by  Rev.  Mr.  Graham;  bur.  March 

31, 1781,  aged  2  yr-5mo-6da. 
Aggnew,  Sarah,  dau:  same  bom  8  March  1784,  bapt.  Mar.  10, 

1784,  by  Graham;    bur:  Aug.    20,    1788   aged   4y^m-6d. 

Beaufort.  Fever. 
Anthony,  Charles  Powell,  son  of  Abraham  and  Mary;  Beaufort. 

Bom  28  July  1780;  bapt.  Dec  11, 1784  by  Lewes. 
Ash,  John  married  by  Lewes  March  10,  1785  Catherine  Lechmere 

widow. 
Anthony,  Stephen,  sn.  of  Abraham  and  Mary  bom  23  Feb.  1785 

bapt  April  21 1785  by  Lewes 
Allen,  Arabella  spin,  of  England  married  by  Lewes  12  May  1785 

Bernard  Macho  bach.    Buried  12  Oct.  1785  aged  26  3rr. 
Ash,  Samuel,  bach,  married  by  Lewes  14  July  1785  Hannah 

Deveaux 
Albergotti,  William  son  of  Anthony  and  Amy  bur.  by  Lewes  in 

churchyard  Beaufort  15  April  1785;  accident 
Askew,  Thomas  married  by  Lewes  5  Jan  1786  Hannah  McKee 
Albergotti,  Sarah  spin.  dau.  of  Anthony  and  Amy  married  by  same 

6  May  1786  William  Boone  wid'r. 
Aggnew,  John  Leacraft  son  of  Andrew  and  Mary  bom  15  March 

1786  bapt.  4  June  1786  by  Lewes.    Isaac  Waight  John  Lea- 
craft  and  Elizabeth  Leacraft  sureties. 
Adams,  William  sn.  of  William  and  —  bapt.  13  Aug.  1786  by  same 
Alexander,  Andrew  married  by  same  14  Sept.  1786  Susannah 

McKallope  wid. 
Anderson,  Margaret    Elizabeth,   dau.   William  and  Mary  bom 

30  Aug.  1786  bapt  Nov.  1786  by  same 
Andrews,  Israel  wid'r  married  by  same  28  April  1787  Mary  Robert- 
son wid. 
Askew,  Archibald  son  of  Archibald  and  Margt.  bom  11  Dec.  1786 

bapt.  9  Nov.  17-  by  same 
Askew,  Ann  dau.  of  same  bom  17  Feb.  1781  bapt.  9  Nov.  17-  by 

same 
Aggnew,  Margaret  dau.  Andrew  and  Mary  bom  14  Dec.  1788  bapt. 

13  Oct  1789  by  samei  bur.  16  Nov.  1789  Beaufort  ch.    3y- 

llm-ld.    fever. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  13 

Aggnew,  James  Andrew  son  of  Andrew  James  and  Ann  bom  29 

Sept.  1800  bapt.  4  April  1803. 
Bailey  Elizabeth,  Da.  Henry  &  Mary  Bom   Mar.  1730  bapt. 

May  S,  1731  by  Jones 
Bailey,  Sarah,  Da.  do.  Bom  Oct.  12, 1733,  Bapt.  Dec.  9, 1733  by  do 

Parents  sureties 
Bailey,  Henry  Sn.  of  do.  Bom  Feb.  12,  1735;  bapt.  Jime  S,  1737 
Bailey,  West,  Sn  of  do.  Bom  Nov.  29, 1738  Bapt.  June  18,  1739  by 

Jones 
Barrard,  Anne  wife  to  Michael  biuied  by  Jones  4  Feb.  1743 
Bartlet,  Thomas  wid'r  married  by  Jones  may  13,  1733  to  Anne 

Waterman  spinster. 
Beamor,  Judith  wife  to  Coll.  John  bom  1697  biuied  by  Jones  14 

Feb.  1731  age  34. 
Becket,  John  Sn  of  Thomas  bora  Dec.  21,  1726  bapt  Mar.  19, 

1726  by  Jones;  Rd.  Hancock,  Row'd.  Sergeant  Rachel  Ellis 

surities. 
Bell,  John,  buried  by  Jones  13  Feb.  1734 

Bell,  Robert,  from  Georgia  S[cotlandp  biuied  by  Jones  17  Nov.  1737 
Bell,  Robert,  from  Dorchester  bur.  by  Do.  12  Oct.  1738 
Bell,  Andrew,  from  Georgia  Scotland  married  by  Do.  Sept.  8, 1739, 

Elizabeth  Dunlap  widow.    Bur.  2  7  Aug  1752  aged  40  Dropsy 
Bell,  William,  Sn.  Andrew  and  Elizabeth  Bom  Dec.   1,  1739 

bapt.  Dec.  IS,  1739  by  Do. 
Becu,  John  Michael  Sn.  Giles  and — from  Georgia  Bur. 

2  June  1749 
Becu,  Jane  Da.  Do.  Bora  1742.  Bur.  18  Sept.  1749 
Becu,  Benjamm,  Sn.  of  Do  Bom  1737  Bur.  2  Oct.  1749 
Beswicke,  Thomas,  Bach,  from  England  married  by  Jones  Apr. 

23,  1734  Deborah  Haines  Wid.  Married  by  St.  John  Sept. 

12, 1749  Anne  Wigg,  wid  to  Richard.    Buried  5  June  1751 

Dropsy 
Beswicke,  Sarah,  Da.  Thomas  and  Deborah  bapt  June  22  1735 

by  Jones  bur.  11  May  1749 
Beswicke,  Charles  Sn.  Do.  Bora  Aug.  30  1737  Bapt  by  Jones 

June  6 1738  bur.  22  Sept.  1738 
Beswicke,  Anne  Da.  Do.  Bora  Jan.  6, 1739  bapt.  Apr.  11, 1740  by 

Jones.  Married  by  Baron  Aug  5,  1759  William  Wescoat 

Bachelor. 

» Place  of  birth. 


Children 


14  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Beswicke,  Thomas  Sn  Do.  Bom  Feb.  19,  1741  Bapt.  May  9  1742 

by  Jones. 
Beswicke,  John  Sn  of  Do  Bom  Apr.  20  1744  Bapt.  May  14  1744 

by  Do.  Bur.  IS  Dec.  1747. 
Beswicke,  Deborah  Wife  to  Thomas  buried  by  Do.  19  Feb.  1748 
Blackstone,  John,  A  Sailor  buried  18  Dec:  1728 
Bland,  Richard  from  Barbadoes  [bom  in]  E[ngland]  buried    15 

June  1737 
Bland,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Richard  and  Elizabeth  Bom  Jan.  6  1733 

Bapt.  May  5  1734  Married  by  Hutson  D[issenter]  May  3 

1750  William  Moses  Bachelor  [from]  E[ngland] 
Bland,  Elizabeth,  widow  to  Richard  married  by  Jones  Sept.  26 

1737  Richard  Rickets  WidV. 
Bodron,  Clement  from  Providence  bur.  by  Jones  3  Jan.  1742 
Bowman,  Martha  Spin,  married  by  Do.    Oct.  3  1734  Philip 

Givens  Wid'r 
Brittain,  Charles  from  Georgia  buried  by  Jones  28  Mar.  1739 
Brown,  Samuel  buried  28  Oct.  1746 
Barnwell,  Coll.  Nath'l  Sn.  of  Coll.  John  and  Anne  Bemers  of 

London  bom  Mar.  3,  1705  in  Charlestown  married  at  Johns 

Island  April  7,  1738  Mary  Gibbes  Spinster  Da.  Coll.  John 

Gibbes  of  Chariestown  Bur.  20  Feb.  1775  aged  70. 
Bamwell,  Nathaniel  Sn.  of  Col.  Nathaniel  and  Mary  bom  Aug. 

10  1739  baptized  by — Mr.  Thos.  Tatnall  and  Parents  sureties; 

Buried  17  Nov.  1739 
Bamwell,  John  Sn.  of  Do.  Bora  May  27,  1741  Bapt.  unknown, 

Parents  sureties.  Bur.  7  Oct.  1743 
Bamwell,  Anne,  Da.  Do.  Bom  Sept.  23,  1743  Bapt.  JDec.  18,  1743 

by  Jones.  Ambrose  Reeve  Eliz:  Flower  &  Parents  Sureties. 

Bur.  1816 
Bamwell,  Mary  Da.  Co.  Nathan'l  &  Mary  bom  A:  11, 1745  bapt. 

by  Quinsey 
Bamwell,  Nathaniel,  Son  of  Do.  bom  Feb.  3,  1746  Bapt.  by 

Whitfield.    Married  De  c.  1,  1768,  Elizabeth  Waight,  Da.  to 

William. 
Bamwell,  John  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  July  15,  1748  Bapt.  July  31,  1748 

by  St.  John.  Jno:  Bamwell  &  wife  &  Ambrose  Reeve  sureties. 

married  8  May  1777  Ann  Hutson. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  15 

Barnwell,  Robert  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  16, 1749  bapt.  Aug.  30  1749 

by  Do.  Buried  Sep  1 1749 
Barnwell,  Bridget,  Da.  Do.  Bom  Oct.  16  1750  Bapt.  Oct.  30  1750 

by  Hutson  Buried  16  May  1751 
BamweU,  John  Sn  of  Coll.  John  and  Anne  Bom  Mar:  8  1711  on 

Port  Royal  Married  by  Jones  Oct.  31  1737  Martha  Chaplin 

Spinster. 
BamweU,  John  Sn  of  John  and  Martha,  Bom  Sept.  14,  1738 

Bapt.  Nov.  19, 1738  by  Jones  Died  3  May  1750 
BamweU,  Catherine  Spinster  Dau.  Do.  Bom  July  3,  1740  Bapt. 

Aug.  17,1740  Married  Mar:  24  1757  Andrew  Deveaux  Jun. 

Bach. 
BamweU,  Anne,  Da.    Do.  Bom  Dec.  11, 1742.   Bapt.  Feb.  6,  1742 
BamweU,  Margt.  Da.  Do.  Bom  Oct  4, 1745 
BamweU,  Martha,  Da.  Do.  Bom  Jan.  6, 1747 
BamweU,  EUzabeth  Da.  Do.  Born  Jan.  18  1749  Bapt.  Apr.  22, 1750 
BamweU,  Margaret  Spin.  Da.  Col.  John  and  Anne  Bemers  Bom 

Feb.  13  1704  in  ChasTown  married  John  Whitmarsh 
BamweU,  Anne,  Spin.  Da.  Do  Bom  Aug.  7,  1707  in  Do.  Married 

Mar:  19, 1726  Thomas  Stanyarn. 
BamweU,  Catherine  Da.  Bom  Nov.  4, 1710  in  Port  Royal  Married 

Jan:  2, 1734  Hugh  Bryan  Bachelor  [sic]. 
Brown,  Mary  Da.  John  and  Judith  Bom  Dec.  15,  1752  Bapt.  Jan. 

16,  1742  by  Jones. 
Broughton,  Edward,  Married  by  Jones  Nov.  21   1740    Sarah 

Weatherly  Widow. 
Breed,  Timothy,  Bachelor  Married  by  Do  Jan.  27  1743  Sarah 

Hodges  Spinster. 
Braddock,  David  Cutler,  Mariner  of  E[ngland]  married  by  Do. 

Nov.  7, 1742  Mary  Lyford,  Spinster. 
Broadbelt,  Jane  Da.  WiUiam  and  Jennet  Bom  Oct.  27,  1741 

Bapt.  June  27  1742  by  same. 
Bodron  Clement,  from  Providence  Buried  by  Do.  3  Jan.  1742 
Bona,  John,  Sn.  Jacob  and  Anne  Bom  Oct.  1737  Bapt.  Dec  13, 

1737  by  Do.  Bur.  24  June  1739 
Bona,  Mary  Mju-gt.  Da.  Do.  Bom  Oct.  13  1039.  Bapt.  Oct.  1739 

by  same 
Bona,  Lewis,  Sn.  of  Do.  Dec.  6,  1742.    Baptized  Dec.  21,  1742  by 

same  Rev.  Lewis  Jones  and  Wd.  Moreau  siureties.    Married 

16  Jime  1774  Sarah  Parmenter. 


16  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Bona,  Judith,  Da.  of  Do.  Bom  Jan.  6, 1745  Bapt.  Jan.  9, 1745 
Bona,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.    Bom  Mar.  6,  1750  Bapt  Apr.  1 

1751by  — ofPonPon. 
Bowry,  Anne,  Da.  Joseph  and  Elizabeth,  Bom  May  23, 1741  Bapt 

Oct.  2, 1 743  by  Jones.    Married  Dr.  James  Steele 
Bowry.    Joseph,  Sn.  of  Do.  Bom  Sept.  20  1743.  Bapt.  Oct.  2, 

1743  by  Jones. 
Bowry,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Do.  Bom  Sept.  20,  1743.    Bapt  Oct.  2, 

1743  by  Do. 
Berry,  Hannah,  Spin.    Married  by  Jones  8  Feb.  1742  to  Henry 

Hill  Bachelor. 
Braddock,  John  Cutler,  Sn.  of  David  Cutler  and  Mary  Bora 

Oct.  3, 1743.    Bapt.  Dec.  2, 1743  by  Jones 
Brown,  Judith,  widow  married  by  Jones  24  Jan.  1743  Thomas 

Harrison  widower. 
Bryan,  Hugh,  widower,  married  by  same  2  Jan.  1734  Catherine 

Barnwell,  spinster. 
Bryan,  Catherine,  wife  to  Hugh,  buried  by  Do.  9  Oct.  1740 
Bryan,  Elizabeth,  Spin.  Da.  Joseph  and  [Wid.  Murray?]  married 

by  Do.  10  May  1739,  Stephen  Bull  Bach. 
Bryan,  Mary,  wife  to  Hugh,  buried  by  Do.  20  Mar.  1732 
Bryan,  Joseph,  buriedby  Do.  12  Feb.  1735 
Byran,  Joseph  Bach,  married  by  Do.  9  Jan.  1741,  Mary  Story 

Spin. 
Bryan,  Hugh,  Sn  of  Jonathan  and  Mary  Bom  Sept.  7,  1738  Bapt. 

Oct  23, 1738  by  Jones. 
Bryan,  Jonathan  Sn.  of  Do.  Bom  Jan.  27,  1739  Bapt  Mar.  10 

1739  by  Do. 
Bull,  Stephen,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Bamaby  and  Lucy  married  by  Jones 

10  May  1739  Elizabeth  Bryan,  Spin. 
BuU,  Sarah,  Da.  Arthur  and  Sarah  Born  Mar.  3, 1738  Bapt.  Apr.  8, 

1739  by  Do. 
Burchie,  Johannes  Sn.  Daniel  and  Hannah,  Bom  Dec  22,  1737 

Bapt.  June  18,  173    by  Do. 
Burton,  Leonard,  Sn.  Thomas  and  Elizabeth,  Bur:  by  Jones  29 

June  1729 
Burton,  Charies  Sn  Do.  Born  Aug.  1729  Bapt.  Oct.  28,  1729  by 

Do.  Bur.  29  Oct.  1729 
Burton,  Sarah  Da.  Do.  Bom  Feb.  29,  1731  Bapt  Apr.  2,  1732  by 

Do.  Bur.  21  June  1732. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  17 

Burton,  Elizabeth  wife  to  Thomas  Bur.  by  Jones  4  Feb.  1736 
Burton  Benjamin.  Sn.  of  Do.  Bom  June  19,  1727  Bapt.  Aug.  20 

1727  by  Jones.  Rowland  and  Elizabeth  Sergeant  and  Peter 
Peterson  sureties.  Married  Mar.  15,  1759  to  Margaret 
Jones  Spin. 

Burton,  Mary,  Da.  to  same  Bom  Apr.  24, 1733  Bapt.  June  10  1733 
by  Jones  Parents  sureties.  Married  by  Lewis  July  6,  1757 
Robert  Wilkinson  Bach.  Buried  Nov.  17th  1774  aged  41  years. 

Bush,  Edward,  from  Georgia  [Bom  in]  E[ngland]  buried  7  March 
1745 

Bush,  Elizabeth  wife  to  Edward,  E[ngland]  Buried  29  April  1750 

Bushine,  Joseph,  Buried  28  Oct.  1733 

Butler,  John,  Sn.  John  and  Rebecca  Bom  Dec.  20,  1713  Bapt. 
Dec.  5  1714 

Bland,  George,  Bachelor,  Sn.  Richard  and  Elizabeth  Bom.  Feb.  11, 

1728  Married  by  Peasely  Jan.  27, 1752  Mary  Douglas  Spin. 
Bromate,  Eliz:  Spin.  Da.  Robert  and  Rebecca  Married  by  Do. 

Mar.  2  1752  Hezekiah  Rose  Bach. 
Bowman,  Margaret,  Spin,  niece  to  Martha  Bowman  married  in 

Charles  Town  David  Stone  Bach. 
Barnwell,  Robert,  Sn.  Coll.  Nath'l.  and  Mary  Gibbs  Bom  Mar.  29 

1752  Bapt.  June  25.  1752  by  Peasely.  Bur:  4  July  1752  aged 

3  mos. 
Barton,  Isaac,  Surgeon.  I[reland.]    Married  by  Do.  Oct.  6,  1752 

Eliz:  Wilkinson,  Spin. 
Bamwell,    Bridget.    Da.    John    and    Martha    Chaplin.    Bom 

Nov.  4, 1752.    Bapt.  Dec.  25, 1752  by  Peasely. 
Baynard,  William,  Bachelor,  married  by  Do.  Feb.  1,  1753  Eliz: 

Grimball,  Spin. 
Barton,  William,  Nat.  Sn.  of  Will'm  a  Soldier  and  Eliz:  Gibbons 

Bom  Feb.  10.  1753.    Married  by  Peasely  June  11,  1757, 

Eliz:  Gibbons,  Widow,  [sic;  the  marriage  evidently   refers 

to  the  father  William  Barton.] 
Bashford,  Will'm,  Married  by  Do.  Mar.  1,  1753  Susanna  Stevens, 

Spinster. 
Bamwell,  Eliz:  Da.  Coll.  Nath.  and  Mary  Gibbes.    Bom  June 

19,  1753  Bapt.  by  Do.  July  14,  1753  [Married  Mr.  Richard 

Gough  in  England.    Pencil  note  in  the  register.] 
Barton,  John.  Sn.  Isaac  and  Elizabeth  Bom  June  25,  1753.  Bapt. 

July  29, 1753  by  Do.  Jno.  Finny  and  wife  sureties. 


18  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 


:,  Ann,  Widow  to  Thomas.    Buried  by  Do.  4  July  1754 
Beal,  Catherine,  Spin.  Da.  of  Edward  and  Catherine,  Aged  about 

19  years  Bapt.  Feb.  13,  1754  by  Peasely,  married  by  same 

Mar.  18, 1754  Josiah  Green,  Bach. 
Betterson,  Ann,  Da.  Jonathan  and  Sarah  buried  4  July  1754 
Betterson,  Mary,  Da.  Do  Bur.  27  Aug't  1754 
Bennett,  Thomas,  Sn.  John  and  Margt.  of  Beaufort,  Taylor, 

Bom  Feb.  5, 1754  Bapt.  Apr.  7, 1754  by  Peasely  Mr.  Fairchild 

Mrs.  Leecraf  ts  and  Father  sureties. 
Blakely,  Luke,  Scrivener,  of  Ewhaw  married  by  Do.  Mar.  20, 

1754  Mary  Ann  Murphy,  Widow. 
Barron,  Anne,  Wd.  to  Michael  &  dau.  to  Phi.  Givens,  married  by 

Do.  June  7th.  1754  Matthew  Hicks  Bach. 
Brown,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Honour  of  Ladies  Isld.  Bom  Dec  24, 

1754  Bapt  June  14,  1754  by  Do.  Bur.  7  Nov,  1754  at  Ladies 

Isld. 
Bashford.  William,  Sn.  of  William  and  Susanna,  Bom  Feb.  5, 1754. 

Bur.  Mar.  3d.  1754 
Barry,  Robert,  I[reland.]    Married  by  Peasely  June  13,  1754 

^es  Lovekin  Wd.  Bur.  26  Mar.  1755.  Ch.  Yd. 
Bettison,  Hannah  Da.  Jona.  &  Sarah.    Bom  May  23  1754 
Bull,  Bamaby,  Fath'r  to  Stephen  BuU,  Buried  Ch.  Yd  Ind.  Land. 

7  Nov.  1754 
Burton,  Thomas,  Father  to  Leonard  Burton,  Carpenter,  E[ngland.] 

Buried  Ch.  Yard  12  Jan.  1755  aged  64  years. 
Bowman,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Anne.    Bom  Dec.  21, 1746 
Brown,  Eliz:  Da.  John  &  Honour,  Lad'y  Island  Bom  Dec.  14 

1754  Bapt.  July  15, 1755  by  Peasely. 
Bull,  William  Esq.  Bro.  to  Bamaby  Bull.  Bom  1683  Buried  by 

Peasely  in  the  Body  of  Pr.  Will'm  P.  Ch.  24  Mar.  1755  aged 

72  yr. 
Bettison,  Mary  Da.  David  and  Elizabeth  Bom  Feb.  22, 1749 

Sn.  to  Do.    Bom  Feb.  22, 1755 

Barnwell,  Richard,  Sn.  CoU.  Nath.  &  Mary  Gibbes  Bom  20  1755, 

Bapt.  April  28,  1755  by  Hutson  D[issenter.]    Bur.  12  Oct. 

1756 
Bland,  Elizabeth,  Da.  George  &  Mary  Bom  Mar.  17,  1755.  Bapt. 

April  12, 1755  by  Peasely. 
Beal,  Edward,  Bro.  to  Catherine  Beal.  Bur.  14  May,  1755  Oled, 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  19 

Bassford,  Sarah,  Da.  William  &  Susan  Bom  July  9,  1755  Bur. 

July  16, 17- 
Butler,  Sarah,  Da.  Clementina  &  John  Bom.  Aug.  IS,  1755  Bapt. 

Sept.  15  1755  by  Peasely.  Bur.  Ch.  Yd  5  Nov.  1756 
Barton,  Robert  Wilkinson  Sn.  Isaac  &  Eliz:  Bom  Oct.  11,  1755 

Bapt.  Dec  12, 1755  by  Do. 
Bennett,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Margt.  Bom  Jan.  11,  1756.    Bapt. 

Feb.  29  1756  by  Peasely  Kenneth  Delabere  Surety 
Brown,  John,  Labourer,  father  to  Elizabeth  Brown  Buried  Oct. 

1755  Ladies  Island. 

Boury,  Josp.,  \niitner  of  Beaufort  Bur.  18  Nov.  1755  aged  47 
Bradbiuy,  Jane  Da.  Thomas  Bapt.  May  22   1756  by  Peasely 

Bur.  at  Plantation  1756 
Bennet,  TT^^'am  Sn.  John  and  Margt.  Bumt  to  ashes  with  the 

Dwelling  house  12  July  1756.    Bones  Buried  Aged  about  4. 
Betterson  Wm.  Romac.  Sn.  of  David  &  Eliz.  St.  Helena.    Bom 

Feb.  22, 1755  Bapt.  Aug.  22, 1756  by  Lewis  Pr.  Wm.  Parish 
Barlow,  George,  Sn.  Henry  &  Sarah.  Bom.  Dec.  1754  Bapt.  Feb.  3 

1756  by  Peasely 

Bamwell,  John  Bemise,  Sn.  John  &  Martha  Chaplin.     Bom 

Sept.  20,  1756.    Bapt.  Dec.  6,  1756  by  Lewis,  Mr.  &  Mrs. 

Stuart  &  Coll.  Bamwell,  Sureties 
Bmce,  Peter  Henry,  Natural  son  of  Peter  Henry  by  Mrs.  Scott, 

Bom  May  1, 1754  Bapt.  Sept.  3  1756  by  Peasely. 
Bmce,  Eleanor,  Nat.  Da.  Do.  Bom  April  30,  1756  Bapt.  Sept.  3, 

1756  by  Peasely.    Bur.  31  Jan:  1758 
Batison,  Jona.  Romack  Sn.  Jonathan  &  Sarah,  Bom  May  3:  1757 
Batey  —  of  PonPon  Married  by  Lewis  Sept.  8,  1756  Harriott 

Desausure  Spinster. 
Boury,  Susanna,  Da.  Joseph  and  Elizabeth  of  Prince  Will'm 

Parish  Bur:  Ch  yard  29,  Augt.  1757 
Bamwell,  Edward,  Sn.  Coll.  Nath'l  &  Mary  Gibbes  Bom  Nov:  16 

1757.    Bapt:  Jan:  1758  by  A.  Baron  of  Stono.    Married 

1st  by  Harrison  Jan.  8, 1783  Mary  Bower  Williamson;  married 

2d.  by  L.  C.  Lewis  July  29  1790  Mary  Wigg.    He  was  buried 

15  April  1808. 
Bettison,  David,  Sn.  David  &  Elizabeth,  St.  Helena,  Bom.    May 

30, 1757 
Barton,  Anne,  Da.  William  &  Eliz:  Bom  Nov:  22, 1756 


20  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Beard,  Margt.  Wd.  to  a  Soldier  in  Oglethorp's  Regt.  Bur:  8  Nov. 

1757 
Bull,  Arthur,  Planter,  Hilton  Heand  Bur.  at  Hilton  Heand,  25 

Dec.  1757 
Bona,  Jacob,  Carpenter,  a  Swisser  Buried  14  Apr.  1758  aged  60 
Bona,  Hannah,  Wd.  to  Jacob  Bur.  25  Apr.  1758  aged  56. 
Barton,  Anne,  Da.  Isaac  &  Eliz:  Bom  Jan.  10, 1758  Bapt.  June  14, 

1759  by  A.  Baron. 
Barnwell,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Martha  Bom.  July  18,  1759  Bapt, 

Sept.  23  1759  by  Do.  Mrs.  Purry,  Mrs.  Mulryne  Jos.  Jenkins 

Jimr.  Sureties. 
Bennett,  Margaret,  Da.  John  &  Margaret  Bom  Sept  16  1759 

Bapt.  Nov.  8, 1759  by  Do. 
Burton,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Benjamin  &  Margaret  Bom  25    Dec. 

1759  Bapt.  Dec.  26, 1759  by  Cooper  Bur.  1  Dec.  1763 
Baron,  Alexander,  Minister,  Beaufort  Buried  9  Dec.  1759 
Barton,  Elizabeth,  Da.  William  &  Eliz:  Bom  April  4,  1760. 

Bapt.  April  16  1760  by  Cooper 
Bland,  William  Bowman,  Sn.  George  &  Mary,  St  Helena.    Bom 

Sept.  11, 1762.  Bapt.  Sept.  16, 1762  by  Mr.  Green 
Bland,  George,  Widower  Married  by  Mr.  Pelot  July    2    1761 

Mary  Bowman. 
Bell,  Andrew,  Sn.  William  &  Ann  Bom  Feb:  27  1763  Bapt.  March 

8  1763  by  Rev.  Green.    Buried  9  November  1765  aged  2  yr- 
Bell,  Ann,  Buried  March  11, 1763 
Barton,  Elizabeth  Da.  Isaac  &  Elizabeth,  Born  Feb.  28,  1763 

Bapt.  Mar.  11. 1763 
Barnwell,  Phoebe  Sarah,  Da.  John  &  Martha  Bom  Sept.  9,  1763 

Bapt  Nov.  27, 1763  Married  11  Dec.  1780  Arch.  Campbell 
Barton,  Isaac,  Sn.  Isaac  &  Elizabeth  Bom  March  20, 1761 
Burton,  Benjamin.    Buried  Feb.-l  764  aged  37? 
Bamwell,  Sarah,  Da.  Col.  Nath'l  &  Mary  Bom  April  15,   1764 

married  5  May  1785  James  Hazzard  Cuthbert 
Bealer,  John,  Sn.  Charles  &  Mary  Bora  Mar.  23,  1764  Bapt. 

June  29, 1764  by  Rev.  Mr.  Ammarr  John  Swian  Thos.  Robin- 
son &  Eliz.  Swain  sureties. 
Bowery,  William,  Sn.  Joseph  Bowery.    Buried  Dec.    13:  1764 

aged  32.    Consum. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER  21 


Burger,  Nansey,  Da.  Burger  &  —  Bom  Dec.  13, 1764.    Bapt.- 

by  Rev.  Mr.  Green 
Charles,  Sn 


Blackwood,  Margarett  Da.  James  &  Mary  Bom  Oct.  30,  1766. 

Bapt.  May  25  1766  by  Rev.  Mr.  Feveryear 
Black,  Elizabeth,  Da.  James  &  Rachel.    Bom  Aug.    13    1766 

Bapt. by  Rev.  Mr.  Evans.    Married  by  Gouerley  Oct 

24,  1784  John  Leacraft  Esq.  Sheriff. 
Boyd,  Cathrine  Da.  John  &  Isabella  Bom  May  4  1766  Bapt 

May  8  1766  by  Rev.  Feveryear. 
Black,  Ann  Da.  James  &  Rachel  Bom  Dec.  16,  1768    Married 

by  Lewis  21  Dec.  1788  to  Thomas  Bowman  Bach. 
Black,  James,  Sn.  James  &  Rachel.    Bora  Aug.  13,  1770  Bapt. 

Do.  219  by  Rev.  Pearce 

Barksdale Da.  George  &  Mary  Bur.  Nov.  20, 1770 

Barnwell,   Elizabeth,   Da.   Nath'l  &    Elizabeth  .  Waight  Born 

May  6, 1770  Bapt.  June  3, 1770  by  Pierce    Bur.  July  5, 1770 
Bull,  Stephen,  Wd.  Sn.  Bamaby  &  Lucy  Married  June  11,  1772 

Mrs.  Ann  Middleton  Wid. 
Bowman,  Thomas  Senr.    Departed  this  life  9  Jan.  &  Bur  11th 

1773  aged  65 

Black,  Sarah,  Da.  James  &  Rachel  of  Beaufort  Bora  Mar.  29  1772 

Bapt.  Rev.  Mareau 
Baras,  William  Wd.  Married  by  Rev.  Ellington  20  Sept.   1773 

Martha  McKee  Spin. 
Barns,  David,  Sn.  of  Wm  &  Martha,  Lady's  Isl.  Born  Jan.  12, 

1704.    Bapt.  by  Rev.  Ellington. 
Bona,  Ann  Agnes,  Da.  Lewis  &  Sarah,  Hilton  Head.    Bora  Jan. 

20, 1776  Bapt.  June  10, 1 776  by  Rev.  Moreau.    Parents  sureties. 
Black,  William,  Sn.    James  &  Rachel,  Beaufort.    Bora  April  21 

1774  Bapt.  by  Rev.  Moreau.    Parents  &  Moreau  sureties. 
Black,  Charles,  Sn.  Do.     Do.  Bora  Augt.  10,   1777   Bapt.   by 

Graham 
Baras,  Mary,  Da.  Wm.  &  Martha,  Lady's  Is.    Bora  Sept.  29, 1776 
Baraes,  Isaac,  Sn.  Do.  Do.  Bora  Sept.  25, 1778 
Barawell,  John  Beraers,  Married  April  1776  by  Rev.  Graham,  to 

Miss  Jean  Cuthbert,  Da.  Dr.  James  &  Mary  Cuthbert.* 

>  Mem:  This  is  an  error;  the  entry  as  to  marriage  being  a  later  Insertion; 
the  Stephen  Bull  who  married  Anne  (Barnwell)  Middleton  was  the  son  of 
Stephen  BulL 


22  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Barnwell,  John  Beraers,  Sn.  of  John  Bemers  &  Jean  Hay,  Bom 

May  20,  Bapt.   May —   1777  by  Graham.    Departed  this 

LifeOct.S1782. 
Barnwell,  Mary  Cuthbert,  Da.  of  John  Barnwell  and  Jean  Hay, 

Bom  Pt.  Royal  29  Sept.  1779  Bapt,  —  1779  by  Do.  Died 

23  July  1785.    age  3  yr.  Worms. 
Bamwell,  James  Cuthbert,  Sn.  Do.  Bom  26  May,  1782 
Barnwell,  Nathaniel,  Sn.  Gen.  John  &  Anne.  Bom  25  May.  1779 

Bapt.  Jan.  23, 1785  by  Lewis. 
Bamwell,  Mary  Hutson,  Da.  Gen.  John  &  Anne,  Pt  Royal. 

Bom  18  July  1781    Bapt.  Jan.  23,  1785  by  Do.    Married 

Robert  Means 
Bamwell,  Anne  Middleton,  Da.    Do.  Bom  29  Dec.  1783  Bapt. 

Do.  Do  Married  John  Habersham. 
Barlow,  Catherine,  Da.  Thomas  &  Catherine.    Bapt.  22   Feb. 

1785  by  Do 
Boyd,  Robert,  Married  by  Lewis  3  Apr.  1785  Susannah  Myers 

Widow. 
Bibbie,  George,  a  Scotch  lad  apprenticed  to  Mr.  Pringle  bur.  by 

Lewis  21  April  1785-  Suddenly. 
Thomas,  of  Thos.  and  Sarah,  Lady's  Isl.  Bom  26  Jan.  1785 

Bapt.  9  June  1785  by  Do. 
Bams,  Sarah  Washington,  Da.  of  Wm  &  Martha,  Lady's  Is. 

Bom  22  Jan.  1781 
Bams,  William  Sn  of  Do.  Bom  29  Sept.  1782. 
Boone,  —  Wife  of  William  Boone,  Bur.  10  Oct.  1785 
Barlow,  Mary,  Married  by  Lewis  10  Nov.  1785  Charles  Givens. 
Barksdale,  John,  Sn.  of  George  &  Margaret  Bur.  25  Nov.  1785 

aged  7y.  9mo. 
Bowman,  James,  Sn.  of  married  by  Lewis  22  Dec.  1785 

Margaret  Greene. 
Bamwell,  Edward,  Sn.  of  Edward,  &  Mary  Bower    Bom  6  Nov, 

1785  Bapt.  by  Do.  5  Jan.  1786.  Capt.  Bamwell,  Dr.  Stuart 

&  Lady  sureties  married  1  Jan.    1808  Elizabeth  Osbom  of 

Charleston,    Married  2nd.  Eliza.  Smith  of  Savanh.  Married 

3d.  Sarah  C.  Richardson. 
Barksdale,  Margaret,  Buried  by  Bowen  26  Jan.  1786  aged  20  yr. 

9  mo. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  23 

Beare,  Andrew  Collin  of  Joseph  &  Hannah,  May  River.     Bom 

12  Sept.  1781.    Bapt.  by  Lewis  13  Feb.  1786 
Beare,  Joseph  Christopher,  Sn.  of  Do.    Bom    12  May    1784. 

Bapt.  Do 
Beare,  Catherine,  Do.    Bom  1st.  Nov.  1779.  Bapt.  Do. 
Boone,  William,  married  by  Lewis  6  May.  1786  Sarah  Albergotti. 
BraOsford,  William,  of  Charleston  married  by  Do.  20  June  1786 

Maria  Heyward. 
Brown,  James,  M.  D.  from  Lreland  Mr'd.  by  Do.  8  Aug.  1786  Ann 

Deveaux  Spin. 
Barksdale,  Mary,  of  George  &  Margaret  Bapt.  by  Lewis  17  April 

1786 
Bull,  Martha,  Spin.    Married  by  Do.  23  Nov.  1786  John  Andrew 

Mongin  Bach. 
Battoon,  Elizabeth  Spr.  Married  by  Do  3  Jan.  1787   Michael 

PhiUp  MarteU 
Boone,  William  Albergotti,  of  William  &  Sarah  Bom  22  Feb.  1787 

Bapt.  by  Lewis  7  April  1787 
Bamwell,  William  Hazzard  of  John  Beraers  &  Jean  Bom  15  July 

1787  Bapt.  18  Aug.  1787  by  Do. 
Black,  Rachel,  widow  Bur.  by  Do.  21  Aug.  1787  aged  43. 
Bolan,  Martin  from  Lreland  Bur.  by  Do.  7  Oct.  1787 
Bowman,  Thomas,  Bach.  Married  by  Do.  21  Dec.   1788  Ann 

Black  Spr. 
Barnwell,  Mary  Bower,  wife  of  Edward  Bur.  by  Lewis  12  March 

1789.    died  of  Misscarriage. 
Barnes,  Isaac  Battoon,  of  John  &  Sarah  Bom  23  Mar.  1788 

Bapt.  12  Mar.  1789 
BaraweU,  Nathaniel  Sams  of  John  Bemers  &  Jean  Hay  bom 

21  Aug.  1788  Bapt.  6  July  1789  by  Do.  Bur.  20  June  1800. 

Fever. 
Brown,  George,  of  Richard  &  Phebe  Born  6  Feb.  1788  Bapt.  26 

June  1789  by  Nixon.  Bur.  28,  Augt  1789 
BaraweU,  Sarah,  of  Gen.  John  &  Ann  Born  15  April  1788  Bapt.  3 

Nov.  1789  by  Lewis. 
Burke,  Margaret,  widow  married  by  Do.  25  Dec.  1789  Timothy 

Knapp,  Bach. 
Barnwell,  Robert,  of  John  Bemers  &  Jane  Hay  Bom  10  Feb, 

1790  Bapt.  10  Feb.  1790  by  Do 


24  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Barnwell,  Col.  Edwaxd,  of  Col.  Nath.,  &  Mary  married  by  Lewis 

29th  July  1790  Mary  Wogg,  Spin. 
Buche,  John  Henry,  of  John  &  Ann,  of  Purysburgh  Bapt.  1  May 

1783  by  Wm.  Estwick  Graham 
Bona,  Henry  Sn.  Lewis  &  Sarah  Bom  23  Sept.  1782  Bapt.  by  Do 
Black,  James  Sn.  James  &  Rachel  Married  by  Tate  March  6  1797 

Elizabeth  Clark  Saltus. 
Barnwell,  John  Gibbes,  Sn.  Genl.  John  &  Ann  Bom  12  Feb.  1778 
Bamwell,  Elizabeth  Da.  Do.  Bom  10  Mar.  1786 
Barnwell,  Sarah,  Da.  Do.  Bom  7  Apr.  1788 
Bamwell,  Esther  Wigg,  Da.  Do  Bom  6  June  1790 
Bamwell,  William  Washington,  Sn  Do.  Bom  17  — 1793 
Bames,  Paul  Hamilton  Sn.  William  &  Martha  Bames  Bom  31 

Jan.  1793 
Bamwell,  William  Bower,  of  Edward  &  Mary  Bom  6  June  1791 

Bapt.  Dec.  1791  by  Tate  Bur.  April  15  1798  aged  7.    Worm- 
Bamwell,  Wlliam  Wigg,  Sn  of  Do.    Bom  21  March  1793  Bapt.  by 

Tate.    Married  Sarah  Gibbes. 
Bamwell,  Mary  Gibbes,  Da.  Do.  Bom.  Feb.  1,  1795  Bapt.  Jany 

1796  Married  by  McCuly  to  J.  J.  Smith. 
Bamwell,  Esther  Hutson,  Da.  Do.  Bom  7  Nov.  1796  Married 

by  Do.  NathT  Heyward 
Bamwell,  Elizabeth  Wigg,  Da.  Do.    Bom  4  April  1798    Married 

by  Graham,  Jan.   18,   1816  Nathaniel  Bamwell.   Mar.  2d. 

Arthur  Rose. 
Bamwell,  Bower  Williamson  Sn.  Do.  Bom  25  Nov.  1799  Bur. 

Nov.  9  1802  Aged  3yr. 
Bamwell,  Ann,  Da.  Do  Bom  2d.  April  1801  married  Lucius  S  — 

Cuthbert. 
Bamwell,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Robert  &  Elizabeth  Bom  4  Aug.  1797 

Mar'd  Dr.  Thomas  Fuller 
Barnwell,  Ann,  Da.  Do.  Bom  10  Oct.  1799 
Bamwell,  Robert  Woodward,  Sn.  Do.  Bom  8  Aug.  1801  Married 

Eliza  Bamwell. 
BamweU,  Nathaniel  Bemers  Sn  Do.  Bom  20  Nov*  1802 
BamweU,  Sarah  Woodward,  Da.  Edward  &  Mary  Bom  28  Feb. 

1803  Bapt.  June  1804  by  Hicks 
Bamwell,  Caroline,  Da.  Do.  Bom  9  Mar.  1805  Bapt.  1805  by  Do 

Married  Thos.  M.  Rhett 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  25 

Barnwell,  Emma,  Da.  of  Do.  Bapt.  Dec.  6,  1806  by  Do.  Married 

Cbarles  Heyward. 
Barnwell,  Charlotte  BuU,  Da.  John  &  Sarah  Bom  Mar.  31,  1810 

Bapt.   Nov.    11,   1810  by  Campbell.    Married   Rev.   Ste- 
phen Elliott  Bp.  of  Georgia. 
BamweU,  Mary  Bower,  Da.  of  Edward  &  Elizabeth  Bom   15 

Jan.    1811    Bapt.    July   21,    1811    Do.    Parents    Sureties 

Married  G.  P.  Elliott 
BamweU,  Maria  Henrietta,  Da.  Robert  &  Elizabeth  Bom  6  Oct. 

1811  Bapt.  Oct.  13  1811  by  Do. 
BamweU,  Mary  Gibbes,  Da.  John  &  Sarah,  Bom  4  Mar.  1812 

Bapt.  —  1812  by  Do.    Parents  sureties.    Married  Middleton 

Stuart 
BamwelJ)  Edward,  Sn.  Edward  &  Elizabeth.    Bom  31  July  1813 

Bapt.  8  Dec.  1813  by  Do.  Parents  Su'ty  M'd  Margt.  Mani- 

gault 
BamweU,  Sarah,  Da.  John  &  Sarah,  Bom  8  June  1814  Bapt  20 

Dec.  1814  Do.  Do. 
BamweU,  Thomas  Osbom,  Sn.  Edward  &  Elizabeth  Bom  18  June 

1815  Bapt.  30,  Augt  1815  by  Do.  Do.  Married  1st  Vose;  Mar: 
2d.  Jean  K.  Richardson 

Bellinger,  John  Skottow,  Sn.  of  John  &  Rebecca  Married  Feb.  8, 

1816  Emily  Giredeau 

BamweU,  Mary  Wigg,  D.  of  NathT  &  EUzabeth  Bom  27  Oct.  1816 

Bpt  8  Aug.  1819  by  Do.  EUz.  BamweU,  Mary  Smith  Gd. 

Mothers.    Wm.  BamweU. 
BamweU,  Robert  Gibbes  Sn.  Wm.  &  Sarah  Bom  June  19,  1818 

Bpt.  8  Aug.  1819  by  CampbeU.    Parents  sureties. 
BeU,  John  McKee  Sn.  of  John  &  Henrietta  Bom  20  April  1819 

Bapt.  8  Aug.  1819  by  CampbeU.    Parents  sureties. 
BeU,  Theodore  Augustus  Sn  of  Do.  Bom  13  Jime  1822  Bapt.  9  Nov 

1822  by  Hanckel.    Parents  &  John  M.  Verdier  sure'ty 
BamweU,  Martha  Ann  Da.  Edward  &  EUzabeth  Bom  May  25  1818 
BamweU,  Elizabeth  Da.  Do.  Bom  Apr.  22  1820  Married  Henry 

Flanders 
BamweU,  Harriet  Meta  Da.  of  Do.  Bom  May  15  1822  Bapt.  by 

Walker 
BamweU,  Hetty  Heyward  Da.  of  Do.  Bom  Mar.  1,  1824  Bpt.  by 

WaUcer  married  Rev.  C.  C.  Pinckney 

{To  be  continued) 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  October) 

Married  at  Stono,  on  Thursday  last,  James  Stanyame,  esq.  to 
Miss  Eliza  Wilson,  only  daughter  of  John  Wilson,  esq. 

Died.  Yesterday  morning,  Mrs.  Swadler,  and  Mr.  John 
McCall,  taylor    (Thursday,  Jan.  1, 1795). 

Married  on  Thursday  last,  William  Clarkson,  Esq;  to  Miss 
Elizabeth  Anderson  Harris,  daughter  of  Dr.  Tucker  Harris.  (Sat. 
Jan.  3, 1795.) 

Married  at  Stono,  on  Thxirsday  last,  Daniel  Fludd,  Esq.  to 
Miss  Elizabeth  Stanyame  Mathewes,  only  daughter  of  John 
Raven  Mathewes  esq.  deceased.  (Monday,  Jan  5, 1795.) 

On  the  first  of  December  ultimo,  capt.  Benjamin  Darrell  saOed 
from  this  port  for  Georgetown  and  was  upset  in  a  gale  of  wind, 
not  having  sufficient  ballast  in  his  vessel.  His  activity,  and  wish 
to  provide  for  his  family  led  him  to  a  conduct  bordering  on  temerity 
which  would  admit  of  no  dissuasion  from  putting  to  sea  when 
scarcely  any  other  mariner  would  venture,  which  proved  his 

over   throw By   his   industry   he   accumulated    a 

pretty  capital,  which  enabled  him  to  build  a  new  vessel,  for  which 
he  was  offered  1400  £  and  manned  her  with  his  own  slaves.  Him- 
self, mate  and  thirteen  negroes  together  with  his  vessel,  have  all 
gone  to  the  bottom    .    .    .    •    (TliursdayjJan.S,  1795.) 

Died,  on  Monday  last,  Mr.  Benjamin  Wish,  sen.  an  old  inhabi- 
tant of  Charleston.    (Friday,  Jan.  9, 1795.) 

Married,  Thiu-sday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Miller,  to  Miss 
Magdalen  Bennett,  both  of  this  City.    (Sat.  Jan.  10, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Marlborough  S.  Hamilton,  to 
Mrs.  Euphame  Miller,  both  of  this  city. 

Died,  lately,  at  his  plantation  at  North  Santee,  Andrew  John- 
ston esq. 

Died,  on  Friday  morning  last,  Mr.  Phillip  Besselieu,  for  several 
years  master,  of  the  Orphan-House  school  in  this  city;  his  wife  and 

26 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  27 

family  have  to  lament  the  loss  of  an  affectionate  husband  and 
father.    (Tuesday,  Jan.  13, 1795.) 

On  Monday  last  a  coroner's  inquest  was  held  on  the  body  of 
William  Harrison,  marriner,  who  died  in  the  Marine  Hospital 
.  •  .  .  verdict,  death  by  certain  blows  received  from  Hector 
Alexander  about  two  months  ago.    (Thursday,  Jan.  15,  1795.) 

Died,  on  the  18th.  Mr.  George  Cubaun,  long  a  resident  of  this 
city,  aged  74  years  and  24  days.     (Sat.  Jan  24, 1795.) 

Married  lately,  Daniel  Brown,  Esq.  of  Camden,  to  Miss  Poke, 
daughter  of  the  late  gen.  Poke,  of  North  Carolina. 

Died,  on  Thursday  the  15th  instant,  at  Columbia,  after  a  short 
illness,  doctor  Henry  Tillinghast. 

Died.  Mrs.  Cunningham,  wife  of  Mr.  John  Cunningham, 
merchant  in  King  St.,  (Monday,  Jan.  26, 1795.) 

Married,  last  evening,  capt.  Benjamin  Harvey,  formerly  of  the 
Georgia  line,  to  Mrs.  Susannah  Keely,  of  James  Island. 

Died,  on  Saturday  last,  Mrs.  Geoige,  wife  of  Mr.  James  George 
ship-carpenter.    (Wednesday,  Jan.  28, 1795.) 

Married,  On  Wednesday  evening,  Mr.  Joseph  Brown,  to  Mrs. 
Ash,  both  of  this  city.    (Friday,  Jan.  30, 1795.) 

Died  suddenly,  on  Sunday  evening.  Dr.  Peter  Fayssoux,  an 
eminent  physician  of  this  city.    (Tuesday,  Feb.  3, 1795.) 

MTrried,  on  Tuesday  evening,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Coste,  Mr. 
Joseph  Olman,  to  Madame  Deverge,  formerly  of  Saint  Domingo. 
(Thursday,  Feb.  5, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Paterson,  of 
this  city.    (Friday,  Feb  6, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Satiu-day  evening,  citizen  Rene  Godard,  chancellor 
of  the  French  consulate  at  Charleston,  to  Miss  Maria  Juhan. 

Married  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  Mr.  Robert  Morrison,  to 
Miss  Eliza  Ficklin,  both  of  this  city. 

Died,  in  this  dty  on  Sunday  evening  last,  Mrs.  Priscilla  Holman 
of  St  Andrew's  parish.    (Tuesday,  Feb.  10, 1795.) 

Died,  in  St.  Stephen's  parish,  on  the  5th  ult.    Mrs.  Elizabeth 
Dubose,  the  amiable  consort  of  Samuel  Dubose,  Esq.    •    .    . 
leaving  behind  a  disconsolate  husband  and  four  children.    .    .    • 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  after  a  short  but  painful  illness, 
Mr.  Joseph  Lafar,  of  this  city,  aged  42  years.  .  .  .  has  left  a 
helpless  widow  and  five  children  to  moan  his  departure. 


28  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

The  elders  and  members  of  the  French  church,  the  members  of 
the  South  Carolina  Society,  the  Fellowship  Society,  the  Amateur 
Society  and  the  rest  of  his  friends  are  requested  to  attend  the 
fimeral  of  Mr.  Lafar,  at  2  o'clock  this  afternoon,  from  his  house  in 
Old  Church-street,  comer  of  Lynch's  lane.  (Thursday,  Feb.  12, 
1795.) 

Died  in  St.  Bartholomew's  parish,  on  Tuesday  the  10th  instant, 
Mrs.  Rachel  McCants,  wife  of  Joseph  McCants,  Esq.  of  that 
place.    (Tuesday,  Feb.  17, 1795.) 

Died.  Mrs.  Tarver,  wife  of  Mr.  John  Tarver,  of  this  city. 
(Thursday,  Feb.  19,  1795.) 

Died.  On  Saturday  evening  last,  Mrs.  Mary  Gregson,  widow 
of  the  late  Mr.  James  Gregson.    (Wednesday,  Feb.  25, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  the  17th  inst.  Jacob  Alison,  Esq;  to 
Miss  Margaret  Lockwood,  the  yoimgest  daughter  of  Mr.  Joshua 
Lockwood,  of  this  city. 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening,  Benjamin  Bonneau,  esq.  of 
Christ-church  parish,  to  Miss  Martha  Scriven,  daughter  of  col. 
Thomas  Scriven,  of  Charleston. 

On  Friday  morning  the  20th  inst.  departed  this  life  at  States- 
burgh,  on  the  High  Hills  of  Santee,  Mr.  Henry  Maxwell,  merchant, 
after  a  lingering  and  painful  illness;  he  resided  near  nine  years 
at  that  place,  and  was  highly  esteemed  by  all  ranks  of  people;  on 
the  day  following  his  remains  were  interred  at  the  burying  groimd 
at  Statesburg.    .    .    .    (Sat.  Feb.  28,  1795.) 

Died,  on  Th\u*sday  last,  in  Marion  county,  St.  John's,  that 
worthy  veteran,  Francis  Marion,  who  was  major  of  the  second 
South-Carolina  regiment  when  the  British  were  repulsed  at  the 
attack  of  Fort  Moultrie;  some  time  after,  he  rose  to  the  command 
of  the  said  regiment:  soon  after  the  fall  of  Charleston  he  was 
appointed  a  brigadier-general  in  the  militia  of  this  state;  in  which 
stations  his  services  during  the  war  arc  well  known  to  the  citizens 
of  this  state.    (Tuesday,  Mar.  3, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Tuesday  last,   Mr.  James  Hamlin  Thomson ,  A.M 
for  upwards  of  thirty  years  an  eminent  instructor  of  youth. 
(Thursday,  Mar.  5,  1795.)    [Corrected  in  the  next  issue  to  James 
Hamdm  Thomson] 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  29 

Died,  on  Tuesday  last  the  3d  inst  Mrs.  Mary  M'Cants,  consort 
of  William  M'Cants  esq.  of  the  Round  O.  .  .  .  her  loss  is 
irreparable  to  her  helpless  oflFspring   ....  (Friday,  Mar.  6, 1795.) 

The  schooner  Cornelia  is  owned  in  New-Brunswick,  (New  Jersey) 
On  her  outward  bound  passage,  she  was  commanded  by  capt. 
Auten,  who  with  Mr.  Dennis,  the  supercargo,  died  of  yellow  fever, 
in  Kingston.  By  a  gentleman  who  arrived  in  this  vessel,  we  are 
informed  that  the  yellow  fever  continues  to  make  great  havoc, 
particularly  among  the  foreigners  who  arrive  there;  he  says  that 
the  physicians  informed  him  that  more  than  three  fourths  of  the 
strangers  who  had  come  there  in  the  last  two  years,  had  died. 
There  was  at  first  a  great  difference  of  opinion  among  the  physi- 
cians respecting  the  proper  mode  of  treating  the  disorder;  but  of 
late  they  had  followed  the  plan  of  Dr.  Rush,  which  they  found 
to  be  the  best  method.  (Monday,  Mar.  9,  1795.)  [In  the  next 
issue  it  is  stated  that  it  was  a  yoimger  brother  of  Mr.  Denis  who 
died  and  not  [the  supercargo] 

Married,  on  Saturday  last,  Mr.  Richard  Hall  to  Mrs.  Rice. 
(Tuesday,  Mar.  10, 1795.) 

Married,  on  the  8th  inst.  Joseph  Kershaw  esq.  of  Camden,  to 
Miss  Sarah  Hutchins,  of  the  same  place.    (Friday,  Mar.  13, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  Tobias  Bowles,  esq.  to  Miss 
Susanna  Drajrton,  daughter  of  John  Drayton,  esq.  deceased. 
(Sat.  Mar.  14, 1795.) 

Died,  on  the  11th  inst.  in  Jacksonborough,  Mrs.  Sarah  Culliatt, 
relict  of  Mr.  James  L.  Culliatt  deceased  .  .  .  •  (Wednesday, 
Mar.  18, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  William  S.  Brisbane,  esq. 
of  John's  Island,  to  Miss  Maria  Hall,  daughter  of  the  late  George 
Abbott  Hall  esq.     (Sat.  Mar.  21, 1795.) 

Died,  on  the  15th  inst.  at  her  plantation  on  Goose-Creek,  in  her 
56th  year,  Mrs.  Rebecca  Withers,  relict  of  William  Withers, 
esq.  deceased.    [Long  obituary  notice  in  next  issue.] 

Died,  on  Sunday  night,  Mrs.  Scrivnor,  wife  of  Mr.  James 
Scrivnor  after  a  lingering  illness. 

Died,  on  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  Hugh  Anderson.  (Tuesday, 
Mar.  24, 1795.) 


30  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died,  yesterday  afternoon,  capt  John  Moore,  late  of  the 
Savannah  packet.    (Sat.  Mar.  28, 1795.) 

On  9th  March  nit.  the  following  melancholy  circumstance 
happened  near  Cambridge  in  this  State:  Miss  Pamela  Cunning- 
ham, an  amiable  young  lady,  aged  17,  daughter  of  Patrick  Cun- 
ningham, Esq.  being  alone  by  the  fire,  her  clothes  were  acci- 
dentally caught  by  the  flames,  which  had  made  considerable 
progress  before  she  discovered  it;  and  before  she  could  obtain 
assistance  she  was  so  greatly  injured,  that  she  expired  on  the 
15th  inst.    [8  lines  of  verse] 

Died,  on  Sunday  last,  in  an  advanced  age,  Mrs.  Weyman, 
widow  of  the  late  Edwd.  Weyman,  esq.  (Wednesday,  Apr.  1, 1795.) 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  in  the  bloom  of  youth.  Miss  Amelia 
MuUer,  daughter  of  the  late  major  MuUer. 

Died,  on  the  27th  ultimo,  at  her  plantation  near  Parker's  ferry, 
Mrs.  Jemima  Croskeys,  relict  of  John  Croske)rs,  esq.  .  .  •  (Friday 
April  3, 1795.) 

Married,  on  the  15th  of  January  last,  at  Philadelphia,  the 
Rev.  Dr.  William  Rogers,  professor  of  English  and  oratory  in  the 
University  of  Pennsylvania,  to  Miss  Susan  Marsh,  daughter  of 
Col.  Joseph  Marsh  of  Southwark. 

Died,  on  Saturday  the  4th  inst.  in  the  62d.  year  of  her  age, 
Mrs.  Frances  Pinckney,  relict  of  the  late  col.  Charles  Pinckney 
In  the  relative  duties  of  wife,  parent  and  friend,  she  was  respected 
and  beloved  for  her  benevolence  and  virtues;  .  .  .  after  a  lingering 
and  painful  illness,  she  closed  a  long  and  useful  life,  an  irreparable 
loss  to  her  family,  and  universally  lamented  by  all  who  had  the 
pleasure  of  her  acquaintance. 

Died,  on  the  5th  inst.  in  St.  Thomases  parish,  after  a  short  but 
severe  illness,  Nathan  Tart,  esq.     (Wednesday,  April  8, 1795.) 

Married  at  Edinburgh,  in  January  last.  Dr.  James  Robertson, 
physician,  of  Inverness,  to  Miss  Catherine  Inglis,  second  daughter 
on  the  late  Alexander  Inglis,  esq.  of  South  Carolina. 

Died,  in  December  last,  at  Beechwood,  near  Edinbiu^^h,  lieut. 
gen.  Alexander  Leslie,  colonel  of  the  9th  regiment  of  foot,  some 
time  commander  in  chief  of  the  British  army  in  South-Carolina. 

Died,  in  the  53d  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Tennent  widow  of  the  late 
rev.  William  Tennent.  She  was  descended  from  respectable 
ancestors,  who,  upward  of  a  hundred  years  ago,  sought  an  asylum 


BiAKRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  31 

in  America  from  the  persecutions  of  Europe  •  •  •  (Sat  April  11, 
1795.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Mills,  to  Mrs. 
Rebecca  Shrewsbiuy,  both  of  this  city. 

Died,  on  Wednesday  last,  the  8th  inst.  Mrs.  Mary  Beard,  in  the 
56th  year  of  her  age.  Her  remains  were  interred  in  St.  Philip's 
chiurchyard  .  .  .  (Tuesday,  April  14, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Sunday  last,  in  this  dty,  Richard  Hutson,  esq.  In 
Christ-Church  parish,  Mr.  John  Sutdiff.  (Thursday,  April 
16, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Wednesday  the  15th  instant,  after  a  lingering  illness, 
Mr.  John  M'Kenzie,  .  .  .  (Friday,  April  17, 1795.) 

On  Thursday  the  9th  inst.  was  married,  Charles  Jones  Colcock, 
esq.  of  Cambridge,  to  Miss  Mary  Hutson,  eldest  daughter  of  the 
late  Thomas  Hutson,  esq.  at  Cedar  Grove,  the  seat  of  her  mother, 
in  Prince  William's  parish.  He  must  be  hi^py  who  possesses  the 
most  amiable  of  her  sex.    (Satiurday,  April  18, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Saturday  evening,  at  the  house  of  Hary  Grant,  esq. 
Mr.  James  Jaffray,  to  Miss  Adams,  of  Edisto  Island.  (Monday, 
Apr.  20, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  the  16th  instant,  William  Skirving,  jun. 
esq.  to  Miss  Bethia  Price,  daughter  of  William  Price,  esq.  (Friday, 
April  24 1795.) 

Died,  in  Chester  county,  John  Mills,  lieut.  col.  commandant  of 
the  eleventh  regiment  of  this  state.    (Sat.  Apr.  25, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  James  Rousom  Stewart, 
esq.  of  St.  George's,  Dorchester,  to  Miss  Eleanor  Livingston. 
(Tuesday  Apr.  28, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Sunday  last  .  .  .  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Miller,  wife  of  Mr. 
James  Miller,  wine  merchant,  64  Bay  •  .  •  left  infant  offspring 

Died,  on  the  22d  inst.  at  Woodville,  in  St.  Bartholomew's 
parish  in  the  46th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Ann  Berresford,  the 
amiable  wife  of  Richard  Beresford,  esq.  and  only  daughter  of  the 
late  Thomas  Ferguson,  esq. 

Died,  on  St.  Helena's  Island,  the  15th  inst.  after  a  twenty-four 
days  illness,  William  Chaplin,  esq.  in  the  51st.  year  of  his  age  ,  .  . 
Cliursday,  April  30, 1795.) 

Died,  at  Brussels,  on  the  20th  of  October  1794,  of  a  wound 
received  in  the  service  of  the  French  republic,  James  Loocock 


32  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Cusack,  a  native  of  this  state  ...  at  the  age  of  18  years,  he  em- 
barked for  France,  in  order  to  join  the  republican  army  .  .  .  He 
obtained  a  commission  in  the  dragoons  of  the  Northern  army  .  .  . 
(Thursday,  May  7,  1795.)  [Long  notice  concerning  him  in  the 
issue  of  May  9.] 

Married,  last  Saturday  evening,  at  Mr.  Williman's,  King  St., 
Benjamin  Elfe,  esq.  of  St.  Thomas's  parish,  to  Miss  Elizabeth 
Rumph,  of  this  dty. 

Died,  on  Friday  last,  col.  Isaac  Motte,  naval  ofl&cer  of  the  port 
of  Charleston. 

Died.,  on  Friday  evening  last,  William  Mason,  esq;  derk  of  the 
common  pleas  for  Charleston  District.    (Tuesday,  May  12, 1795) 

Departed  this  life,  on  the  18th  Mardi  last,  John  Mills,  esq. 
coroner  of  Chester  coimty,  and  lieut.-col.  of  the  Chester  county 
regiment  .  .  .  (Monday,  May  18, 1795.) 

Died,  on  the  9th  February  last,  at  Madrid,  \^^lliam  Carmichael 
esq.  charge  des  affaires,  and  one,  of  the  commissioners  plenipoten- 
tary  of  the  United  States  of  America  to  the  court  of  Spain. 

Died,  at  Philadelphia,  on  the  4th  instant,  John  Kean,  esq. 
late  cashier  of  the  Bank  of  the  United  States.  (Tuesday,  May 
19, 1795) 

Married,  Thursday  last,  Mr.  Francis  Silvester  Curtis,  to  Miss 
Frances  Churchill,  both  of  this  dty. 

Died,  Sunday  last,  Mr.  Thomas  Harris,  of  St.  Andrew's  parish. 
(Thursday,  May  21,.  1795.) 

Married,  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  Mr.  John  Robertson, 
merchant,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Ann  Trenholm,  youngest  daughter 
of  Mr.  Wm.  Trenholm,  merchant,  of  this  dty. 

Died,  on  the  30th  ult.  at  Columbia,  Mr.  James  M'CaUum,  late 
of  this  dty,  merchant.     (Friday,  May  22, 1795) 

Married,  at  Lifeland,  in  St.  Stephen's  parish,  on  Thursday  last, 
by  the  rev.  doctor  Smith,  Christopher  Gadsden  White,  esq.  to 
Miss  Martha  Walter,  daughter  of  Richard  Walter,  esq.  deceased. 
(Saturday,  May  23, 1795.) 

Died,  at  Beaufort,  on  Sunday  the  17th  inst.  after  a  long  and 
distressing  illness,  which  she  bore  as  a  good  Christian,  Mrs. 
Eliza  Drayton,  the  excellent  wife  of  Glenn  Drayton,  esq.  She 
has  left  a  disconsolate  husband  and  three  children  to  deplore  their 
great  loss.    (Tuesday,  May  26, 1795.) 


UARRLAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  33 

Died,  on  Monday  last,  in  the  80th  year  of  her  age.  Miss  Mary 
Hall,  a  respectable  inhabitant  of  this  city,  Friday,  May  29, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Wednesday  last,  Richard  Henry  Peyton  esq.  to 
Mrs.  Ann  Stobo. 

Died,  on  the  21st  inst.  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Clarkson,  wife  of  capt. 
Aaron  Loocock  Clarkson,  lately  from  England  .  .  .  (Verses) 
(Saturday,  May  30, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  even  last,  Mr.  John  G.  Happoldt,  to 
Miss  Elizabeth  Ernst.     (Monday,  June  1, 1795.) 

Married,  last  Monday  evening,  Henry  Izard,  esq.  son  of  the  hon. 
Ralph  Izard,  to  Miss  Middleton,  daughter  of  the  hon.  Arthur 
Middleton,  deceased.    (Wednesday,  June  1, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Friday  evening  last,  at  the  seat  of  William  Moultrie, 
jun.  esq.  at  San  tee,  John  Poaug,  esq.    (Tuesday,  June  9, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  at  Sullivan's  Island,  by 
the  rev.  Dr.  Purcell,  Mr.  Elias  Smerdon,  to  Miss  Pricilla  Cobum, 
bom  of  this  city.    (Friday.  June  19, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Tuesday  the  9th  inst.  in  Savannah,  Sir  John  Houston, 
bart.    (Monday,  June  22, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Sunday  evening,  after  a  painful  illness.  Miss  Isabella 
Sheed,  youngest  daughter  of  Dr.  William  Sheed. 

Died,  a  few  days  ago,  at  Waccamaw,  John  Allston  Esq. 

Died,  at  Waccamaw,  a  few  days  ago^  of  a  fall  from  his  horse, 
that  very  promising  and  worthy  young  man,  Mr.  George  Allston 
.  .  .  (Wed.  June  24, 1795.) 

Married,  at  Belleville,  near  Wilmington,  Abraham  Motte,  esq. 
to  the  accomplished  Miss  Washington  Quince,  only  daughter  of 
Parker  Quince,  esq.  deceased,  formerly  of  N.  Carolina.  (Tuesday, 
June  30, 1795.) 

(To  be  continued) 


ABSTRACTS  OF  RECORDS  OF  THE  PROCEEDINGS  IN 
THE  COURT  OF  ORDINARY,  1764-1771 

CompQed  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

Sir 

Jonathan  Evans  of  James  Island  about  17  years  old,  Son  of 
Jonathan  Evans  deceased,  having  personally  applied  to  me  to 
appoint  George  Russel  of  the  said  Idand  to  be  his  Guardian,  Let 
letters  of  guardianship  issue  accordingly. 

Wm.  Bull    July  4,  1765, 

To  George  Johnston  Esq.  Dept  Sec. 

CharlesTown  2d.  July  1765 
Hono'ble  WiU'm  BuU  Esq 
Lieut  Gov.  &c&c. 

Hon'ble  Sir 

Having  been  in  town  these  ten  da}^  past  Expecting  the  Honour 
of  Waiting  upon  you  Sir  in  order  to  be  admitted  Guardian  to  an 
orphan  the  Natural  Son  of  Dr.  Alex.  McDowell  (?)  and  being 
advised  this  Morning  by  Coll.  Beale  of  your  Honours  Indisposition 
and  reconmiended  by  the  Coll.  to  take  this  method  of  requesting 
that  your  Honour  will  [torn]  favourably  pleased  to  give  order  that 
this  particular  business  may  be  done  under  your  Honours  Authority 
I  trust  your  Honours  Indulgence  as  my  busiEess  calls  pressingly 
for  my  return  to  Winyaw. 

I  am  Respectfully,  Honourable  Sir 

your  Honours  Most  Obed't  Hble  Serv't 

Thomas  Godfrey 

Let  Guardianship  be  issued  to  Mr.  Thomas  Godfrey  according 

to  the  above  application.    July  2, 1765. 

Wm.  Bull 

Citation  to  Benj.  Garden,  Prince  Williams  parish  planter  to 
admr.  estate  of  Frances  Gunswigg  late  of  ChasT'n  St.  Philips 
psh.  widow  his  Cousin,  4  July  1765 

34 


RECORDS  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  35 

Citation  to  Frances  Williams  of  Chas.  T'n  widow  to  admin,  on 
estate  of  John  Williams  Taylor  with  will  annexed,  as  widow  and 
next  kin.    4  July  1 765 

Citation  to  Daniel  Williams  of  St.  Stephens  parish  planter  to 
adminr.  on  estate  of  Philip  Williams  late  of  sd.  parish  planter,  as 
brother.    5th  July  1765 

Citation  to  Charles  Wright  to  adnm.  on  William  Fitzpatrick 
late  of  St.  Pauls  parish  overseer,  as  greatest  creditor.    8  July  1765 

Caleb  Toomer  enters  Caveat  against  Letters  of  Administration 
being  granted  to  Constantia  Toomer  on  estate  of  Ralph  Toomer  of 
St.  Helena,  planter  until  sd.  Caleb  is  heard.    9  July  1765 

Citation  to  James  Witter  and  Joanna  Witter  his  wife  of  St. 
Johns  parish  Colleton,  to  admr.  on  estate  of  John  Newington  of 
sd.  parish  said  Joanna  halfsister  of  sd  deceased  as  next  of  kin. 

Citation  to  Gideon  Gibson  to  admin,  on  estate  of  James  Rowe    ^ 
late  of  Prince  George's  parish  planter  as  greatest  creditor.    13 
July  1755 

Citation  to  Gideon  Gibson  to  adminr.  on  Mathew  Driggers  late 
of  Prince  George's  parish  planter,  as  greatest  creditor  13  July  1765. 

Mr.  Johnston-Let  Letters  of  Guardianship  issue  to  Mr.  Garden 
over  the  Daughter  and  Son  of  the  late  Mrs.  Frances  Grunswig, 

Wm.Bull    July  13, 1765 

Gtation  to  AndV  Cathcart  and  John  Waggener  of  ChsTown 
merchants  on  Valentine  Qoudy  late  of  St.  Philip's  parish  planter 
as  greatest  creditors.    17  July  1765 

Citation  to  Griffeth  Tubb  to  adminr.  on  James  Jeter  late  of 
Chas  Towns  greatest  creditor.    18  July  1765 

Citation  to  Plowden  Weston  of  ChasTown  merchant,  to  adminr. 
on  John  HoUybush  late  of  ChasTown  in  so  far  as  left  tmadmr.  by 
Sarah  HoUybush  Extrx.  of  said  John  also  deceased,  in  Right  of 
his  Wife — Daur.  of  sd.  deceased  as  next  kin,  23  July  1765. 


36  so.  CA.  HISTOSaCAL  AND  (^NEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Gtatkn  to  Vkmdeti  Weston  to  admr,  on  Sarah  HoOibush  in 
right  of  his  wife.    23  July  1765 


Citaticm  to  Robert  Gibb  of  Prince  George  parish  plantar  to 
Adminr.  on  estate  of  James  Crockett  late  of  Pr.  Fred^idc,  planter 
as  next  kin. 

Charles  Pinckney  on  behalf  of  Thomas  Lynch  Esq.  enter's  a 
Caveat  agt.  Adm'n  of  est.  of  Dr.  James  Crockett  being  granted  to 
Robert  Gibbe  or  any  other  person  untill  he  is  heard  respecting 
Mr.  Lynch's  dainL    31  July  1765. 

Citation  to  John  Pendal  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  Richard  Pendal 
late  of  the  Fords  between  Saludy  and  Broad  River,  his  brother  to  be 
be  published  in  the  parish  church  at  the  Congarees.    5th  Aug.  1 765. 

In  Court  of  Ordinary  3  Aug.  1765 
William  Bellinger  &  Uxon  vs.  And'w  Deveaux 

Andrew  Deveaux  with  John  Rutledge  Esq;  his  proctor  appeared 
and  exhibited  his  Acc't  of  his  admon.  and  exorship  of  estate  of 
George  Cussins. 

Mr.  Parsons  proctor  for  Wm.  Bellinger  appeared  and  pra)red  a 
Copy  of  sd  account  might  be  made  out  for  him,  and  moved  that  a 
Day  be  appointed  for  his  approving  or  objecting  against  same. 
Ordered  accordingly  and  second  day  of  Oct.  next  appointed 

Citation  to  Anthony  Martin  White  to  adminr.  on  estate  of 
John  Claybum  late  of  Prince  Fredericks  parish  planter  as  Executor 
to  Frances  Claybum  widow  to  said  John  also  deceased.  8  August 
1765 

Citation  to  Eleanor  Ford  and  Benjamin  Ford  of  St  Marks 
parish  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  Thomas  Ford  late  of  sd.  psh.  as 
widow  and  son.    9  Aug.  1 765. 

Citation  to  Dorcas  Harvey  to  adminr,  on  estate  of  Maurice 
Harvey  of  St.  George's  Dorchester,  merchant,  as  his  widdw. 
9  Aug.  1765. 


RECORDS  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  37 

Citation  to  Constance  Toomer  of  St.  Helena's  parish  widow 
to  adminr.  on  estate  of  Ralph  Toomer  of  sd.  parish,  planter  her 
husband.    14  Aug.  1765. 

Citation  to  Sarah  Jordan  of  St.  Paul's  parish  widow,  to  adminr. 
on  estate  of  John  Jordan  of  sd.  parish  planter,  her  husband  16 
Aug.  1765. 

Citation  to  Samuel  Little  and  John  Cantey  of  St.  Marks  parish 
planters  to  adminr.  on  the  estate  of  Samuel  Little  of  St.  John's 
parish  Berkley  Coimty  planter,  said  Samuel  Little  his  son  and 
John  Cantey  his  son  in  law.    23  Aug.  1 765. 

Citation  to  Peter  Manigault  and  Chas.  Pinckney  Esqrs.  to 
adminr.  on  the  estate  of  Thomas  Bromley  late  assistant  Clerk  of 
the  assembly  as  next  friends.    23  Aug  1765. 

Admonrs  of  Hooper  Vs  Swallow  23  Aug.  1765 

A  Citation  or  Monition  at  instance  of  James  Wright  and  John 
Burrell  admors.  of  Thos.  Hooper  deceased  against  Newman 
Swallow  late  admor.  of  sd.  eestate,  citing  him  to  appear  this  day 
and  render  account. 

It  was  suggested  that  the  Debts  due  from  Hooper  Swallow 
and  Company  amounted  to  Sixty  Seven  thousand  three  Hundred 
and  Ninety  one  pounds  four  shil's  and  eleven  pence  Currency 
which  tho'  it  is  probable  the  Debts  due  the  partnership  is  sufficient 
to  make  good  that  sum,  yet  as  there  may  be  bad  debts  and  Re- 
mittances it  is  possible  they  might  fall  short;  In  which  case  the 
private  estate  of  Mr.  Hooper  will  be  called  upon  to  answer  the 
deficiencies  And  that  the  estat  of  Mr.  Hopton  one  of  the  sureties 
in  the  Admin  granted  to  Wright  and  Burrell  at  least  the  most 
part  is  settled  on  his  Family.  Prayed  in  behalf  of  the  creditors  of 
Hooper  Swallow  and  Company  that  the  goods  of  said  Hooper  now 
in  hands  of  said  Swallow  may  not  be  delivered  to  present  admirs. 
but  in  trust  to  some  person  for  benefit  of  his  creditors.  His  honor 
agreed  to  consider  same  until  next  Friday. 

His  Honor  finds  security  given  by  James  Wright  and  John 
Burrell  in  the  admor.  aforesaid  sufficient  and  Ordered  that  ad. 
Newman  Swallow  deliver  the  goods  to  same.    30th  Aug.  1765 


38  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Doctor  Gibb  Vs.  Thomas  Lynch. 

Mr.  Leigh  produced  several  affidavits  establishing  the  affinity  of 
Doctor  Gibbs  to  Doctor  James  Crokatt  deceased;  admon.  granted 
to  said  Robert  Gibb  as  next  of  kin,  security  for  Four  Thousand 
poimds  Sterling  to  be  given;  Paul  Trapier  Esq;  Dr.  Charles 
Fyffe  and  James  Gordon  of  paiish  of  Prince  George  were  accepted 
as  securities.  Dedimus  granted  to  Arch.  Baird  Esq.  to  qualify  the 
admor. 

Citation  to  Thos.  Adam  to  adminr.  on  John  McDowell  of 
St.  Paul's  parish  as  greatest  creditor.    31  Aug.  1765 

(To  be  continued) 


A 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
CHARLESTON,  S.  C. 


VOLUME  XXIll,  No.  2  APRIL,  1922 


Uadi  in  Vnitii  Statu  «/  Atturia 


PUBUCATION  COMMITTEE 

J06EFH  W.  Baknwell,  Henry  A.  M.  SmzH, 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OF  THE  MAGAZINE 

Mabel  L.  Webber 


CONTENTS 

Grimball  of  Edisto  Island 39 

St  Helena's  Parish  Register 46 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  City  Gazette. 72 

Abstracts  of  Records  of  the  Proceedings  in   the  Court  of 
Ordinary,  1764-1771 77 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
Vol.  I,  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  EQstorical  Society.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per 
annum  (the  fiscal  year  being  from  January  to  January),  and 
members  can  buy  back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  $1.00  each. 
In  addition  to  receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a 
discount  of  25  per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Sodety, 
and  have  the  free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 
please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

South  Carolina  Historical  Society, 

Chftrieston,  S.  C 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXni  APRIL,  1922  No.  2 


GRIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  January) 

7. 

Paul  Grimball  (Thomas,  2,  Paul,  1.)  since  he  is  named  as  execu- 
tor in  his  fathers  will,  was  probably  bom  about  1700,  and  died 
between  Jan.  29, 1749/50  and  Jan.  25, 1750/51.  He  was  a  planter 
on  Edisto  Island,  and  died  there.  Paul  Grimball  married  several 
times,  certainly  three,  and  we  have  the  maiden  name  of  only  one 
of  his  wives,  Mary  Barnwell,  daughter  of  Col.  John  Barnwell* 
who  seems  to  have  been  his  second  wife.  His  last  wife  was  Mary, 
daughter  of  Susannah  Winbom,  widow  of  Thomas  Winbom,  by  a 
former  marriage;  after  the  death  of  Paul  Grimball,  this  wife,  Mary, 
married  Capt.  William  Lawton  for  his  third  wife  and  after  his 
death,  she  married  again  for  her  third  husband,  Samuel  Pickling* 

'  >  P.  C.  Charleston,  1749-51,  page  409,  Mary,  Catherine  &  Elizabeth  Grim- 
ball, infant  children  of  Paul  Grimball  deceased,  make  application  that  Nathl. 
Barnwell  &  John  Barnwell  gentlemen  be  i^pointed  their  guardian's,  16  Mar. 
1750/1. 

M.  C.  O.  Book  S.  S.  p.  136.  13  Aug.  1757.  George  Cuthbert  of  St.  Helena 
and  Mary  his  wife  to  Philip  Box;  imdivided  third  of  500  acres  granted  14  May 
1706,  to  John  Barnwell  Esq.  who  by  will  4  May  1724  to  daughter  Mary;  said 
Mary  intermarried  with  Paul  Grimball  of  Edisto  Island;  issue  3  daughters, 
1.  Mary  Md.  to  George  Cuthbert.  2.  Catherine,  now  wife  of  David  Adams 
of  Edisto.  3.  Elizabeth,  now,  wife  of  Wm.  Baynard  of  Edisto.  On  16  Aug. 
1757,  Box  reconveys  to  Geo:  Cuthbert. 

*  Will  of  Susannah  TOnbome  dated  1778,  proved,  1780. 

39 


40  80.  CA«  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Paul  Grimball  and  his  first  wife,  name  unknown,  had  issue: 

L    Ann  Grimball,  bom  1728  or  earlier,  married  June  20, 1744, 

John  Paul  Grimk£;  she  died  in  1747;  had  one  child, 

Providoice  Grimk£,  bom  March  6,  1746,  and  died 

Oct.  1747  (St.  Philip's  Register). 

11.  iL    Paul  Grimball,  IxHii  about  1730,  married  Mary  Ann 

Calder,  daughter  of  John  Calder  and  Sarah  his 

wife;'    he  made  his  will  Feb.   1,   1757,    proved 

May  1,  1767;  mentions  wife  Mary  Ann  Grimball, 

daughter  Martha  Grimball,  nephew  Thomas  Bay- 

nard  and  nephew  Wm  Baynard  Jr.   Island  known  as 

Grimball's  island  to  be  sold,  interest  to  be  used  for 

education  of  daughter,  who  is  to  inherit  at  17  or 

marriage  said  daughter  to  have  plantation  where  he 

lives  when  of  age  or  married;  if  she  die  without  issue, 

then  brother  John  Grimball,  and  sister  Ann  Roberts. 

Mary  Ann  Grimball  widow  of  Paul,  married  for  her  2d.  husband, 

Ephriam  Mikell^  and  Martha  Grimball,  their  daughter  married 

Joseph  Jenkins,  and  died  without  issue. 

Paul  Grimball  and  his  wife  Mary,  daughter  of  Col.  John  Bam- 
well  had  issue: 

iii.    Mary  Grimball,  bom  1738  or  earlier,  married  Feb.  3, 1754 

George  Cuthbert  (St.  Helena's  register). 
iv.    Catherine  Grimball,  bom  1737  or  earlier;  married  Feb.  1, 

1753,  David  Adams,  widower.  (Ibid.) 
v.  Elizabeth  Grimball,  bom  1737  or  earlier,  died  1773;  mar- 
ried Feb.  1,  1753,  William  Baynard,  bachelor.  (St. 
Helena's  reg.)  he  died  1773.  They  had  issue; 
1.  Elizabeth  Ann  Baynard,  who  married  Dr.  John 
Hall,  of  Philadelphia,  and  had  one  son,  Baynard 
Rush  Hall  1798-1863.  2.  Thomas  Baynard  1763- 
1805;  married  July  6,  1784,  Sarah  Calder,  and  had 
issue.  3.  William  Baynard,  1772-1802;  married 
first,  April  6,  1791,  Sarah  Black,  one  son,  William 
Grimball  Baynard,  who  married  first  Ann  Ninian 
Jenkins,  and  second  Mary  Swinton.  William  Bay- 
nard married  second,  Elizabeth  Mikell,  who  married 

» WU  of  John  Calder  of  Edisto  Island,  30  Nov.  1766.    Proved  12  Dec.  1766. 
*  De  Saussure's  Equity  Reports,  v.  2.  p.  342. 


GRIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  41 

nexty  Mungo  Macky;  issue  by  Elizabeth  Mikell, 
Elizabeth  Grimball  Baynard,  who  married  Dr.  Ed- 
ward Mitchell  and  had  issue;  and  Abigail  Baynard, 
who  married  Edward  Whaley,  and  had  issue. 

Paul  Grimball  and  his  third  wife  Mary had  issue: 

vi.     Providence  Grimball,  unmarried  when  her  father  made  his  will, 

married  to  Ephraim  Mikell  by  1762;  died  without 
issue.    (Receipt  for  her  share  of  fathers  estate.) 
12.  vii.    John  Grimball,  bom  between  the  making  of  his  fathers 

will  1746,  and  the  codicil  dated  1750. 
viii.   Ann  Grimball,  bom  between  1746  and  1750;  married  Peter 

Robert  Jur.  They  moved  to  Woodville  Miss,  about 
1810;  and  she  is  said  to  have  died  in  1818;  as  wife 
of  Peter  Robert  Jr.  she  receipts  for  a  child's  share 
of  the  estate  of  Paul  Grimball,  April  10,  1760;  she 
left  issue, 
ix.    Thomas  Grimball,  bom,  about  1750,  apparently  after  the 

death  of  his  father;  he  died  young.^ 
Paul  Grimball  made  his  will  Nov.  24, 1746;  Codicil  dated  9  Jan. 
1749;  Will  proved  25  Jan.  1750;  Paul  Grimball  of  Edisto  Island, 
Colleton  Coxmty.  Wife  Mary  1/4  of  slaves  and  use  of  500  acres 
on  Edisto  Island  for  life  or  widowhood;  [Copy  is  badly  mutilated, 
and  parts  not  decipherable.]  Son  Paul  Grimball  Island  called 
Linckley's  Island,  842  acres,  south  west  of  Edisto;  but  if  son  Paul 
die  under  21  without  issue,  then  to  the  next  son  bom  of  my  said 
wife,  and  in  want  of  such  son,  executors  to  sell  and  divide  among 
daughters  Mary,  Catherine,  Elizabeth  and  Providence  and  any 
other  daughter  or  daughters  which  may  be  bom  when  21  or 
married. 

Has  already  given  to  daughter  Ann  Grimk^,  wife  of  Mr.  Paul 
Grimk6  of  CharlesTown  jeweller  certain  parts  of  personal  estate 
as  is  equal  for  her;  to  said  daughter  Ann  Grimk6  500  acres  on 

Edisto  Island  commonly  called  the  P Pines  adjoining  the 

plantation .  where  he  now  Kves.  Unto  ....  Susannah 
.  .  .  and  her  heirs  [bad  break  here] -undred  acres  Land  .  .  . 
rest  of  estate  to  son  Paul,  and  daughters  Mary,  Catherine,  Eliza- 
beth and  Providence  and  any  other  child  or  children. 

» P.  C.  1751-54,  p.  399  and  1756-58  p.  351.  Inventory  by  Mary  Lawton,  his 
mother,  of  the  estate  of  the  child  Thomas  Grimball,  which  includes  a  legacy 
left  by  Providence  Hutchinson. 


42  80.  CA«  mSTOBICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Brothers  Joshua  and  Isaac  Grimball,  brother  in  law  Robert 
Sams  and  f rioid  John  Jenkins  to  be  executors.  Elizabeth  Pinckney 
William  Pinckney,  and  Cs.  Pinckney  witnesses.  Codicil  states 
that  a  son  John  and  a  daughter  Ann  have  been  bom  since  the 
making  of  the  will,  and  makes  provision  for  them.  C.  Pinckney 
Wm.  Davis  and  Thos.  Grimball  witnesses.  Joshua  GrimbaU  and 
John  Jenkins  qualified. 

8. 

Thomas  Grimball  (Thomas,  2.  Paul,  1 .)  not  of  age  when  his  father 
made  his  will  in  1721,  he  inherited  land  from  his  father  on  Port 
Royall  Island,  and  lived  in  St.  Helena's  parish;  the  name  of  his 
wife  has  not  been  found;  he  was  living  in  March,  1779,  when  his 
son  Thomas  made  his  will;  according  to  the  will  of  his  aunt, 
Providence  Hutchinson,  he  had  four  children  in  1756;  the  names 
of  only  two  have  been  recovered;  in  one  account  of  the  family, 
a  daughter  of  this  Thomas  is  said  to  have  been  one  of  the  wives 
of  John  Grimball,  son  of  Isaac,  and  to  have  died  without  issue; 
this  is  some  what  supported  by  the  will  of  John  Grimball,  who 
speaks  of  Thomas,  son  of  the  above  Thomas,  as  his  nephew  in 
one  place,  and  as  his  cousin  in  another. 
Thomas  Grimball  and  his  wife  (name  unknown)  had  issue: 
i.    Thomas  Grimball,  bom  1745,  died  in  Feb.  1783;  he  was  an 
attomey  at  law;  married  June,  1765,  Mary  Mag- 
dalen Prioleau,  second  daughter  of  Samuel  Prioleau, 
Esq;  he  was  Major  of  the  CharlesTown  Battalion 
of  Artillery;  was  captured  at  the  surrender  of  Charles- 
Town  and  banished  to  St.  Augustine.    His  will, 
dated  6  Mar.  1779,'  Thomas  Grimball  Jr.,  mentions 
Honoured  father,  who  is  to  have  £  100  a  year  for 
life,  and  wife  Mary  Magdalen  Grimball.    They  had 
no  issue. 
13.  ii.    Joseph  Grimball,  died  intestate  before  23d.  Oct.  1777, 

when  John  Grimball  and  ''Mrs.  Sison"  administered. 
The  records  give  very  little  information  conceming 
him;  according  to  a  family  account,  he  married 
Mary  Elliott,  and  had  several  children;  among  them, 
a  son  Thomas,  who  married  Ann  Audubert,  and 

•This  Magatine,  vol.  XVIII,  p.  38. 


GBIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  43 

moved  to  Mississippi  about  1810;  this  Thomas 
Grimball  is  said  to  have  been  brought  up  by  Col. 
John  Grimball,  son  of  Isaac.  Joseph  Grimball  had 
also,  daughters  Esther  and  Sarah,  for  their  grand- 
father Thomas  Grimball  gives  to  each  of  them  a 
negro  in  1763,  describing  them  as  his  grand-daughters. 
Other  children  of  Thomas  Grimball,  of  St.  Helena's  parish 
if  any,  unknown. 

9. 

Joshua  GrimbaU,  (Thomas,  2.  Paul,  1.)  under  age  when  his 
father  made  his  will  Nov.  2, 1757;  proved  2d.  Dec.  1757;  married 

Mary, .    He  was  a  planter  on  Edisto  Island;  a  member  of 

the  Baptist  Church,  and  friend  of  Rev.  Isaac  Chandler;  his  will 
leaves  sons  William  Maxwell  and  Joshua  Grimball  executors;  to 
wife  Mary  Grimball  in  lieu  of  dower,  the  estate  he  received  by 
marriage  with  her,  consisting  of  12  negroes,  and  certain  named 
personal  property  for  widowhood  and  no  longer;  use  of  house  he 
lived  in,  or  that  he  was  then  building,  but  if  wife  claims  any  dower 
rights  then  bequest  to  her  is  void.  To  daughter-in-law  Ann  Grim- 
ball, relict  of  his  son  Paul  Grimball,  £  60  curreny  for  life,  to  be 
paid  by  his  three  children  and  grandchild,  vizt.  Mary  Grimball 
Joshua  Grimball,  Elizabeth  Grimball,  and  Sarah  Maxwell;  son 
Joshua  Grimball  all  Lands,  2320  acres  more  or  less;  rest  of  estate 
to  his  three  children  and  grand  child,  when  18  or  married;  each  of 
them  to  have  imtil  of  age  sufficient  quantity  of  land  to  support 
their  slaves. 

Joshua  Grimball  had  issue  by  his  wife  [or  wives,  for  from  the 
reading  of  his  will,  apparently  Mary  Grimball  was  not  the  mother 
of  his  children]. 

i.  Sarah  Grimball,  1738-1757;  married  William  Maxwell, 
had  one  child  Sarah,  who  from  a  mutilated  inscrip- 
tion on  a  tombstone  an  old  Grimball  burying  ground 
on  Edisto  Island  seems  to  have  died  yoxmg. 
ii.  Paul  Grimball;  died  intestate  before  Feb.  9  1757;  married 
Ann  Jenkins  spinster  8  July,  1756;  his  widow  mar- 
ried William  Patureau,  23  Oct.  1760. 
14.  iii.    Joshua  Grimball  bom  1744  or  earlier;  married  1765 

Hannah  Rippon,  widow. 


44  so.  CA«  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

iv.  Mary  GrimbaU,  bom  1742  or  earlier;  married  Benjamin 
Jenkins.' 

V.  Elizabeth  Grimball,  married  James  ClariL,  before  April  2, 
1767y  when  she  receipts  lor  her  share  of  her  fathers 
estate  as  the  wife  of  James  Clark;  James  Clark  and 
Elizabeth  Grimball  had  issue:  James  Clai^  who 
married  1788,  Sarah  Grimball,  dau^ter  of  Charies; 
Martha  Clark,  who  married  1790,  Charles  Isaac 
Grimball,  brother  of  Sarah.  Elizabeth  Claris,  and 
Sarah  Clark. 

10. 

Isaac  Grimball  (Thomas  2,  Paul  1.)  imder  age  in  1722  when  his 
father  made  his  will;  died  in  1752  leaving  a  will.  He  married 
first  before  Jime  4, 1734  Elizabeth  Pemberton,  daughter  of  Charies 
Pemberton,  of  Parish  of  St.  Georges,  Barbadoes,  and  Rebecca  his 
wife.  Rebecca  Pemberton,  widow,  married  about  Sept.  1718; 
Henry  Livingston,  of  St.  Michael's  parish,  Barbadoes;  the  mar- 
riage settlement*  mentions  her  children,  Charles  Sawyer  Pember- 
ton, Ann  Pemberton,  and  Elizabeth  Pemberton;  in  Jan.  1722/3 
Henry  Livingston  and  his  family  were  in  Charleston;  he  was  the 
brother  of  the  Rev.  William  Livingston,  and  married  for  his 
second  wife  Sept.  2,  1726,  Ann  Harris  widow,  bom  Alston  (St. 
Phillip's  reg.).  He  had  two  sons  by  his  first  marriage,  Henry  and 
William  (Will  of  Ann  Livmgston,  dated  16  May  1732.) 

The  will  of  Henry  Livingston,  of  Colleton  County  dated  29  Jan. 
1785,  leaves  his  estate  to  his  [grand?]  nephew  and  [grand?]  neice 
Charles  Isaac  Grimball  and  Sarah  Grimball.  Makes  his  two 
nephews  Chas.  Isaac  Grimball  and  Isaac  Jenkins  Exors. 

Isaac  Grimball  married  for,  his  second  wife,  Rebecca  (Sealey?) 
she  died  between  January  and  April  10,  1767.,  leaving  her  son 
John  Grimball  and  John  Sealey  Sr.  executors  of  her  will,  which 
mentions  her  sister  Mary  Whippy,  and  Cousins  Ann,  John,  Rebecca 
Whippy;  Elizabeth  Wilkins,  Dorcas  and  Tabitha  Sealey;  Ann 
Askew,  Thomas  Askew;  Isaac  Grimball,  son  of  Charles. 

» Ibid,,  vol.  XX  p.  226. 

*  Ofif.  Hist.  Com'n.  Book  B.  B.  p.  260.  P.  C.  Charleston,  Book  1722-26 
page  80. 


GBIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  45 

Isaac  Grimball,  in  his  will  dated  Feb.  4,  1753,  proved  Nov.  3, 
1753,  mentions  wife  Rebecca,  daughter  Elizabeth,  daughter  Provi- 
dence son  John  son  Charles,  and  an  unborn  child;  makes  wife, 
brother  Thomas  Grimball,  and  son  Charles  Grimball  executors. 
Had  land  in  CharlesTown,  Edisto  Island,  and  Euhaws. 

Isaac  Grimball  and  his  first  wife  Elizabeth  Pemberton  had 
issue: 

u  Elizabeth  Grimball,  no  further  record  of  her;  she  is  not 
mentioned  in  the  will  of  her  half  uncle  Henry  Living- 
ston, nor  any  issue  by  her. 
ii.  Providence  Grimball,  married  first,  John  Jenkins,  had 
two  children,  Isaac  Jenkins  and  John  Jenkins* 
married  second,  Christopher  Jenkins,  no  issue  mar- 
ried third  in  1775,  Samuel  Eaton;  married  fourth 
Abraham  Bush,  who  died  in  1788;  she  died  intestate 
Samuel  Fickling  administered  on  her  estate  28  March 
1806. 

15.  iii.    Charles  Grimball,  bom  1735  or  earlier,  died  1770  mar- 

ried 1756,  Ann  Sealey. 
Isaac  Grimball  and  his  second  wife  Rebecca  Sealey  had  issue: 

16.  iv.    John  Grimball,  bom  12  Sept.  1748;  died  10  Nov.  1804. 

(Tombstone  in  Unitarian  Church  yard.) 

{To  be  continued) 
•  This  Magaxine,  v.  XX. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER 

Copied  and  arranged  for  printing  by  Joseph  W.  Basnwell  and 

Mabel  L.  Webbek 

(Continued  from  January^) 

Cadman,  Peter  Sn.  Peter  &  Anne  bom  Oct.  3, 1741  Bapt.  Nov:  16, 

1741  by  Jones. 
Cafry,  Towras,  buried  26  June  1744. 
Cahill,  Mary,  of  Ireland  married  by  Jones  June  15,  1741  Alex: 

Parris  Wid'r. 
Calder,  Martha,  Da.  John  &  Martha  bom  Mar.  4,  1743  bapt. 

Aug.  19, 1744  by  Do. 
Calder,  Archibald,  Sn.  Archibald  &  Mary  bom  Aug.  26,  1736 

bapt.  June  S  1737  by  Do.    Parents  sureties. 
Campbell,  Hugh,  mariner  of  Ireland,  married  by  Jones  May  3, 

1747  Cath.  Delegal,  spin. 
Campbell,  Catherine,  Da.  Hugh  &  Catherine  bom  Jan.  IS,  1750 

bapt.  Jan.  15, 1750. 
Campling,  William,  married  by  Jones  Apr.  24,  1728  Sarah  Page. 
Capers,  Anne,  Spin:  Da.  Rich'd  &  Rebecca  of  St.  Helena  married 

Joshua  Morgan  of  L[ondon],  Bach. 
Capers,  Mary,  spin.  Da.  Do.  married  by  Jones  Aug.  14,  1740 

Nath'l  Adams,  Bach. 
Capers,  Susan  Da.  of  Do.  buried  by  Do.  Oct.  16, 1740. 
Capers,  Josp:  Ellicot,  Sn.  of  Do.  married  by  Do.  Dec.  21,  1740 

Hannah  Frampton,  wid:  bur:  4  Dec.  1743. 
Capers,  William,  Sn.  Josp:  Ellicot  &  Hannah  bom  Sept:  18,  1743 

bapt.  Dec.  18, 1743  by  Do:  bur:  16  Aug.  1745. 
Capers,  Richard,  Sn.  Do.  bom  Nov:  23,  1741;  bapt.  Nov:  25, 

1741  by  Do. 

'  Mr.  A.  S.  Salley  Jr.  Secretary  of  the  Historical  Commission  of  S.  C.  is 
printing  the  minutes  of  the  Vestry  of  St.  Helena's  Parish,  1726-1812,  and  from 
his  page  proof  we  are  able  to  add  the  names  of  Vestry  and  Church  Wardens 
which  are  missing  in  the  old  Register,  in  1752  vestry — Col.  Nat:  Barnwell,  Col; 
Thos.  Wigg,  Col.  John  Mullryne,  Capt,  Jno:  Gordon,  Mr.  Jno.  Barnwell 
Mr.  Charles  Purry  and  Mr.  Jona:  Norton,  Mr.  Richard  Capers. 

46 


ST.  Helena's  PAiasH  segister  47 

Cary,  Jane,  Da.  John  &  Jane  bom  Dec.  26,  1741  bapt.  Jan.  10, 

1741  Do. 
Cary,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  9, 1743  bapt.  May  6, 1744  by  Do. 
Cary,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bapt.  Nov.  27, 1747  by  St.  John. 
Cattel,  John,  wid'w  married  by  Jones  Dec.  9, 1742,  Sarah  Hazzard 

wid:  bur:  27  Dec.  1749. 
Chaplm,  Mary  Ann,  Spin:  Da.  John  &  Phebe,  St.  Helena,  bom 

Jtdy  22,  1716  bapt.  Dec.  24,  1732  by  Jones,  married  by  same 

May  16, 1732  Jonathan  Norton,  Bach. 
Chaplin,  Phebe,  Spin:  Da,  Do.  bom  Jan'y  25, 1717  bapt.  May  31, 

1735  married  by  Do.  May  31, 1735  Joseph  Jenkins,  Bach. 
Chaplin,  Martha,  Spin:  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Apr.  3, 1720  bapt.  Oct.  31, 

1737  by  Do.  married  by  Do.  Oct.  31,  1737  John  Bamwell, 

Bach. 
Chaplin,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Do.  bapt.  July  6,  1741  by  Do.  married 

by  Do.  Apr.  30,  1741  John  Evans. 
Chaplin,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bapt.  July  6,  1741  by  Do.  married 

by  Do.  Apr.  30,  1741  Sarah  Reynolds  wid. 
Chaplin,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  William  &  Sarah  bom  Mar:  26,  1742 

bapt.  May  30,  1743  by  Do. 
Christy,  Mary,  Da.  Henry  &  Sarah  bom  May  24,  1739  bapt. 

June  15, 1739. 
Christian,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Jane  bom  1726;  married  by  Do. 

Apr:  11,  1744  Laurence  Wolferstone  wid'r. 
Clerk,  John,  bur:  10  Sept:  1747. 
Clerk,  Mary  Ann,  Da.  William  &  Frances  Mary,  bom  Mar:  8, 

1736  bapt.  Apr.  10, 1737  by  Do. 

Cobley,  Jemmitt,  Storekeeper  from  London  married  Helen  Wright 

spin:  bur:  10  Feb.  1750. 
Connant,  John,  married  by  Jones  July  21, 1728  Anne  Levy. 
Connant,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Anne  bom  May  6,  1732  bapt.  June  6, 

1732;  Lieut.  Huddy  &  Lieut.  Watt  sureties:  bur:  11  July  1732. 

[line  obliterated]  bur:  27  Sept.  1731. 

Cole,  John,  Sn.  Paul  &  Susanna  bom  Nov.  1,  1737  Bapt.  Dec.  29, 

1736  by  Jones;  married  Oct.  29, 1754  Anne  Hogg  spin. 
Cole,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  20,  1737  bapt.  Oct:  20,  1737 

byDo.  bur:  21  Oct.  1737. 
Cole,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  IS,  1738  bapt.  Sept:  21. 1739 

byDo. 


48  so.  CA.  mSTOBICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Cole,  Paul,  bur:  by  Do.  30  Jan.  1739. 

Carman,  Deborah,  married  by  Do.  May  5,  1727  William  Hain^ 

Conyers,  Elizabeth,  Wife  to  William,  bom  1700;  bapt  May  16, 

1732  by  Do.  bur:  Jan.  1739. 
Conyers,  Thomas,  Sn.  William  &  Elizabeth  bom  July  10,  1725 

bapt.  May  16, 1732  by  Do.  married  by  D.  Orr,  Dec.  10, 1744, 

Elena  Scott  spin. 
Conyers,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  27,  1728  bapt.  May  16, 1732 

by  Jones;  married  by  Peasely,  May  10,  1752  Elizabeth  Hicks 

Wid:  bur:  Feb.  10,  1755. 
Conyers,  William,  Sn.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Sq>t:  21, 

1731  bapt.  May  16,  1732  by  Jones. 
Conyers,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  15,  1734  bapt  Jime  28, 

1736  by  Do. 
Conyers,  Elizabeth,  spin:  Da.  of  Do.  bom  May  28,  1738;  bapt. 

May  28, 1738  by  Jones;  married  Aug:  3, 1755  John  Reynolds. 
Coster,  Peter,  Sn.  of  Joseph,  bom  1719,  bapt.  Mar.  8,  1725  by 

Jones    Father  surety. 
Coster,  Charles,Sn.of  Do.boml722,bapt  Mar.8,1725  byDo.Do. 
Cowen,  Sarah,  spin:  Da.  John  & married  by  Jones,  Jan.  27, 

1728  William  Hazzard  Bach. 
Cowen,  Judith,  spin:  bapt.  by  Jones  July  14, 1728  married  by  Do. 

Feb.  4,  1741  James  Stevens,  bach. 
Cockran,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth;  bom  Dec.  29,  1742 

bapt.  May  6,  1744  by  Do. 
Cockran,  Elizabeth  wid:  mar.  by  Do.  Oct.  16, 1744  John  Mullais. 
Cowell,  Susanna,  bur:  by  Do.  22  June  1739. 

Cowell, a  Serjeant,  bur:  by  Do.  29  Sept.  1739. 

Cross,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Thomas  &  Sarah  bapt.  Aug.  10 by 

Do;  bur:  24  Oct.  1730. 
Cross,  Elenor,  Da.  Do.  bom  March  12,  1730  bapt.  Apr.  18,  1731 

by  Do.    Thos.  Wattle,  Deborah  Haines,  Catherine  Harris, 

sureties. 
Cross,  Sarah,  Da.  Do.  bom  July  27,  1733  bapt.  July  30,  1733  by 

Do.  Parents  sureties;  bur:  23  Aug.  1733. 
Cross,  Sarah,  wife  to  Thomas,  bur:  by  Do.  30  July,  1733. 
Cross,  Thomas,  wid'r:  married  by  Do.  Mar.  28, 1743  Joanna  Dyer. 
Couley,  John,  Sn.  Gabriel  &  Christianna  bom  July  11, 1742  bapt. 

Aug.  8, 1742,  by  Do. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  49 

Crossby,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Anne  bom  June  2,  1741,  bapt. 

Aug.  16, 1741,  by  Do. 
Crosskejrs,  Anne,  spm:  married  by  Do.  Jan.  1,  1731,  John  Hogg. 
Crotly,  Mary,  Da.  Thomas  &  Jane,  of  Ireland,  bom  Oct.  1738 

bur:  by  Dp.  7  Nov.  1742. 
Crafimore,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Margaret;  bom  Aug.  13, 

1735  b^t.  Oct.  28, 1735  by  Do. 
Cupit,  Joseph,  a  soldier  bur:  by  Do.  May  14, 1733. 
Cox,  Frances  wid:  from  Georgia  married  by  Do.  June  1,  1734 

Lieut:  James  Watt,  wid'r. 
Cole,  Susanna,  wid:  to  Paul;  married  by  Jones  Jan.  6,  1740  John 

Wells  w'r. 
Campbell,  Anne,  Da.  Hugh  &  Catherine  bom  May  17, 1745. 
Campbell,  Catherine  Da.  Do.  bom  Sept:  29, 1750. 
Chaplin,  Sarah,  spin:  Da.  John  &  Phebe  married  by  Peasely 

Oct.  1, 1751  William  Field,  bach. 
Chaplin,  Benjamin,  bach:  Sn.  of  Do.  married  by  Do.  Oct.  1, 1751, 

Sarah  Ladson,  spin. 
Capers,  Elizabeth,  spin:  Da.  of  Thomas,  married  Edmimd  Ellis, 

Bach. 
Conyers,  John,  a  taylor,  of  Ireland,  married  Anne  Stone,  wid. 

Conyers,  Anne,  wife  to  John . 

Chaplin,  John,  father  to  Mary  Ann  Chaplin,  buried  on  St.  Helena, 

5  Jan  1752,  69J  years. 
Capers,  Hannah,  wid:  to  Josp.  Ellicott  Capers,  married  Mid- 

dleton  Evans,  bach. 
Cowen,  John,  father  to  Sarah,  of  St.  Helena,  bur:  on  St.  Helena 

5  July  1752. 
Cox,  John  of  Char'sTown,  I[relandl  married  by  Peasely,  27  Aug, 

1752  Mary  Dick,  spin.' 
Christy,  Hugh,  of  Prince  Wm.  Parish  married  by  Do.  Oct.  12, 

1752  Elizabeth  Nichols,  spin. 
Campbell,  Mary  Ann,  Da.  Hugh  &  Catherine,  bom  Oct.  16,  1752 

bapt.  Apr.  8,  1753  by  Peasely,  Mary  Wigg,  Marsh:  Ddegall, 

Revd.  Mr.  Peasely  Sureties. 
Clark,  George,  married  by  Do.  Apr.  9, 1752  Sophia  Edwards  spin. 

St.  Helena. 
Cuthbert,  George,  S[cotland],  married  by  Do.  Feb.  3, 1754,  Mary 

Grimball  spin. 


50  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Campbell,  Sarah,  spin:  Da.  John  & from  CharsTown  bur: 

23  June  1754  aged  19  yrs. 
Chaplm,  Eliz:  Da.  Wiliiiun  &  Sarah,  bom  Apr.  15,  1751  bi^t. 

Sept.  1, 1754  by  Peasely. 
Chaplin,  Sarah,  Da.  Do.  bom  Jan  31,  1753  bapt.  Sept.  1,  1754 

by  Do. 
Capers,  Richard,  father  to  Anne  Capers,  of  St.  Helena;  bur'd 

20  Oct.  1754  aged  74  years. 
Chaplin,  Sarah,  wife  to  Boijamin  of  St.  Helena;  bur.  at  St.  Helena 

1  Feb.  1755. 
Conyers,  William,  Father  to  Thomas  Conyers  bur:  8  Feb.  1755. 
Cox,  Thomas,  bach.  Mariner,  married  Mar.  8,  1755  to  Eliza- 
beth Clark  spin. 
Clark,  Eliz:  Daughter  in  law  to  Cookson,  a  Cooper  from  Ogle- 
thorpe's Reg'mt  Georgia  married  Do.  Thomas  Cox  mariner. 
Clark,  Joseph  George,  Sn.  George  &  Sophia  bom  Oct.  28,  1754 

bapt.  June  4, 1755  by  Peasely. 
Cook,  Mary,  Da.  Laurence  &  Rose  bom  Dec.  6,  1754. 
Chaplin,  Sarah  Toomer,  Da.  Benjamin  &  Sarah  bom  Jan.  23, 

1755;  bapt.  Feb.  17,  1756  by  Rev'd  Belcher. 
Capers,  Charles,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Mary  married  by  Peasely  Nov:  13, 

1755  Anne  Thomson,  spin. 
Chaplin,  John,  Sn.  Benj.  &  Sarah,  bom  Apr.  25,  1753  bapt.  Feb. 

17,  1756  by  Rev'd  Belcher. 
Chaplin,  Benj.  wid'r  bapt.  Feb.  24,  1756;  married  Jan:  29,  1756 

by  Belcher,  an  Assumptin  by  a  License  directed  to  Mr.  Peasely, 

to  Eleanor  Reynolds,  spin. 
Campbell,  Charles  Sn.  Hugh  &  Catherine  bom  June  2d.  1755. 
Cole,  John  Sn.  John  &  Anne  bom  Oct  17, 1756  bapt.  Mar  18, 1756 

by  Peasely. 
Cundall,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Thomas  &  Elizabeth  bom  Dec.  15, 1753; 

bur  20  Oct.  1755. 
Cattell,  John,  Sn.  John  & mar'd  by  Peasely  Sept.  7,  1755 

Eliz:  Wigg.;  bur:  12  Apr:  1758. 
Conyers,  Elizabeth,  wid:  of  John  mar'd  by  Do.  Apr'l  20,  1756 

John  Swain. 
Chaplin,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Phebe  bapt.  Feb.  24,  1756  by  Jno: 

Belcher,  mar'd  Nov.  2,  1758,  Elizabeth  Ladson,  w'd  of  B. 

Ladson. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  51 

V  Chaplin,  Jno:  Saxby,  Sn.  William  &  Sarah,  bapt.  Feb.  1,  1756 
by  Do.  bur:  Oct.  1756. 
Carlisle,  2^chariah,  from  Ponpon  bur:  21  Dec.  1755. 
Cowen,  John,  bach.  Sn.  John  &  Sarah  married  by  Peasdy  Jxme  12, 

1756  to  Jane  Cuddy,  spin. 

Cuddy,  Jane,  spinster  of  St.  Helena,  married  by  Do.  June  12, 

1756,  John  Cowen. 
Cox,  Sarah,  Da.  Thomas  &  Eliz:  of  Beaufort,  bom  July  17,  1756 

bapt.  Aug.  29, 1756  by  Do. 
Capers,  Constance,  Da.  Charles  &  Anne,  St.  Helena,  bom  Aug.  15, 

1756,  bapt.  Oct.  3, 1756  by  Lewis  of  Pr.  Wm.  Parish. 
Carlisle,  Anne,  Adult,  Da.  2^chariah  bapt.  by  Do.  Mar.  26, 1757. 
Cundall,  Thomas,  Ewhaus,  bur:  1753. 
Cimdall,  Eliz:  wid.  of  Thomas  Ewhaus  bur:  1753. 
Cook,  John,  Carpenter,  mar'd  by  Pelot,  d[issenter]  May  11,  1757 

Hannah  Powell,  wid. 

Cook, Da.  Laurence  &  Rose . 

Chaplin,  Anne,  Da.  William  &  Sarah,  St.  Helena,  bom  April  23d. 

1757  bapt.  Sept.  4, 1757  by  Lewis. 

Campbell,  Edward,  Sn.  Hugh  &  Catherine  bom  June  13,  1757 

bapt,  July  4, 1757,  by  Lewis. 
Cowen,  Margt.  Da.  John  &  Jane  bom  Feb.  18, 1757,  bapt.  Feb.  20 

1757  by  Lewis. 
Clerk,  Sophia,  wid:  to  George,  St.  Helena,  married,  Dec.  5, 1756 

Henry  Toomer. 
Cuthbert,  James,  of  Prince  Williams  Parish  Son  of  John  Cuthbert 

of  CastlehuU  &  Jane  Hay,  Invemess,  N.  Britain,  bom  Dec. 

1716  married  by  A.  Baron  Feb.  24, 1758,  Mary  Wigg,  Wid. 
Curry,  Peter,  a  Soldier  in  Capt.  John  Stuarts  Prov.  Comp'y. 
Curry,  Jacob,  Sn.  of  Peter  &  Mary,  bom  Mar.  23,  1758  Bapt. 

July  2d.  1758,  by  A.  Baron. 
Calvin,  John,  of  Pr.  William  Parish  married  by  Do.  June  11, 1758 

Mary  Dossette,  spin;  Acadian. 
Cole,  Susanna,  Da.  John  &  Anne  bapt.  June  10,  1759  by  Do. 

Nath  Green  &  wife  sureties. 
Chaplin,  Phebe,  Da.  Benj.  &  Eleanor  bapt.  June  10,  1759  by  Do. 
Cattell  Elizabeth  wid.  to  John,  married  by  Do.  Oct.  12,  1758, 

John  Heyward,  Bach. 
Chaplin,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth  bom  July  29,  bapt.  Sept.  2, 

1759  by  Do. 


52  so.  CA.  mSTOBICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Cochran,  James,  private  in  Ci^t.  Stuart's  Company  of  Provincials 

bur.  8  Aug.  1759. 
Collins,  Mary,  Da.  Jeremiah  &  Mary  bom  Jan.  16,  1759  bi^t. 

Feb.  7,  1759  by  Do.  Serjeant  in  Capt.  Stuarts  Comp'y  bur, 

Feb.  14, 1759. 
Con3rers,  Richard,  Son  Richard  &  Sarah  bom  Nov.  14, 1759  bapt. 

Apr.  15, 1760  by  Cooper.    Parents,  St.  Helena,  sureties. 
Connor,  Roger,  A  soldier  in  Ci^t.  Stuart's  Co.  bur.  29  May  1759. 
Cuthbert,  James  Hazzard,  Sn.  James  &  Mary,  bom  Aug.  27, 1762; 

mar.  5  May  1784  Sarah  Barnwell. 
Crookshanks,  David,  mar:  by  Rev.  Mr.  Green  Dec.  22,  1762, 

Elizabeth  Florishton. 
Campbell,  Archebel,  Da.  [sic]  to  William  &  Mary,  St.  H.  married 

by  Rev'd  Green  Jan  26, 1763,  Jane  Orr. 
Charls,  Noulson,  bach,  soldier  of  Beaufort,  St.  Helena  married  by 

Rev.  Green  Jan.  29, 1763,  Sarah  Lowary. 
Chaplin,  William,  bach,  mar:  by  Green  Feb.  5,  1763,  Martha 

Fripp. 
Capers, bach,  married  by  Green  April  28,  1763,  Susannah 

Morgan. 
Cook,  Margaret,  Da.  John  &  Hannah  bom  Oct.  29,  1763  bapL 

by  Green  Apr.  7,  1764  married  by  Lewis  28  Apr.  1785  James 

Scantlin,  bach. 
Celle,  Ather,  from  Georgia,  bur:  Sept.  25, 1763.    Soldier. 
Cook,  Ann  Elizab'h,  Da.  Larance  &  Rose  Mary  bom  Sept.  6, 

1763  bapt.  Mar.  4, 1764. 
Chaplin,  Thomas,  Sn.  William  &  Martha  bom  March  21,  1764 

bapt.  May  27,  1764,  by  Rev.  Green. 
Cole,  Paul,  Sn.  John  &  Ann,  Indian  Land  bom  Sept.  13,  1763 

bapt.  July  6, 1764  by  Do. 

Cowen,  Thomas,  married  by  Green, Dicks,  spin. 

Colar,  Andrew,  married  by  Do.  Ann  Bealer,  spin. 
Cuthbert,  George,  Sn.  James  &  Mary  bur:  13  Mar.  1765. 
Chaplin,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Jan:  10, 1768, 

bapt.  Jxme  5,  1768  by  Rev.  Cosgrave. 
Chaplin,  Wm.  Fripp,  Sn.  of  Wm.  &  Martha,  bom  Nov.  23,  1767, 

bapt.  June  5,  1768,  by  Do. 
Chaplin,  Wm.  Pitt,  Sn.  of  Benj.  &  Ellmor,  bom  20  June  1766, 

bapt.  June  26,  176-  by  Do. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  53 

Campbell,  William,  Sn.  Arch'd  &  Jane  bom  17  Jan'y  1764  Do. 
Clemmons,  Thomas,  W'r  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Streaker  15  Sept. 

1769  Elizabeth  Baily. 
Capers,  Joseph,  Sn.  Richard  &  Eliz:  Rachel,  bom  18  Aug.  1770 

bapt.  Dec.  9,  1770  by  Rev.  Mr.  Peirce. 
Capers,  Ann,  Da.  Charles  &  Ann,  bom  Nov.  23, 1770  bapt.  Jan.  27, 

1771  by  Do. 
Chaplin,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Martha,  bom  25  Oct.  1770, 

bapt.  Jan:  27, 1771,  by  Do. 
Cuthbert,  Jean  Hay,  Da.  of  James  &  Mary,  bom  21  Dec.  1758, 

bapt.  Jan:  1,  1759  by  Rev.  Mr.  Arch'd  Simpson,  Ind.  Land. 
Cuthbert,  John  Alex.  Sn.  of  James  &  Mary,  bom  12  Oct.  1760, 

bapt.  Oct.  20,  1760,  by  Do. 
Catterton,  Mark,  Sn.  of  William  &  Hannah,  bom  20  Oct.  1771. 

Rev.  Ellington. 
Catterton,  WilUam  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  8  Jime  1774,  bapt.  10  Nov. 

1774  by  Rev.  Moreau.    la:  Peart  surety. 
Cuddy,  Robert,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  Port  Royall,  bom  14  Oct. 

1769.    Rev.  Pearce. 
Cuddy,  John  Sn.  of  John  &  Eliz*h.  Port  Royal,  bom  14  Mar.  1774. 
Cuddy,  Ann,  Da.  John  &  Eliz.  bom  3  Dec.  1776,  bapt.  4  May, 

1777  Rev.  Graham. 
Campbell,  Archibald,  Dr.  of  State  of  New  Jersey  bora  25  Oct. 

1758  married  by  Graham  14  Dec.  1780  Phoebe  Sarah  Bamwell. 
Campbell,  Archibald,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Arch.  &  Phebe,  bom  24  Jan. 

1782  mar.  by  Stuart  24  Oct.  1—6  Sarah  B.  Crawford. 
Campbell,  John  Bamwell,  Sn.  Arch.  &  Phoebe  Sarah,  bom  1  Aug. 

1784  bapt.  31  Dec.  1784  by  Lewis,  married  by  Dr.  Percy 

21  Nov.  1811  Catherine  Anna  Percy. 
Capers,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Charles  &  Ann,  St.  Helena  married  by 

Lewis  Feb.  24,  1785  Thomas  Ladson. 
Capers,  Charles,  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Rachel,  Hilton  Head;  bapt. 

Jan.  7,  1785  by  Lewis,  Parents  sureties. 
Cimninghan,  Harriot,  Da.  of  Martha,  bapt.  17  Apr.  1785  by 

Lewis  private. 
Campbell,  Charles,  from  State  of  New  Jersey  buried  by  Do. 

8  Nov.  1785. 
John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  May  River,  bom  7  Feb.  1782 

bapt.  7  Dec. by  Do.  private. 


54  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

(Capers,  Sarah]  married  by  Do.  29  Jan.  1786,  Daniel  John  Greene. 
Clark,  Archibald  Campbell,  from  Scotland,  married  by  Lewis 

14  Mar.  1786  Susannah  Sutter,  wid.  bur:  1788. 
Cuthbert,  James  Hazzard,  d  James  &  Sarah,  bom  24  Jan.  1785, 

bapt.  7  June  1786  by  Do. 
Campbell,  Collin,  Sn.  d  Archibald  &  Phebe  Sarah,  bom  5  Aug. 

1786  bapt.  22  Oct.  1786  by  Do. 
Cross,  Charles  John  Carr,  d  John  &  Hannah,  bom  22  Sept.  1785 

Bapt.  8  April  1787  by  Do. 
Cross,  James  William  Mongin,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Do.  bapt.  Do. 

(twin]  bur:  4  July  1789,  Putrid  sore  th'rt. 
Cuthbert,  Mary,  Of  James  Hazzard  &  Sarah,  bom  24  Feb.  1787, 

bapt.  30  Sept  1787  by  Do.    Bur:  20  August  1789  Worms. 
Clark,  Sarah  Rosamond,  of  Archibald  &  Susannah,  bom  22  Feb. 

1788  bapt.  7  May,  1788  by  Do. 
Crawford,  Christiana,  Spm.  Da.  of  David  &  Catherine,  mar: 

29  June  1780,  Thomas  Talbird,  Bach. 
Cross,  Mary,  of  John  &  Hannah,  bur:  by  Graham  14  July  1789 

Putrid  sore . 

Culbertson,  Sarah,  of  John  &  Penelope,  bom  Apr:  1783  [erased]. 
Culbertson,  Elizabeth  Ann,  of  John  &  Penelope,  bom  5  May  1789, 

bapt.  by  Lewis,  7  Feb.  1790. 
Campbell,  Mary  Martha,  of  Archibald  &  Phebe  Sarah,  bom 

1  Dec.  1789  bapt.  by  Do.  17  June  1790  married  by  Campbell 

14  Dec.  1809  James  Stuart. 
Cuthbert,  John  Alexander,  of  James  &  Sarah  bom  3  Feb.  1790 

bapt.  23  Aug.  1790  by  Campbell,  married  by  same  15  Dec: 

1811,  Mary  Williamson. 
Cross,  John,  of  John  &  Hannah,  bom  2  May  1779. 

Cuthbert,  Anne,  Da.  of  James  & bapt.  10  Feb.  1805  by  Hicks. 

Capers,  Charles,  married  by  Hicks,  12  Mar.  1808  Mary  Capers. 
Cuthbert,  Robert  Bamwell,  of  James  H.  &  Sarah  bom  8  May,  1791. 
Campbell,  Phebe  Sarah,  Da.  John  Bamwell  &  Catherine  Amarin- 

thia  bom  1  Mar.  1813  bapt.  9  May  1813  by  Percy,  Parents  & 

Mary  Martha  Stuart  sureties. 
Cuthbert,  Sarah  Bamwell,  of  John  &  Mary  bapt.  Jime  2, 1813. 
Cuthbert,  Wm.  Henry,  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Jan.  3,  1814  bapt. 

June  29, 1814  by  Campbell  parents,  sureties. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  55 

Campbell,  Catherine  Elliott,  of  John  BamweU,  &  Catherine 

Amarinthia,  bom  July  11,  1814,  bapt.  Sept.  11,  1814,  by 

Hanckel,  parents  &  Charlotte  Bull  sureties,  bur:  June  15, 1815. 
Campbell,  Archibald  Chaplin,  Sn.  of  Archibald  &  Sarah,  bom 

Aug.  1814  bapt.  Sept.  11, 1814  by  Do.  Parents  &  J.  B.  Camp- 

bell  sur'ts. 
Cuthbert,  Mary  Porcher,  Da.  John  &  Mary,  bom  Mar.  11,  1815, 

bapt.  Jime  28,  1816  Parents  sur'ts. 
Campbell,  John  Bamwell,  of  John  &  Catherine,  bom  Aug.  9, 

1815,  bapt.  1815  Colin  Campbell  &  Sophia  Guerard  sur'ts. 
Cuthbert,  Sarah  Bamwell,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Nov.  12, 

1816  bapt.  May,  1818  Mrs.  Thos.  Deveaux  &  Mrs.  Cuthbert 

sur'ts. 
Cuthbert,  Ann,  D.  of  Edward  &  Louisa  Eliz:  bom  Oct.  7,  1822, 

bapt.  8  Nov.  1822  by  Hanckel. 
Cuthbert,  Alice  Louisa  Screven,  Da.  Do.  Do.  Do.  Do.  Do.  twins. 

Mrs.  Ann  Cuthbert  &  Father  Dr.  Jac'b  D.  Guerard  &  Miss 

Eliz'th  Guerard  sureties. 

Dalzil,  Anne,  Da.  John  &  Hannah,  bom  Jime  17,  1736  bapt. 

Dec.  16, 1739  by  Jones. 
Dalzil,  Judith,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  22,  1740,  bq>t.  Jan.  10, 

1741,  by  Do. 
Dalton,  Elizabeth,  Wife  to  William,  buried  by  Do.  11  Nov.  1728, 
Dalton,  William,  wid'r  married  by  Do.  Mar.  13,  1728  Mary 

Miller  spin. 
Daly,  Jane,  spin,  married  by  Do.  May  27,  1739,  Philip  Delegall 

Junr.  Lieut. 
Davis,  Frederick,  Sn.  William  &  Martha,  bom  Jan:  13,  1738, 

bapt.  Jan.  17, 1738,  by  Do. 
Davis,  Francis,  Sn.  Edward  &  Sarah,  bom  Aug.  3,  1740  Bapt. 

Sept.  7,  1740  by  Do. 
Dawson,  Christopher,  Sn.  Richard,  bom  Jan:  26,  1724,  bapt. 

Feb:  13,  1725  by  Standish,  Father  surety:  bur:  4  Feb.  1727, 
Dawson,  Lavinia,  married  by  Jones  Mar.  31, 1728  William  Lavis. 
Daniel,  Marg't,  spm:  married  by  Do.  Feb:  11,  1742  Mark  Hird, 

bach. 
Delebere,  George,  Sn.  of  John  &  Jane,  bom  Aug:  28,  1733,  bapt. 

Sept.  28,  1733,  by  Do. 


56  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Ddebere,  John  Kinard,  Son  of  Do.  bom  Feb:  6,  1736,  bapt. 

Mar.  20y  1736,  by  Do.  married  by  Baron,  Anne  Flemming, 

spin. 
Delebere,  Sarah,  Da.  Do.  married  Edward  Morris,  bach. 
Delebere,  Mary,  Da.  Do.  bom  Jan:  28, 1728,  bapt.  Mar.  14, 1728 

by  Jones. 
Delebere,  Anne,  Da.  Do.  bur:  by  Peasely  11  Apr.  1753. 
Ddebere,  Jane,  wife  to  John,  bur.  by  Jones,  30  Apr.  1737. 
Ddegall,  Philip  Junr.  Lieut,  (sic)  Sn.  of  Philip  Lieut  &  Elenor 

married  by  Do.  May  27, 1739,  Jane  Daly,  spin. 
Ddegall,  Catherine,  Da.  Philip  &  Jane,  bom  27  Oct.  1741,  bapL 

June  24, 1742. 
Ddegall,  Marseil  Marg't,  spm.  Da.  Philip  &  Elenor,  bom  Mar:  5, 

1727  bapt:  Oct.  20, 1728  by  Dyson;  mar:  by  Peasdy  May  13, 

1753,  William  Edm,  widV. 
Ddegall,  Catherine,  Da.  Do.  married  by  Jones,  May  3,  1747, 

Hugh  Campbell. 
Ddegall,  Sophia,  Da.  Do.  bom  Dec.  15, 1733,  bapt.  May  1, 1734, 

by  Jones. 
Dclegaye,  John,  bach,  from  France,  mar:  by  Do.  Apr.  17,  1737 

Catherine  Gaudie,  spin. 
Dean,  Elizabeth,  Da.  James  &  Elenor,  fr.  Georgia,  bapt.  9  Mar. 

1741  by  Do. 

Deveaux,  Jno.  Palmer,  Sn.  Andrew  &  Hannah,  Ind.  Land  bom 

10  Nov.  1736,  bapt.  June  8, 1737  by  Do. 
Deveaux,  Lucy,  Da.  James  &  Anne,  Ind.  Land,  bom  Apr.  15, 1737. 

Bapt.  Nov.  11, 1737  by  Do.  dy'd  in  Georgia,  1757. 
Deveaux,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Do.  bom  Jan.  14,  1738,  bapt  Apr.  8, 

1739  by  Do. 

Deveaux,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  28,  1740,  bapt.  Feb.  8, 

1740  by  Do. 

Deveaux,  Anne  Eliz  Da.  Do.  bom  Feb.  1,  1742  bapt.  Mar.  6, 

1742  by  Do. 

Deveaux,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Sarah,  Ind.  Land,  bom  Dec.  23, 1739, 

bapt.  June  2,  1740,  by  Do. 
Debore,  Mary,  buried  by  Do.  13  Aug.  1733. 
Delebere,  John,  father  to  George  Delebere,  bur:  by  Jones,  9  Mch: 

1738. 
Dixsey,  James,  bach,  married  by  Jones  June  15,  1740,  Hannah 

Wannd,  wid. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  57 

Dixsey,  James,  Sn.  of  James  &  Haimah,  bom  Aug.  20, 1740  bapt. 

Nov.  27,  1740  Do. 
Dixsey,  Sarah,  Da.  Do.  bom  Aug.  10,  1742,  bapt.  Sept.  20, 1742 

by  Do. 
Dixsey,  Rachel,  Da.  Do.  bur:  28  Aug.  1749. 
Dohearty,  James,  natiural  Son  of  James  Dr:  &  Mary  Ann,  bom 

June  19,  1743,  bapt.  Sept.  27,  1742  by  Do. 
Drake,  Elizabeth,  spin,  married  by  Do.  June  15,  1738,  James 

Scott,  w'r. 
Dnunmond,  Mary,  wife  to Dnunmond  aged  21  yr.  bapt.  by 

Jones  May  10  1727,  Andrew  Hogg  surety. 
Dunford,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Joseph,  bapt.  by  Do.  Nov.  26,  1727 

James,  Margt.  &  Ann  Watt  sureties. 
Dunlap,  Elizabeth,  wid.  to  James,  married  by  Do.  Sept.  8,  1739, 

Andrew  Bell,  Bach. 
Ddegall,  Edward,  Sn.  Philip  Senr.  &  Elinor,  bapt.  Aug.  7,  1731 

by  Do. 
Dyer,  Joanna,  married  Mar.  28, 1743  Thomas  Cross,  w'r. 
Delegall,  Elenor  Clement,  Da.  Philip  &  Jane,  bom  Dec.  15, 1750, 

bapt.  Aug.  30, 1751  by  Peasely. 
Dougk^s,  Mary,  Da.  George  &  Margt.  married  by  Do.  Jan.  27, 

1752  George  Bland,  Bach. 
Douglass,  Jane,  Da.  Do.  married  by  Garden,  CharlesTown,  July  4, 

1750,  Patrick  Hinds,  wid'r. 
Dunlap,  Abraham,  Sn.  James  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Dec.  27,  1724 

bapt.  by  Orr,  Dpssenter]  bur:  25  Jan.  1748. 
Dunlap,  Alex'dr,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  26, 1728  bapt.  by  Do.  mar- 
ried in  Georgia,  Nov.  10,  1754,  Sarah  Fleming,  spin,  of 

W.  Indies. 
Dimlap,  James,  Father  to  Abraham,  bur:  by  Jones,  25  Dec.  1737. 
Davis,  William,  bach,  from  London,  married  by  Jones  Jime  16, 

1745,  Martha  Watson,  spin. 

Davis,  Will'm  Durrett,  Sn.  of  William  &  Martha,  bom  Oct.  1, 

1746,  bapt.  by  Whitfield  Wm.  Davis,  Eliz:  Harvey  &  Ann 
Hardwick  sureties,  bur.  21,  Oct.  1749. 

Davis,  Mary,  Da.  do.  bom  Dec.  18,  1750,  bapt.  by  Chiffelly, 

parents  sureties. 
Deval,  Eliz:  wid.  to  James,  bur.  by  Peasely  Plant'n  1  July  1752. 
Dicks,  Ebenezer,  married  Margaret  Orr,  spin. 


58  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Dicks,  Margt.  Da.  Ebenezer  &  IsebeUa,  txHrn  May  3,  1731,  see 

Hussey  (She  md.  Jno.  Hussey]. 
Dicks,  Eliz:  Da.  Do.  bom  Jan.  17, 1733,  mar:  by  Peasdy  SepL  18, 

17S3  James  Orr. 
Dicks,  Mary,  Da.  Do.  bom  Apr:  5,  1735,  mar:  by  Do.  Aug.  27, 

1752,  John  Cox. 
Dicks,  Ebenezer,  Sn.  Ebenezer  &  Margaret,  bom  Nov:  1, 1740. 
Dicks,  Mary,  Da.  Do.  bom  Sept.  6, 1742. 
Dicks,  Susanna,  Da.  Do.  bom  Apr:  6, 1747. 
Dicks,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  July  12, 1749. 
Davidson,  Martha,  wid:  from  Frederico  of  E[ngland]  mar:  by 

Peasely  Aug.  30, 1752  Daniel  Parker  bach. 
Davis,  Edward,  bach:  [of]  E[ngland]  married  by  Do.  Nov.  9, 

1752,  Margaret  Hatcher,  spin. 
Delegall,  Margaret,  spin.  Da.  Philip  &  Elenor  [all]. 
Davis,  Jeremiah  Jam's,  Sn.  William  &  Martha,  bom  May  22, 

1752  bapt.  May  23,  1753  by  Peasely;  bur:  Nov.  21,  1752 

aged  6  mo.    Epi — . 
Davis,  Elizabeth,  spin.,  da.  Sam'l  &  Rebecca,  Pr.  Will'ms  Parish, 

bom  Feb.  18,  1734,  bapt.  Aug.  16,  1753  by  Peasely,  Henry 

Jackson  &  Sarah  Heape  sureties,  mar:  Aug.  16,  1753,  Hen: 

Jackson,  Pr.  Wm.  Par: 
Davis,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  June  7,  1739,  bapt.  Aug.  16,  1753 

by  Do.  Hen:  Jackson,  Sar:  &  Benj:  Heape  suretie. 
Davis,  Eliz:  Tyrril,  Da.  John  &  Catherine  of  ChasTown  aged 

11  yr.  bapt.  Nov.  13,  1753  by  Do.  Rev.  Wm.  Peasely,  Mrs. 

Lousserre  &  Mrs.  Mary  Henderson,  sureties. 
Deveaux,  Sn.  of  James  &  Anne,  bom  Aug.  16, 1734. 
Daly,  Joseph,  Sn.  John  &  Judith,  bur:  23  April  1754  aged  27  yr. 

Pleuri — . 
Daly,  Mary,  spin.  Da*  John  & Mar:  by  Robt.  Orr,  d[issenter] 

June  13, 1738,  Henry  Orr,  Bach. 
Daly,  Daniel,  Sn. Ewhaws,  bur:  in  Ch.  Yard,  27  Dec.  1754 

agd.  41  yr. 
David,  Abraham,  Carpenter,  St.  Helena,  married  Mary  Anne 

Williams. 
David,  Abraham,  Sn.  Abraham  &  Mary  Anne,  bom  Dec.  31, 1754. 
David,  Mary  Anne,  wf.  to  Abraham,  bur:  Mar.  12, 1755. 
Davis,  Margaret,  Da.  William  &  Martha  bom  Mar.  18,  1755 

bapt.  April  5,  1755  by  Peasely,  bur:  Aug.  1759. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PASISH  REGISTER  59 

David,  Abraham,  mar:  by  Do.  Feb.  19,  1756,  Elizabeth  Guy. 
Dowdee,  Richard,  pumpmaker,  mar:  by  Do.  Aprl.  11, 1756  Judith 

Russ,  w'd. 
Dunlap,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Alex.  &  Sarah  bom  Nov.  16,  1755,  bapt. 

Dec.  30, 1755  by  Do. 
Dean,  Nathaniel,  liv'd  with  Dr.  Thomson  bur:  Ch.  Yd.  7  Oct. 

1756  agd.  16  yr.  Fl— . 
Dorong,  John,  fr.  Nova  Scotia,  Fr.  Neutral,  bur.  at  Planta'n  1756. 
Deveaux,  Andw.  Jr.  bach.  Sn.  Andrew  &  Hannah,  P.  Will.  P. 

mar:  by  Lewis  Mar.  24,  1757,  Cath:  Barnwell,  da:  Jno.  & 

Martha. 
Dale,  Richard,  a  weaver,  E[ngland]  bur:  17  Dec:  1757,  agd. 

abt.  84. 
Deveaux,  Andrew,  Sn.  Andrew  &  Catharine,  bom  April  30,  1758, 

bapt.  July  2,  1758  by  A.  Baron;  John  Bamwell,  John  Chap- 
man &  Miss  Mary  Mullryne,  sureties. 
Dossett,  Mary,  Fr.  Acadian  mar:  by  Baron  June  11,  1758,  John 

Calvin. 
David,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Abraham  &  Eliz:  bur:  26  Dec.  1759. 
Davis,  Martha,  wife  to  William,  bur:  Ch:  Yard  20  May  1758. 
Deveaux,  Martha,  Da.  Andw.  &  Cath.  bom  Sept.  9,  1763. 
Deveaux,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  1, 1769  bapt.  Augt.  6, 

1769  by  Rev.  Mr.  Streaker. 
Dudley,  John,  Sn.  Benjamin  &  Ann,  bom  23  Feb.  1770  bapt. 

June  7,  1770  by  Rev.  Mr.  Peace. 
Deveant,  James,  Sn.  of  Jas.  &  Lydia,  Port  Royal  bom  14  May 

1770;  bapt.  July  30, 1770  by  Revd.  Mr.  Peace. 
DeSaussure,  Louis,  bach,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Ellington,  Mar.  S, 

1772,  Sarah  Toomer  Chaplin. 
Devant,Isack,  Sn.  Isack  &  Tabitha,  on  HiltonHead,  bom  19  Nov. 

1772,  bapt.  May  18,  1772  by  Ellmgton. 
Didier,  Benj:  Wilson,  widower,  Sn.  of  Benj.  Didier,  Attomey  at 

Law,  Canterbury  in  Kent,  England,  bom  1727,  mar:  by 

Rev.  Mr.  Graham,  18  July  1778  Hannah  Cook,  wid. 
Deveaux,  Hannah,  spin'r,  Da.  of  Andrew  &  Catharine,  mar:  by 

Lewis  14  July  1785  Samuel  Ash. 
Dalton,  Hannah  Periclear,  of  James  &  Hannah  bom  Dec.  23, 

1785  bapt.  16  June  1786  by  do. 

Deveaux,  Ann,  spin.  Da.  of  William  & mar:  by  Do.  8  Aug. 

1786  James  Brown,  M.D. 


60  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Deveaux,  Caroline,  of  Jacob  &  Elizabeth  bom  8  Sept.  1789  b£q>t. 

17  June  1791,  by  Do. 
Detreville,  John,  of  John  L.  &  Sarah,  bapt.  5  Nov.  1791,  by  Tate. 

Edee,  Ann,  Da.  William  &  Amy,  bom  Feb:  23, 1737,  bapt.  July  30,' 

1737  by  Jones. 
Edee,  Amey,  wid.  to  William,  mar:  by  Do.  Mar.  9,  1739,  William 

Ellis,  bach. 
Edgar,  William,  a  Surgeon,  bur:  by  Do.  31  Oct.  1727. 
Ellis,  Edmund,  bach.  Sn.  of  Edmund  &  Anne,  bom  Aug.  26, 1724, 

bapt.  Feb.  13,  1725  by  Standish,  Father,  surety;  mar:  Eliza- 
beth Capers,  spin. 
Ellis,  Margaret,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct  10, 1727,  bapt  Nov.  19, 

1727  by  Dyson,  Rev.  Lewis  Jones,  Ann  &  Morgan  Watt 

sureties,  married  by  Jones,  Sept.  6,  1744,  Nathaniel  Adams, 

wid'd. 
Ellis,  John,  S.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  29,  1729,  bapt.  Nov.  29,  1730 

by  Do.  mar:  by  Peasely,  Sept.  2,  1752  Elizabeth  Reynolds, 

Spin. 
Ellis,  Edmimd,  father  to  Edmund,  bur:  by  Do.  29  Aug.  1734. 
Ellis,  Anne,  mother  to  Edmund,  bur.  by  Do.  31  Mar.  1738. 
Ellis,  Thomas,  Sn.  Morgan  &  Rachel,  bapt.  Feb.  13,  1725  by 

Standish,  father  surety;  bur:  17  Nov.  1726. 
Ellis,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom,  Aug.  7,  1726,  bapt  Sept.  4, 

1726  by  Jones,  Father  surety. 
Ellis,  Thomas,  Sn.  Do.  bom  Feb  26,  1727,  bapt  Sept  14,  1736 

by  Do. 
Ellis,  William,  bach,  mar:  by  Do.  Mar.  9,  1739,  Amey  Edee,  wid. 
Elliott,  Charles,  mar:  by  Do.  Jan:  11, 1729,  Anne  Vin)rard. 
Elliott,  Aquilla,  Sn.  Charles  &  Anne,  bapt.  Jan:  11,  1729,  by  Do. 
Elizabeth,  a  Dutch  servant  to  Edw.  Bush,  bur:  1  Mar:  1745. 
Evans,  Mar  Ann,  Da.  Rowland  &  Margaret,  bom  July  26, 1730, 

bapt.  July  26,  1730;  by  Jones,  bur:  26  July  1730. 
Evans,  Margaret,  wid:  to  Rowland  &  Sister  to  Col.  Jno.  Palmer, 

mar:  by  Quinsey  Sept.  11, 1733,  Rev.  Lewis  Jones,  bach. 
Evans,  Rowland,  bur:  by  Jones  7  Mar:  1732. 
Evans,  Sarah,  wid.  bur.  by  Do.  16  Jan:  1739. 
Evans,  William,  bur:  by  Do.  Jan:  1739. 
Evans,  John,  Sn.  to  Randolph  &  Sarah,  mar:  by  Do.  Apr:  30, 

1741,  Sarah  Chaplin  Spin;  bur:  5  Jan.  1768. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  61 

Evans,  Elizabeth,  wife  to  John,  bapt.  July  6,  1741,  by  Do. 
Ellis,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Edmund  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Aug:  28,  1750, 

bapt.  Nov.  14,  1751  by  Peasely. 
Evans,  Elizabeth,  W.  to  a  soldier  from  Georgia  bur:  by  Do.  1  July 

1751.    Suddenly. 
Edwards,  Digby,  mariner,  Sn.  Isaac  fr.  W.  Indies,  married  by 

Chiffelly  Feb.  14, 1751,  Martha  Fendki. 
Evans,  Middleton,  fr.  James  Island,  married  Hannah  Capers  wid. 
Evans,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Jan.  24,  1748,  bapt. 

Feb.l9, 1748  by  St.  John  mar:  by  Rev.  Evans  Nov.  27,  1766, 

Sarah  Fripp,  spin.  Da.  to  John.    Died  in  Philadelphia. 
Evans,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  31,  1752,  bapt.  Nov:  9, 

1752  by  Peasely;  bur.  14  Nov.  1752,  St.  Helena. 
Edwards,  Isaac,  Father  to  Digby  from  W.  Indies,  bur:  24  Jan. 

1753,  agd.  69.    Fever.    St.  Helena. 
Edwards,  Sophia,  spin.  Da.  Isaac  &  Sarah,  fr.  W.  Indies;  mar: 

by  Peasely  April  9,  1753  George  Clark,  bach. 
Edin,  William  wid'r,  Sn.  William  &  Tabitha,  mar:  by  Do.  May  13, 

1753,  Margaret  Delegal,  spin. 
Ellis,  Morgan,  bur:  8  Mar.  1754. 
Edwards,  Isaac  Evans,  Sn.  of  Digby  &  Martha,  bom  Nov.  13, 

1757,  bapt.  Augt.  4, 1754  by  Peasely.    Jno.  Fendin  &  Parents, 

Tho:  Fendin  &  Martha  Edwards  proxy:  for  Isaac  &  Judith 

Evans  of  Island  St.    Crocx. 
Ellis,  Ann,  Da.  Edmund  &  Eliz:  bom  Aug.  28, 1752;  bapt.  July  7, 

1754  by  Do. 
Ellis,  Edmund,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  July  26, 1753,  bapt  July  7, 1754. 
Ellis,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Eliz.  bom  Dec.  1,  1753,  bapt.  July,  1754 

by  Do  bur:  St.  Helena  18  Oct.  1757. 
Elbert,  William,  Ewhaws;  [from]  E[ngland],  bur:  16  Nov.  1754. 

Consump. 
Elliott,  William,  bach,  mar:  by  Do.  April  11,  1756,  Sarah  Mul- 

Tynt,  spin. 
Ellis,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Eliz:  bom  May  11,  1755,  bapt. 

Feb.  1,  1756  by  Jno:  Belcher;  mar:  April,  1784,  Daniel  John 

Greene,  her  2d.  husband,  David  Adams,  first  husband;  she 

was  bur:  25  Man  1785  Inflamation  in  the  Bowels. 
Ellis,  Mary,  Da.  Edmund  &  Eliz:  bom  Jan'y  15,  1755;  bapt. 

Feb.  1, 1756  by  Do. 


62  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Ellis,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Do.  bom,  Sq>t.  3,  1756,  bapt.  Oct.  3,  1756 

by  Lewis  of  Pr.  William  Parish. 
Elliott,  Sarah,  wf.  to  William,  bur:  Ch  Yard  28  Mar:  1757  Child- 
bed aged  20  yrs. 
Edwards,  Jdtm,  Sn.  Digby  &  Martha,  bom  Mar.  21,  1758;  bapt. 

May  28, 1758  by  Hu^ 
Evans,  Elizabeth,  Da.  William  &  Martha,  bom  Augt.  29,  1758, 

bapt.  May  28, 1758  (sic)  by  A.  Baron. 
Ellis,  John,  Sn.  of  Edmund  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Mar:  3,  1757, 

bapt.  July  6, 1758  by  Do. 
Ellis,  Eleanor,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth  bom  April  13, 1758. 
Elliott,  William  wid'r.  Da.  [sic]  Nathaniel  &  Mary*  married  by 

R.  Cooper,  St.  Helena  Parish,  Aug.  6,  1760,  Mary  BamwdL 
Elliott,  William  Jun'r,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary  bom  July  9, 1761, 

bapt.  by  Do.  Beaufort,  Nath.  Barnwell,  Jno.  Mullryne  Esq. 

Mrs.  Claudia  Mulryne  sureties.    Married  28  May,  1787, 

Phoebe  Waight,  bur:  8  May,  1808. 
Elliott,  Ralph  Emms,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  Feb:  7, 1764, 

married  Susannah  Parsons  Savage. 
Emsden,  Wm.  Hazzard,  Sn.  Ambrose  & bom  Jan.  28,  1762, 

bapt.  by  Rev.  J.  Green,  Beaufort,  bur:  13  June  1764. 
Knsden,  Martha,  Da.  Ambrose  & bora  Oct.  21,  1764,  bapt. 

Nov.  27, 1764  by  Rev.  Mr.  Green. 
Elliott,  Nathaniel,  Sn.  William  &  Mary,  not  christened;  bur: 

20  Oct. 
Ellis,  Mary  Ann  Sarah,  Da.  James  &  Martha  bapt.  June  26, 1768 

by  Rev.  Cosgrove. 
Evans,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Sarah,  bom  16  Sept.  1767;  bapt. 

Nov.  27,  1767  by  Rev.  Mr.  Evans  married  by  Rev.  W. 

Graham,  July  4,  1782  Jos.  Jenkins  of  Edisto;  bur.  Oct.  1827 .» 
Evans,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Sarah,  bom  23  Aug.  1768. 
Elliott,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  5  Oct.  1767; 

bapt.  Dec.  21,  by  Rev.  Robt.  Cooper  of  CharlesTown;  died 

17  July  1768. 
Edin,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  George  &  Eliz:  bom  1.  Sept.  1769;  bapt. 

Sept.  1,  1769  bur:  Sept.  1,  1769. 

•  Parents  of  Mary  Barnwell,  not  of  Wm. 

•  Pencil  note  in  original  register. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  63 

Edin,  Joshua,  Sn.  George  &  Elizabeth,  bom  31  Dec.  1770;  bapt 

Mar.  17,  1771  by  Rev.  Mr.  Peirce. 
Elliott,  Stephen,  Sn.  William  &  Mary,  bom  11,  Nov.  1771;  bapt. 

by  Rev.  Mr.  R.  Ellington. 
Ellis,  John  Greene,  of  Richard  &  Elizabeth,  P.  Royal,  bom  20, 

Mar.  1785;  bapt.  17  April  1785  by  Lewis. 
Ellis,  Ann  Sarah,  Da.  of  Edmund  &  Elizabeth,  of  P.  Royal;  bom 

10  Dec.  1784;  bapt.  28  April  1785  by  Do. 
Elliott,  William,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  bom  8  May,  1785, 

bapt:  7  June,  1785  by  Do.  Bur  17  July,  1785. 
Ellis,  James,  an  adult,  bom  5  Feb.  1760  bapt.  10  Aug.  1785  by  Do. 
Ellis,  Margaret,  wife  to  above,  bom  14  Aug.  1761;  bapt.  10  Aug. 

1785  by  Do. 
Ellis,  Elizabeth,  of  James  and  Margaret,  bom  29  Oct.  1783;  bapt. 

22  April  1785  by  Graham. 

Ellis,  Ann  Mary,  dau.  of  Do.  of  Port  Royal  Island;  bom  22  Mar. 

1785  bapt.  10  Augt.  1785  by  Lewis. 
Ellis,  Elizabeth,  dau:  John  and  Mary  of  May  River,  bom  18  April 

1785;  bapt.  22  July  1786. 
Elliott,  Barnard  Berresford,  son  of  Barnard  &  Catharine,  bom 

17  Sept.  1783;  bapt.  24  July,  1786. 
Ellis,  Martha  Hamilton,  dau:  of  Richard  &  Susannah,  bom  5  Jan. 

1787  bapt.  7  Augt.  1787,  by  Lewis. 
Ellis,  Nathaniel  Greene,  son  of  Richard  Junr.  &  Elizabeth,  bom 

14  July,  1787  bapt.  4  April  1788  by  Do.  bur:  3  Dec.  1788. 
Ellis,  Eleanor,  dau:  of  James  &  Margaret  bom  1  July  1786;  bapt. 

2  Aug.  1789. 
Ellis,  John  Edmund,  of  James  &  Margaret,  bom  28  Nov.  1787; 

bapt.  2  Augt.  1789. 
Elliott,  William,  son  of  William  &  Mary;  bom  9  July  1761;  mar: 

23  May  1787  Phoebe  Waight. 

Elliott,  William,  son  of  WiUiam  &  Phoebe,  bom  27  April,  1788. 
Elliott,  Phoebe  Caroline,  dau:  of  Do.  bom  2d.  Sept.  1791;  married 

by  Campbell  1  May  1811,  Charles  Cotesworth  Pinckney. 
Elliott,  Mary  Bamwell,  dau:  of  Do.  bom  23  Mar.  1793. 
Elliott,  Susan  Parsons,  dau:  of  Do.  bom  21  Sept.  1794;  bur: 

Sept.  1798  aged  4  years;  fever. 
Elliott,  Ralph  Emms,  of  Do.  bom  IS  July,  1797. 
Elliott,  Stephen,  of  Do.  bom  10  Mar.  1799;  bur.  March  1800  aged 

1  year. 


64  so.  CA.  mSTQSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Ellis,  Elizabeth  Capers,  of  Richard  &  Susannah,  bom  7  Dec  1780; 

mar:  by  Graham,  18  Jan:  1801,  Saml.  Lawrence  Senr. 
Ellis,  Sarah  McKee,  of  Do.  bom  13  May,  1782;  Gardner. 
Ellis,  Charles,  of  Do.  bom  13  Aug.  1789.    Do. 
Elliott,  William,  son  of  Stephen  and  Esther,  bom  15  May,  1810 

bapt.  1810  by  Campbell,  Parents  &  Miss  Phoebe  Elliott 

sureties. 
Elliott,  William,  sn.  of  Stephen  &  Esther,  bom  8  Nov.  1812; 

bapt.  25  January  1813;  Parents  sureties. 
Elliott,  Stephen,  son  of  William  &  Phoebe,  bom  15  Nov.  1804; 

bapt.  Dec.  1813,  by  Campbell,  Phoebe  Elliott  surety. 
Elliott,  George  Parsons,  son.  of  William  and  Phoebe,  bom  28  May 

1807;  bapt.  Dec.  1813  by  Campbell,  Wm.  &  Ra^h  Parsons 

siureties. 
Farrington,  Hannah,  wife  to  Thomas  an  Ensign,  bur:  by  Jones, 

8  Oct.  1729. 
Farrington,  Thomas,  Ensign  in  Indepen'dt  Company,  bur:  by 

Do.  22  Feb:  1735. 
Farris,  Mary,  wife  to  William,  bur:   by  Do.  3  Jan.  1739. 
Fendin,  John,  bach,  son  of  John  and  Martha,  St.  Helena,  bom 

Sept.  22,  1721;  married  Aug:  7,  1744,  Eliza  Thomas,  spin. 

Bur:  26  Oct.  1758,  plant;  St.  Helena. 
Fendin,  William,  son  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  23,  1732,  bapt.  June  10, 

1733.  by  Jones,  Rowland  Sergeant  surety. 
Fendin,  Isaac,  son  of  Do  bom  Nov.  21, 1734  bapt  May  6, 1735  by 

Do. 
Fendin,  William,  son  of  Do.  bom  Feb:  6,  1736,  bapt.  Dec:  11, 

1737  by  Do. 
Fendm,  Jacob,  son  of  Do.  bom  May  13,  1739;  bapt.  July  21, 

1739  by  Do. 
Fendin,  Mary,  spin:  dau:  of  Do.  married  by  Jones,  Feb:  4,  1741, 

Thomas  Hall. 
Fendin,  Sarah,  dau:  of  Do.  bom  Nov:  23,  1730;  bapt.  May  18, 

1732  by  Do. 
Fendin,  Elizabeth,  Spin:  dau:  of  Do.  married  by  Do.  Dec.  29, 1739, 

William  Adams,  bach. 
Fewkers,  Mary,  Da.  Thomas  &  Anne,  bom  Oct.  15,  1739;  bapt. 

Oct.  30,  1739. 
Field,  Jennet,  spin.  Da.  of  John  &  Mary  of  Chehaw,  bom  Oct.  24, 

1716;  mar:  by  Jones,  Mar.  31,  1736,  Thomas  Smith,  bach. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  65 

Field,  John,  bach.  Son  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  24,  1717,  married  Eliza- 
beth Betterson;  dead. 
Field,  Mary,  spin,  Dau.  of  Do.  bom  April  28, 1721;  married  by 

Do.  Sept.  2,  1741,  Joseph  Hunt,  bach. 
Field,  Elizabeth,  dau:  Do.  bom  Mar:  22,  1723;  mar:  William 

Waight,  bach. 
Field,  Charles,  son  of  Do.  bom  May  26,  1725,  married  Anne 

Waight,  spin. 
Field,  Richard,  son  of  Do.  bom  April  22, 1727;  bapt.  July  24, 1727 

by  Jones;  Father  surety. 
Field,  William,  bach,  son  of  Do.  bom  Apr:  22,  1729,  bapt.  May 

19,  1730  by  Jones;  married  by  Peasley,  Oct.  1,  1751,  Sarah 

Chaplin,  spin. 
Field,  James,  son  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  1730,  bapt.  Dec.  29,  1730,  by 

Jones. 
Field,  Keziah,  dau.  John  junr.  &  Elizabeth,  bom  June  8,  1741, 

bapt.  July  26,  1741,  by  Jones. 
Fife,  Joseph,  son  of  Dr.  Fife  &  Anne,  bapt.  May  9,  1744,  by  Do. 
Fife,  Margaret,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  June  11,  1744,  bapt.  July  1,  1744 

by  Jones. 
Finney,  John,  Sn.  William  &  Mary,  born  July  24,  1744;  bapt. 

Aug:  21,  1744  by  Do 
Finny,  William,  bach.  Sn.  John  &  Sarah,  married  by  Jones,  Sept: 

15,  1740  Mary  Poor,  spin. 
Finn,  Mary,  married  by  Do.  July  7, 1728,  William  Allen. 
Finch,  William,  bur:  by  Do.  21  AprU  1736 
Fitzgerald,  James,  married  by  Do.  May  26,   1742,  Elizabeth 

Stanton,  spin. 
Fitzgerald,  John,  son  James  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Aug:  20,  1743; 

bapt.  Oct.  2, 1743  by  Do. 
Fitzpatrick,  Elizabeth,  bur:  16  Oct.  1746 
Fletcher,  Joseph,  bur:  by  Do.  1,  Aug.  1728 
Flinn,  Florence,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Nov.  18,  1740;  bapt. 

July  5,  1741. 
Flinn,  John,  Son  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  15,  1743;  bapt.  Jan:  22,  1743. 
Flower,  Sarah,  Nat:  Dau:  of  Coll.  Joseph  Edw'd  Flower  bom 

Mar:  14,  1735  bapt.  Mar.  14,  1735 
Flower,  Amelia,  spin:  Nat.  dau.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  29,  1736,  bapt. 

Sept.  8  17 —  married  May  17,  1752  John  Leecraft,  bach. 


1 


66  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Flower,  Edward,  Sn.  ColL  Josq>h  Edward  Flower  and  Elizabeth, 

bom  July  15, 1739;  bq>t.  July  IS,  1739;  bur:  15  July,  1739 
Flower,  John,  Sn,  of  Do.  bom  July  15,  1739;  bapt.  July  15,  1739; 

bur:  July  15,  1739 
Flower,  Mary,  dau:  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  8, 1741;  bapt  Mar.  2, 1742. 
Flower,  Richard  Woodward,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Feb.  24,  1744;  bur: 

22  March  1786;  Diarrhoea. 
Floyd,  John,  Widower,  married  by  Jones,  Dec.  9,  1733,  Ann 

Parmenter,  spin. 
Floyd,  Henry,  son  of  John  &  Ann;  bom  Feb.  23, 1735;  bapt.  Aug. 

9,  1736,  Parents  sureties. 
Foot,  John,  bur:  Feb:  IS,  1729 
Forsythe,  Willi  am  Junr.  bur:  22  Mar:  1726 
Fox,  Jonathan,  Sn.  of  David  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Dec.  28,  1731; 

bapt.  May  28, 1732,  by  Do. 
Fox,  Anne,  Dau;  of  Do.  bom  Dec:  11,  1733;  bapt.  May  19,  1734 

by  Do.    Parents  sureties. 
Fox,  Margaret,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  June  29,  1736;  bapt.  Aug:  29, 

1736  by  Do.    Parents  sureties. 
Fox,  Benjamin,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom.  Mar:  23,  1738;  bapt.  May  27, 

1739,  by  Do. 
Fox,  Thomas,  Sn.  bom  Aug.  30, 1740;  bapt.  Aug.  31, 1742,  by  Do. 
Fox,  Richard,  Sn.  bom  ^r.  23, 1741;  bapt.  July  12, 1741 
Fox,  James,  bapt.  July  3, 1743  by  Do. 
Fripp,  Sarah,  Da.  of  John,  Jur.  &  Martha,  bom  Oct.  26,  1726; 

bapt.  Jan.  5,  1726  by  Do.  Rowland  &  Eliz.  Serjeant  &  Sarah 

Fripp  sureties. 
Fripp,  Martha,  spin.  Da.  Do.  bom  May  31,  1728;  bapt.  Nov.  24, 

1728  by  Do.  married  Apr.  26,  1745  Isaac  Waight,  bach:  bur: 

16  Nov.  1783,  aged  55  yr.  5  mo.  16  da. 
Fripp,  John,  bach.  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Mar.  15,  1721;  bapt.  Aug:  3, 

1730  by  Do.  married  Apr.  19,  1747,  Elizabeth  Hand,  spin. 
Fripp,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  May  10,  1732;  bapt.  May  17, 

1732  by  Do.  married  Oct.  1,  1761,  Tabitha  Edings,  spin;  of 

Edisto;  married  May  10  1770,  to  Madolen  Magott  of  St. 

Helena. 
Fripp,  May,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  6,  1733;  bapt.  Feb.  10, 1733  by 

Do. 
Fripp,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Mar.  19,  1736;  bapt  June  27, 

1736  by  Do.  mar:  by  Peasely  Aug.  17, 1752  Benj.  Green,  bach. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  67 

Fripp,  Paul,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  8,  1737;  bapt.  Jan.  22,  1737,  by 

Do 
Frampton,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Hannah,  bom  Feb;  1737;  bapt. 

Nov.  25, 1741,  by  Jones. 
Fripp,  John,  Junr.  husband  to  Martha,  bur:  2  Dec.  1739. 
Fripp,  John,  Senr.  his  Father,  bur:  29  May,  1742,  aged  61. 
Fripp,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Sept.  18,  1750; 

bapt.  Jan.  13,  1750,  by  Chiflfely,  of  Purysbourgh. 
Franklin,  William,  from  CharlesTown,  bur.  3  May,  1741. 
Flinn,  Anne,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Sept.  5,  1739;  bapt.  Nov. 

2-,  by  Jones 
Franklin,  Richard,  mar:  by  Dyson,  in  CharlesTown,  Dec.  5, 1731, 

Susanna  Gilbert,  wid. 
Franklin,  Richard,  junr.  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Susanna,  bom  Sept. 

3, 1732;  bapt.  nov.  3-  by  Jones;  Jno.  &  Jane  DeLabere  &  Wm. 

Lyford  sureties. 
Franklin,  Susanna,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Mar.  2, 1733;  bapt.  Apr.  15. 

by  Do 
Franklin,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  John  &  Jude  or  Jane,  bom  Dec.  24, 1735; 

bapt.  June  2-  by  Do.  parents  Sureties. 
Fumival,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary  bom  June  1729;  bapt.  July 

21,  by  Do.  bur:  21  Oct.  1740 

Fumival,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  May  7,  1731;  bq>t.  Jime       by 

Do.  bur:  24  Aug.  1733 
Fumival,  Charlotte,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  1732;  bapt.  May  14, 

1733  by  Do.  bur:  16  June,  1734 
Fumival,  Mary,  wife  to  John  bur:  by  Do.  22  Aug.  1733. 
Fripp,  Mary,  wid:  to  John  Fripp  Junr.  married  by  Jones,  Mar: 

3, 1740,  Thomas  Hall,  bach.  St.  Helena. 
Frampton,  Hannah,  wid:  to  John;  mar:  by  Do.  Dec.  21,  1740 

Josp.  EUicott  Capers,  Bach. 
Fendin,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  APR.  15,  1746;  bapt. 

Mar;  26,  1752  by  Peasely. 
Fendin,  Martha,  Da.  to  Do.  bom  Sept.  20,  1749;  bapt.  Mar:  26, 

1752  by  Do 
Fendin,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Do.  bora  Oct.  28,  1751;  bapt.  Mar:  26, 

1752,  by  Do 
Fendin,  Martha,  spin.  Da.  of  John  &  Martha;  mar:  by  Chitfelly 

Feb:  14,  1751  Digby  Edwards,  bach. 


68  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Frippy  Martha,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Mar:  7,  1747;  bapt. 

by  St.  John. 
Flinn,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Mary;  bapt.  by  Do. 
Fell,  William,  Sn.  Zachary  &  Eliz:  bapt.  July  29, 175-  by  Peasely: 

dead  1751 
Floyd,  Anne,  wid:  to  John,  mar:  by  Jones  June  22,  1742  Benj: 

Tobias,  bach. 
Foster,  Mary,  spin,  married  by  Do.  May  8,  1743;  Philip  Martin* 

angle  bach. 
Flinn,  John,  mar:  by  Do.  June  19, 1739,  Mary  Winter. 
Ferris,  Christopher,  bur:  by  Do.  16  Feb:  1737,  aged  58. 
Ferris,  Rachel,  bur:  by  Do.  11  Nov:  1738,  aged  63. 
Ferris,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  Sept:  21,  1737 
Ferris,  William,  wid'r,  Sn.  of  Christopher,  mar:  by  Orr,  July  3, 

1744  Janet  Orr;  bur:  24  Oct:  1749,  aged  35. 
Ferris,  William,  Sn.  William  &  Janet,  bom  Jime  3,  1745 
Ferris,  Janet,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Feb.  14,  1746 
Ferris,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  23,  1749.    mar:  by  Ellington, 

April  9,  1772,  Margaret  Wainwright,  spin. 
Fripp,  Sarah,  Da.  John  &  Eliz,  bom  Oct:  18,  1752;  bapt.  Mar: 

13,  1753  by  Peasely.    [Mar:  John  Evans,  pencil  notel 
Furrow,  Charles,  bur:  21  Augt:  1753,  aged  56,  Bils.  Cholic 
Ferguson,  Thomas,  Sn.  John  &  Mary,  bom  Sept:  9,  1753;  bapt: 

Jan.  29,  1754,  by  Hutson. 
Fairchild,  Robert,  wid'r  mar:  by  Peasely  Feb:  14,  1754,  Sarah 

Wigg,  spin.  Bur:  3d  July  1775,  aged  47. 
Finny,  John,  bur:  by  Do.  19  Mar:  1754,  aged  65  Nerv.  Fever. 
Fripp,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Eliz:  bom  April  29: 1754;  bapt.  July  7, 

1754  by  Do 
Flinn,  Charles,  Sn.  of  John  &  Sarah,  bom  Aug:  7,  1752;  bapt: 

July  7,  1754  by  Do 
Freeman,  Anne,  Da.  William  &  Anne,  bom  Feb:  9,  1753;  bapt. 

Dec:  12,  1754  by  Do 
Fendin,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Eliz:  St.  Helena;  bom  Jan:  9,  1754; 

bapt:  Mar:  2,  1755,  by  Do 
Freeman,  Elizabeth,  Da.  William  &  Ann;  bom  Sept:  7,  1755; 

bapt.  Dec:  11  1756 
Furguson,  William,  Sn.  John  &  Mary,  bom  Dec:  13,  1756. 
Furguson,  Jane,  Da.  Do.  bom  Oct:  7,  1739 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  69 

Fisher,  Prudence,  Da.  Edward  &       mar:  by  Peasely  Feb:  17, 

1756,  John  Richardson 
Fripp,  William,  Sn.  John  &  Eliz:  St.  Helena;  bom  Dec.  23,  1755; 

bapt;  Feb.  1,  1756  by  Jno.  Belcher,  a  Clergjntnan  travelling 
Fripp,  Sarah,  wid.  to  St.  Helena,  bur:  9  Jan:  1756  St.  Helena. 
Fairchild,  Mary  Anne,  Da.  Robert  &  Sarah,  Beaufort;  bom  Mar: 

23,  1756;  bapt.  Mar:  24,  1756  by  Peasely.  Bur:  Ch.  yard  13 

Oct.  1756;  Flux. 
Furguson,  James,  Sn.  John  &  Mary;  bom  Oct:  27, 1735 
Furguson,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  17,  1741. 
Furguson,  Eleanor,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  25,  1743 
Furguson,  Margt.  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Feb:  25,  1745 
Furguson,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Feb.  25,  1747 
Flower,  Joseph  Edward,  Mercht.  from  England,  bur:  July  7, 1756, 

Ch.  Yard. 
Fendin,  Wm.  Henry,  Sn.  John  Junr.  &  Elizabeth,  St.  Helena, 

bom  May  3d,  1756,  bapt.  Aug:  22,  1756  by  Lewis  in  Pr. 

Wm.  Parish. 
Fripp,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Elizabeth,  St.  Helena;  bom  Mar:  1, 1757 
Fairchild,  Sarah,  Da.  Robert  &  Sarah,  Beaufort,  bom  Augt.  21, 

1757;  bapt.  Augt.  29,  1757 
Frentz,  Frederick,  Sn.  John  &  Margt:  bom  Jan:  11,  1759;  bapt. 

Feb.  1759 
Fripp,  Rebekah,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Nov.  2,  1759 
Fripp,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Apr:  18,  1749;  bur: 
Fairchild,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Sarah;  bom  Nov:  14,  1759; 

bapt.  Mar:  21, 1760,  by  Sergeant;  married  8  Jan:  1778  James 

Joyner,  bach. 
Fairchild,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Robert  &  Sarah;  bom  Oct.  2,  1762; 

bapt.  Jan'y  30,  1763  by  Rev.  Mr.  Green;  bur:  10  Nov.  1788. 

Dysentery. 
Fleming,  Charlotte,  Da.  Nat  Fleming;  bom  Jan:  16, 1763; 

bapt.  Apr.  27, 1763  by  Green;  bur:  23  May  1763  aged  4  mons. 
Fripp,  Tabitha,  Da.  Will'm  &  Tabitha,  St.  Helena,  bom  4  Feb. 

1763,  bapt.  1  May  1763  by  Green 
Fendin,  Susanna,  Da.  Jacob  &  Susanna,  St.  Helena  bom  Nov.  6, 

1763;  bapt.  Sep:  6,  1764. 
Fripp,  Paul,  bach,  of  St.  Helena,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Cosgrove 

27  Jime  1768  to  Amey  Reynolds,  spinster. 


70  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Fripp,  Thomas,  Sn.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  11  April  1761 
Fripp,  Paul,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  23  Sept.  1762,  married  Elizabeth 

Jenkins. 
Fripp,  Hannah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  23  Jn'y  1764;  married  Benjamin 

Jenkins. 
Fripp,  Ann,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  5  May  1765;  married  Majr  Scott 
Fripp,  Archibald,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  6  Nov.  1766. 
Fripp,  Martha,  Da.  of  William  &  Tabitha,  bom  30  Mar:  1765; 

bapt.  Sept.  2,  1765 
Fripp,  William  Edings,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  22  Sept.  1768,  b^t.  May 

23d.  1769;  departed  this  life  13  Jan:  1770 
Fripp,  Tabitha,  wife  to  William,  departed  this  life  the  18th  Feb: 

buried  20th  1769. 
Fairchild,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Sarah,  bom  19  Jan:  1768,  bapt. 

July  10,  1768  by  R.  Cosgrove. 
Fripp,  Isaac,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  22  Jime,  1768. 
Fripp,  William,  Sn.  Paul  &  Amey,  bom  7  July,  1769,  bapt.  Augt.l3y 

by  Rev.  Mr.  Streaker. 
Frazier,  James,  wid'r,  from  London;  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Elling- 
ton, Feb.  27  1772,  Mary  Ash,  spinster. 
Fairchild,  Robert,  widow'r  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Ellington,  Mar: 

19,  1772,  Christiana  McLoud,  spinster. 
Fairchild,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Robert  &  Christiana,  of  Beaufort,  bom 

11  Feb:  1773,  bapt.  19  Mar:  1773,  by  Ellington. 
Fairchild,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  6  Jime  1774,  bapt.  25  June, 

1774,  by  Ellington. 
Fairchild,  Robt:  Archbald,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  24  Augt.  1775;  bapt. 

19  Sept.  1775  by  Rev.  Mr.  Moreau;  John  Joyner,  Wm 

Woodhough,  Mrs.  Fairchild  sureties. 
Fendin,  John,  of  St.  Helena,  married  by  Lewes  3  Nov:  1785, 

Sarah  Toomer,  St.  Helena. 
Field,  Isabella  Caroline,  of  John  Cato  Field  by  Elizabeth  his  wife, 

bom  23  Oct.  1785,  bapt.  23  April,  1786  by  Do. 
FuUer,  Thomas,  of  St.  Andrew's  Parish,  mar:  by  Do.  19  Jime  1786, 

Elizabeth  Middleton. 
Fripp,  Thomas  Hann,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  3  July,  1786; 

bapt.  3  Sept.,  1786. 
Fripp,  Elizabeth  Hann,  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  19  Oct  1785, 

bapt.  3  Sept.  1786,  by  Do. 


V 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  71 

Fuller,  Mary,  of  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  bapt.  29  Mar:  1787. 
Ficklmg,  John  Verdier,  Sn.  of  William  &  Sarah. 
Fickling,  Sarah,  Da.  of  ditto  &  ditto,  bom  29  Oct:,  1795. 
FuDer,  Thomas,  Son  of  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  bom  May  2,  1788^ 

mar:  13  Dec.  1812,  Phoebe  Waight. 
Fripp,  bapt.  by  Rev:  Hicks,  The  Father  &  Mr.  John 

McKee  &  wife  sureties. 
Fripp,  Henrietta  Caroline,  Da.  of  Hamilton  &  Elizabeth, 
Fripp,  Hamilton,  Sn.  of  Hamilton  &  Elizabeth,  bapt.  Fer'iy  21» 

1809. 

{To  be  continued) 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CITY 

GAZETTE 

CompQed  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  January) 

Break  in  fik  from  July  first  to  October  5,  1795. 

Died,  the  3rd  instant,  Mr.  James  McGill  Wright,  hatter,  late 
of  Newery,  Ireland,  aged  25  years — a  man  much  esteemed  and 
greatly  regretted  by  all  who  knew  him.  (Saturday,  October  10, 
1795.) 

Died,  on  the  3rd  instant,  Mr.  Morris  Dean,  hatter,  late  oi  Easton, 
m  Pennsylvania,  who  was  on  his  way  to  visit  his  parents  residing 
in  this  state,  about  30  miles  from  Augusta.  (Mcmday,  Oct.  5, 
1795.) 

Married,  Mr.  Daniel  Symmes,  of  the  county  of  Newberry,  to 
Mrs.  Ann  Tourtellet,  of  the  County  of  Pendleton.  Tuesday, 
Oct.  6,  1795. 

Died,  on  the  evening  of  the  5th  instant,  on  board  the  brig 
Russell,  at  Fort  Johnson,  capt.  Charles  Tallman,  master  of  the 
said  brig,  lately  arrived  from  Leogane. 

Died,  yesterday,  after  a  short  illness,  capt  John  Dickinson, 
master  of  the  brig  Nancy,  of  New-York,  last  from  Wilmington, 
(Thursday,  Oct.  8,  1795.) 

Capt.  Osborne,  late  master  of  the  schooner  Averick,  Sellers, 
Died  about  six  weeks  ago  at  Aux-Cayes.     (Friday,  Oct  9,  1795.) 

Died,  on  Friday  last,  Mr.  James  Chapstick,  after  a  short  illness. 

Died  on  Thursday  evening,  3rd  instant,  Mr.  Ebenezer  Carter, 
printer,  from  Concord  in  New-Hampshire. 

Died,  at  Norfolk  in  Virginia,  on  the  15th  ult.  Mr.  J.  Kenna, 
comedian. 

Augusta,  Sept.  26.  Was  KiUed  lately  at  his  House  in  South- 
Carolina,  Robert  Thomas,  Esq.  one  of  the  senators  of  this  state 
in  the  last  general  assembly:  he  was  shot  dead  by  some  person 
unknown — but  it  is  generally  supposed  his  death  was  occasioned 
by  his  voting  for  the  Yazou  bill,  and  receiving  upwards  of  4000  dol- 
lars for  that  vote.     (Monday,  Oct.  12,  1795.) 

72 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  73 

Died,  on  Sunday  evening,  major  Timothy  Olcott,  late  of  the 
state  of  Vermont.    (Tuesday,  Oct.  13,  1795.) 

Died,  on  Wednesday  last,  in  Beaufort,  the  Rev.  Matthew  Tate. 
(Wednesday,  Oct.  14, 1795.) 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  Mr.  George  Henry  Schmidt,  Mer- 
chant, from  Dudbury.    (Thursday,  Oct.  15,  1795.) 

Married,  on  the  15th  instant,  John  Logan,  esq.  adjutant  of 
the  Colleton  county  regiment,  to  Mrs.  Catherine  Postell,  both  of 
the  Round  O.    (Friday,  Oct.  16, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Thursday  last,  in  the  prime  of  life,  after  a  short  iUness, 
Mr.  Edward  Jaffray,  of  Glasgow,  merchant. 

Died,  on  Monday  night  last,  at  Mount  Pleasant,  near  Dor- 
chester, in  the  41st  year  of  his  age,  capt.  Nathaniel  Bradwell,  late 
of  the  continental  army.    (Sat.  Oct.  17,  1795.) 

Died  suddenly,  and  alone,  on  the  6th  instant,  in  the  town  of 
Beaufort,  the  Rev.  Matthew  Tate,  A.M.  and  pastor  of  the  Episco- 
pal Church  in  that  place,  in  the  46th  year  of  his  age.  Mr.  Tate 
had  been  indisposed,  but  not  confined,  for  a  few  days  previous  to 
this  unexpected  and  truly  affecting  event.  During  this  time  when 
visited  occasionally  by  his  friends,  he  conversed  with  his  usual 
cheerfullness,  and  refused  the  constant  attention  which  was  pro- 
posed and  offered,  and  entirely  unnecessary.  The  very  day  of 
his  departure,  he  went  down  stairs  about  his  concerns,  and  in  the 
evening,  sent  his  servant  to  prepare  something  for  his  nourish- 
ment; but  upon  her  return,  she  found  him  lying  upon  his  bed  a 
corpse.  This  is  the  more  surprising,  as  Mr.  Tate's  health  had 
been  scarcely  ever  interrupted  by  a  day's  confinement  or  en- 
dangered by  an  act  of  intemperance.  He  was  regular  and  abstemi- 
ous to  an  imcommon  degree.  But,  improbable  as  so  sudden  a 
death  was  in  his  case,  his  prudence  led  him  to  make  the  most 
ample  preparations  for  it.  His  affairs  could  not  have  been  set- 
tled with  more  exactness  and  accuracy,  had  the  manner  of  his 
dissolution  been  ever  so  probable,  or  even  inevitable.  In  Mr. 
Tate,  learning,  the  religious,  and  the  poor,  have  lost  a  sincere 
friend.  He  shared,  it  is  true,  in  the  common  lot  of  humanity,  in 
having  his  foibles;  but  they  were  over-weighted  by  many  good 
qualities.  He  was  the  author  of  many  charities,  which  could 
be  dictated  by  nothing  but  the  purest  and  most  disinterested 
benevolence. 


74  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died,  at  St.  Helena,  on  Sunday  the  11th  instant  in  the  prime 
of  life,  Mrs.  Harriet  Bland,  the  amiable  wife  of  Mr.  Rich.  Bland, 
and  daughter  of  Mr.  Charles  Capes.    (Monday,  Oct.  19,  1795.) 

Married,  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Blair,  to  Mrs. 
Elizabeth  Chadwick,  both  of  this  city. 

Married  on  Saturday  evening,  Mr.  William  Lovely,  merchant 
to  Miss  Margaret  CuUin,  both  of  this  city. 

Died,  yesterday,  James  Ballentine,  esq.  coroner  of  Charleston 
district.    (Tuesday,  Oct.  20,  1795.) 

Died,  suddenly  on  the  17th  instant  at  his  place  in  St.  Bar- 
tholomews parish  Frederick  Wetsdl,  esq.  .  .  .  (Wednesday, 
Oct.  21, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Simday  last,  Miss  Ann  Joanna  Swallow,  daughter  of 
Mr.  Newman  Swallow;  (Verses.)    (Friday,  Oct.  23,  1795.) 

Died,  at  an  advanced  age,  on  Tuesday  last,  the  20th  instant, 
at  his  residence  in  Prince  Williams  parish,  after  a  long  and  painful 
illness,  which  he  bore  with  christian  fortitude,  Thomas  Hey- 
ward  sen.  an  old  and  respectable  inhabitant  of  this  state.  In 
him  the  widow  and  fatherless  have  ever  found  a  friend,  and  the 
poor  were  never  suffered  to  leave  his  door  unassisted. 

Died,  at  Port  Royal,  in  the  Island  of  Martinico  on  the  27th 
March  last,  Mr.  Thomas  I.  Lyon,  in  the  18th  year  of  his  age, 
youngest  son  of  John  Lyon  deceased,  of  this  city. 

Died,  on  Thursday  last,  after  a  short  illness,  Mr.  Michael 
Carroll,  a  young  gentleman  much  regretted  by  all  who  knew  him. 
(Sat.,  Oct.  24,  1795.) 

Died,  on  Saturday  last,  capt.  Ebenezer  Little  Dearing,  com- 
mander of  the  ship  Polly,  of  Portland.    (Tuesday,  Oct.  27, 1795.) 

Died,  yesterday,  after  a  lingering  illness,  Mr.  John  Cox. 

Died,  on  Monday  last,  capt.  William  Robins(»i. 

Died,  on  the  24th  instant,  in  the  18th  year  of  his  age,  Joseph 
Brown  Edwards,  late  of  Mecklenburg  coimty,  Virginia,  at  the 
house  of  his  brother-in-law,  Mr.  Heiiry  Bailey. 

Died,  in  France,  January  last,  Mr.  Samuel  Palmer,  eldest  son 
of  Mr.  Job  Pahner,  of  this  city.    (Thursday,  Oct.  29,  1795.) 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  William  Fuller,  esq.  second  son  of 
Thomas  Fuller,  esq.  of  St.  Andrew's  parish.  (Saturday,  Oct.  31, 
1795.) 

Died,  on  Friday  last,  Mrs.  Martha  Baker,  widow  of  the  late 
Mr.  William  Baker. 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  75 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  after  a  lingering  illness,  Mr.  Matthew 
Peppin.    (Tuesday,  Nov.  3,  1795.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Purcell, 
William  Peters,  esq.  of  PonPon,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Mary  Willi- 
man,  daughter  of  Mr.  Christopher  Williman,  of  this  city.  (Satur- 
day, Nov.  7,  1795.) 

Died,  a  few  days  ago,  at  Jacksonborough,  Mr.  John  Caskins, 
aged  50  years. 

Died,  on  Tuesday,  Mr.  John  Woodward  from  Connecticut. 
(Thursday,  Nov.  12, 1795.) 

Died  yesterday,  in  this  city,  capt.  James  Tate  junr.  of  Pendle- 
ton county,  in  this  state.    (Saturday,  Nov.  14,  1795.) 

Married,  at  NewPort,  R.  I.  on  Thursday  the  5th  inst.  Mr.  John 
Robins(»i,  of  this  city,  merchant,  to  Miss  Abigail  Robinson,  of 
that  place. 

Died,  suddenly,  on  Friday  last,  in  the  72d  year  ol  her  age, 
Mrs.  Ann  Burgess,  of  this  city.    (Wednesday,  Nov.  18,  1795.) 

Died,  on  Wednesday  morning  last,  capt.  John  B.  Cotterell,  of 
the  ship  Hope.    (Friday,  Nov.  20,  1795.) 

Married,  at  Mr.  Foreshaw's  plantation  on  James  Island  on 
Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  William  Evans,  to  Mrs.  Francis 
Clarke,  both  of  James  Island. 

Died,  the  3d  instant,  on  Eklisto  Island,  Mrs.  Martha  Calder, 
the  amiable  consort  of  Dr.  William  Calder. 

Died  on  Thursday  morning,  in  the  prime  of  life,  Alexander 
Borthwick,  mill  wright.    .    .     (Sat.,  Nov.  21,  1795.) 

Married,  on  Simday  last,  by  the  rev.  Dr.  Buist,  David  Lyall, 
of  St.  John's  parish,  to  Catherine  Mimgall,  of  this  city.  (Tuesday, 
Nov.  24,  1795.) 

Died,  on  Tuesday  evening,  at  his  house  in  Tradd  street,  Chanler 
Dinwiddie  Fowke,  esq.  attorney  at  law.  In  a  few  words,  this 
gentleman  possessed  unbounded  generosity  and  benevolence; 
those  who  knew  him  most,  loved  him  best.  (Thursday,  Nov.  26, 
1795.) 

Columbia,  Nov.  25.  Died  at  Round  O  on  the  14th  instant, 
Mr.  Peter  Prentiss,  merchant,  late  from  Massachusetts  .  .  . 
dutiful  son,  affectionate  brother,  cordial  friend  ...  his  re- 
mains were  buried  in  the  garden  of  the  honorable  Mr.  Fishbume. 
(Long  notice,  and  verses.)     (Monday,  Nov.  30,  1795.) 


76  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Died,  on  Monday  morning,  Mr.  John  Minnick,  merchant 

Died,  Mr.  Alescander  Taylor,  as  assistant  officer  in  the  revenue. 
(Wednesday,  December  2,  1795.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  last,  Mr.  John  Baptiste  Audry,  to  Mrs. 
Jones,  both  of  this  city.    (Monday,  Dec.  7,  1795.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  Mr.  John  Horlbeck,  jun. 
to  Miss  Elizabeth  Lindauer,  youngest  daughter  of  the  late  Mr. 
Henry  Lindauer,  both  of  this  city. 

Died,  in  Connecticut,  capt.  Lemuel  Palmer  Fanning,  son  of 
Mr.  Gilbert  Fanning,  of  the  same  place.    He  has  left  in  this  city 

a  widow  and  an  infant  child [Verses.]    (Thursday, 

Dec.  17, 1795.) 

Died,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  after  a  lingering  illness,  Mr.  John 
Gourley,  a  respectable  inhabitant  of  this  city.  (Friday,  Dec.  18, 
1795.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  John  Stroble,  to 
Miss  Mary  Beard,  both  of  this  city. 

Married  on  Thursday  evening  last,  Leighton  Wilson,  esq.  to 
Mrs.  Sarah  Adams,  both  of  Edisto  Island.    (Sat.  Dec.  19,  1795.) 

Married  on  Thursday  evening  last,  doctor  William  Lehre,  of 
this  city,  to  Mrs.  Ann  Miller,  of  St.  Stephens,  Santee. 

Died,  on  Saturday,  the  19th  instant,  on  John's  Island,  in  the 
bloom  of  life,  Mr.  Miller  St.  John,  a  young  gentleman  of  agree- 
able manners.    .    .    .    (Monday,  Dec.  28,  1795.) 

Married,  last  Thursday,  Mr.  John  Couie,  merchant,  to  Miss  Ann 
Keely,  both  of  this  city. 

Married,  last  evening,  Mr.  William  Robinson,  of  the  Shakespeare 
tavern,  to  Mrs.  Abemethie,  relict  of  the  late  Mr.  Thomas 
Abemethie. 

Died,  on  Saturday  last,  Mrs.  Mary  Eyre  Kershaw,  wife  of 
Mr.  Charles  Kershaw  of  this  city.    (Thursday,  Dec.  29,  1795.) 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  Mr.  William  Serjeant,  of  this  city, 
Vendue  Master.    (Thursday,  Dec.  31,  1795.) 

(To  be  continued) 


ABSTRACTS  OF  RECORDS  OF  THE  PROCEEDINGS  IN 
THE  COURT  OF  ORDINARY,  1764-1771 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  January) 

Citation  to  John  M'Nichol  of  St.  Mathews  parish  to  adminr. 
on  the  estate  of  George  M^ichol  planter,  his  father.    Sept.  1765. 

Buckingham  Keene  to  adminr.  on  the  estate  of  John  Anderson 
late  of  Prince  Frederick  parish  pedlar  as  greatest  creditor.  Sept. 
1765. 

Citation  to  Elizabeth  Perry  and  John  Fripp  of  St.  Helena  parish 
to  adminr.  on  estate  of  Peter  Perry  planter  deceased;  said  Eliza- 
beth his  widow.    5  Sept.  1765. 

Citation  to  Edward  Tucker  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  John  Green 
late  of  St.  Helena  as  greatest  creditor.    Ibid. 

Citation  to  Martha  McDowell  and  Archibald  McDowell  to 
adminr.  on  estate  of  John  McDowell  late  of  Christ  Church  parish 
shoemaker,  his  widow  and  brother.    6  Sept.  1765. 

Citation  to  Catherine  Eaton  of  St.  Bartholomew  parish  widow 
to  adminr.  on  estate  of  John  Eaton  of  sd.  parish  as  next  of  kin. 
12  Sept.  1765. 

Citation  to  John  Deas  to  adminr.  estate  of  Edmimd  Kelly  late 
of  St.  Barth.  planter  as  greatest  Creditor.    14  Sept.  1765. 

Citation  to  Robert  Raper  of  CharlesTown  to  adminr.  on  estate 
of  Andrw.  Johnston  late  of  St.  Philips  parish,  planter  in  so  far  as 
same  left  imadminr.  by  James  Grindlay  late  adminr.  said  estate, 
as  attorney  to  Wm.  Greenwood  and  Wm.  Hygmston  of  London, 
principal  creditors.  20  Sept.  1765 

77 


78  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

Citation  to  Eberhard  Ehney  to  adminr.  estate  of  John.  Ernest 
Hoff  late  of  St.  Philips  parish,  blacksmith,  in  trust  for  during 
the  minority  of  the  Infant  children  of  said  deceased.   21  Sept.  1765. 

Edgerton  Leigh  in  behalf  of  Henry  Laurens  Esq.  enters  a 
Caveat  against  Eberhard  Eheney  obtaining  letters  of  adminr.  on 
John  Ernest  HoS  deceased  until  sd.  Laurens  is  heard.  25  Sept. 
1765. 

Martha  Brown  citation  to  adminr.  on  estate  on  Wm.  Brown  of 
St.  Barth.  planter,  his  widow.    30  Sept.  1765. 

Alex.  Kynock  enters  caveat  against  letters  of  admin,  being 
granted  to  Jno.  Tuke  of  the  estate  of  Joseph  Todhunter  imtil  he 
is  heard. 

Citation  to  Alex.  Kynock  of  St.  Michaels  parish,  merchant  to 
adm.  estate  of  Joseph  Todhunter  late  of  St.  Philips  psh.  wharf- 
inger, as  greatest  creditor.    5  Oct.  1765. 

Citation  to  Jonah  Woodbery  to  adminr.  estate  <rf  John  Wood- 
bery  late  of  Prince  Frederick's  parish.  Craven  County  planter, 
liis  son  and  next  of  kin.    8  Oct.  1765. 

Citation  to  Ena  Nelson  to  adminr.  estate  of  William  Nelson 
Junr.  of  St.  Marks  Parish,  planter,  his  widow  and  next  kin. 
Oct.  10, 1765. 

Citation  to  Robt.  Rowan  mercht.  of  Chas.Town  to  adminr.  cm 
est.  of  John  Jordan  of  St.  Pauls  parish,  CoUington  (sic)  planter 
as  greatest  creditor.    Oct.  11,  1765. 

Citation  to  Robt.  Rowan  merht.  Chas.  T  to  adminr.  estate 
Wm.  FitsPatrick  planter,  as  greatest  creditor.    Ibid. 

Citation  to  Archer  Smith  and  Samuel  Hamlin  of  St.  Georges 
psh.  to  admin,  estate  Thomas  Waring,  planter,  in  so  far  as  un- 
adminr.  by  Benj.  Waring  and  Joseph  Waring,  exors.  to  said 
estate,  deceased,  as  next  of  kin.    Ibid. 


RECORDS  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  79 

Sarah  Jordan  enters  caveat  against  letters  of  adminr.  being 
granted  to  any  person,  on  estate  of  John  Jordan  her  husband, 
untill  she  is  heard.    Oct.  17,  1765. 

Oct.  18,  1765.  Postponed  till  this  day  Week  on  or  before 
wdi.  the  widow  is  desired  to  answer,  if  not  letters  to  Robt.  Rowan. 

Citation  to  Robt.  Rowan  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  Revd.  Patrick 
Keer,  St.  Andrews  parish,  as  greatest  creditor. 

Citation  to  Wm.  Saltridge  and  Lydia  his  wife  to  adminr.  on 
Wm.  Ellis  formerly  husband  to  sd.  Lydia  Saltridge  (A  St.  Philips 
butcher.    Oct.  19,  1765. 

Citation  to  Sarah  Westberry  to  adminr.  estate  Jonathan  West- 
berry  late  St.  Bartho.  planter,  his  widow.    24  Oct.  1765. 

Citation  to  Isabell  Chisholm  to  adminr.  estate  William  Chisholm 
late  of  St.  Philips  parish  his  widow.    25  Oct.  1765. 

Citation  to  Elizabeth  Scott  widow  to  adminr.  estate  of  Thomas 
Gulliem  Scott  of  Pr.  Frederick's  parish,  merchant.    26  Oct.  1765. 

Citation  to  John  Fleming  of  Pr.  Frederick's  psh.  planter,  to 
adminr.  estate  Allen  Barr  late  of  sd.  parish,  as  greatest  creditor. 
29  Oct.  1765. 

^K^Uiam  Guerin  and  Elias  Vanderhorst  enters  a  Caveat  against 
Eliz:  Scott  obtaining  Letters  of  admin,  of  estate  oi  Thomas  Guillan 
Scott  imtil  they  are  heard.    Mar.  3,  1766. 

John  Rutledge  in  behalf  of  William  Young  enters  caveat  letters 
adminr.  being  granted  to  estate  of  William  Nelson  imtil  he  be 
heard.    Mar.  4,  1766. 

May  7,  1766.  Citation  to  Jacob  Monrow  of  St.  Paub  parish 
to  adminr.  on  estate  of  Daniel  Monrow  planter  of  same  place  as 
nearest  kin. 


80  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

May  8.  Citation  to  Moses  Mitchd  of  CharlesTown  to  adminr. 
on  Eliza:  Donnafan  of  St  George's  parish  Dorchester  as  nearest 
kin. 

May  8.  Citation  to  Hanah  Screven  and  James  Fowler,  to 
adminr.  on  estate  of  William  Screven  of  Prince  George's  parish^ 
Craven,  planter  as  nearest  kin. 

May  9.  Citation  to  Agness  Dannial  to  adminr.  estate  of  John 
Dannial  of  Craven,  planter  as  nearest  kin. 

May  9.  Citation  to  Elizabeth  McDonald  to  adminr.  on  est. 
of  Mary  Morrison  of  CharlesTown  as  greatest  Creditor. 

May  9.  Citation  to  Thos.  Marshall  ChasTown  pedler  to  admin, 
on  estate  of  Allen  Barr  of  Craven  as  greatest  creditor. 

May  9.  Chas.  Pinckney  Esq;  in  behalf  of  Jean  Mary  Hendrie, 
widow  of  Andrew  Hendrie  enters  caveat  against  probate  of  his 
will  until  she  is  heard  by  her  council. 

May  9.  Citation  to  Messrs.  Ancrun,  Lance  and  Loocock  of 
CharlesTown  merchants  to  adminr.  on  est.  of  Daniel  Monrow  of 
St.  Johns  parish  as  greatest  creditors. 

May  9.  Citation  to  William  MaxweU  of  ChasTown  on  estate 
of  WiUiam  Stanyame  Junr.  of  Stono  planter  as  nearest  of  kin. 

May  12.  Citation  to  William  Ferguson  of  prince  William 
parish  planter  to  adminr.  on  Thomas  Adam  of  sd.  parish  planter 
in  behalf  of  said  Ferguson's  wife  as  nearest  kin. 

Citation  to  Sarah  Re)aiolds  of  St.  Helena  to  adminr.  on  Richard 
Re3aiolds  of  same  place,  planter,  as  nearest  of  kin. 

William  Stanyame  of  St.  John  parish  enters  caveat  against 
letters  of  admin,  being  granted  to  William  Maxwell  of  ChasTown 
on  est.  of  William  Stanyame  Junr.  until  he  is  heard.    May  13, 1766. 


RECORDS  OF  CX)nRT  PROCEEDINGS  81 

Citation  to  Daniel  Desaussure  of  Prince  William  to  adminr. 
on  estate  of  Ralph  Scott  of  said  parish  as  greatest  creditor.  May 
14, 1766. 

Citation  to  Newman  Swallow  of  ChasTown,  merchant  to 
adminr.  on  estate  of  Joseph  Bradwell  of  St.  George's  Dorchester, 
as  greatest  creditor.    May  14,  1766. 

Citation  to  Magdalen  Williamson  and  Andrew  Postd  of  Pr. 
William  to  administer  on  estate  of  John  Williamson  of  said  parish 
as  nearest  of  kin.    May  14,  1766. 

16  May,  1766.  Petition  of  Stephen  Bull  of  Sheldon  and  £d- 
mimd  Bellinger  Esq.  and  Mr.  John  Kelsall  of  Prince  William 
parish  pra3dng  letters  of  administration  of  estate  of  William  Rose 
late  of  Prince  William  deceased  to  Sabina  Wilson  may  be  revoked, 
and  letters  of  adminr.  with  will  annexed  be  granted  to  the  Peti- 
tioners jointly  with  the  said  Sabina  Wilson,  and  the  Petitioners 
be  all  appointed  Guardians  of  the  children  of  the  said  William 
Rose;  Ordered  that  the  prayers  of  the  Petitiones  be  granted. 

Petition  of  William  Stanyame  and  James  Glaze  praying  that 
they  might  be  joined  in  letters  of  administration  of  estate  of  Wil- 
liam Stanyame  Junr.  with  William  Maxwell:  Granted. 

Citation  to  Jane  McMahon  and  Henry  Mendy  of  Williamsburg 
Township  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  John  McMahon  of  same  place 
planter  as  nearest  of  kin.    21  May,  1766. 

Citation  to  Stephen  Ackerman  of  St.  Bartholomew's  parish  to 
Adminr.  the  estate  of  Peter  Ruden  of  same  place  planter,  as 
nearest  of  kin.    21  May,  1766. 

Citation  to  Abigal  Hart  of  CharlesTown,  to  administer  on  estate 
of  William  Hart  of  same  place,  shipwright,  as  nearest  kin.  21 
May,  1766. 

Citation  to  Mary  Campbell  of  Prince  Fredericks  Parish,  Craven 
county,  to  administer  on  estate  of  James  Campbell  of  same  place, 
planter  as  nearest  of  kin.    21  May,  1766. 


82  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Citation  to  James  Edwards  of  St.  George's  parish,  Berkley, 
to  administer  the  estate  of  Uriah  Edwards  of  same  place,  planter, 
as  nearest  of  kin.    21  May,  1766. 

Citation  to  John  Weston,  surg'n.  of  CharlesTown,  to  administer 
on  estate  of  James  Barnes,  marriner,  late  of  Boston  in  New  Eng- 
land, as  greatest  creditor.    May  23,  1766. 

Court  of  Ordinary,  23d.  May,  1766. 

Upon  a  Business  of  Citation  at  Instance  of  Anna  Neilson,  widow 

and  nearest  of  kin  of Neilson,  deceased,  to  cite  the  kindred 

and  creditors  of  the  said  Neilson,  to  show  cause  if  any  why  adminis- 
tration of  estate  of  said  deceased  should  not  be  granted  to  the 
said  Anna  Neilson,  and  caveat  entered  against  granting  thereof  to 
Young,  the  husband  of  the  mother  of  the  deceased. 

Mr.  Rutledge  as  Proctor  for  the  said  Young  moved  that  his 
wife  being  nearly  related  and  himself  principal  creditor  of  the 
deceased,  that  he  might  be  joined  in  the  Letters  of  administration 
with  said  Anna  Neilson,  the  widow. 

Mr.  Parsons  in  behalf  of  the  Defendant  observed  and  cited  an 
Act  of  Parliament  and  several  cases  to  show  that  the  Ordinary 
had  not  a  power  of  refusing  the  widow  when  there  was  no  Child, 
the  Stat,  of  Henry  8th  not  being  of  force  in  this  province. 

Thereupon  ordered  that  Letters  of  administration  be  granted 
to  the  widow  of  the  deceased,  having  first  examined  her  securities 
on  Oath. 

Mr.  Parsons  as  Proctor  for  James  Whitter  &  Joanna  his  wife 
moved  that  administration  be  granted  sd.  James  and  Joanna 
Whitter  on  estate  of  John  Newington  of  St.  John's  parish  ColletCMi. 
Granted. 

Thomas  BuUine  Junr.  enters  caveat  against  Letters  of  Adminis- 
tration being  granted  to  Newman  Swallow  on  the  estate  of 
Joseph  Bradwell  late  of  St.  George's  parish  until  he  should  be 
heard.    26  May  1766. 

Citation  to  James  and  Ann  Jenkins  of  Prince  Frederick's  parish 
Craven  County  to  Administer  the  estate  of  Thomas  Chinners  of 
same  place  planter  as  nearest  kin.    26  May  1766. 


K£COia>S  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  83 

Citation  to  William  Loocock  and  David  Fulton  on  estate  of 
Sidonious  Snook  late  of  Prince  Fredericks  parish  as  greatest 
Creditor.    28  May,  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  John  Howell  of  CharlesTown  on  the  Estate 
of  John  Forbes  late  of  same  place  as  greatest  Creditor.  28  May, 
1766. 

Citation  to  Daniel  Doyley,  Miles  Brewton  and  William  Gibbes, 
to  administer  on  estate  of  Robert  Baldwin  late  of  Prince  George's 
parish,  Craven  County,  as  Friends  of  the  deceased.    29  May,  1766. 

Citation  to  Lambert  Lance  to  administer  the  estate  of  Archibald 
Thompson  of  CharlesTown,  taylor,  deceased,  in  behalf  of  Ancnun 
Lance  and  Loocock  as  greatest  creditors.    29  May  1766. 

Sir/  We  withdraw  the  Caveat  entered  agt:  Mrs.  Scott  adminis- 
tering to  her  Husband  upon  Dr.  Loocock's  and  Mr.  Dillons  being 
Securities  for  her  Administration. 
To  Thos.  Skottowe  Esq;  Guerin  &  Vanderhorst. 

Secry 
May  30th  1766 

Citation  to  Frances  Williams  to  administer  on  estate  of  David 
Williams  late  of  St.  Marks  parish  Craven  County  planter  as 
nearest  of  kin.    3d.  June  1766. 

(To  be  continued) 


<J5    l<|5<i  5.-Z.O 


THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 

CHARLESTON.  S.  C. 


VOLUME  XXIIl,  No.  3  JULY,  1922 


Unit  U  UnHtd  Stuns  ef  Am 


PUBUCATION  COMMITTEE 

Joseph  W.  Basnwell,  Hemey  A.  M.  Smm, 

A.  S.  SAixEYy  Jr. 

EDITOR  OP  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webbes 


CONTENTS 

Swiss  Settlers  in  South  Carolina. ^ 85 

List  of  the  Upper  District  of  St.  John's  Parish 92 

Grimball  of  Edisto  Island 94 

St  Helena's  Parish  Register ...102 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  City  Gazette. «.1S2 

Abstracts  of  Records  of  the   Proceedings  in   the  Court  ci 
Ordinary,  1764-1771 ....158 


N.  B. — These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
VoL  I,  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
CaroUna  Historical  Society.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per 
annum  (the  fiscal  year  being  from  January  to  January),  and 
members  can  buy  back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  Sl.OO  each. 
In  addition  to  receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a 
discount  of  25  per  cent,  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Sodety, 
and  have  the  free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 
please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber, 

South  CaToIioa  Historical  Sodkiy, 

CharlcsUm,  S.  C 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXm  JULY,  1922  No.  3 


SWISS  SETTLERS  IN  SOUTH  CAROLINA 

By  R.  W.  Kelsey,  of  Haverford  College,  Pa. 

The  following  translations  are  descriptive  of  the  Swiss  settle- 
ments in  southern  South  Carolina,  along  the  Savannah  River. 
Purrysburg  was  settled  through  the  efforts  of  John  Peter  Purry, 
of  Neufch&tel,  Switzerland.  The  actual  settlement  began  ap- 
parently in  1732.  The  climate  turned  out  to  be  poor,  the  settlers 
did  not  prosper,  and  they  graduaUy  scattered  to  more  favored 
places  in  South  Carolina  or  elsewhere. 

The  two  following  descriptions,  so  contradictory  in  their  con- 
clusions, iUustrate  in  outstanding  fashion  the  difficulty  of  valuing 
critically  the  accounts  of  uncritical  writers.  Such  variety 
of  opinion  must  have  been  equaUy  baffling  to  prospective  emi- 
grants in  Switzerland.  Of  the  two  characterizations,  "an  earthly 
paradise,"  and  "a  damned  fraud,"  the  more  profane  phrase  seems 
more  nearly  to  have  gained  the  warrant  of  history. 

The  pastor  referred  to  in  the  Gondy  letter  was  thjB  Reverend 
Joseph  Biignion,  a  Swiss  minister,  who  received  Episcopal  ordina- 
tion in  England  as  he  passed  through  that  country  on  his  way  to 
South  Carolina. 

A  detailed  description  of  the  Purr)^burg  settlement,  by  Judge 
Henry  A.  M.  Smith,  was  printed  in  the  South  Carolina  Historical 
and  Genealogical  Magazine,  10  (Oct.,  1909):  187-219. 

The  German  manuscripts  from  which  the  translations  were  made 
are  in  classification,  "Auswanderung  A,"  in  the  Staatsarchiv  at 

85 


86  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Baaely  Switzerland.  The  Dyssli  letter  is  a  contemporary  cxvpy. 
The  one  by  Gondy  may  also  be  a  copy,  although  the  archivists 
at  Basel  believe  it  is  the  original 

The  present  writer  wishes  to  acknowledge  the  skilled  help  o£ 
his  former  teacher,  Dr.  Adolph  Gerber,  in  preparing  the  following 
translations. 

LETTER   FROM   ANTHONY    GONDY,    CHARLESTON,    SOUTH   CAROLINA^ 
TO  mS  BROTHER  IN  THE  NEIGHBORHOOD  OF   LAUSANNA, 

SWITZERLAND 

"Schaleton  [Charleston!  May  28,  1733  S.  C. 

Dear  brother: 

I  did  not  wish  to  fail  to  report  to  you  upon  our  condition  and 
life  in  Carolina.  Because  Rev.  Pignaud  has  left  for  Purisburg, 
where  he  has  been  engaged  as  pastor,  and  made  me  the  solemn 
promise  to  send  my  letter  together  with  his  own  to  England  and 
to  recommend  strongly  that  it  be  duly  forwarded  to  Switzerland, 
hence  I  wished  to  report  by  these  lines  that  by  the  help  of  God  we, 
some  170  persons,  arrived  here  safely  and  in  good  health  after 
having  been  out  on  the  sea  11  weeks.  People  in  Virginia  showed 
us  much  and  great  kindness  and  received  us  with  such  ho^itality 
that  it  is  indescribable.  Thence  we  went  to  Piuisburg  where  we 
were  treated  in  the  same  manner  and  entertained  hospitably  for 
fully  6  weeks  and  where  cousin  Marianne  married  a  man  worth 
50  m.  [thousand  ?]  dollars  (Thaler),  who  was  a  widower  and  had 
an  only  child  by  his  first  wife.  He  made  over  to  her  all  he  owns 
and  possesses.  He  is  a  Palatine,  bom  at  Speier,  by  the  name  of 
Thomas  Baumgartner.  We  attended  the  wedding  and  had  a 
very  good  time.  TTie  new  cousin  presented  me  with  8  horses  for 
the  journey. 

Thence  we  came  to  Charlestown,  where  we  were  again  enter- 
tained hospitably  as  at  Purisburg.  Then  the  Commissary  took 
us  to  the  Savannah,  a  large  river  abounding  with  fish,  8  leagues, 
Swiss  leagues,  from  the  sea,  where  we  built  our  cabins;  there  we 
assigned  50  yokes  [here  probably  =  acres]  of  good  land,  women 
as  well  as  men.  The  soil  is  exceedingly  good,  rich  and  fertile. 
Now  nobody  in  this  country  works  more  than  2  m.  [  =  months]. 
The  remainder  of  the  time  he  may  go  fishing  or  hunting.  There 
are  Indians  living  among  us,  the  best  people,  except  that  we  can- 


SWISS  SETTLERS  IN  SOUTH  CAROLINA  87 

not  talk  to  each  other,  but  must  communicate  with  each  other 
by  tokens  and  signs.  They  go  half  naked  and  have  only  a  deer 
skin  about  their  loins.  For  the  rest  they  do  nothing  but  fish  and 
himt,  know  of  no  other  work  nor  like  to  do  any  other  work.  We 
have  provided  well  for  all  our  single  women,  who  consisted  of 
13  persons.  They  have  all  been  favorably  married.  In  the  old 
coimtry  they  would  not  have  had  such  good  fortune.  Oui  children 
have  become  as  much  acclimated  to  this  country  as  if  they  had 
had  been  bom  here,  because  the  air  is  so  very  healthful.  Yet  it 
is  as  hot  all  the  year  round  as  near  Lausanne  in  August.  Winter 
is  unknown.  When  we  have  winter,  there  is  occasionally  a  cold 
dew  or  rain,  yet  only  by  night.  As  soon  as  day  comes  it  is  warm 
again.  There  are  also  exceedingly  fine  large  trees  in  the  forests, 
oaks  about  10  feet  in  diameter  and  more,  and  bearing  very  many 
acorns,  so  that  the  domesticated  and  wild  hogs  do  not  lack  food 
in  summer  and  winter.  The  cattle  are  allowed  to  go  outdoors  in 
summer  and  winter  like  the  game.  This  coimtry  is  quite  an 
earthly  paradise.    There  is  plenty  of  all  one  desires. 

Since  the  Swiss  people  came  here,  they  make  cheese  and  butter, 
which  the  people  did  not  have  before.  They  have  also  planted 
vines  in  various  places  which  yield  good  wine,  but  they  have  not 
the  presses  and  casks  as  in  Europe.  If,  therefore,  our  neighbors 
of  Morges,  Nyon,  St.  Pr6,  Etoy,  Aubronne,  RoUe,  wish  to  come 
over  here,  they  should  bring  coopers  with  than,  also  whatever 
artisans  they  can  get,  who  will  become  prosperous  and  wealthy 
people  in  this  Canaan.  We  have  immense  forests  from  8  to 
10  days  long  and  wide.  They  teem  with  game  like  ants.  I  and 
cousin  Albert  went  himting  once  with  the  Indians,  to  see  how 
they  shoot  the  game  with  their  bows  and  arrows.  It  is  a  curious 
thing,  but  we  almost  missed  our  way  home,  so  that  we  should 
have  been  obh'ged  to  pass  the  night  with  the  wild  beasts  in  the 
forest,  if  one  of  the  Indians  had  not  foimd  the  way  by  which  we 
had  entered.  There  are  in  the  forests  cypress  trees  of  astonishing 
size,  nuts,  chestnuts,  citrons,  oranges,  lanons,  pomegranates, 
dates,  jujubes,  and  a  thousand  kinds  of  other  trees  and  fruit,  herbs, 
roots.  If  one  of  our  doctors  of  medicine  could  come  to  this 
country  and  had  a  knowledge  of  herbs,  he  might  discover  all  sorts 
of  delicious  things  there  are  herbs  of  quite  delicious  odor.  We 
have  all  we  want  except  wine,  which  is  imported  from  England  or 


88  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Spain,  so  that  it  costs  4  shillings  a  quart.  For  the  rest  we  fed 
as  if  we  were  living  in  a  terrestrial  paradise.  There  are  a  thousand 
kinds  of  birds  of  all  sorts  of  colors,  red,  white;  large  and  small 
parrots;  also  a  kind,  of  which  it  is  said  none  has  yet  been  carried 
to  Europe,  which  is  green  and  like  pure  gold,  mingled  with  gray, 
the  name  of  which  nobody  knows.  The  Indians  call  than  Pitivaor. 
They  sing  as  beautifully  as  a  musical  instrument,  wonderfully 
sweet,  like  small  flutes. 

My  pen  cannot  possibly  describe  the  loveliness  and  charm  of 
this  coimtry,  and  who  does  not  come  himself  to  this  country  can- 
not possibly  believe  it.  I  could  not  have  believed  it  either  if  I 
had  not  seen  it  myself  for  it  has  been  with  me  as  with  the  un- 
believing Thomas*  What  I  heard  related  about  this  coimtry  in 
Switzerland  I  just  regarded  as  a  fable,  but  everything  is  even  much 
lovelier,  better  and  more  beautiful  than  it  was  described.  The 
Europeans  have  about  3(XM00  chickens,  geese,  ducks,  about 
6-700  pigs,  200  cows,  about  400  horses.  In  short,  it  is  incredible; 
wherefore  I  ask  all  our  friends  and  relatives  who  are  not  of  great 
means  that  they  may  please  join  us  here.  They  will  thank  me 
for  it. 

Nor  is  the  voyage  at  all  so  dangerous  as  we  were  made  to  believe, 
yet  it  is  well  if  many  people  come  together.  It  is  less  e]q>ensive. 
It  is  also  well  if  they  bring  artisans  of  all  kinds  with  them  who 
are  getting  along  best  of  all.  They  are  making  as  much  as  they 
please,  particularly  tl^  blacksmiths,  cart-wrights,  carpenters, 
masons,  potters,  rope-makers,  linen-workers  who  also  know  how 
to  weave  cloth^  because  there  is  very  much  cotton  here,  whole 
forests  full  of  it.  Also  all  poor  females  who  are  of  scanty  means 
should  come  along  to  America  if  they  are  virtuous  and  sensible. 
They  will  all  get  along  nicely  inasmuch  as  all  can  make  their 
fortune,  for  here  men  do  not  care  for  the  money  as  they  do  in 
Switzerland.  Dear  brother,  I  feel  sure  that  these  lines  will  appear 
to  you  as  a  veritable  fable,  but  I  should  be  ashamed  of  myself  if 
I  told  in  them  a  single  word  not  based  upon  truth.  I  am  looking 
for  you  and  your  entire  family. 

A  thousand  r^ards  to  you,  your  wife,  dearest  children  and 
friends!  I  commend  you  all  together  to  the  protection  of  the 
Most  High. 

Antony  Gondy." 


SWISS  SETTLERS  IN  SOUTH  CAROLINA  89 

(Note: — ^The  above  letter,  in  German,  was  printed  in  The 
American  Historical  Renew,  22  (Oct.  1916):  115-117.  It  was 
contributed  by  Albert  B.  Faust.) 

letter  from  SAMUEL  DYSSLI,  CHARLESTON,  SOUTH  CAROLINA,  TO 
HIS  MOTHER,   BROTHERS  AND  FRIENDS  IN  SWITZERLAND 

"Carlestatt  [Charleston]  in  Carolina, 
Dec.  3, 1737. 

Praised  be  the  Lord  to  the  end  of  the  heavens!  In  the  name 
of  Jesus  my  special  childlike  and  kind  regards  in  the  first  place  to 
you,  my  dear  mother,  and  to  you,  my  dear  brother  Albrecht,  as 
well  as  to  the  dear  children  and  other  brothers  and  sisters,  friends, 
relatives  and  acquaintances!  In  haste  I  send  you  these  few  words 
from  Carolina,  through  a  good  friend  who  has  gone  back  to  Switzer- 
land. I  am  over  here,  thank  God,  hale  and  hearty,  and  doing  at 
present  quite  nicely.  I  am  working  with  an  English  master.  He 
gives  me  every  week  two  Bern  kronen,  say  50  shillings,  and  a 
plentiful  board,  food  and  drink  in  abundance,  in  addition.  I 
have  already  been  half  a  year  with  him.  Apart  from  this,  I  was 
ill  with  fever  in  Purisburg  about  3  months,  and  afterwards  in 
Georgia  at  Savannah,  the  capital,  I  had  the  bloody  flux  [?]  or 
dysentery  for  about  six  months.  Also  a  great  swelling  befell  me. 
My  whole  belly  was  swollen  so  that  I  might  have  burst.  My 
doctor  in  these  perilous  times  was  our  Lord  Grod,  for  I  did  not  take 
medicine  from  men,  but  trusted  myself  to  divine  care.  My  heart 
trembles  when  I  think  of  the  following,  that  once  upon  a  farm, 
where  many  people  were  together  and  felling  large  trees,  calling 
to  each  other  when  one  was  about  to  fall,  when  I  was  passing  by 
there,  a  mighty  large  oak  fell  over  me  which  ordinarily  would 
have  crushed  me  to  atoms.  But  the  hand  of  the  Lord  ordained 
that  I  come  through  between  the  branches  and  remained  unhurt. 
Oh,  how  much  the  prayer  of  pious  parents  can  accomplish!  How 
sincerely  I  have  always  felt  that  on  the  part  of  my  mother! 

To  report  something  of  the  quality  of  this  coimtry,  I  herewith 
wish  to  have  everybody  warned  that  he  should  not  hanker  to 
come  into  this  country,  for  diseases  here  have  too  much  sway,  and 
people  have  died  in  masses,  [now  the  children  leaving  their  parents] 
then  the  parents  leaving  their  children.  Moreover,  the  children 
soon  go  [to  work]  the  one  here  the  other  there,  and  are  treated  like 


90  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

slaves  and  brought  up  in  ignorance  like  the  savages.  Nor  are 
provisions  given  any  more  to  the  new  comers,  as  used  to  be  done. 
Moreover,  everything  is  exceedingly  dear,  e.g.  a  poimd  of  butter, 
7^  shillings,  a  poimd  of  cheese  5  shillings,  white  wine  5  shillings 
a  quart,  red  wine  10  shiUings,  beer  3  shillings.*  What  is  bought 
in  Switzerland  for  a  kreutzer  is  here  a  shilling.  Besides  the  quart 
in  this  country  is  no  larger  than  half  a  Bern  ^'maass,"  the  pound 
is  also  very  small.  In  short  everything  is  dreadfully  dear.  Cheap- 
ness has  retired  into  the  raw  ox-  or  cattle-hide,  an  ox-hide,  indeed 
without  distinction  the  largest,  is  20  shillings,  just  think,  20  shil- 
lings, and  the  pound  of  leather  2  shillings. 

Carolina  looks  more  like  a  n^o  country  than  like  a  country 
settled  by  white  pecple.  In  Charleston  and  that  neighborhood 
there  are  calculated  to  be  alwa3rs  20  blacks,  who  are  called  negroes, 
to  one  white  man,  but  they  are  all  slaves.  The  whites  mix  with 
the  blacks  and  the  blacks  with  the  whites,  and  if  a  white  man  has 
a  child  by  a  black  woman,  nothing  is  done  to  him  on  accoimt  of  it. 
Such  swinishnisss  is  not  punished  in  this  country.  There  are 
brought  large  shiploads  of  these  people  from  the  African  negro 
country.  Thereupon  they  are  put  on  the  market  and  sold  as  a 
head  of  cattle  is  sold.  It  also  occurs  that  the  English  marry,  nay, 
mar  themselves,  by  manying  black  women,  often  also  Indian 
women. 

Regarding  the  savages:  these  savages  are  by  no  means  terrible, 
ferocious  brutes,  as  many  may  imagine.  If  one  lets  them  alone, 
they  will  not  do  harm  to  anybody.  They  are  kind  natured,  well 
built,  strong  people,  but  alas!  they  do  not  know  anything  at  all 
of  the  true  God.  If,  however,  they  are  harmed  by  somebody, 
there  is  no  reconciliation  any  more, 'but  they  try  to  avenge  them- 
selves in  any  possible  way.  They  live  like  the  birds  of  heaven, 
do  not  work,  do  not  sow,  but  go  hunting,  pursue  the  deer  very 
vigorously  and  the  bears.  There  are  also  mighty,  large  buffaloes, 
wild  ones,  also  tigers,  wolves,  wildcats  twice  as  large  as  the  do- 
mesticated, beavers,  crocodiles.  These  are  more  than  plenty,  but 
they  do  no  great  damage.  The  rattle  snake  is  a  huge  animal. 
There  are  some  which  are  as  thick  as  an  ale-pot  and  thicker,  yet 
they  pursue  no  one,  unless  he  steps  on  them  imawares. 

*  So.  Ca.  currency  was  then  about  1/7  the  value  of  sterling. 


SWISS  SETTLERS  IN  SOUTH  CAROLINA  91 

My  journey  hither  was  quite  safe,  thank  God.  On  the  way 
through  France. we  found  kind  people  everywhere.  In  London  I 
spent  2  weeks.  Across  the  great  sea  we  were  especially  favored, 
for  we  got  across  in  6  weeks.  God  gave  us  very  welcome  winds. 
Our  captain  said  he  had  never  had  such  a  good  passage  in  all  his 
life.  When  we  were  a  fortnight  out  on  the  sea,  we  came  to  the 
exceedingly  beautiful  island  of  Madeira.  There  we  saw  the  first 
fiying  fish,  many  hundreds  of  them  together.  Two  of  them 
dropped  on  our  vessel.  Besides,  we  saw  horribly  large  fishes  near 
our  vessel  They  drew  in  large  streams  of  water  and  spit  them 
out  again  with  a  horrible  rushing  and  snorting. 

In  the  meantime  I  tell  you  once  more:  Let  nobody  hanker  to 
come  to  this  country!  True,  there  have  come  to  Switzerland 
people  whom  I  know  well,  and  they  have  had  villainous  letters 
with  them,  as  if  Carolina  were  such  a  good  country,  but  it  is  a 
damned  fraud.  If  one  man  is  well  o£F,  about  1000  others  are  so 
much  the  worse  off.  As  reported  above,  I  am  at  present,  thank 
God,  so  well  off  that  it  would  be  a  sin  if  I  desired  anything  better. 
But  what  of  it?  One  swallow  does  not  make  a  spring.  I  ought 
to  answer  Pmi's  mendacious  booklet,  paragraph  by  paragraph, 
but  I  have  not  time.  All  citizens  be  kindly  warned,  especially 
those  who  eventually  would  send  sons  abroad,  that  they  beware 
of  enlisting  to  work  in  their  professions  in  this  coimtry,  unless  they 
desire  to  get  into  great  slavery,  as  it  has  happenied  to  many  whom 
I  know  quite  well. 

If  it  please  God,  I  hope  to  write  to  you  more  in  detail  from 
Philadelphia  or  Pennsylvania  in  half  a  year  hence.  I  must  dose. 
May  the  God  of  all  grace  give  his  peace  to  all  of  you!    Amen! 

N.B.  My  regards  to  cousin  Andreas  Grimm!  Have  him  alsa 
read  this  letter. 

Samuel  Dsrssli." 


LIST  OF  THE  UPPER  DISTRICT  OF  ST.  JCW5rS  PARISH 

31st  Jan.  1756^ 

This  List  Serves  for  the  27th  March  1756  and  the  Defanhmes 
are  preck'd  at  the  Right  hand  o'  the  names. 

Capt.  John  Ward 
LieaL  Henry  De  St.  Johen 
Eiic  Stephen  Maz3rdL 
Cleik  Henry  Ravend 

^^     I  John  Jones 


! 


Daniel  Ravenel  Senr. 
Benja.  De  Su  Julian 
James  Ravenel 
Andrew  Bankson 
Richd.  Stitt 
Henry  Winningham 
Frans.  Gain 
John  Pearce 
JohnLawson 
Thomas  Hopkins 
Peter  Perce 
John  Wheeler 
James  Beard 
Philip  Perott 
James  McKelvey  Jan. 
Willm:  Coram 
Edw:  Coram 
Jacob  Markley 
Michael  Brady 
Robert  Jones 
James  Hammilton 
Wilhn.  Webber 


John  Cook 
Robert  Pearce 
WUhnWheder 
James  McKdvey  Senr 
John  Middleton 
Alezr.  Ding^ 
James  Newman 
Thos.Bolleau 
Math.\mison 
John  Tate 
James  Flud 

J 

Isaac  Goudin 
Jonathn.  Hill 
John  Graves 
John  Nights 
John  McKelvey 
John  Shaveneau 
John  Breadhead 
Samuel  Little 
Wilhn.  Budding 
Robert  Taylor 


^  An  original  militia  list  found  among  the  papers  of  the  Danid  Ravend 
family,  formeriy  of  Somerton  and  Wantoot  plantations  in  St.  John's  Berkley, 
loaned  for  printing  by  D.  £.  Huger  Smith,  Esq. 

92 


LIST  OF  UPPER  DISXKICT  OF  ST.  JOHN'S  PARISH 


93 


Daniel  Ravenel 
David  Lassons  (?) 
John  Jonson 
Hugh  Anderson 
John  Goldsmith 
Fred  Dick 
Frans.  Grame 

Gabl.  Marion 
Frans.  Marion 
Thos.  Ley 
Jonathan  Wood 
James  Keith 
Danl.  Jourdon 

Isaac  Winningham 
Jos.  Bradwell 
Jas.  Winningham 
Jonathan  Roil 
Thos.  Comings 
Thos.  Dwight. 


George  Brunson 
Wilhn.  Flud 
Thos  Piatt 


Men  Listed  31  Jan.  1756 


Men  Listed  27  Mar. 


GRIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

{Continued  from  April) 

12. 

John  Grimball  (Paul  3.  Thomas  2.  Paul  1),  son  of  Paul  GrimbaD 
(7)  and  his  third  wife  Mary — ,  was  bom  between  Nov.  1746,  and 
December  1747,  for  on  December  2,  1768,  he  gives  receipt  to 
William  Maxwell,  executor  of  Joshua  Grimball  deceased,  who 
was  the  surviving  executor  of  Paul  Grimball,  for  the  personal 
property  and  titles  of  lands,  left  to  him  by  his  father.^  James 
Wright  and  James  Robert  witnesses. 

On  December  14,  1768,  as  John  Grimball  of  St.  Lukes  Parish, 
planter,  he  released  to  Thomas  Searson,  194  acres,  part  of  1000 
acres  originally  granted  to  Capt.  Charles  Odingsell,  bounding 
west  on  Col.  Daniel  Heyward,  South  on  John  Grimball,  East 
on  the  estate  of  John  Sealy,  and  —  on  branch  of  Port  Royal 
River.* 

On  25  Nov.  1773,  as  John  Grimball,  son  of  Paul,  he  gives  bond 
for  £10000  to  John  Grimball,  son  of  Isaac,  to  secure  the  latter 
from  any  obligation  which  might  arise  from  the  fact  that  John, 
son  of  Paul,  had  been  buying  and  selling  lands  and  negroes  under 
the  appellation  of  John  Grimball,  Junior,  when  it  should  have 
been  Senior;  signed  John  Grimball  Sr.,  James  Pelot,  Samuel  Pelot 
and  John  Swinton  witnesses.' 

On  26  July,  1778,  as  of  St.  Peter's  Parish,  with  Elizabeth  his 
wife,  planter,  he  conveys  to  Abraham  Ginerat  (?)  400  acres  in 
several  tracts,  on  New  River,  Calf  Pen  Bay,  sold  to  him  by  EUas 
Robert,  John  Audebert  and  Elias  Robert  witnesses.^ 

A  family  record  states  that  this  John  Grimball  married  Elizabeth 
Robert,  a  daughter  of  Jacques  Robert  and  Elizabeth  Jaudon,  this 
is  confirmed  by  a  Robert  family  chart;  his  sister  Ann  Grimball, 

*  Probate  Court,  1765-69,  page  462. 
«  M.  C,  Office,  Book  N  3,  page  16. 

*  P.  C,  1774-79,  page  84. 

*  M.  C.  O.  Book  H-5,  page  17. 

94 


GIUMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  95 

married  Peter  Robert  Junr.,  brother  to  Elizabeth,  and  to  the  Elias 
Robert  of  the  deed  above.*  John  Grimball  died  before  Feb.  6, 
1795,  for  on  that  date  Paul  Grimball  Jimr.,  of  Beaufort  district 
conveyed  to  William  Evans  of  Edisto  Island,  two  tracts  of  land, 
in  all  600  acres,  conveyed  to  Paul  Grimball  Sr.  of  Edisto  Island 
10  Nov.  1750,  by  Richard  Ash.  The  said  600  acres  at  the  death 
of  Paul  Grimball  Sr.  fell  to  his  son  Paul,  as  heir  at  law;  this  second 
Paul  died  leaving  an  only  child  and  daughter  Martha,  at  whose 
death,  without  issue,  the  said  lands  reverted  to  Paul  Grimball  Junr., 
by  right  of  his  father  John  Grimball,  who  was  eldest  brother  to 
the  said  Paul  Grimball,  son  of  Paul.' 

According  to  a  family  record,  Elizabeth  Robert,  widow  of  John 
Grimball,  married  after  his  death.  Rev.  Alexander  Scott,  moved 
to  Woodville,  Miss,  in  1810,  and  died  in  1818  at  Bayou  Boeuf,  La. 
A  son  by  her  second  marriage  was  a  Governor  of  Miss. 
John  Grimball  and  his  wife  Elizabeth  had  issue: 

i.  Paul  Grimbal  Jimr.  of  St.  Peters  Parish,  Beaufort 
Dist.  bom  11  Oct.  1773;  died  23  April,  1841,  in 
Rapides  parish.  La.  Married  Esther  Jaudon,  born 
in  S.  C.  12  July  1777,  died  in  Rapides  parish.  La., 
22  Oct.  1822.  They  are  said  to  have  had  five 
daughters;  Mary,  who  married  John  Caliban; 
Sarah  Robert,  bom  in  S.  C.  Oct.  4,  1805,  married 
in  Louisiana,  Dr.  J.  D.  Wright;  Ann,  who  married 
Mr.  Poland?;  Jane,  a  Mr.  Pompfrey,  and  Amanda, 
a  Mr.  Crawford, 
ii.  John  Grimball,  have  no  data  conceming  him  beyond 
a  family  chart  which  states  that  he  moved  away 
about  1806,  with  60  people,  all  of  the  family  con- 
nection; he  is  also  stated  to  have  married  a  first 
cousin,  Mary  (or  Ann)  Robert,  daughter  of  Peter 
Robert  and  Ann  Grimball,  and  have  had  three 
daughters,  Sarah,  Esther  and  Elizabeth,  and  one 
Son,  Paul  Jabez  Grimball,  who  married  and  left 
issue, 
iii.    Providence  Grimball,  who  married  a  Mr.  McNeely. 

*  This  Magasdne,  current  vol.  page  41. 

•  M.  C.  O.  Book  R-6,  page  93,  and  this  vol.  page  40. 


96  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

13. 

Josq>h  Grimball  (Thomas  3.  Thomas  2.  Paul  1.)  bom  1746  or 
later,  died  intestate  before  23  Oct.  1777,  when  John  Grimball, 
[son  of  Isaac]  and  "Mrs.  Sison"  administered;  estate  valued  at 
6000  Pounds,  Samuel  Porcher,  Paul  Porcher,  and  John  Booker 
appraisers.  He  is  said  to  have  married  Mary  Elliott;  little  ap- 
pears about  him  on  the  records;  it  is  stated  that  he  had  several 
daughters,  most  of  them  d3dng  unmarried,  and  one  son,  Thomas 
Grimball,  who  was  brought  up  by  his  cousin  and  unde-in-law,  John 
Grimball  (son  of  Isaac)  and  to  have  married  Ann  Audibertin  S.  C. 
and  to  have  moved  with  his  family  to  Miss,  about  1810,  and  died 
there;  the  issue  of  Thomas  Grimball  and  Ann  Audibert  were:  1. 
John  A.  Grimball,  married  Eugenia  Bracy,  had  one  daughter, 
Laura,  who  married  T.  J.  Lenoir.  2.  Thomas,  bom  in  1800;  died 
unmarried.  3.  Leroy,  immarried.  4.  Caroline,  married  Dr. 
Theophilus  Hawkins.  S.  Eliza  A.,  who  married  Dr.  David  McRae 
and  had  issue.    6.  Daughter . 

14. 

Joshua  Grimball  (Joshua  3.  Thomas  2.  Paul  1.)  bom  1744  or 
earlier,  lived  on  Edisto  Island;  married  29  Oct:  1765,  Hannah 
Rippon,  widow  (St.  Philip's  Register).  He  gave  William  Max- 
well, executor  of  his  father  Joshua  Grimball,  a  receipt  for  his  one 
fourth,  or  child's  share  of  the  estate  on  8  Nov.  1766,^  and  died 
intestate  before  March  8,  1768,  when  Hannah  Grimball  and 
Benjamin  Jenkins  advertised  his  estate." 

His  widow,  Hannah  Grimball  of  Edisto  Island  also  died  intes- 
tate before  Feb.  11,  1771,  when  Benjamin  Jenkins  administered 
upon  her  estate;'  her  maiden  name  has  not  been  found. 
Joshua  Grimball  and  Hannah  his  wife  had  issue: 

17.  i.  Paul  Grimball,  bom  on  Edisto  Island,  Oct.  1766; 
died  1836;  married  June,  1787,  Sarah  Chaplin, 
1766-1822,  of  St.  Helena. 

^  P.  C,  1763-67,  page  511. 

'  S.  C.  Gazette  and  Countiy  Journal,  March  8,  1768. 

*  This  Magasine,  page  44,  and  vol.XX,  page  232. 


GKDCBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  97 

15. 

Charles  Grimball  (Isaac  3.  Thomas  2.  Paul  1.),  merchant  of 
CharlesTown,  bom  1735  or  earlier,  died  June  1st  1770;  married 
Sept.  9,  1756,  Anne,  daughter  of  William  and  Sarah  Sealy;  she 
was  bom  at  Euhaw,  Indian  Land,  Jan:  4,  1740.  After  the  death 
of  Charles  Grimball  she  married  April  4,  1774,  Rev.  Oliver  Hart, 
pastor  of  the  Baptist  church  in  CharlesTown.^® 

Charles  Grimball  made  his  will  29  May,  1770;  leaves  each  of 
his  children  (not  named)  £20,  ^and  leaves  the  remainder  of  his 
estate  to  his  wife  Anne,  who  is  sole  executrix. 
Charles  Grimball  and  Anne  his  wife  had  issue: 

i.    Charles  Isaac  Grimball,  of  Edisto  Island,  bom  about 

1761,  died 1793,  married  May,  1790,  Martha 

daughter  of  James  Clark;  they  had  no  issue;  his 
will  mentions  his  wife  Martha,  mother  Anne  Hart, 
sister  Sarah  Clark,  formerly  Sarah  Grimball. 
Brother-in-law,  James  Clark,  and  wife  Martha  to 
be  exors.;  dated  June  3, 1791;  proved  Feb.  4, 1794. 
ii.  Sarah  Grimball,  bom  about  1767,  married  1788, 
James  Clark,  son  of  James  Clark  and  Elizabeth 
Grimball,  and  brother  to  Martha  Clark,  who 
married  Chas.  Isaac  Grimball. 

16. 

John  Grimball  (Isaac  3.  Thomas  2.  Paul  1.),  son  of  Isaac  Grim- 
ball and  his  second  wife  Rebecca  Sealy,  was  bom  according  to  the 
family  account,  12  Sept.  1748;  his  tombstone,  in  the  Unitarian 
(formerly  Congregational)  Church  Yard,  states  that  he  died  Nov.  8, 
1804,  aged  53  years,  which  brings  his  birth  date  in  the  year  1751; 
this  John  Grimball  had  lands  in  St.  Luke's  Parish,  Fairfield  plan- 
tation, and  owned  a  house  on  South  Bay  in  Charleston;  according 
to  his  family,  he  was  married  at  least  six  times,  one  wife  being  his 
cousin,  a  daughter  of  Thomas  Grimball  (no.  8),  and  sister  to 
Major  Thomas  Grimball,  Jr.  and  to  Joseph  Grimball  (no.  13), 
this  is  supported  by  the  will  of  John  Grimball,  who  calls  Thomas 
GrimbaU,  son  of  Joseph,  his  nephew.  In  June  1784,  John  Grim- 
ball of  Edisto  Island,  married  Mrs.  Ann  Adams,  widow  of  Mr. 

^  Diary  of  Rev.  Oliver  Hart,  CharlesUm  Year  Book,  1896,  page  386. 


98  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

John  Adams.^^  The  family  account  states  that  he  married  two 
Miss  Berkley's;  certainly  he  married  some  time  in  April,  1797, 
Elizabeth  Berkley,  daughter  of  Mr.  John  Berkley,  of  Wilton, 
planter;  John  Grimball  being  then  described  as  of  Beaufort  Dis- 
trict, planter,  the  marriage  settlement  was  dated  21  April,  1797, 
Paul  Hamilton  of  St.  Bartholomew's  Parish,  and  Morton  Waring 
of  Charleston  being  the  trustees;  the  date  of  marriage  is  given  in 
the  Circular  (Congregational)  Church  register,  as  April  2, 1797. 

John  Grimball's  will,  dated  17  December,  1801,  proved  16  April, 
1806,  describes  him  as  being  of  St.  Luke's  Parish  Beaufort  District, 
planter.  He  divides  his  plantation,  Fairfield,  from  the  north 
edge  of  the  ca^l  which  joins  near  the  house  of  Thomas  Dra3rton 
Esq.  on  his  Ocean  plantation  ...  to  the  west  line  of  Jacob 
Guerard  on  Bee's  Creek,  with  the  use  to  the  Old  Settlement,  to 
his  wife  Eliza  for  life  or  widowhood,  then  to  his  daughter  Eliza 
Grimball;  if  his  daughter  died  unmarried,  then  to  his  son  John 
Berkley  Grimball,  and  in  case  said  son  died  unmarried  under  21, 
then  to  his  nephew  Isaac  Grimball  Jenkins,  son  of  Isaac  G. 
Jenkins,  of  Edisto  Island. 

To  son  John  Berkley  Grimball,  the  tract  of  Fairfield  plantation 
called  the  New  Settlement,  if  he  died  under  21,  immarried,  then 
to  daughter  Eliza  Grimball,  if  said  daughter  die  under  21,  and 
unmarried  then  to  nephew  Thomas  Grimball. 

Wife  to  have  use  of  three  negroes,  horses  and  furniture  in  house 
in  Charleston,  use  of  said  house,  and  the  house  on  Sullivans  Island 
for  widowhood,  then  to  his  two  children,  Eliza  and  John  Berkley 
Grimball. 

To  son  John  Berkley  Grimball,  house  and  lot  on  South  Bay, 
and  if  he  die  under  21,  then  daughter  Eliza,  and  if  she  die  under 
age  and  unmarried,  then  to  nephew  Isaac  Grimball  Jenkins,  son 
of  Isaac  G.  Jenkins,  of  Edisto  Island.  All  negroes  and  other 
personal  property  to  his  son  and  daughter,  and  if  they  died  under 
age  and  without  issue,  then  to  nephew  Thomas  Grimball,  son  of 
Joseph  Grimball,  20  negroes,  and  the  plantation  left  to  son  John  B. 
Grimball.  Remainder  to  nephews  Robert  and  William  Jenkins, 
sons  of  John  Jenkins  of  Edisto  Island,  and  to  nephew  Isaac  G. 
Jenkins,  and  nieces  Eliza  and  Providence  Jenkins,  children  of 
Isaac  Grimball  Jenkins  of  Edisto  Island. 

"  5.  C.  Weekly  GazeUe,  Jan.  23,  1784. 


GRIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAN1>  99 

To  Cousin  Thomas  Grimball,  watch,  sword,  and  double  bar- 
relled gun. 

Wife,  executrix  for  widowhood,  and  friends  John  Potter,  Morton 
Waring,  William  Smith,  (son  of  Josiah)  and  Thomas  Grimball  to 
be  executors.  Proved  before  Charles  Jones  Jenkins,  Esq.  Eliza 
Grimball  qualified,  25  April,  1806. 

EKza  Grimball,  widow  of  John,  married  Rev.  Alexander  Flinn, 
pastor  of  the  Second  Presbyterian  Church  in  Charleston,  and  died 
before  August  Sth,  1844,  when  her  will  was  proved;  buried  in  a 
vault  in  the  Circular  Church  Yard. 
John  Grimball  and  EUza  Berkley  had  issue: 

i.    Eliza  Berkley  Grimball,  bom  about  1798,  died  1863; 
married  May  1824  (Marriage  Settlement)  Martin 
L.  Wilkins,  and  had  issue, 
ii.    John  Berkley  Grimball,  bom  23  June,  1800,  died 
Mar.  7, 1893,  buried  at  Magnolia,  married  10  Mar. 
1830,  Margaret  Ann  Morris  (called  Meta)  daugh- 
ter of  Col.  Lewis  Morris,  and  Elizabeth  Manigault 
♦of  Morrisania,  New  York  and  Wilton,  St.  Paul's 
Parish,  S.C.  She  died  in  1863,  buried  in  Magnolia. 
He  was  at  one  period  President  of  the  Charleston 
Library  Society. 
They  had  issue: 

1.  Elizabeth  Berkley,  married  \^IIiam  Munroe, 
no  issue.  2.  Berkley,  died  immarried.  3. 
Lewis  M.  married  Miss  Legg,  two  sons  who 
left  no  issue.  4.  ^lliam  H.  died  unmarried. 
5.  John  Grimball,  bom  in  Charleston,  S.  C. 
April  18, 1840,  died  there  Dec.  25, 1922;  was 
a  graduate  of  the  U.  S.  Naval  Academy  at 
Annapolis;  distinguished  officer  in  the  Con- 
federate Navy."  He  married  first,  IWS, 
Miss  Catherine  Moore  of  Ala.  who  died  the 
same  year;  he  married  second,  in  1886,  Mary 
Georgiana  Barnwell,  (had  four  sons,  i. 
Wm.  Heyward,  who  married  Panchita  Hey- 
ward  and  has  issue,  ii.  Arthur  umd.  iii. 
John  Berkley,  imd  iv  George  Elliott,  who 

"  For  sketch  of  his  life,  see  News  and  Carrier,  Wednesday,  Dec.  27,  1922. 


100         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

married  Frances  Biiist  and  has  issue.)  6. 
Arthur,  died  unmarried.  7.  Gabriella  Mani- 
gaulty  immarried.  8.  Charlotte  Manigault, 
unmarried.  9.  Harry  Morris,  married  Helen 
Trenhohn,  (had  ten  children;  Elizabeth  Berk- 
ley, unmarried;  Eliza  Trenholm,  married 
H.  B.  lindsey;  Margaret  Ann  Morris;  Helen 
Margaret,  married  F.  C.  Howland;  Edward 
Trenhobn  (daughter),  died  yoimg;  Harry 
Morris,  married  Margarite  Leonard;  Berkley, 
married  Anne  Strohecker;  Gabriella  Mani- 
gault,  married  Francis  Marion  Whaley; 
Lewis  Morris,  und.  and  Delancy  Izard,  md. 
Helen  Louise  Sutton.)  10.  Harriett  M.  died 
young. 

17. 

Paul  Grimball  Qoshua  4.  Joshua  3.  Thomas  2.  Paul  1.),  bom 
1766,  died  1832,  married  June  1787,  Sarah  Chaplin  of  St  Helena 
(1766-1832);  his  uncle  in  law,  James  Clark  was  appointed  his 
guardian  in  October,  1781;  on  14  Oct.  1789,  as  Paul  Grimball  of 
Edisto  Island,  with  Sarah  his  wife,  he  conveyed  to  Ralph  Bailey 
of  same  place  the  plantation  called  Point  of  Pines,  1262  acres, 
bounding  North  on  North  Edisto  River,  East  on  Josiah  Mikell 
and  Paul  Hamilton,  South  on  William  Mikell,  West  on  Thomas 
Whaley,  Joseph  flckling  and  James  Clark.^^  This  plantation 
was  part  of  a  grant  of  1500  to  the  first  Paul  Grimball,  who  seems 
to  have  left  it  to  his  wife  for  life,  and  then  to  his  son  Thomas; 
Thomas  Grimball  seems  to  have  divided  it  between  his  son  Paul 
(1000  acres)  and  his  son  Joshua  (500  acres).  Paul  apparently 
gave  500  acres  of  his  tract  to  his  daughter  Ann,  and  his  son-in-law, 
John  Paul  Grimke;  and  Grimke  sold  this  500  acres  to  Joshua 
Grimball,  June  20,  1749^^  the  bounds  then  being  N.E.  on  Joshua 
Grimball,  S.E.  on  Paul  Grimball,  west  on  —  Sams;  the  titles  of  all 
of  this  land  have  not  been  followed. 

Paul  Grimball  and  Sarah  Chaplin  had  issue: 

i.    Paul  Chaplin  Grimball  bom  at  St.  Helena's  March 
17,  1788;  died  Oct.  3,  1864;  married  1814,  Eliza 

»  M.  C.  O.  B.6,  page  557. 

^  Ibid  £.  £.  page  126  and  130. 


GRIMBALL  OF  EDISTO  ISLAND  101 

(Jenkins)  Hanscome,  widow,  eldest  daughter  of 
Benjamin  Jenkins.^*    She  was  bom  8  Aug.  1786, 
and  died  19  Dec.  1850,  buried  in  St.  John's  Church- 
yard, John's  Island;  Paul  Grimball  is  buried  in 
Sumter  District.    They  had  issue:  1.  Eliza  Ann 
1815-1836.    2.  Benjamin  Jenkins,  1820-1838.    3. 
Isaac  Paul,  1822-1898,  married  1845  Eliza  Jenkms, 
(1836-1901)  they  had  six  children,  some  of  whom 
have  left  issue.    4.  Thomas  Hanscome,   1824- 
1864,  married  1857,  Sarah  Patterson  Bailey,  who 
died  1914;  his  will  is  on  file  in  Barnwell;  he  left 
issue  living,  one  son  Henry  Bailey  Grimball  who 
married  and  has  issue.    5.  Pauline,  1830-1888, 
married  Robt.  C.  McFadden  and  left  issue, 
ii.    William  Grimball,  died  young, 
iii.    Isaac,  married  Ann  Croske3rs,  lived  and  died  in 
Waterboro;  left  no  male  issue. 
For  the  names  of  the  later  generations  we  have  been  dependent 
upon  family  information,  and  for  lack  of  space  are  unable  to  bring 
the  various  lines  down  to  date.    The  Compiler  does  not  claim 
that  the  genealogy  is  complete,  but  hopes  that  it  will  be  of  assis- 
tance to  any  one  interested. 

>■  This  AfafosMie,  vol.  XX,  page  242. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER 

Copied  and  arranged  tor  printing  by  Joseph  W.  Baxhwell  amd 

BfABEL  L.  Webbek 

(CofUimied  from  April) 

Garvey,  Jchn,  Deceased;  bur;  21  Nov:  1767,  aged  50.    Con- 
sumption. 
Garvey,  Juditii,  wife  to  John;  bur;  27  Dec:  1741. 
Gaudee,  CaUierine,  from  Eng^d;  mar:  ^ril  17,  1737,  John 

Ddegaye,  bach. 
Gaudee,  Mary,  fr.  Eng^nd,  mar:  Mar:  28,  1743,  Thomas  Glenn, 

bach. 
Gayner,  Nicholson,  Sn.  of  Isaac,  bom  Mar:  28,  1723:  bapt  Sept: 

28: 1724,  by  Brayfield. 
Gazyley,  Josph:  Sherwin,  Sn.  of  Josq>h  &  Sarah;  belonging  to 

Adventure  Man  of  War;'  bom  Dec  29,  1747;  bapt:  Feb:  14, 

1747  by  St  John. 
Gilbert,  Searles,  Sn.  of  Barnabas  &  Susanna;  bom  Aug:  21, 1726; 

bapt:  Aug:  28,  1726  by  Jones.    Jas.  &  Margt  Watt  &  Jas. 

Searles  sureties. 
Gilbert,  Barnabas,  Sn.  of  Do.    Bapt:  Dec.  27,  1729  by  Do. 
Gilbert,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  married  by  Jones,  Mar:  16,  1736, 

John  Garvey,  bach. 
Gilbert,  Barnabas,  Capt.  the  Father,  bur:  20  May  1731. 
Gilbert,  Susanna,  wid:  to  Barnabas,  the  Mother,  married  by 

Dyson,  in  CharlesTown,  Dec.  5,  1731,  Richard  Franklin. 
Gilchrist,  Patrick,  Dr.  bur:  6  Sq>t.  1730. 
Giraldeau,  James,  bach:  married  by  Jones,  Mar:  22,  1740,  Mary 

Postell,  spinister. 
Giraldeau,  John,  Sn.  of  James  &  Mary,  bom  Sept:  5,  1742;  bapt: 

Sept.  19, 1742  by  Jones. 
Glenn,  Thomas,  bach:  a  Taylor  married  by  Do.  Mar:  28,  1743, 

Mary  Gaudee,  spin. 
Goldrick,  Bryan,  mar:  by  Do.  Feb:  6, 1728,  Mary  Shortey. 
Goldrick,  John,  Sn:  of  Bryan  &  Mary,  bapt:  Dec.  25, 1729  by  Do. 
Goldsmith,  Thomas,  a  soldier,  bur:  13  Feb:  1728. 

*  This  is  interlined,  and  may  refer  to  either  Gaynor  or  Gadey. 

102 


ST.  Helena's  pause  register  103 

Gordon,  John,  bach:  from  Frederica,  Merchant,  S[cotland]  mar: 

by  Langhom  of  PonPon  Apr:  2, 1751,  Elizabeth  Wright,  spin. 
Gordon,  Eleanor,  Da.  Capt  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Feb:  15, 1752; 

bapt:  Nov:  19, 1752  by  Peasdy;  Grey  EDiott,  Elenor  Cobley 

&  Elizabeth  Gordon  sureties;  bur:  20  Sept:  1753.    Flux  & 

Fever. 
Gordon,  John,  a  Soldier;  bur:  4  Oct:  1731. 
Gough,  William  &  Martha,  fr.  London,  landed  at  Georgia,  1733, 

and  there  died  at  Savannah  1733  aged  61  &  59,  of  Bloody  Flux. 
Gough,  William,  fr.  London,  Sn.  of  William  &  Martha,  bom 

Oct:  5,  1703  in  London,  and  was  in  London  Jan:  19,  1727, 

married  to  Mary  Bearsley  spinister;  he  died  12  May,  1758 

aged  55,  of  Pleurisy. 
Do.  married  at  Savannah  by  Quinsey  Oct.  24,  1735,  Susannah 

LeFong  wid: 
Do.  came  and  settled  in  Carolina,  1737,  was  there  married  by 

Hutson,  D[issenter]  May  7,   1749  to  Magdalen  Hamilton, 

widow. 
Gough,  William,  Sn.  of  William  and  Mary,  bom  in  London, 

July  30>  1729;  died  at  Beaufort  9th  Sept:  1738  of  Fever. 
Gough,  Bearsley,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  in  London  Sept:  27,  1731;  died 

at  Savannah,  15  Dec:  1733  of  Bloody  Flux. 
Goughy  Mary,  wife  to  William,  bom  in  London,  1711;  died  at 

Savannah  11  Aug:  1735  aged  24,  Convulsions. 
Gough,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Susannah,  bom  Dec:  18,  1738; 

bapt.  Feb:  24,  1738  by  Jones;  Parents  sureties;  bur:  29  Feb: 

1738.  Fever. 

Gough,  Susannah,  wife  to  William,  Died  on  James  Island,  29  Nov: 

1739,  aged  24;  Convulsions. 

Gough,  Martha,  Da.  William  &  Magdalene,  bom  Mar:  24,  1749 

bapt:  Apr.  22,  1750  by  Chiflfdey;  Parents  sureties. 
Greaves,  Anne,  wife  to  Alexander,  bom  1727,  bapt:  May  10, 1743, 

by  Jones. 
Greaves,  Elizabeth,  Da:  Alexander  &  Anne,  born  June  21,  1743, 

bapt:  Sept:  11, 1743,  by  Jones. 
Greaves,  Thomas,  buried  1st.  May,  1739. 
Graves,  Jonathan,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Mary;  bom  Feb:  6,  1727; 

bapt:  Apr:  28, 1736,  by  Do. 
Graves,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  born  May  26,  1730;  bapt:  Apr:  28, 1736 

by  Jones. 


104  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Graves,  Mary,  wid:  to  Thomas;  married  by  Jones  July  14,  1731 
Alexander  Hinson,  bach. 

Graves,  Nathaniel,  Sn.  Stephen  &  Mary,  bapt:  Jan:  13,  1750,  by 
ShiflFelley. 

Greene,  Mary  Roper,  Da.  Nathaniel  &  Susanna,  bom  Sept:  14, 
1748;  bapt:  Jan:  13, 1750,  by  Do. 

Greene,  Daniel  John,  Sn.  Do.  bom  Jan:  29,  1745,  bapt:  Feb:  9, 
1745  by  Botham,  in  CharlesTown. 

Greene,  Francis  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  29,  1745;  bapt: 
Feb:  9, 1745  by  Do.  bur:  23  Sept.  1785. 

Greene,  Charlotte,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  3,  1751,  bapt:  Dec:  20, 
1751  by  Peasely,  Tumer,  Eliz:  Jenkins  &  Eliz;  Greene  sureties. 

Greene,  Elizabeth  Anne,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Anne,  buried   5th 
Mar:  1747. 

Greene,  Thomas  Edward,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  April  26, 1748. 

Greene,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  John  &  Phoebe,  buried  17  May,  1749. 

Greene,  Mary,  married  by  Jones  Aug:  30, 1726,  Charles  Purdy. 

Greene,  Abigail,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Ann,  bom  Dec.  23,  1749. 

Grey,  Charles,  bachelor,  married  Dec:  8,  1742,  Elizabeth  Green- 
land, widow. 

Griffith,  Elizabeth,  widow  to  Isaac,  married  by  Jones,  Feb:  11, 
1742,  Gilbert  Murray. 

Gri£feth,  Isaac,  bom  about  1700;  bapt:  Mar:  3,  1739  by  Jones. 
Buried  9  Oct.  1740. 

Givin,  John,  widower,  married  by  Jones,  Mar:  17, 1739,  Catherine 
Ricketts,  Spin. 

Guttery,  Gilbert,  buried  30  March,  1742. 

Guiimeay,  Henry,  buried  20  Oct:  1736. 

Greene,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Ann,  bom  Oct:  9,  175;  bapt: 
Dec:  14,  1751  by  Peasely. 

Greaves,  John  Bemherd,  Sn.  of  Alexander  &  Anne,  bom  Sq>t:  20, 
1750;  bapt:  July  17,  1751,  by  Do. 

Givens,  John,  bach:  Sn.  of  Phillip  &  Hannah,  bom  Feb.  8,  1726, 
bapt:  Mar:  19,  1726  by  Jones;  Richard  Hancock,  Allen 
McLane  &  Eliz.  Seargean  sureties.  Married  Sept:  18,  1751 
by  Jones,  Mary  Stone,  spin.    Bur:  17  Oct:  1785  Fever. 

Givens,  Phillip,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  25, 1732;  bapt.  Aug.  2,  1732, 
by  Do.    Thomas  Inns  &  Rowld.  Sergeant,  sureties. 

Givens,  Phillip,  wid'r,  mar:  by  Jones  Oct.  3,  1734,  Martha  Bow- 
man, spin.  Bur:  May  18, 1753,  aged  64  years  Infla.  Bowels. 


ST.  heleka's  pause  register  105 

Graves,  Anne,  spin.  Da.  Stephen  &  Mary,  married  by  Peasely, 

Mar:  19,  1752  WiUiam  Harris,  bachelor. 
Greenland,  Elizabeth,  wid.  Married  by  Jones,  Dec.  8,    1742, 

Charles  Grey,  bachelor. 
Green,  Samuel,  bach,  mar:  by  Shi£Felly,  Feb:  27,   1752,  Sarah 

Norton,  spin. 
Garvey,  Sarah,  spinister,  from  West  Indies,  married  April  19, 1744 

Charles  Puny,  bachelor. 
Graves,  Benjamin,  Sn.  to  Stephen  &  Mary,  bom  August  20, 1746. 
Graves,  Stephen,  father  to  Nathaniel,  a  Cooper,  buried  12  March, 

1749. 
Green,  Benjamin,  bach.  Shipwright  of  St.  Helena,  married  by 

Peasely  Aug:  17, 1752  to  Elizabeth  Fripp,  spinster. 
Graves,  Mary,  widow  to  Stephen,  mar:  by  Do.  July  12,  1752, 

William  Wade,  wid'r. 
Graham,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  Mar:  18, 1744, 

at  Frederica  in  Georgia. 
Graham,  Frands,  son  of  Do.  bom  Feb:  5, 1747  at  Frederica. 
Givens,  PhiUip,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Aug.  7,  1752;  bapt. 

Oct.  3, 1752  by  Peasely;  Phillip  Givens  &  Parents  sureties. 
Gibbs,  Mary,  spin,  dau:  of  Coll.  John  &  Mary  of  Charlestown, 

married  by  Guy  April  7^  1738,  Coll.  Nath:  Barnwell;  bur: 

Dec:  5, 1801  aged  79.    Pleurisy. 
Grimball,  Catherine,  spin:  Da.  Paul  &  Mary,  married  by  Peasely 

Feb;  1,  1753,  David  Adams,  wid'r. 
Grimball,  Elizabeth,  spin.  Da.  Do.  married  by  Do.  Feb:  1,  1753 

William  Baynard,  bachelor. 
Green,  Mary  Anne,  Da.  Samuel  &  Sarah,  bom  Oct.  28,  1752; 

bapt.  Feb.  22,  1753,  by  Do.  bur:  22  Oct.  1754.  St.  Helena. 

Worms. 
Grieves,  Alexander,  Sn.  of  Alexander  &  Anne,  bom  Mar.  2,  1753; 

bapt.  Apr.  11,  1753  by  Do. 
Godwin,  Edward,  Sn.  to  a  Dissenting  Minister:  Lond:  bur:  29  Oct: 

1753  aged  abt:  32  yrs. 
Green,  Daniel,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Ann.  bom  Feb:  1,   1753;  bapt. 

Oct:  27, 1753  by  Peasely. 
Gough,  Mary  Anne,  Da.  William  &  Magdalene  bom  Nov:  13, 1753; 

bapt:  Apr;  17,  1754  by  Do.  Eliz:  Story,  Amelia  Leecraft  & 

Father  sureties. 


106         SO.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Gordcm,  Elizabeth,  Da.  04>t  John  &  EHzabeth,  bom  Nov:  19, 

1753;  bapt:  Dec  10, 1753  by  Do. 
Grimball,  M^Ty  ^>in.  Da.  Paul  &  Mary,  married  by  Peasely 

Feb:  3, 1754  George  Cuthbert 
Green,  Josiah,  bach:  Cordwainer  &  Overseer,  mar:  by  Do.  Mar:  18, 

1754,  Catherine  Beale,  S.  bur:  30  Aug:  1757. 
Grayscm,  John,  from  West  Indies,  £[n^and],  married  by  Do. 

^r;  14, 1754,  Sarah  Wigg,  punster. 
Gibbes,  John,  bach.  Sn.  of  Coll:  John  &  Mary,  Chas:town  mar: 

by  Do.  May  2, 1754,  Mary  Ann  Stq)hens,  ^)in. 
Green,  James,  Sn.  Benjamin  &  Eliz:  bom  Dec:  26,  1753,  b4>t. 

June  7, 1754  by  Do.  bur:  at  St.  Helena,  3  Aug:  1755.    Quinsy. 
Guy,  Edward,  Natural  son  of  Elizabeth  Guy,  a  servant,  bom 

Feb.  2, 1752. 
Givens,  Anne  Sarah,  Da.  John  &  Mary,  bom  June  29,   1754, 

bapt:  July  22,  1754  by  Do. 
Givens,  Mary,  Da.  Philip  &  Martha,  bom  Mar:  18, 1736. 
Givens,  Charles,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Sept:  26, 1740;  married  by  Lewes 

16  Nov:  1785,  Mary  Barlow,  Port  RoyaL 
Givens,  Margt.  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  30, 1742. 
Givens,  Martha,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  1, 1745. 
Givens,  Philip  Solomon,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Augt  17, 1749. 
Green,  James,  Sn.  of  Samuel  &  Sarah,  bom  Nov:  1,  1754  bapt. 

Jan:  5,  1756  by  Peasely. 
Gordon,  Sarah  Frances,  Da.  Capt  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Nov. 

29, 1754,  bapt.  May  8, 1755  by  Do.  Grey  EUiot,  Mrs.  Cobky 

&  Mrs.  Mullryne  sureties. 
Green,  John,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Anne,  bom  9  July,  1754;  bapt:  Mar: 

13, 1754  by  Do. 
Green,  Susan,  Da.  of  Nathaniel  &  Susan,  bom  Jan.  1,  1755. 
Garvey,  John,  wid'r,  of  Okattee  Creek,  married  by  Chiffley, 

Oct:  24, 1751,  Martha  Rich,  wid. 
Garvey,  James,  Sn.  of  John  &  Martha,  bom  Dec:  10,  1752,  bapt. 

Apr:  1753  by  Chiffely,  Miss  Grifl^,  surety. 
Garvey,  Catherine,  Da.  to  Do.,  bom  Feb.  1, 1755,  bapt.  April  13, 

1755  by  Peasely,  Parents  &  Mrs.  Purry  sureties.    Bur:  Oct 

10, 1756  at  Okettee  Creek. 
Greves,  Robert,  Sn.  of  Alexander  &  Anne,  bom  Apr:  23,  1755, 

bur:  Apr:  1755,  St.  Helena. 


ST.  Helena's  pakish  register  107 

Green,  Eliz:  Da.  of  Benj:  &  Eliz:  St.  Helena,  bom  July  17,  1755, 

bapt:  Oct:  17, 1755  by  Peasely. 
Greene,  Francis,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Anne,  Beaufort,  bom  Oct:  4, 

1755;  bapt:  Oct.  23, 1755  by  Do.  bur:  Oct.  24, 1755. 
Guy,  Elizabeth,  from  England,  married  by  Peasely,  Feb;  19,  1756 

Abraham  David. 
Guinn,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Catharine,  bom  Feb.  24,  1745. 
Guinn,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Do.,  bom  Jan:  23, 1747. 
Guinn,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  30, 1749. 
Guinn,  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Feb:  15, 1751;  bur;  12  Sept  1758. 
Guinn,  Roger,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  May  5, 1753. 
Guinn,  Catherine,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sq>:  3, 1755. 
Givens,  Mary,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  April  4,  1756,  bapt. 

April  4,  1756  by  Peasely  bur:  5  April,  1756  at  Port  Royal. 
Givens, Da.  of  Do.  bom  Apr:  4,  1756  unbaptized,  bur:  5 

April  1756  at  Port  Royal. 
Gough,  William  Bearsley,  Sn.  of  William  and  Magdalen,  bom 

April  15, 1756;  bapt:  Aug:  31,  1756  by  Do. 
Green,  William,  Sn.  of  Josiah  &  Catherine,  April  20, 1756  by  Do. 
Green,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  Samuel  &  Sarah,  St.  Helena,  bom  June  13, 

1756,  bapt:  June  27, 1756  by  Lewis,  Prince  Wm.  Parish. 
Gordon,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  EUzabeth,  Beaufort,  bom  Aug:  31, 

1756,  bapt:  Aug:  31,  1756,  bur:  Ch.  Yard,  15  May,  1757, 

Dropsy  in  head. 
Greves,  Elizabeth  Mary,  Da.  of  Alex:  &  Anne,  St.  Helena,  bapt: 

Dec:  5,  1756  by  Lewis,  mar:  9  J\me  1785,  Green  Simpson. 
Garvey,  Michael,  Sn.  of  John  &  Martha,  bom  Nov.  3d.  1756, 

bapt:  July  3,  1757,  by  Lewis. 
Godfrey,  Bridget,  Da.  Robert  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Nov.  1,  1756. 
Givens,  Jane,  Da.  John  &  Mary,  bom  April  10,  1757;  bapt: 

June  8, 1757. 
Guinn,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Catherine,  bom  June  27, 1757. 
Godfrey,  Robert,  Sn.  of  Robert  &  Elizabeth,  bur:  in  Ch:  Yard 

30  Sept:  1757. 
Gibbons,  Eliz:  wid:  Da.  Morgan  Ellis,  mar:  Jime  11,  1757,  Wil- 
liam Barton. 
Galloway,  Mary,  spin.  Da.  of married  by  Lewis,  July  4, 1757, 

Richard  Wigg,  bach. 


108  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Graves,  John  ^K^neman,  Sn.  of  John  &  Susannah,  bom  Mar.  10, 

1758,  bapt:  June  11, 1758,  by  A.  Baron. 
Greene,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Josiah  &  Catherine,  bapt:  Augt:  20, 

1758,  by  Do. 
Greene,  Nathaniel,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Ann,  bapt  Jan:  27,  1758 

by  Do. 
Graham,  Francis,  married  by  Touberbuhekr,  April  13,  1758, 

Catherine  Bull,  widow. 

Grayson, Da.  John  &  Sarah,  bom  June  21, 1759,  stiUbom. 

Givens,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Mary,  bom  July  4, 1759;  bapt:  Aug.  12, 

1759. 
Greaves,  Alexander,  husband  to  Anne  Greaves,  St  Helena  bur: 

5  Nov:  1759.    Quinzy. 
Greaves,  James,  Sn.  Alexander  &  Anne,  bapt  ^ril  15,  1760  by 

Cooper.    Parents  sureties. 
Green,  Rev.  John,  married  by  Tongue  Oct.  28,  1762  Sarah  Wigg. 
Givens,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Jan'y  7,  1763;  bs^t: 

Nov.  3,  1763 
Green,  Mary  Hazzard,  Da.  Rev.  John  &  Sarah,  bom  Oct:  19, 

1763;  bapt:  Nov:  3,  1763;  bur:  3d  Jan:  1764,  aged  2  mos. 

15  da. 
Gray,  James  bach.  Mar:  by  Rev.  Green,  Mar:  15, 1764,  Elizabeth 

Watson. 
Greayson,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Sarah,  bom  April  7,  1764,  Mar:  by 

Lewes,  1790,  Michael  O'Brien. 
Greene,  James  F.  Sn.  of  John  &  Phebe  mar:  by  Rev.  Green, 

May  15,  1764,  Margt.  Givens. 
Graves,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  John  &  Susannah,  bom  Dec:  11,  1763, 

bapt:  May  27,  1764  by  Rev.  Teal.    Parents  sureties. 
Guinn,  Catherine,  wife  to  Mr.  John  Guinn,  bom  Augt  7,  1726, 

bur:  30  Oct:  1764  aged  38  years. 
Green,  Sarah  Malecare,  Da.  of  the  Rev.  Jno:  Green  &  Sarah, 

bom  Nov:  20,  1764,  bapt:  Dec:  1, 1764. 
Givens,  Agnes,  Da.  of  John  Givens  &  Mary,  bom  Nov:  22,  1764; 

bapt:  Dec:  2, 1764  by  Rev.  Green. 
Gardiner,  Benjamin,  Sn.  of  Widow  Gardner,  Beaufort,  Clerk, 

bur:  21  June,  1765  aged  25  yr.    Murdered  by  Yates. 
Gregory,  William,  of  Beaufort,  mar:  Oct:  24,  1765,  Ameliah 

Lecraft. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PASISH  REGISTER  109 

Green,  Mary,  Da.  Daniel  John  &  Ann,  bom  1st  Oct:  1768;  bapt: 

Nov:  5, 1768  by  Simpson;  married  by  Graham,  Feb:  27, 1785, 

Rev.  Stephen  C.  Lewes. 
Gardner,  James,  Sn.  of  Edward  &  Ailce  [sic]  bom  June  11,  1768 

bur:  Aug:  29,  1770. 
Gardner,  Edward,  Sn.  of  Edward  &  Ailce,  bom  July  12,   1766, 

bapt.  by  Rev.  Mr.  Tongue;  bur:  Aug.  29,  1770  [sic]. 
Gardner,  William,  Sn.  of  Edward  &  Ailce,  bom  Sept.  10,  1770; 

bapt.  by  Rev.  Mr.  Peirce. 
Godfrey,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Ann,  bom  Augt:  15, 1770;  bapt:  Aug.  29, 

1770.    Natural  son  of  Charles  Furrow  [sic:  the  last  item  is 

entered  under  heading  of  "To  Whom  Married."] 
Gardner  Elizabeth  Da.  of  Edward  &  Alice,  bom  Nov.  18,  1772. 

Bapt:  Dec.  18,  1772,  by  Rev.  Mr.  Ellington. 
Greene,  Susannah,  Da.  Daniel  John  &  Ann,  bom  Dec.  2,  1770; 

bapt;  by  Rev.  Mr.  Simpson;  married  9th  Oct:  1787,  John 

Grayson,  who  died  10  Oct:  1797,  she  then  married,  11  Sept: 

1798,  WiUm:  Joyner. 
Gignilliat,  James,  bach.  Married  by  Rev.  Feveryear,  8  May,  1766 

Charlotte  Pepper,  spinster. 
Gray,  Josiah,  Sn.  of  John  &  Sarah,  St.  Helena,  bom  7  Oct:  1771. 
Gray,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Sarah,  bom  10  Dec.  1773. 
Gardner,  Ann,  Da.  of  Edward  &  Alice,  bom  25th  March,  1775, 

bapt:  by  Rev.  Moreau. 
Givens,  Charles,  of  Charles  &  Mary  Barlow,  bapt:  22  Fcb'y  1785 

by  Lewes,  private. 
Givens,  Mary,  of  Charles  &  Mary  Barlow,  bom  19  May,  1778, 

bapt:  22  Febr'y  1785  by  Lewes,  private. 
Givens,  John,  Son  of  Charles  &  Mary  Barlow,  bapt.  Do.  Do. 
Givens,  George  Washington,  of  Charles  &  Mary  Do.    Bapt 

Do.  Do. 
Greene,  John  of  Daniel  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  19  March,  1785; 

bapt;  19  March  1785,  by  Lewes,  private;  bur:  20  March  1785. 
Grive,  Thomas  William,  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  15  June,  1782; 

bapt;  9  June,  1785,  by  Do. 
Grive,  John  Daniel,  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  14  Augt:  1784;  bapt: 

9  June,  1785,  by  Lewes. 
Grayson,  Elizabeth,  of  John  &  Sarah,  married  by  Lewes,  1  Dec: 

1785  John  Mark  Verdier. 


110         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Greene,  Margaret,  married  by  Do.  22  Dec:  1785,  James  Bowman. 
Greene,  Daniel  John,  married  by  Do.  29  Jan:  1786  Sarah  Capers. 
Greene,  Ann,  widow,  from  Georgia,  bur:  by  Do.  13  June  1786, 

aged  63. 
Gardner,  Samuel,  of  Edward  &  Alice,  bom  30  May,  1785;  bapt: 

16  June,  1786,  by  Do. 
Graham,  Thomas,  of  Rev.  WiUm.  £.  &  Sarah,  bom  19  Feb:  1786; 

bapt:  11  June,  1786,  by  Do. 
Givens,  Martha,  of  Charles  &  Mary,  bom  22  Dec:  1785;  bapt: 

3  Oct:  1786,  by  Do. 
Guerard,  Amelia,  of  Goddin  &  Ann,  bom  July  18,  1786;  bapt: 

23  Nov:  1786,  by  Do. 
Greene,  Charles  Thompson,  of  Daniel  John  &  Sarah,  bapt:  15 

Feb:  1787,  by  Do. 
Grayson,  William  John,  of  John  &  Sarah,  married  by  Do.  9  Oct: 

1787,  Susannah  Greene. 

Gibson,  William  Marks,  of  Robert  &  Anna  Maria,  bom  3  Nov: 

1787;  bapt:  5  March,  1787. 
Gra3rson,  William  John,  of  ^^lliam  John  &  Susannah,  bom  12  Nov. 

1788,  bapt:  by  Do.  12  April,  1789. 

Gardner,  John,  of  Edward  &  Alice,  bom  7  June,  1788;  bapt; 

26  Augt  1789  by  Do. 
Guerard,  Mary  Ann,  of  Goddin  &  Ann,  mar:  by  Lewes  11  Oct: 

1789,  Isaac  Waight,  junr. 

Garden,  Col.  Benjamin,  buried  by  Do.  19  Nov:  1789,  aged  52. 
Guerard,  David,  bur:  by  Do.  13  Dec:  1789,  aged  51.  Sudden. 
Greene,  Eleanor,  spr.  of  Nathaniel  &  Susannah,  mar:  by  Do. 

Adam  Perrydear,  Bach:  bur:  26  Nov.  1789. 
Greene,  Robert,  of  Daniel  John  &  Sarah,  born  29  April,  1790, 

bapt:  29  August,  1790,  by  Do. 
Greene,  Daniel  John,  of  Daniel  John  &  Ann,  bom  21  March, 

1776,  bapt:  by  Graham. 
Greene,  Nathanid,  of  Do,  bom  20  Sept:  1777,  bapt:  by  Do. 
Grayson,  Thomas  Wigg,  Sn.  of  John  &  Sarah,  mar:  by  Rev.  Tate, 

Feb:  27, 1794,  Mary  Hill. 
Grayson,  John  Robert,  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  Paris  Island,  bom 

15  Dec:  1794:  bapt:  25  Mar:  1795,  by  Tate. 
Grayson  Thomas  Wigg,  Sn.  of  William  John  &  Susannah,  died 

Fever. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PAIOSH  REGISTER  111 

Gra3rson,  Edward  James,  of  Do.  bapt:  9  Jxily,  1797,  by  Rev. 

Mr.  Graham. 
Gra3rson,  Mary  Susan,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  1  Jime,  1796; 

bapt:  9  July  1797,  by  Graham;  bur:  28  Aug:  1797,  Fever. 
Grayson,  Susan  Saltus,  Da.  of  Thos.  &  Mary,  Beaufort,  bapt: 

8  Dec:  1805  by  Rey.  G.  Hicks.    Parents  siureties. 
Grayson,  Elizabeth  Mary,  Da.  of  James,  Beaufort,  bapt:  8  Dec. 

1805,  by  Do.    Parents  sureties. 
Guerard,  Mary  Luda,  Da.  of  John  &  Sophia,  Beaufort,  bom 

7  Nov:  1813;  bapt:  8  Dec.  1813,  by  Campbell;  Parents  and 

Margt.  Guerard  Siureties. 

Haines,  Mary,  bapt:  Aug:  20,  1714,  by  Guy. 

Haines,  William,  Senr.,  bapt:  June  3,  1731  by  Jones;  married  by 

Jones,  May  5,  1727,  Deborah  Carman,  wid;  bur:  1  Feb:  1731, 

aged  31. 
Haines,  William  Jimr,  Sn.  of  William  &  Deborah,  bom  Dec:  12, 

1729;  bapt:  Feb:  15,  1729  by  Jones,  James  Watt,  Rowland  & 

Eliz:  Serjeant  sureties;  bur:  21  May,  1754  aged  24  yr.  6  mo. 

Drowned. 
Haines,  Thomas  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Aug:  31,  1727,  bapt:  Nov:  8, 

1727,  by  Do,  Bamabas  Gilbert,  Jas:  Searles  &  Eliz:  Stone 

sureties. 
Haines,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  born  July  23, 1732;  bapt:  Sept:  24, 

1732  by  Do.  Thomas  Beswick  &  Eliz:  Serjeant  sureties. 
Haines,  Deborah,  widow  to  William,  married  by  Jones,  April  23, 

1734,  Thomas  Beswicke,  bachelor. 
Hancock,  Richard,  married  by  Do.  Mar:  29,  1726,   Pmdence 

Mortimer. 
Hancock,  Pmdence,  wife  to  Richard,  bur:  by  Do.  1  Oct:  1738. 
Hand,  Elizabeth,  spin.  Da.  of  John  &  Martha,  bom  Nov:  22, 

1725;  bapt:  by  Jones  Apr:  18,  1728,  Ann  Levy  surety;  mar: 

Apr:  19,  1747,  John  Fripp,  bach. 
Hanshaw,  John,  bur:  by  Do.  7  Feb:  1727. 
Hall,  Thomas,  St.  Helena,  mar:  by  Do.  Mar:  3,  1740,  Martha 

Fripp,  wid:  St.  Helena.    Do.  mar:  by  Do.  Feb:  4,  1741,  Mary 

Fendin,  spin.  St.  Helena. 
Hall,  Thomas,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  Nov:  9,  1742;  bapt: 

May  10,  1743  by  Jones. 


112  so.  CA.  HISTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Hall,  Isaac,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  Nov:  28,  1749,  bapt:  July  7,  1751, 

by  Pcasely. 
Hamilton,  Archibald,  Master  of  a  Periagua,  mar:  by  Jones,  Apr:  6, 

1735,  Anne  Pahner. 
Hamilton,  Ann,  wife  to  Archibald,  bur:  by  Do  4  Oct:  1737. 
Hamilton,  David,  bur:  by  Do.  26  Oct:  1744. 
Hamilton,  Magdalen,  wid:  Da.  of  Peter  &  Judith  Robert,  Fb. 

Santee,  bom  there  Sept:  28, 1719;  mar:  by  Hutson,  D[issenter] 

May  7,  1749,  William  Gough,  wid'r. 
Hamilton,  Elizabeth,  Dau:  of  Arch'd  a  Lawyer  &  the  said  Mag- 
dalen, bora  at  N.  Carolina,  ^r:  1,  1740. 
HamUton,  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  at  N.  Cai:olina,  Aug:  19, 1742. 
Harris,  William,  Sn.  of  William  6r  Elizabeth,  bom  Oct:  8,  1727; 

bapt:  Oct:  12,  1727  by  Jones,  parents  sureties;  bur:  14  Oct: 

1727. 
Harris,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  William  &  Mary,  bapt;  aged  about 

6  weeks.  May  17,  1730,  by  Jones,  Peter  Paterson,  Sarah 

Hazelton  &  Sarah  Cross  sureties. 
Harris,  William,  bach.  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  Sept:  9, 1732, 

bapt:  Oct:  29,  1732  by  Jones;  Edmund  Ellis  &  Thos:  Stone 

sureties;  married  by  Peasely  Mar:  19,  1752  Anne  Graves, 

spinster. 
Harris,  Anne,  Da.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  Apr:  15,  1737;  biqpt: 

Jan:  15, 1737  by  Jones;  bur:  5  Dec:  1738. 
Harris,  Elizabeth,  bur:  by  Do.  4  Nov:  1728. 
Harris,  John,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bur:  by  Do.  31  Mar:  1740. 
Harris,  Elizabeth,  bur:  by  Do.  12  Oct:  1727. 
Harrison,  Thomas,  wid'r,  Carpenter,  Euhaws,  mar:  by  Do.  Jan: 

24,  1743  Judith  Brown  wid;  bur:  1755,  Flux. 
Harrison,  William  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  Dec:  23,  1741 

bapt:  Jan:  16,  1742  by  Do. 
Harrison,  Hannah,  Da.  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Sept:  5,  1750; 

bapt:  Sept:  10,  1750,  by  ChifiEelly  of  Puriysburgh. 
Haydon,  Martha,  Da.  John  &  Mary,  bora  Feb:  28,  1730;  bapt: 

Apr:  8,  1739,  by  Jones. 
Hardwick,  Thomas,  mar:  by  Jones,  Jime  27,  1727  Sarah  Watson, 

wid. 
Hardwick,  William,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Sarah,  bora  Dec:  17,  1727; 

bapt:  by  Jones  Mar:  20,  1727,  Thos.  Inns,  Row'ld  Serjeant  & 

Mary  Becket  sureties  bur:  18  July,  1731,  aged  3  y.  8  mo. 


ST.  Helena's  PAiasH  register  113 

Hardwick,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec:  17,  1727;  bapt:  Mar:  20, 

1727,  by  Do  Thos  Barton,  £liz:  Sarjeant  &  Sarah  Harris 

sureties. 
Hardwick,  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  Taylor,  bapt:  Dec:  21,  1729  by  Do. 

bur:  30  Dec:  1735.    Canker. 
Hardwick,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  bapt:  by  Do.  May  7,  1731,  aged 

2  mos:  bur:  25  Oct:  1731. 
Hardwick,  Sarah,  wife  to  Thomas,  bur:  by  Do.  25  Mar:  1731. 
Hasleton,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Richkrd  &  Sarah,  bom  Feb:  19,  1729, 

bapt:  Apr:  5,  1730  by  Jones,  James  Watt,  Barnab.  Gilbert  & 

Mary  Wigg  sureties^  bur:  19  Nov:  1730. 
Haselton,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jaii':  10,  1731;  bapt:  Feb:  27, 

1731,  Wm.  L3^ord,  Thos.  Wigg  &  Susannah  Fnuiklin  sureties. 
Haselton,  Eliza)beth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  8,  1734;  bapt:  Feb:9, 

1734  by  Do.  parents  sureties. 

Haselton,  Sarah,  wife  to  Richard,  bur:  by  Do.  18  Aug:  1739. 
Hatcher,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  James  &  Sarah,  bapt:  Mar:  30,  1726, 

by  Do.  Rowld  &  Eliz:  Serjeant  &  Wm.  Hazzard  sureties; 

bur:  5  Ma;y,  1738. 
Hatcher,  Williabi,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  25,  1732;  bapt:  Oct:  1, 

1732  by  Do.  Thos:  &  Ann  Stone  &  Allen  McLane  sureties; 

bur:  14  Oct:  1737. 
Hatcher,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  16,  1734;  bapt:  May  10, 

1735  by  Do.  Parents  sureties;  bur:  21  Sept:  1738. 
Hatcher,  William,  bom  Feb:  4,  1737;  bapt:  Feb:  15,  1737  by  Do.; 

bur:  8  Feb:  1756. 
Hatcher,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Nov:  27,  1741;  bapt:  Nov:  30, 

1741  by  Do.;  mar:  Sept:  30, 1758  Jane  Jervey. 
Harvey,  William,  bach.  Married  by  A.  Baron,  Feb:  16,  1743, 

Elizabeth  Mikell  widow. 
Harvey,  Hazzard,  Sn.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Jan:  13, 1744; 

bapt:  Jan:  15,  1744  by  Orr,  D[issenter]  Col:  Hazzard  & 

Parents  sureties. 
Harvey,  Maurice  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bpm  Dec:  18,  1747;  bapt: 

Feb:  24,  1747  by  St.  John,  Col:  Hazzard,  Ed:  &  Mary  Wigg 

sureties,  bur:  2  Sept:  1755,  aged  7  )rr.  9  mo.    Nervous  Fever. 
Harvey,  Samuel  Benj:  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec:  25,  1749;  bapt: 

Apr:  2, 1750,  by  Shiffley. 


114  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAgXF. 

Harvey,  Frances  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Fd>:  28,  1749,  Jan:  1 
bring  nS2f  bapt:  April  1,  1752  by  P^asdy;  bar:  29  Oct: 

1753,  aged  20  mo.    Teething. 

Hazzard,  WilUam,  CoD:  (rf  the  MaUtia,  England,  married  first 

Rose;  married  second,  Elizabeth  Russdl;  buried  17  Mmr:  1757, 

aged  73  yrs.    Plantation. 
Hazzard,  William,  Back  Sn.  of  CoD:  William  &  Saiah,  bom  1709; 

married  Jan:  27,  1728,  Sarah  Cowen,  spin:  bur:  9  Aug:  1741. 
Hazzard,  Sarah,  ^nn:  Da.  William  &  Saiah,  bom  Nov:  1730; 

bapt:  Jan:  3,  1730  by  Jones;  married  by  Hntson,  Dissenter, 

Aug:  1, 1749,  Nathanid  Tucker,  bach. 
Hazzard,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  30:  1732;  bapt:  June  10, 

1733  by  Jones;  Wm.  Hazzard,  Mary  Wigg,  Jno:  Bamwdl 
sureties.    Bur:  5  Novr:  1753;  Hectic  Fever. 

Hazzard,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Avig:  22,  1734;  bapt:  Sq>t:  9, 

1734  by  Do.    Parents  sureties;  married  by  Peasdy  S^t:  15, 

1754,  Edward  Tucker,  Bach. 

Hazzard,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Fd>:  15, 1735;  bapt:  Fd>.  25, 1735 

by  Do.  Parents  sureties.    Bur:  15  OcL  1737. 
Hazzard,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Apr:  24, 1737;  bapt:  May  29, 

1737  by  Do.  bur:  18  Mar:  1739. 
Hazzard,  Dorothy,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept:  2,  1738;  bsLpt:  by  Do. 

Sept:  22, 1738  by  Do.    Bur.  6  Sept  1741. 
Hazzard,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  July  9, 1740;  B^t.  Sq)t:  3, 1740 

by  Do. 
Hazzard,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Coll:  \^^lliam  &  Elizabeth,  married  by  Do. 

John  Mcgilvcry. 
Hazzard,  Mary,  Da.  Coll:  William  &  Eliz:  married  by  Jones, 

Feb:  22, 1738  Edward  Wigg,  Bach. 
Hazzard,  William,  Bach.  Sn.  of  William  &  Sarah,  bapt:  July  27, 

1729  by  Jones  married  by  Chitfclly,  ^ril  22, 1750,  Catherine 

Wigg,  spin. 
Hazzard,  Sarah,  wid:  to  William,  married  by  Jones  Dec:  6,  1742 

John  Cattel  widower. 

'The  imperfection  of  the  Julian  computation  of  the  annual  calender,  oc-, 
casioned  the  Gregorian  calendar  to  be  adopted  in  many  parts  of  Europe.  In 
England  it  was  not  adopted  till  the  year  1752,  when  the  error  required  the 
intercalation  of  eleven  days.  Accordingly,  by  an  Act  of  Parliament  of  that 
year,  the  3rd  of  September  was  made  the  15th;  and  the  year  which  was  here- 
tofore reckoned  as  commencing  in  March,  was  ordered  to  conmience  the  first 
day  of  January.    (S.  C.  St.  at  Large,  V.  4,  P.  6.) 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER  115 

Hicks,  Matthew,  Sn.  of  Mathew  &  Mary,  bom  Aug:  9,  1730: 

bapt:  Aug:  23,  1730  by  Do.  James  &  Ann  Watt,  &  PhiKp 

Dliegall  sureties;  married  by  Peasdy,  June  7,  1754  Anne 

Barrow,  wiA 
Hicks,  Mary,  bur:  by  Jones,  15  Aug:  1737. 
Hicks,  Hannah,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Nov.  28,  1749; 

bapt:  July  7, 1751  by  Peasely. 
Hicks,  John,  father  to  Hannah,  of  St.  Helena,  bur:  by  Do.  17 

Nov:  1751,  aged  42,  at  St.  Helena. 
Hill,  Henry,  bach:  married  by  Jones,  Dec:  8, 1742,  Hannah  Berry, 

spin. 
Hill,  Sarah,  dau:  Henry  &  Hannah,  bom  Oct:  3,  1743;  bapt: 

Nov:  6, 1743  by  Jones. 
Hinds,  Patrick,  Shoemaker,  married  by  Jones,  Aug:  23,  1742, 

Margt:  McHerry,  spin. 
Hinds,  James,  Sn.  of  Patrick  &  Margt.  bom  Aug:  6,  1744;  bapt: 

Aug:  8, 1744  by  Do. 
Hinson,  Alexander,  bach:  married  by  Do.  July  14,  1737  Mary 

Graves,  wid: 
Hird,  Mark,  bach:  married  by  Do.  Feb:  11,  1742,  Margt:  Daniel, 

spin,  bur:  24  May,  1758  NB  Plantation. 
Hird,  Isaac,  sn.  of  Mark  &  Margt.  bom  Mch:  4, 1743,  Bi^t:  July 

24,  1744  by  Do. 
Hitchens,  Thomas,  Ensign  Indp:  Company  bur:  Ch:  yard  22  June 

1749,  aged  24. 
Hobbs,  Richard,  Bur:  by  Jones,  10  Oct:  1736. 
Hodges,  Sarah,  spin:  fr.  Georgia,  [bom  in]  E[ngland],  married  by 

Do.  Jan:  27,  1743  Timothy  Breed,  bach. 
Hogg,  John,  Bach,  [from]  E[ngland],  married  by  Do.  Jan:  1,  1731, 

Anne  Crosskeys  spin. 
Hogg,  Mary,  wid:  to  Andrew,  married  by  Do.  Oct.  6, 1737  George 

Hugg,  bach. 
Hogg,  Hannah,  spin:  Da.  Andrew  &  Mary,  married  by  Do.  Feb:  2, 

1743,  Samuel  Lacy,  bach. 
Hohnes,  WiUiam,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  Dec:  30,  1706; 

bapt.  by  Guy. 
Hohnes,  Ralph,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  July  8, 1709;  bapt:  Dec.  5, 1714 

by  Do. 
Hohnes,  Isabella,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov:  27,  1713;  bapt:  Dec.  5, 

1714  by  Do. 


116  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Heyward,  Daniel,  Coee:  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Hester,  of  James  Island, 

married  by  Do.  Mar:  8, 1743  Mary  Miles,  spin. 
Hejnvard,  Thomas,  Sn.  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  July  28,  1746;  bapt: 

Feb:  22, 1746  by  Whitfield. 
Heyward,  Nathaniel,  Sn.  of  Do.  born  May  1,  1748;  Iw^t:  Feb:  9, 

1749  by  Zoberbaler,  of  Georgia.    Bur:  11  Sept.  1753. 
Heyward,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  6,  1749;  bapt:  Jan:  9, 

1750,  by  Chitfelly  of  Purrysburg. 
Hunt,  Joseph,  bach,  married  by  Jones,  Sept:  2, 1741,  Mary  Fields, 

spin. 
Huddy,  Charles,  Lieut:  Indepent:  Company  bur:  by  Do.  30  Aug: 

1732. 
Hulet,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Jan:  25,  1739;  bapt: 

Jan  31,  1739  by  Do. 
Hugg,  George,  bach,  married  by  Jones,  Oct:  6,  1737,  Mary  Hogg, 

wid. 
Hughes,  Robert,  a  soldier,  bur:  by  Do.  19  Mar:  1728. 
Hill,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  John  &  Rebecca  bom  Apr:  4,  1748;  bapt: 

Mar:  2,  1752  by  Pcasely.    Thos:  Conyers,  Eleanor  Conyers, 

&  Eliz:  Beswick  siureties. 
Hazzard,  Mary  Ann  Wigg,  Da.  William  &  Catherine,  bom  Oct: 

31,  1751  bapt:  Mar:  4,  1752,  by  Do.  HiUersdon  Wgg,  Sarah, 

Thos:  and  Sarah  and  Richd:  Wigg  siureties.    Bur.  by  Lewis 

in  Ch.  yd.  23  July  1757.    Fever. 
Henderson,  William  Harcourt,  a  Lawyer  from  Chas.Town.  [of] 

I[reland].    Bur:  by  Lewis  2  Sept:  1751,  aged  28.    Cholic 
Hatcher,  Jane,  Da.  Thos.  &  Margt.  married  by  Do.  Jan.  2,  1752, 

George  Meleken,  bach. 
Hinds,  Jane,  2d.  wife  to  Patrick,  bur:  by  Do.  29  Apr:  1752  aged  20. 

Consmnption. 
Hicks,  Elizabeth,  wid:  to  John,  married  by  Do.  May  10,  1752, 

John  Conyers,  bach. 
Hejrward,  Hester,  Da.  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  Nov:  26,  1751;  bapt: 

May  16,  1752  by  Do.  bur:  1  Sept:  1753. 
Henney,  Mary  Ann,  Da.  John  &  Anne,  Cooper,  Germ:  bom 

April  3, 1752;  Do. 
Hall,  Mary,  Da.  Thos:  &  Mary,  bom  Nov:  13,  1751;  bapt:  July 

30,  1752  by  Do.  Willm.  Adams  and  Martha  Fendin,  sureties. 
Hatcher,  Margt:  spin:  Da.  Thos.  &  Margt:  married  by  Do.  Nov.  9, 

1752  Edward  Davis,  bach. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PAIOSH  REGISTER  117 

Hogg,  Anne,  spin.  Da.  Andrew  &  Mary;  married  by  Do.  Nov:  13, 

1752,  Thos:  Askew  bach. 
BBrd,  Mary,  Da.  Mark  &  Margt:  bom  Mar:  21,  1752;  bapt: 

Feb.  5, 1753  by  Do. 
Hastings,  Archibald,  Killed  by  the  fall  of  a  tree  6  Feb.  1753;  bur: 

at  Plantation. 
Hogg,  William,  Sn.  George  &  Anne,  bom  Jan:  21,  1753;  bapt: 

Mar:  16,  1753  by  Do. 
Heape,  Mary,  Da.  Benj:  &  Sarah,  bom  Jan:  1, 1753;  bapt:  July  8, 

1753  by  Do. 
Harris,  John,  Sn.  William  &  Anne,  bom  Feb:  3,  1753;  bapt: 

Oct:  13, 1753  by  Do.  bur:  10  Dec:  1758.    Fever  &  Ague. 
Hazzacd,  Sarah,  Da.  William  &  Catherine,  bom  Aug:  20,  1753; 

bapt:  Nov:  28, 1753  by  Do. 
Harris,  William,  falther  to  Williapi  Harris,  bur:  by  Do.  23  Nov: 

1753. 
Hurst,  Samuel,  Esq;  [from]  E[ngland]  bur:  29  Nov:  1753  aged 

37.    Fever. 
Hurst,  Mary,  wife:  to  Samuel,  [from  I[reland],  bur:  by  Jones 

1%  Dec:  1753  aged  32.    Histerics. 
Harris,  Mary,  wid:  to  William,  married  by  Jones,  Jan:  8,  1754, 

Leonard  >^dman. 
I^^PPy^  Samuel,  Sn.  Samuel  &  Mary,  bur:  by  Do.  23  Nov:  1753. 

Fever. 
Hamilton,  Ann,  Da.  Joseph,  bur:  13  Aug:  1753,  Hasting  Planta- 
tion.   Fever. 
Hamilton,  Hannah,  Da.  of  Do.  bur:  19  Nov:  1753,  Hasting  Planta- 
tion.   Fever. 
Hatcher,  Anne,  spin:  Da.  Thomas  &  Margt.  married  by  Jones, 

Fev:  6, 1754,  Capt.  William  Watson. 
Heyward,  William,  Son  Col.  Danl.  &  Mary  bom  Dec.  1,  1753; 

bapt:  Apr:  14,  1754  by  Do. 
Hussey,  Margt:  W.  of  Jno.  of  Dorchester,  da:  of  Eben  Dicks, 

Burd,  m  Meet:  Yd:  June  13, 1754  aged  23.    Childbed. 
Harvey,  Thomas  Eleazer,  Sn.  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Oct:  10, 

1754,  bapt:  Oct.  10,  1754  bur:  m  Ch.  Yd.  Sept:  9,  1756. 

Worms, 
Hogg,  Anne,  Da.  George  &  Anne,  bom  Oct:  16,  1737;  married 

Oct:  29,  1754,  John  Cole,  bach. 


118  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

HBrd,  Phebc,  Da.  Mark  &  Margt.  bom  Sept:  29,  1754;  bapt: 

Nov:  10, 1754  by  Do. 
Haiddns,  William,  [from]  E[ngland]  buried  by  Jones  14  April 

1755;  Drown'd  Ladys  Island. 
Harrison,  Henry,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  Augt  9, 1738. 
Harrison,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  &  Hannah,  bom  Oct:  25,  1746. 
Harrison,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  23, 1749. 
Harrison,  Michal,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec:  50, 1751. 
Harrison,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  March  21, 1754. 
Harris,  William,  Sn.  of  WUliam  &  Anne,  bom  Jan:  22,  1755. 
Hogg,  Andrew,  Sn.  George  &  Anne,  bom  Jan:  17,  1756;  bapt: 

Mar:  18, 1756  by  Peasdy. 
Heratman,  Valentine,  Tajdor,  St.  Helena,  bur:  26  July,  

St  Helena. 
Henny,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Anne,  bom  May  16,  1755;  bapt: 

Oct:  6, 1755  by  Do.  bur:  20  Oct: .    Consuiiq>tion. 

Hogg,  Nancy,  Da.  John  &  Nancy,  St  Helena,  bom  Aug:  5,  1755; 

bapt:  Feb:  IS,  1756  by  Jno:  Belcher. 
Hazzard,  William,  Sn.  of  William  &  Catherine,  bapt:  April  12, 

1756  by  Peasely;  bur:  by  Lewis  Ch:  yard,  26  July,  1757. 

Fever. 
Harris,  Anne,  Da.  William  &  Mary,  bapt  May  29,  1756,  by 

Peasely. 
Hutchinson,  Axtell,  bach.  Overseer,  Pr.  WnL  Parish.    Married  by 

Lewis  Jime  27,  1756,  Anne  Williams,  spin. 
Harris,  Bcnj.  Sn.  William  &  Anne,  Port  Ro3ral,  bom  Jan:  17, 

1757;  bapt:  Mar:  19,  1757  by  Lewis. 
Harvey,  Anne,  Da.  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Mar:  5,  1757; 

bapt:  Mar:  27,  1757  by  Lewis;  bur:  Ch.  Yard  2  Oct:  1758. 
Hatcher,  Thomas,  Sn.  James  &  Sarah,  bur:  1756. 
Hogg,  Anne,  W.  to  John,  Ewhaws,  bur:  at  Ewhaws  2d.  Nov.  1756. 
Hird,  Margt  Da.  Mark  &  Margt.  bom  Jan:  12, 1757;  bapt:  July  1, 

1757,  by  Lewis. 
Hazzard,  Thomas  Edward,  Sn.  William  &  Catherine,  bom  May  31, 

1757;  bapt:  July  27,  1757  by  Lewis,  bur:  Ch  Yd.,  6  Sept: 

1757.    Fever. 
Hogg,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Nancy,  St.  Helena,  bom  Feb:  6, 

1757;  bapt.  May  30,  1757  by  Lewis. 
Hazzard,  William,  Sn.  William  &  Catherine,  bom  June  15,  1759: 

bapt:  Oct:  18,  1759,  by  Baron. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PAHISH  REGISTER  119 

Hord,  [or  Hard],  Anne,  Da.  John  &  Eleanor,  bom  Sept:  19,  1759; 

bapt:  Nov:  19,  1759  by  Do. 
Hutchenson,  John,  bur:  m  Ch.  yd.  Feb.  10,  1758. 

Hutchenson, Da.  Axtill  &  Anne,  Lad:  Island, . 

Hervey,  Lydia,  Da.  William  &  Eliz:  bapt:  Mar:  1760  by  Serjeant 
Hardall,  George,  bur:  Ch.  Yard,  Jan:  IS,  1760. 

Hazelton,  Susannah, . 

Hale,  Janes,  bach:  Overseer,  Port  Royal,  mar:  by  Rev:  Green, 

Feb:  6, 1763  Ann  Westbarry. 

Herrison, Da.  Henery  &  Mary,  bom  Dec:  11, 1761  [erased]. 

Hutchinson,  John,  Sn.  Axtell  &  Anne,  bom  Jan:  16,  1761;  bapt: 

May  3, 1763. 
Hazzard,  [Catherine],  Da.  William  &  Catherine,  bom  16  May,  1763 
Hale, Sn.  James  &  Ann  bom  Oct:  24,  1763,  bapl.  by  Rev. 

Green. 
Henney,  Ann,  wife  to  John,  bur:  by  Do.  19  Dec:  1763. 
Harvey,  Sarah,  Da.  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Apl.  19,  1764; 

bur:  by  Clerk,  9th  Sept:  1765  aged  1  year  5  months;  measles. 
Hogg,  John,  bach:  mar:  by  Rev.  Green,  July  6,  1764,  Margt: 

Burton,  wid. 
Harvey,  Hazzard,  Sn.  William  Harvey  Esqr:  mar:  by  Rev.  Green 

Nov.  29, 1764  Catherine  Smyth,  Ma. 
Hogg,  George,  mar:  by  Do.  Ann.  Jenkins,  M. 
Hutchinson,  Axtell,  Sn.  of  Axtell  Hutchinson  &  Ann,  bom  Sept: 

6th,  1764;  bapt:  Nov.  28,  1764  by  Rev.  Mr.  Greene, 
Henny,  John,  Cooper,  bur:  by  Clerk.   14  July  1765 ;  age  not  known; 

Consmnption. 
Heyward,  James,  Sn.  of  Colonel  Daniel  &  Elizabeth,  bom  April 

ye  13th  1764. 
Hope,  WiUianx,  Merchant  in  Beaufort,  married  25th  Oct:  1765 

Catherine  Smyth. 
Hedderly,  Phillips,  Bach,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Cooper  7  Nov: 

1768  Mary  Williams  wid:  to  Charles. 
Hamilton,  Elizabeth,  Departed  13  July  1768  Bur:  July  14;  Sudden. 
Hedderly,  Sarah,  Da.  Phillips  &  Mary  bom  Nov.  27,  176-,  bapt. 

July  22,  1770  by  Pierce. 
Hull,  Wilhn.,  bom  Nov:  22, 1770;  Mar:  Ehzabeth  Johnson. 
Hale,  Elizabeth,  Da.  James  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Dec.  27,  1770; 

bapt:  Feb:  28, 1771,  by  Rev:  Mr.  Pierce. 


120  so.  CA.  HISTOKICAL  AMD  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Hale,  James,  mar:  by  Rev.  Mr.  Simsom,  D.T.  Elizabeth  Fening 

Aug:  16, 1768. 
Harsking,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Fanney,  bom  Oct:  11,  1770;  bapt: 

Jime  22, 1771,  by  Rev.  Mr.  Kerce. 
Halsall,  William,  Sn.  of  William  &  Susannah,  bom  19  Dec:  1772; 

bapt:  Aug:  22,  1773,  by  Rev.  Mr.  Moreau. 
Hogg,  William,  Sn.  William  &  Ann,  Okatee  Creek,  bom  4  Aug: 

1783;  bapt:  Dec:  11, 1784  by  Lewes. 
Heyward,  Maria,  Euhaws,  married  by  Do.  20  June  1786,  ^(^lliam 

Brailsford. 
Howard,  >X^lliam,  from  Liverpool,  England,  bur:  30  June  1786, 

aged  42  sudden. 
Henzie,  Bigoe,  bach:  from  Ireland,  married  8  May,  1787,  Elizabeth 

Murray;  bur:  28  Aug:  1787  aged  29.    Fever. 
Hird,  John,  of  Isaac  &  Mary,  bom  21  Dec:  1786;  bapt:  17  July 

1787  by  Lewes. 
Hogg,  Elizabeth,  q>in:  Da.  of  John  &  Margaret,  married  by  Da 

24  Dec:  1788,  Jonathan  >^tter,  bach. 
Hughes,  Mary  Us^r,  married  by  Do.  24  Nov:  1789,  John  Can- 

naway  Ladson. 
Hird,  Mary,  of  Is^ac  &  Mary,  bom  12th  Jan:  1790;  bi^t:  8  Feb: 

1790  by  Do. 
Hazzard,  William  Wigg,  Sn.  of  WUliam  &  Mary,  Beaufort,  bom 

July  27,  1793;  bapt:  Nov:  3,  1793,  by  Rev.  Matt:  Tate. 

Hutson,  Ann,  Da.  of mar:  8  May,  1777,  John  Bamwell. 

Hicks,  Caroline  Lavinia,  Da.  of  Rev.  Galen  &  Sarah,  bom  Oct:  4, 

1806;  bapt:  March  27,  1807  by  Rev.  Hicks.    Mr.  Collin  & 

Mary  Canq)bell  &  Mrs.  Lavinia  Cady  sureties. 
Houseal,  Christiana  Margaretta,  Da.  John  Bernard  &  Mary, 

bora  19  Feb:  1811;  bapt:  April  IS,  1811;  by  Campbell. 

Mrs.  Sarah  Campbell  &  Mr.  Lockwood  sureties. 
Hamilton,  Mary  Rhodes,  Da.  Paul  &  Henrietta,  bom  13  Jan.  1811, 

bapt:  July  21,  1811  by  Campbell.    Parents  sureties. 
Houseal,  John  Bemard,  Son  of  John  Bernard  &  Mary,  bora  11 

April  1812;  bapt:  May  26,  1812,  by  Campbell.    Parents 

sureties. 
Hazel,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  WilHam  &  Rebecca,  bora  10  Dec.  1812; 

bapt:  Sept:  23,  1813,  by  Campbell,  parents  sureties. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  121 

Hazel,  Ann  Margaret,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  13  July,  1813:  bapt:  Do. 

Do.    Parents  sureties. 

Hartstien,  Henry  Julius,  of &  Mary,  bom  13  Oct:  1812; 

^  bapt:  Dea  28,  1812  by  Do.    Mary  Hartstien  &  John  Verdier 

sureties. 
Habersham,  Ann  Hutson,  Da.  of  John  &  Ann,  bapt:  June  2(L 

1813,  by  Do.    Parents  sureties. 
He3rward,  Edward  Bamwell,  Son  of  Nathl.  &  Esther  bom  13  Dec: 

1814;  bapt:  22  Jany.  1815,  by  Campbell.    Pai;ents  sureties. 
Hanckel,  Sarah  Reeve,  Da.  of  Christian  &  Ann,  bom  23  Dec: 

1814;  bapt:  8  Feb:  1815,  by  Hanckel,  Mrs.  Hanckel,  C.  Bull 

&  J.  B.  Campbell  sureties. 
Habersham,  Maria  Elliott,  Da.  of  John  &  Ann,  bom  8  Sept: 

1815;  bapt:  IS  Nov:  1815. 
Hatton,  Eliza,  from  London,  died  2  Nov.  1829  bur:  in  the  Church 

Yard. 
Hallonguist,  D.  D.  from  London,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Canq)bell 

Dec.  17,  1812  to  Marian  Hatton. 
Hatton,   Marian,  Daugt.   of  Ehza.  from  London,  married  by 

Campbell,  Dec.  17,  1812,  to  D.  D.  HaUonguist. 
Hallonquist,  Laurent  Daniel,  Son  of  D.  D.  &  Marian,  bom  AprU  17, 

1815  bapt:  Feb.  20,  1819  by  Rev.  Mr.  Dektveax:  H.  Verdier 

and  father  sureties. 
Hallonquist,  Charles  Frederick,  son  of  Do.  bom  July  11,  1817, 

bapt:  by  Do.  Do.  A.  G.  Verdier  and  Father  sureties. 
Hallonquist,  Euphemia  Isabelle,  daught.  of  Do.  bom  Aug:  15, 

1819;  bapt:  Oct:  20,  1819  by  Campbell  parents  &  I  Delar- 

veauz  sureties. 
Hallonquist,  Eliza  Marion,  daughter  of  Do.  born  Feby.  14,  1823, 

bapt:  March  8,  1823  by  Delaueaux,  A.    G.   Verdier,   M. 

Verdier  &  I  Delarveaux  sureties. 

Jenkins,  Joseph,  bach,  from  St.  Helena,  married  by  Jones,  May  31, 

1735  Phebe  Chaplin,  spin. 
Jenkins,  John,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Phebe,  bom  May  1738:  bapt: 

May  28,  1738. 
Jenkins,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Do.  Sept:  3,  1740;  bapt:  Oct:  26,  1740 

by  Do, 


122  so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Jenkins,  Phebe,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  30,  1742;  bapt:  May  8, 

1743,  by  Da 
Jenkins,  Christopher,  Sn.  of  Christopher  &  ,  bom  July  9, 

1738;  bapt:  July  9, 1738,  by  Do. 
Jenkins,  Elizabeth,  widow,  married  by  Do.  Sept:  13, 1737,  Thomas 

Simpson,  bach. 
Jervey,  John,  bach,  married  by  Do.  Mar:  16,  1736  Elizabeth 

Gilbert,  spin. 
Jervey,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Aug:  28,  1738;  bapt: 

Dec.  11,  1738  by  Do.  bur:  14  Sept:  1739. 
Jervey,  Eliz:  Da.  Do.  bom  Feb:  8,  1739:  bapt:  Mar.  16,  1739, 

by  Do. 
Jarvis,  Jane,  mar:  by  Do.  July  24, 1727,  Saml.  Nichols. 
Jevins,  John,  bach:  Sn.  of  Philip  &  Hannah,  bom  Feb:  8,  1726: 

bapt:  Mar:  19,  1726;  (See  Letter  G.  for  Givens,  that  being 

the  proper  name)  married  Sept:  18,  1751,  Mary  Stone. 
Jevins  Philip  Jimr:  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  25,  1732:  Bapt:  Aug:  2, 

1732. 
Jevins,  Philip  Senr.,  wid'r.  married  Oct.  3,  1734,  Martha  Bow- 
man, spin. 
Inns,  Sarah,  Nat.  daughter  of  William  and  Mary  Hicks,  bom 

Aug.  20, 1735;  bapt.  Jan.  15  1735,  by  Jones,  bur:  21  Mar.  1735. 
Irwin,  John,  Bach,  married  by  Jones,  Sept  19,  1739,  Mary  Ann 

Vemoid,  spinister. 
Irwin,  Mary  Ann,  dau.  John  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  Feb:  8,  1740; 

bapt.  Mar:  29, 1741,  by  Do. 
Irwin,  John,  son  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  24,  1742,  bapt  Jan.  12,  1742* 

by  Do. 
Johnson,  Margaret,  spin.  Da.  John  &  Jane,  St.  Helena,  mar: 

by  Do.  June  28, 1727,  John  Mcloud. 
Jones,  Lewis,  bach,  minister  of  this  Par'h  from  Wales,  married 

by  Quinsey,  Sept:  11,  1733,  Margaret  Evans,  wid.  biu::  26 

Dec:  1744. 
Jones,  Catharine,  Da.  Rev.  Lewis  &  Margt  bom  Mar.  13,  1733; 

Bapt.  by  Jones  Mar.  13, 1733;  bur.  Mar.  15, 1733. 
Jones,  Margaret,  wife  to  Rev.  Lewis,  bur.  by  Do.  14  Dec.  1743. 
Jones,  Simon,  Bach,  [from]  E[ngland],  married  by  Do.  Oct  12, 

1733,  Eliza:  Wilkinson,  wid. 

*  These  i^pareiit  discrqMmdes  in  dates  are  due  to  the  isct  that  the  old  style 
of  chronology  was  still  in  use. 


ST.  heusna's  pasish  register  123 

Jones,  Margaret,  Da.  Simon  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Jan:  17,  1734; 

bapt:  Feb:  16,  1734  by  Jones;  married  Mar:  15,  1759,  Benj: 

Burton.    Bur:  Dec.  2, 1786.    Pleurisy. 
Jones,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  27, 1737;  bapt:  Feb:  19, 1737,* 

by  Do.  bur:  Dec.  5,  1740. 
Jones,  William,  Sn.  of  William  & Bapt:  Mar.  28,  1726,  by 

Do  James  &  Mary  Watt  &  Rowland  Serjeant  sureties. 
Jones  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  Bapt:  Mar.  28, 1726,  Do.  Do. 
Jones,  James,  Sn.  of  Comelius,  bapt:  Feb:  13,  1725  by  Standish, 

Father  surety. 
Jones,  Benjamin,  married  by  Do.  i9  Oct:  1740,  Sarah  Peters,  md. 
Jones,  Lydia,  bur:  by  Do.  27  Mar:  1740. 
Iten,  Thomas,  mar:  by  Quinsey,  of  Johns  Island,  May  27,  1744, 

to  Mary  Stanyame. 
Iten,  Mary,  Da.  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  Aug:  9,  1745;  Bapt: 

by  Do. 
Iten,  Thomas,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Mary,  Bom  Jan:  10,  1747,  bapt: 

by  St  John  bur:  19  Aug:  1748. 
Iten,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec:  11, 1746;  bapt:  by  Orr  of  Stono, 

Bur:  15  April  1760  aged  10  [sic]  Shot  by  accident. 
Iten,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Feb:  21,  1749.    Bapt.  by  Chiffelly 

of  Purysburgh. 
Iten,  Grace,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  24,  1752;  bapt:  Mar:  26,  1752 

by  Peasdy.    Bur:  20  Aprl.  1756  in  Ch:  Yd 
John,  Philip,  Negr.  Married  by  Do.  April  23,  1753,  Rebecca 

Royal,  wid:  Negro. 
Jackson,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Henry  &  Elizabeth,  Pr.  Wm.  Psh.  mar- 
ried by  Peasdy,  Apr:  23, 1753,  Elizabeth  Davis,  spinster. 
Joiner,  William,  Sn.  John  &  Phebe,  bur:  by  Do.  18  Sept  1753, 

abt.  2,  Flux  &  Fever. 
Iten,  Thomas,  Sn.  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  Jan:  16,  1754;  bapt 

June  2,  1754,  by  Do.  Bur:  12  Oct  1754.    Teethmg. 
Joiner,  Phebe,  wife  to  Capt  John,  of  the  Scout  Boat;  [from] 

E[ngland]  bur:  31  July,  1754;  Poison. 
Joiner,  Catharine  Da.  Do.  Bapt:  Sept  1, 1754  by  Do.  Mr.  Morgan 

Sabb  &  wife  &  Miss  Mary  Taylor,  sureties.    Bur.  8  Oct  1754. 

Teething. 

*Tliese  apparent  discrepancies  in  dates  are  due  to  the  fact  that  the  old  style 
of  chronology  was  still  in  use. 


124         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AMD  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Jenkins,  Anne,  Da.  Joseph  &  Phebe,  bom  Jan:  29,  1745;  bapt: 

Sept  1,  1754  by  Do. 
Jenkins,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  May  13,  1750,  bapt:  Do.  by  Do. 
Jenkins,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  6,  1752,  biy>t  Do.  by  Do. 

bur:  6  Mch.  1755 
Joiner,  John,  wid'r,  Capt.  Scout  Boat,  [from]  E[ngland],  married 

by  Do.  Jan:  9,  1755,  Anne  Wigg,  Da.  Capt  Richard  &  Anne; 

bur:  7  Mar:  1796,  aged  76. 
Jemmison,  Anne,  Da.  Thomas  &  Anne,  Overseer;  bom  Jan:  3, 

1754;  bapt:  Sept.  1755  by  Do. 
Jones,  Jane,  from  the  Orphan  House,  Georgia.    Bur:  St  Hdena, 

1756. 
Jo)mer,  Richard,  Sn.  to  John  &  Anne,  bom  Nov.  5,  17 —  Bapt: 

Jan:  31, 1756,  by  Peasdy. 
Jones,  Elizabeth,  wid.  to  Simon,  Port  Royal,  Bur:  Hantation, 

12  Mar:  1757. 
Irwin,  John  Samuel,  Sn.  John  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  Aug:  28, 1756. 
Lrwin,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  Bom  Feb:  22, 1758. 
Joyner,  Mary,  Da.  John  &  Anne,  biy>t:  Jan.  23, 1758,  by  A.  Baron. 
Itingere,  Christiana,  Da.  Conradt  &  Mary  Anne,  bom  June  14, 

1759:  bapt  Feb:  17, 1760  by  Cooper. 
Jenes,  John,  a  Soldier,  married  by  Green,  Oct:  7, 1762  Ann  Spencer. 
Irvin,  Ritch  James  Sn.  John  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  June  6,  1761; 

bapt:  Mar:  21,  1763  by  Green. 
Irvin,  John,  Ditto,  Da.  Cathn.  John  &  Mary  Ann  [sic]  bom 

Oct  1, 1762;  Bapt  Mar:  21, 1763  by  Ditto. 
Jones,  Ann,  Da.  Simon  &  Margt.  Bom  27  July,  1763;  bapt  Nov: 

27, 1763  by  Ditto. 
Jones,  Simon,  Bur:  by  Ditto,  5  Jan:  1764. 
Jenkins,  Elizabeth  Da.  Joseph  &  Phebe,  St.  Helena,  bur:  29  Dec: 

1763. 
Jacob,  Susannah,  bur:  by  Ditto,  2d.  June  1764. 

Johnston ,  bur:  4th  Augt:  1764. 

Iten,  Rebecca,  Da.  Thomas  &  Ann,  bom  May  7,  1763;  bapt: 

Augt.  5, 1764  by  Ditto:  married  Anathony  Albergottie,  Jur. 
Jones,  William,  Bach.  Taylor,  Married  by  Rev.  Green,  3rd.  Oct. 

1764,  Elizabeth  Hamleton  wid. 
Jenkins,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Joseph  Jenkins,  married  31  May,  1770, 

to  Sarah  Toomer. 


■^ ..  I 


ST.  HELENA'S  PABISH  REGISTER  125 

JoneSy  Elizabeth,  Da;  Wm.  &  Elizabeth,  bom  5  June,  1767;  bapt: 

Nov:  21,  1767,  by  Rev.  Frink,  in  Georgia. 
Johnson,  John,  bach.  Married  by  Revd.  Faverier,  Rebecca  Verdier, 

28  May,  1766. 
Johnson,  Peggy,  Da.  John  &  Rebecca,  bom  28  May,  1767;  bapt: 

July  31,  1769,  by  Rev.  Mr.  Streekwell;  married  by  Graham, 

9  Mar:  1784,  John  McKee,  bach.  Lad3rs  Island. 
Johnson,  Jacob,  married  Nov.  22, 1770,  Martha  Boiler. 
Jones,  Samuel,  married  Jan.  27,   1771,  to   Elizabeth  McKee, 

Ladys  Island. 
J03mdr,  Margaret,  Da.  John  &  Anne,  bom  24  Sept:  1772;  bapt 

June  3, 1773  by  Rev.  Mr.  Moreau;  married  by  Lewis  11  June 

1789  Archibald  Smith.    Dead,  1795. 
Joyner,  James,  bach.  Married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Graham,  8  Jan:  1778, 

Elizabeth  Fairchild,  spinster. 
Johnson,  Sarah,  Da.  John  &  Rebecca,  bom  8  Feb:  1776.    Married 

William  Fickling,  Ladys  Island. 
Odar,  John,  bach,  married  by  Rev.  Moreau,  16  Aug:  1774,  Ann 

Palmer,  spinster. 
Tklar,  Ann  Palmer,  Da.  John  &  Ann,  bom  1  Nov.  1774;  bapt 

27  Dec:  1774,  by  Rev.  Moreau. 
Irvine,  Kenneth,  of  John  &  Ann,  Savannah  Georg.  bapt:  17  Mar 

1785,  by  Lewes. 
Johnson,  William,  Sn.  of  John  &  Rebecca,  bom  22  Jan:  1782 

bapt  2  Mar:  1783,  by  Graham. 
Joyner,  William,  Bach,  of  Bristol,  married  by  Graham,  23  Jan 

1783,  Elizabeth  Joyner,  wid.  who  died  in  Augt.  1797,  &  on  11 

Sept:  1798  he  married   Susanna   Grayson,  widow  of  Jno 

Grayson. 
Joyner,  Sarah  Oliver,  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  Beaufort,  bom 

18  Dec.  1783;  bapt:  8  May,  1785  by  Lewes.    Married  15  Jany: 

1801,  John  Burton. 
Jones,  Elizabeth  Sarah,  of  Ann  Jones,  a  natural  child,  bapt  6  Dec: 

1785.    Dead. 
Itting,  Conrad,  a  German,  buried  30  Dec:  1785,  aged  72. 
Joyner,  John,  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  bapt:  19  Feb:  1786,  by  Do. 

Bur:  19  July,  1786. 
Jenkins,  Richard,  of  Joseph  &  Elizabeth,  bom  9  May    1786; 

bapt:  11  June  1786  by  Do. 


126         so.  CA.  mSTQRICAL  AKD  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Jones,  Jesse,  of  John  &  Mary,  May  River,  bom  13  ^ril  1779: 

iM^t:  22  July  1786,  by  Lewes. 
Joyner,  Mary  Ann,  Da.  WilUam  &  Elizabeth,  Beaufort,  bom  29 

May,  1787;  bapt:  5  May  1791,  by  Gardmer. 
Joyner,  Elizabeth  Margt:  of  Do.  Do.  Bom  23  July,  1789:  bapt: 

5  May,  1791,  by  Do. 
Joyner,  William  Howlett,  Son  of  Do.  Do.  bom  9  May,  1794; 

bapt:  9  May  1800,  by  Graham. 
Joyner,  Susan  and  Isabella,  daughters  of  William  &  Susan,  Beau- 
fort, bom  11  July,  1799,  Bapt:  9  May,  1800  by  Ditto. 
Johnson,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Willm.  &  Elizabeth,  Beaufort,  bom 

13  Nov.  1809;  bapt:  Sept.  1810,  by  Hicks;  Parents  &  Jno. 

M.  Verdier  surities. 
Johnson,  A^^lliam  Sn.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  Do.  bom  10  April, 

1811,  bapt.  July  5,  1811,  by  Do.  Parents  &  Joseph  Fickling 

sureties. 
Johnson,  Joseph  Fickling,  Sn.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  Beaufort, 

bom  10  Feby:  1813.    Bapt:  Sq)t:  22,  1813,  by  J.  B.  Camp- 
bell, Parents  &  Joseph  Fickling  sureties. 
Jones,  Mary  Amelia  Harriet,  Da.  of  Jane  &  Thomas,  P.  Williams; 

bom  18  Jan.  1814;  bapt:  Sept:  7,  1814  by  Do.  Mrs.  Jones 

Parent,  surety. 
Johnson,  Mary  Whaley,  Da.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  Beaufort, 

bom  17  Dec:  1814;  bapt:  April  30, 1815,  by  Do.,  Parents  & 

Miss  H.  McKee  sureties. 
Jenkins,  Caroline  Olivia,  Da.  Isaac  &  Isabella,  St..  Helena,  bom 

26  Augt:  1814;  bapt  Augt:  1816  by  Do. 
Jenkins,  Margaret  Mary,  Da.  Isaac  &  Isabella,  St.  Helena,  bom 

29  March,  1816. 
Johnson,   Benjamin  Jenkins,   Sn.   William   &  Elizabeth,   bom 

18  March  — ;  bapt:  Augt  7,  1817  by  HanckeL 
Johnson,  John,  Sn.  of  William  and  Elizabeth,  bom  2d.  Mar:  1819; 

bapt:  8  Sept:  1819,  by  J.  B.  Campbell;  Parents  sponsors. 

Kennedy,  Daniel,  Sn.  Michael  &  Margery  bapt:  Augt:  24,  1729, 

by  Jones. 
Kennedy,  Marg'y,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  April  18,  1730;  bapt:  Apr:  25, 

1731,  by  Do.  Jas:  Watt,  Lt.,  Ann  Nicholson  &  Margery 

Kennedy  sureties. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PAXISH  REGISTER  127 

Kennedy,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Augt:  29,  1733;  bapt:  Sept:  7, 

1733,  by  Do.  Parents,  sureties. 
Kennedy,  Enoch,  Sn.  William  &  Margaret,  bom  Oct:  17,  1742. 

Bapt:  Mar:  6,  1742  by  Do. 
Kellsall,  Roger,  Sn.  John  &  Mary,  bom  Feb:  16,  1738:  bapt: 

Feb:  23, 1738,  by  Do. 
King,  Mary,  A  Servant  to  Robert  Williams,  buried  by  Do.  25 

Oct:  1743. 
Karr,  Mary,  Da.  Thomas  &  Mary  fr.  Georgia,  bom  Jan:  3,  1750; 

bur:  29  Aug:  1751. 
Karr,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  June  26,  1746,  at  Frederico,  bapt. 

by  Bosomworth. 
King,  Thomas,  bach.  Married  by  Mr.  Green,  Oct:  18, 1762,  Martha 

Graves. 
Kelsall,  William,  bach,  marned  by  Mr.  Ellington,  April  23,  1772, 

Elizabeth  Desaussure,  spinster. 
Knights,  Winrifred,  wid.  married  by  Lewes,  23  June  1785,  David 

Sten,  bach,  [or  Iten?]. 
Kelsall,  John,  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  bur:  by  Lewes,  29  July, 

1785,  aged  4;  worms.   (Intered  at  the  plantation  &  afterwards 

removed  to  P.  Wm.  Parish.) 
Knowles,  George,  of  George  &  Elizabeth,  bom  1  Jan.  1787;  bapt: 

27  Jany.  1787,  by  Do.  bur:  1  Feb:  1787. 
Knowles,  Elizabeth,  wife  of  the  above,  bur:  by  Do.  5  Jime  1787, 

aged  43. 
Knapp,  Timothy,  Bach,  from  Boston,  Bay  State,  married  by  Do. 

25  Dec.  1789,  Margaret  Burke,  widow. 
King,  Richard,  Sn.  Richard  &  Margaret,  bom  10  May,  1767; 

bapt:  Aug.  10,  1767  by  Simpson. 
King,  Charles,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom.  10  Feby.  1770;  bapt:  10  May, 

1770  by  Do. 

Lacy,  Samuel,  wid'r.  Master  of  a  Pariagua,  E[ngland],  married 

by  Jones,  May  14, 1741,  Hannah  Sealey,  widow;  bur:  10  Oct., 

1741. 
Lacy,  Elizabeth,  first  wife  to  Samuel,  bur:  by  Do.  21  Dec:  1740. 
Lacy,  Samuel,  bach.  Sn.  Samuel  &  Elizabeth,  Bn.  in  England, 

Shipcarpenter  married  by  Jones,  Feb:  2, 1743,  Hannah  Hogg, 

spin. 


128         so.  CA.  HISTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 


Lacy,  Elizabeth,  spin.  Da.  of  Do.  Bn.  in  Eng.  married  by  Do. 

April  18,  1741,  SamL  Parker,  bach. 
Laroche,  Step  Dyer,  Sn.  Isaac  &  Sarah,  bom  Jan:  28,  1741;  b^>t: 

Mar:  28, 1753  by  Do. 
Lafit,  Mary,  wife  to  Mr.  Lafit  bur:  by  Do.  6  Aug:  1733. 
Lavis,  William,  A  Soldier,  married  by  Do.  Mar:  31, 1728,  Lavinia 

Dawson  bur:  20  Dec:  1728. 
Lee,  Richard,  a  Serjeant,  bur:  by  Do.  7  Nov:  1739. 
Lewis,  William,  bur:  by  Do.  14  Feb:  1736. 
Lavis,  Lovinia,  wid.  to  William,  married  by  Do.  Feb:  3,  1733, 

Thomas  Newell,  wid'r. 
Levy,  Anne,  married  by  Do.  July  21, 1728  John  Connant 
Leyton,  John,  Sn.  Richard  &  Mary,  bom  Jan:  19,  1738;  bapt: 

Jan:  3, 1738  hy  Do.  Bur:  24  June,  1739. 
,Lewin,  Henry  Dr.  fr.  Berbadoes,  Lreland,  biuied  by  Do.  3  June, 

1739. 
Lowre,  Leoline,  Sn:  of  Leoline,  bom  1722:  bapt:  Mar:  26,  1732, 

by  Do. 
Lloyd,  John,  wid'r  (See  Floyd)  married  by  Do.  Dec:  8,  1733, 

Anne  Parmenter,  spinster. 
Lloyd,  Anne  wid.  (See  letter  F)  married  by  Do.  June  22,  1742 

[no  name  given]. 
Lloyd,  Henry,  Sn.  John  &  Anne  bom  Feb:  23,  1735:  bapt:  Aug:  9, 

1736  by  Do. 
Ljrford,  William,  Capt.  wid'r.  Mariner,  married  by  Do.  Jan:  6 

1733,  Ann  Watt,  spin. 
Ljrford,  Mary,  spin.  Da.  Capt.  William  by  1st  wife,  married  by  Do. 

Nov:  7,  1742,  Davd.  Cutler  Braddock,  bach. 
Lyford,  Ann,  Da.  Capt.  William  &  Ann,  bom  Dec:  22, 1734,  bapt: 

Feb:  26,  1734  by  Do.:  bur:  Feb:  28,  1734. 
Lyford,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec:  31,  1735;  bapt:  Dec:  31,  1735, 

by  Do.  Parents  sureties;  bur:  Jan:  1, 1735. 
Lyford,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  3,  1736;  bapt:  Mar:  3,  1736 

by  Do. 
Lyford,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Mar:  3,  1737,  bapt:  Mar:  3, 1737, 

by  Do. 
Lyford,  Ann,  wife  to  Capt  William,  bur:  25  Sept:  1745. 
Ladson,  Sarah,  Spin.  Da.  Samuel  &  Elizabeth,  married  by  Peasely, 

Oct:  1, 1751,  Benj:  Chaplin,  bach. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  129 

Ladson,  Elizabeth,  W.  to  Samuel,  St.  Helena,  bur:  by  Do.  at 

St.  Helena  26  April  1752. 
Leecraft,  John,  bach.  Mariner,  Bennud's,  married  by  Do.  May  17, 

1752,  Amelia  Flower,  spin.  Bur:  1  Aug:  1758.    Consumption. 
Ladson,  Benjamin,  Bach.  Sn.  Samuel  &  Elizabeth,  married  by 

Wm.  Orr,  of  Stono,  Mar:  19,  1749,  Elizabeth  Perry. 
Ladson,  Benjamin,  Sn.  Benjamin  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Apr:  13, 1752, 

bapt.  by  Peasely  bur:  1  Nov:  1753  aged  1  yr.  7  mo.  St.  Helena. 
Ladson,  Elizabeth,  spin.  Da.  Samuel  &  Elizabeth  married  by  Do. 

Apr:  24,  1753,  Peter  Perry,  bach.  St  Helena. 
Ladson,  Joseph,  Sn.  Benj.  &  Eliz:  bom  May  29, 1753;  bur:  18  Oct: 

1753,  St.  Helena. 

Lovekin,  Agnes,  wid:  Da.  to  Thomas  &  Anne  Stone,  mar:  by 

Peasely,  Jime  13,  1754  Robert  Barry. 
Ladson,  Benjamin,  Sn.  Benj:  &  Eliz:,  St.  Helena,  bom  Oct.  11, 

1754,  bapt.    Jan.   S,    1755  by  Do.    bur:  25  Mar:   1786, 
Perineumony. 

Ladson,  Sarah,  wife  to  Samuel,  St.  Helena,  bur:  4  April,  1755. 

Child  Bed. 
Livingston,  Eleanor,  Da.  George  &  Eleanor,  P.  R.  bom  May  22, 

1755. 
Ladson,  Thomas,  Sn:  Benj:  &  Eliz:  St.  Helena,  bapt:  June  27, 

1756  by  Lewis;  married  by  Lewis,  Prince  Wm.  Parish,  Feb'y 

24,  1785,  Elizabeth  Capers. 

Legg ,  a  Carpenter  on  St.  Helena,  bur:  St.  Helena  1756. 

Leecraft,  John,  Sn.  John  &  Amelia,  Beaufort,  bom  Dec:  3,  1756; 

bapt:  Jany.  3,  1757  by  Lewis  Jno.  Chapman  &  Father  sur- 

ties,  married  by  Gowerly  Oct:  24,  1784,  Elizabeth   Black, 

Spins. 
Ladson,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Benj:  &  Elizabeth,  bapt:  Feby.  27,  1758, 

Bur:  by  A.  Baron,  14  Oct.  1759. 
Ladson,  Elizabeth,  wid:  of  Benj:  married  by  A.  Baron,  Nov:  2, 

1758,  John  Chaplin,  St.  Helena. 
Ladson,  Sarah  Phebe,  Da.  Samuel  &  Sarah,  bom  Aug:  30, 1759: 

bapt.  Dec:  2,  1759  by  Baron. 
Ladson,  Elenor,  Da.  Henry  &  Elizabeth,  bom  5  Dec:  1763:  bapt: 

8  July,  1764  by  Green. 
Ladson,  Mary  Jane,  Da.  Samuel  &  Sarah,  bom  24  Nov.  1765: 

bapt:  June  26,  1768  by  Rev.  Cosgrove. 


150         so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AKD  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Ladson,  Darius  Susanna,  Da.  Saml.  &  Sarah,  bom  22  Mar:  1768: 

bapt:  June  26,  1768,  by  Do. 
Loyd,  Abraham,  Sn.  Joseph  &  Sarah,  free  mulattoes,  bom  19  Oct: 

1767:  bapt.  July  3, 1768  by  Do.  mar:  by  Lewb,  11  July  1790, 

Mary  Diana,  free  mulattoe. 
Linton,  Catherine  Hamilton,  Da.  John  &  Mary:  bom  20  Jany. 

1770:  bapt:  Jan:  25  Do. 
Linton,  Hamilton  Hannah,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  Beaufort,  bom 

9  Jan:  1773,  bapt:  Jan:  14, 1773  by  Rev.  Mr.  Ellington,  James 

Cook,  Mrs.  Cook,  and  Mrs.  Iten  sureties. 
Lebby,  Robert,  Sn.  Nath'nl  &  Eliza:  Beaufort,  bom  July  30, 1777, 

bapt:  Sept:  17,  1777  by  Rev:  Mr.  Graham,  Parents  sureties. 
Lewes,  Rev.  Stephen,  Rector  of  Beaufort,  married  by  Graham, 

Feb:  27,  1785,  Mary  Greene,  spin. 
Lechemere,  Catherine,  widow,  Da.  of  Andrew  &  Catherine  De- 

veaux,  married  by  Lewes,  March  10,  1785,  John  Ash. 
Lewes,  John  Daniel,  of  Rev.  Stephen  Lewes  &  Mary,  bom  10 

Jan.  1786,  bapt:  19  Feb:  1786  by  Do.  Col:  Ed:  Barnwell  & 

Lady  &  Mr.  Daniel  John  Greene  sureties. 
Lloyd,  Sarah,  of  Joseph  &  Sarah,  bom  31  Aug:  1769;  bapt:  3  Oct: 

1769,  by  Smith. 
Lloyd,  Josiah,  of  Do.  bom  6  Sept.  1771;  bapt:  10  Feb:  1772  by 

Ellington. 
Lloyd,  Thomas,  of  Do.  bom  8  April,  1774;  bapt:  1  May,  1775 

by  Moreau. 
Lloyd,  John,  of  Do.  bom  4  Oct:  1776;  bapt:  29  Sept:  1786  by 

Lewes. 
Lloyd,  William,  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  10  July,  1786,  bapt:  29  Sept: 

1786,  by  Do. 
Lloyd,  Ann,  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  4  Oct:  1781,  bapt:  29  Sept:  1786, 

by  Do. 
Lewes,  William  Bower,  of  Stephen  C.  &  Mary,  bom  13  March 

1788,  bapt:  10  May,  1788  by  Do,  private  since  Reed,  into 

the  Church  bur:  25  Sept:  1790,  Worm  Fever. 
Ladson,  John  Camaway,  married  by  Do.  24  Nov:  1789,  Mary 

Ussher  Hughes. 
Lewes,  Elizabeth  Mary  Hooper,  of  Stephen  C.  &  Mary  bom 

29  Oct:  1789;  bapt.  8  Sept:  1790  by  Do,  private. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PABISH  KEGISTER  131 

Lawrence,  Samuel,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Holcomb,  17  Mar:  1796, 

Sarah  Grayson;  died   IS  Oct:   1799,   Dysentary:    married 

18  Jan'y*  1800,  Elizabeth  Givens,  widow. 
Lawrence,  Richard  Grayson,  Son  of  Samuel  &  Sarah,  bom  21 

JanV  1797. 
Lubbock,  Melisa  Sarah  Chisolm,  Da. bom  18  Jan,  1815: 

bapt:  22  Aug:  1815,  Private  Baptism. 
Lubbock,  Edwyn  Kirby  Sandwitch,  Son  of  bom  9  May 

1813;  bapt:  Aug:  23,  1813  Mrs.  Lobbock  surety. 

McLane,  John,  Sn:  AUen  &  Margt.  bom  July  17,  1725,  bapt:  by 

Orr  Dissentor,  married  by  Boskey  of  Pon  Pon  Sept:  28, 1748, 

Elizabeth  Page,  Spmster. 
McLane,  Sarah,  Da.  Do.  Do.  bom  May  19,  1727;  bapt:  June  19, 

1727  by  Do.  Edmund  Ellis,  Eliz:  Serjeant,  &  Sarah  Hardwick 

sureties.    Bur:  28,  Feby:  1739. 
McLane,  Allen,  Sn.  of  Do.  Do.  bom  May  23, 1728;  bapt.  June  25, 

1729  by  Do.  Rowland  Serjeant  and  Parents  sureties. 
McLane,  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  Do.  bom  Feb:  1730,  bapt.  Apr:  25, 

1731  by  Dyson,  Rev.  Edwd.  Dyson,  Jas:  Watt  &  Lavina 

Lavis  sureties.    Bur:  2  July  1733. 
McLane,  Charles,  Sn.  of  Do.  Do.  bom  Jan:  6,  1732,  bapt:  Apr:  1, 

1733  by  Jones;  Jas:  Watt  surety. 

McLane,  Margt.  Da.  of  Do.  Do.  bom  Dec:  17, 1734;  bapt:  Mar:  2, 

1734  by  Do.    Bur:  8  Jan:  1739. 

McLane,  Martha,  Spin.  Da.  of  Do.  Do.  bom  Aug:  5,  1736;  bapt: 

Nov:  14,  1736  by  Do.;  married  Aug:  2,  1752,  Thomas  Stone, 

bach.  * 
McLane,  Alexander,  Sn.  of  Do.  Do.  bom  Aug:  23,  1738,  bapt: 

Oct:  14,  1738  by  Do.    Bur:  24  May,  1744. 
McLane,  AUen,  father  to  above,  bom  1696  buried  by  Do.  8  Nov. 

1743. 
McLoud,  John,  married  by  Do.  28  June  1727,  Margt: Johnson, 

spins. 
McLoud,  John,  Sn.  to  John  &  Margt:  bom  24  Sept:  1732;  bapt: 

May  6,  1733,  by  Do.  Rowld.  Serjeant  &  Margery  Kennedy 

sureties. 
McLoud,  Margt.  Da.  Do.  Do.  bom  Feb:  4,  1734;  bapt:  ^r:  6, 

1735  by  Do. 


132       so.  CA.  msToncAL  and  .exsEAuxacAL  magahwk 

McLood,  Ann,  Da.  Do.  bom  Oct:  1737;  bapt:  Nov:  4, 1737  fay  Da 
McLood,  Enos,  Sn.  of  Do.  born  Fd>:  14,  1740;  hxpt:  Mar:  12, 

1740  by  Do. 
McLood,  Margt:  wid:  to  Jdm,  married  by  Do.  Dec:  21,  1743, 

Jo8q)h  ToUas,  BadL 
McCHIvciy,  EUzabeth,  wid:  to  Jdm,  married  by  Do.  June  22, 

1736  Ephraim  Mikdl,  widower. 
McGQvery,  John  married  EUz:  Hazzard,  spoL    Bur:  4  Apr:  1736. 
McKee,  WiOiam  Sn.  of  CapU  JcAn  & bom  July  27,  1743: 

bapt:  Aug:  1, 1743  by  Do. 
McKay,  George,  Sn.  Q^t ,  bom  Oct:  29, 1743,  bapt:  Nov.  10, 

1743  by  Do.  Bur:  30  Nov:  1743. 

Mcpherson,  Alexander,  married  by  Do.  Sq>t.  24,   1738  Jane 

Ifichols,  wid: 
Mcpherson,  Mary,  Da.  Alexander  &  Jane,  bom  Nov:  4,  1739, 

bi^t:  Mar:  16, 1739,  by  Do. 
Mcpherson,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  Do.  bom  Aug:  1742;  bi4>t:  Aug:  31, 

1744  by  Do. 

Mderling,  Magdalen,  Wife  to  Daniel  a  soldier  bom  1681  bur.  by 

Do.  16  Dec:  1731. 
Mcguire,  Terence  bur:  by  Do.  3  Sept:  1729. 
McHarry,  Margt:  Spin.  Married  by  Do.  Aug:  23,  1742  Patrick 

Hinds,  BadL 
Maggot,  Magdalen,  Da.  James  &  Martha,  bom  Feb:  2,  1742; 

bapt:  May  9, 1742  by  Do. 
Mandervil,  John,  St.  Helena,  married  by  Do.  June  19,  1733, 

Mary  Wmter  died  1750  CharlesTown. 
Mandervil,  Elena,  Da.  John  &  Mary,  bom  Jan:  6,  1734,  bapt: 

May  19,  1734  by  Do. 
Metier,  Jane,  Spinster  married  by  Do.  Sept:  2, 1742  David  Mdvin, 

Badi. 
Mare,  Elenor,  Wife  to  William,  bur:  by  Do.  16  June  1731. 
Mathewes,  Chriatiana,  Wife  to  William  bur:  10  April,  1751. 
Martinaugle,  Philip,  Bach,  bom  at   Rome,  married  by  Jones, 

May  8, 1743  Mary  Foster,  sjunster. 
Martinaugle,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Philip  &  Mary,  bom  Feb'y  2, 1743; 

bapt:  May  28, 1744  by  Do. 
Matson,  Eliz:  married  by  Do.  Dec:  1739,  Joseph  Warren. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER  133 

Mellichamp,  Dorothy,  spin.  Da.  William  & married  by  Do. 

Nov.  5,  1738  Hugh  Wire,  Bach. 
Mellichamp,  Sarah,  bur:  by  Do.  13  Sept.  1741. 
Melvin,  David,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  Sept.  2,  1742,  Jane  Metier, 

spinster. 
Meredith,  Martha,  Spinster,  married  by  Do.  Nov:  19,   1739, 

William  Rich,  Bach. 
Meredith,  Edward,  Bur:  by  Do.  28  Mar;  1736. 
Mikell,  Ephraim,  wid'r,  married  by  Do.  June  22,  1736,  Eliz: 

McGilvrey,  widow. 
Mikell,  Eliz:  Da.  Ephriam  &  Eliz:  bom  Feb:  2,  1738,  Bapt:  July 

22,  1744  by  Do.    Married  by  Peasdy,  Nov:  23,  1753,  John 

Story,  Bach. 
Mikell,  Elizabeth,  widow,  married  by  Jones,  Feb:  16,  1743,  Wil- 
liam Harvey,  Bach. 
MiUer,  Mary,  Spin,  married  by  Do.  Mar:  13,  1728,  William 

Dalton,  widower. 
Milton,  Richard,  Sn.  Richard  & bom  July  18,  1726;  bapt: 

May  7,  1727  by  Do. 
Moor,  Elizabeth,  Spin,  married  by  Do.  Aug:  25,  1734,  Thomas 

Searson,  Bach. 
Moon^  Duncan,  Sn.  Alexander  &  Sarah,  bom  Aug:  10,  1742; 

bapt:  Mar:  6, 1742  by  Do. 
Morgan,  Joshua,  Bach,  from  London,  married  Ann  Capers,  Spin. 

[no   date].      Do.  widower,   married    Magdalen    Albergotti, 

Spinster. 
Morgan,  Anne,  Da.  Joshua  &  Anne,  bom  Feb:  17,  1740,  bapt: 

July  5,  1741  by  Jones. 
Morgan,  Susannah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  July  13,  1742;  bapt:  Aug:  29, 

1742  by  Do.    Married  April  28,  1763,  Capers. 
Morgan,  Anne,  Da.  John  &  Catherine,  bom  Aug:  18,  1738;  bapt: 

Oct:  22,  1738  by  Do. 
Morgan,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Feb:  15,  1740;  bapt:  Jime  1, 

1741  by  Do. 

Morgan,  Lewis,  Sn.  of  Do.  Bom  Dec:  5,  1742,  bapt:  Feb:  10, 

1742  by  Do. 

MoUertee,  John  David,  Buried  by  Do.  26  May,  1736. 
Morris,  Edward,  Bach.  Capt.  Scout  boat,  P.    Royal,  married 
Sarah  Delebere,  Spin;  bur:  9  Dec:  1753,  Epil — 


134       so.  CA.  msToncAL  ahd  g£icealogx:al  maoazikk 

Morris,  Mary  Anne,  Da.  Edwanl  &  Sanl^  boikd  Oct:  14d^  174^^ 
Morris,  Thomas  Edward,  Sn.  of  Do.  buried,  Dec:  14tli,  1752. 
Mortimer,  Prudence,  married  by  Jones,  May  29,  1726,  ISdmtd 


Moore,  David,  BadL  married  by  Jones,  Mar:  9,  1741,  Efix: 

Searsons,  wid. 
Murray,  WOUam,  a  Sailor,  buried  by  Do.  1  Jan:  1728. 
Murray,  GOben,  married  by  Do.  Fd>:  11, 1742,£liz:  Griffith,  wkL 
MuOens,  John,  married  by  Do.  Oct:  16, 1744,  Eliz;  Cockran,  wid. 
MuUryne,    laiy.  Da:  CdD:  J<^  &  Cbuidia,  bom  Sept:  5,  1741, 

baptized  Oct:  19, 1741  by  J<mes. 
Murray,  Anne,  Da:  Laurence  &  Sarah,  bom  Oct:  24, 1741.     Bap- 
tized Feb:  19, 1741  by  Do. 
Murray,  William,  Sn:  William  and  EUz:  bom  Aug:  13,  1742, 

bapL  Oct:  31,  1742  by  Do. 
Murray,  John,  Sn.  Laurence  &  Sarah,  bom  July  28,  1743,  bapC 

Sq>t:  8,  1743  by  Do. 
Nf OSes,  William,  Bach.  fr.  Wales  married  by  Hutson  May  3, 1750, 

Eliz:  Bland,  spia, 
McLane, :  Sn.  John  &  Eliz.  bom  Mar:  23,  1750,  bapt  Sept: 

29, 1751  by  Peasely. 
Melekin,  George,  Bach.  Sn.  George  &  Jane,  married  by  Do. 

Jan.  2, 1752  Jane  Hatcher,  Spin. 
Mitchell,  Robert,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  Mar.  30,  1752,  Mary 

Ann  O'Bryan,  Spin. 
Martin,  William,  Mariner,  of  England,  buried  by  Do.  Sept,  2n 

1751,  Age  56,  Consmp. 

Moor,  Michael,  Carpenter,  of  Scotland,  buried  by  Do.  Feb.  26th, 

1752,  Quinsey. 

Miles,  Mary,  Spin,  Da;  Will'm  &  Mary,  of  Ashley  River,  married 

by  Guy,  Mar;  8,  1743,  Daniel  Heyward,  Bach. 
May,  Anne,  a  Soldiers  wife  [from]  £[ngland],  buried  by  Pcasdy, 

6  July,  1752. 
Myers,  John,  Bach.  Boatman,  S[cotland],  married  by  Hutson, 

Aug;  1,  1752,  Mary  Marquess,  Spin. 
Marquess,  Mary,  Spin;  Da.  Samuel  &  Predlla,  married  by  Do. 

Aug.  1, 1752,  John  Myers,  Bach. 
Murrough,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Alexander  &  Elizabeth,  bapt  Feb.  A, 

1753,  by  Peasely,  bur.  8  Oct.  1754. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER  135 

McLane,  Elizabeth,  Da.  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Aug.  22,  1752, 

Bapt  Nov.  16,  1752,  by  Peasdy,  Parents  sureties. 
McKee,  Martha,  Da.  David  &  Mary,  bom  Nov.  13,  1752,  bapt 

Mar.  13, 1753  by  Peasely;  married  by  Ellington  30  Sept:  1773 

William  Bams,  wid'r. 
Morris,  Anne,  Da.  Edward  &  Sarah,  bom  Apr;  20,  1753,  bapt 

May  13, 1753  by  Do. 
Mitchell,  Anne,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Mary  Anne,  bom  Jan.  10, 1753, 

bapt  June  14, 1753  by  Do. 
Martinangele,  Mary,  Da.  of  Philip  &  Mary,  bom  Dec  16,  1745. 
Martinangele,  Philip,  Sn.  <rf  Do.  bom  Nov.  20, 1747. 
Martinangele,  Isaac,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Aug;  1,  1752. 
Myers,  Jacob,  Sn.  Daniel  &  Ann  Mary,  bom  Aug.  6,  1753,  bapt 

Sept  9,  1753  by  Peasely,  buried  28  Oct.  1775.    Accident  by 

falling  off  — . 
Miller,  Eve,  Da.  of  Nicholas  &  Mary,  bom  Sept  3,  1753,  bapt. 

Oct  10, 1753  by  Do. 
Melekin,  Margt:  Da.  of  George  &  Jane,  bom  Nov.  13,  1752, 

Bapt.  Jan.  10, 1754  by  Do. 
Mathewes,  William,  of  England,  buried  by  Do.  Jan:  3,  1754, 

Age  33.    He . 

Moses,  William,  Sn.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Nov.  5,  1753, 

buried  26  Oct  1758. 
McQumn,  Elizabeth,  Da:  of  Alex'dr  &  Lettice,  Ind:  Trader,  mar- 
ried by  Do.  Feb.  24,  1754,  Daniel  Parker,  wid'r. 
Miuphy,  Thomas,  Overseer  @  Euhaws,  buried  3  Dec  1753. 
Murphy,  Maay  Ann,  wid.  Thomas,  married  by  Do.  Mar.  20, 1754, 

Luke  Blakely,  Bach. 
Miller,  Charles,  Sn.  of  Nicholas  &  Mary. 
McRee,  Jane,  Spin.  Da.  David  &  Mary,  married  by  Peasely 

July  2,  1754,  Danl  Savage,  Hilton  Head. 
Morris,  Sarah,  wid.  to  Edward,  married  by  Peasely,  Sept.  20, 

1754,  George  Russell,  Bach. 
Mandevil,  Mary,  Wid.  to  John,  St  Helena,  bur.  4  Nov.  1754. 
Morgan,  Reese,  a  Stranger,  Cordw'r.  Welsh,  bur.  18  Oct.  1754. 

Age  26. 
McKee,  David,  Fa.  to  Jane,  St.  Helena,  bur.  31  Oct.  1754. 
Mikell,  Ephraim,  Sn.  of  John  &  Anne,  born  Mar.  26,  1741. 
Mikell,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Oct.  12,  1742. 


136  so.  CA.  mSTOUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

MikcU,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  29,  1744,  buried  27  Feb.  1744. 

Mikell,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Mar.  4,  1745. 

Mikell,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  May  6,  1749,  bur.  3  Jan'y,  1750. 

MikeU,  Will'm  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  3,  1751. 

Mikell,  Josiah,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  28,  1754. 

McLane,  Sarah,  Da.  of  John  &  Eliz.  bom  July  23,  1749. 

Martinangde,  Abraham,  Sn.  to  Philip  &  Mary,  bom  July  20, 

1754. 
McLane,  Margaret,  Da.  of  John  &  Eliz.  bom  Dec  19,  1754, 

Bapt  Apr.  17, 1755  by  Peasely. 
Murrough,  Mary,  Da.  of  Alex  &  Elizabeth,  P.  W.  Parish,  bapt. 

Mar.  24, 1755,  by  Peasely. 
Morand,  John,  Sn.  of  Francis,  Carpenter,  bur.  30  Apr.  1755, 

Accidentally  shot. 
Myers,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Ann  Mary,  bom  June  21, 1755, 

bapt.  Nov.  1, 1755,  by  Peasely. 
McKee,  David,  Sn.  of  David  &  Mary,  bora  Nov.  17,  1754,  bapt. 

Oct.  3, 1755,  by  Do. 
Moses,  David,  Sn.  of  William  &  EUzabeth,  bom  Nov.  28,  1755, 

bur.  30  Nov.  1755.    Ch:  yd. 
Mdekin,  Jams.  Hatcher,  Sn.  of  George  &  Jane,  bom  Apr.  18, 

1753,  bapt.  Jan.  31, 1756  by  Peasely. 
Mdekin,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  24,  1755,  bapt  Jan'y  31, 

1756  by  Do. 
Mullryne,  Sarah,  Spin.  Da.  of  Coll:  John  &  Claudia,  married  by 

Do.  Aprl.  11, 1756,  Wiffiam  EUiott  Bach. 
Moses,  Elizab:  wife  to  Will'm:  buried  21  Apl:  1756,  Ch:  Yd. 
Myers,  John,  Sn.  to  Peter  &  Anne  Margt.  bom  July  6,  1755, 

bapt.  Sept.  3,  1756  by  Do. 
Mayee,  Quiatist,  fr:  Novia  Scotia,  a  French  Neutral,  bur.  17  Sept. 

1756,  age  34  yrs.  Ch:  Yd. 
McPharling,  Thomas,  at  the  Battle  of  the  Boyn  in  Eg:  Williams 

Army  in  Ireld.  bur.  in  the  Ch:  Yard,  5  Oct.  1756,  age  96  yr. 

Flux. 
McEee,  Mary,  Da.  of  David  &  Mary,  St.  Hdena,  bom  Oct.  13, 

1756,  bapt.  Dec.  5, 1756,  by  Lewis  of  P.  Williams  Parish. 
Mikell,  Martha,  Da.  of  John  &  Anne,  bom  Feb'y  23, 1757,  Baptist. 
Melldur,  Jacob,  Eilled  by  the  bite  of  a  Rattle  Snake.    A  Dutch- 
man. River  May,  Bur.  Jime  4,  1756. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PASISH  REGISTER  137 

McLane,  Josiah,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Apl.  13,  1757, 

bapt  by  Lewis,  born  in  Pr.  Will'm  Parish. 
Myers,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Ann  Mary,  bom  Feb.  13,  1757, 

bapt.  July  3,  175-  by  Lewis,  bur.  July  28,  1759,  age  2  yr. 

6  mo. 
McRee,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Dec.  17,  1756,  bapt. 

Aug.  2, 17 — ,  by  Baron  of  Stono. 
McEee,  Sarah,  Da.  of  David  &  Mary,  bom  Mar.  6th,  1758,  bapt. 

Aug.  20, 17—. 
Myers,  Mary,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  July  29,  1759, 

bapt.  Oct.  16,  1759  by  Do. 
Middleton,  Stephen,  of  Capt:  Joyners  Scout  Boat,  drowned  in 

Savannah  River. 
McMannis,  Eleanor,  Da.  of Apprentice  to  Matthew  Hezt, 

bur.  27  Oct.  1759. 
Meyer,  John,  Barber,  Beaufort,  bur.  in  Ch:  Yard. 
Middleton,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Thorns.  &  Ann.  B.  T.  bom  July  28, 1762 

in  St.  Helena's  Parish,  bur.  15  Sept.  1767. 
Midlewood,  Stephen,  married  by  Mr.  Green  Oct.  17,  1762,  Jean 

Savage. 
Myers,  Daniel,  Wd.  Wife  to  Daniel  [sicl  bur.  Mar.  27,  1762, 

Dropsy. 
Myers,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Ann  Mary,  bom  Jan.  14,  1762, 

bapt.  July  5,   1862,  by  Baron.    Bur.  July  19,   1762,  age 

6  mos.  5  da. 

Murray,  Charles,  Sn.  of  Fras.  & bom  17  Feb.  1763. 

Myers, ,  Sn.  Jo.  bom  Feb.  4, 1763,  bapt.  by  Green. 

Middleton,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Ann,  bom  Feb.  13,  1764, 

bapt.  Feb.  22,  17 —  by  Lewis.    Married  by  Green,  19  Jime 

1786,  Thomas  Fuller.    Bur.  Aug.  29,  1833. 
Milligen,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  George  &  Jean,  bom  Oct.  18,  1764, 

bapt.  Aug.  4,  17 — . 
Middleton,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Ann,  bom  Aug.  28,  1765, 

bapt  Oct.  2,  17 —  by  Evans.    Bur.  Dec.  11,  1765,  aged 

3  mos.  13  da. 
Middleton,  Ann,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Ann,  bom  Dec.  18,  1766. 

Married  by  Lewes  18  May,  1785,  James  Stuart. 
McKoy,  Alexander,  Sn.  of  Alexander  &  Mary,  bom  Mar.  2,  1768, 

bapt.  June  5, 17 — ,  by  Cosgrave. 


138         so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Maggeotte,  James  Bowers,  Sn.  of  William  &  Elisabeth,  bom 

Dec.  2, 1765. 
McCluer,  Will'm  Davis,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  horn  2  of  Apr. 

1769,  and  bur.  Aug.  18, 1770. 
Maggeotte,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  25  F^. 

1769,  bapt  Aug.  13, by  Mr.  Streaker. 

M3rars,  Mary,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  22  Oct  1753. 

Myers,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  17  May,  1756. 

Myers,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  20  Sept.  1758. 

Myers,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  25  Nov.  1760. 

Myers,  Jesse,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  7  Feb.  1763,  bur.  Oct  31,  1770. 

Myers,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  3  Sept.  1764. 

Myers,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  10  Nov.  1766. 

Myers,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  21  Nov.  1768. 

McKay,  John,  from  Scotland,  bur.  Aug.  31st,  1768. 

McKee,  John,  Sn.  of  David  &  Mary,  bora,  3  Nov.  1760,  and 

married  by  Graham  9  Mar.  1784,  Margaret  Johnson,  Spin. 
McKee,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  8  Dec.  1765. 
McKee,  AUen,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  6  July,  1768,  bapt.  Aug.  13,  1768 

by  Rev.  Mr.  Streaker. 
McKee,  PauU,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  10  July,  1770.    Bapt.  Oct  21, 1770, 

by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Pierce.    Married  9  Aug.  1792,  Elizabeth  G. 

Seyres, 
McLuer,  Rob't:  Fairchild,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  12  of  April 

1771,  bapt  28  Dec.  1771,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Peirce. 
McKee,  David,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Jno:  &  Mary,  married  by  the  Rev. 

Mr.  Ellington  April  12,  1772,  Hannah  FumivaL 
Meggett,  Mary  Martha,  Da.  of  Will'm  and  Eliza,  St  Helena, 

bom  11  Jan.  1772,  bapt.  by  Rev.  Ellington. 
McKee,  Elizabeth,  of  John  &  Margaret,  bom  10  Feb.  1785,  bapt. 

4  of  April,  1785  by  Lewis. 
Myers,  Susannah,  Wid:  married  by  Lewes  3  April,  1785,  Robt 

Boyd. 
McNish,  James,  of  John  &  Mary  Catherine,  bapt.  5  April,  1785 

by  Lewes. 
McNish,  John,  of  John  &  Mary  Catherine,  (Mary  Rivers)  [sic] 

bapt.  5  April,  1785  by  Lewes. 
Miller,  Barbara,  wid.  married  by  Lewes  28  April,  1785,  to  Thomas 

Pringle. 


ST.  Helena's  paxish  register  139 

MachOy  Bernard,  Bach,  Schoolmaster  at  Beaufort,  married  by 

Lewes  12  May,  1785,  Arabella  Allen. 
McRee,  Hannah,  married  by  Do.  5  Jan.  1786,  Thomas  Ashew. 
Mosse,  Marianne,  of  George  & ,  bom  10  March,  1786,  bapt 

11  Jime  1786  by  Do. 
Mason,  Robert,  of  Samuel  &  Mary,  May  River,  bom  5  Jstn.  1777, 

bapt.  22  July,  W86  by  Do. 
McTureos,  John,  from  Ireland,  married  by  Do.  26  July,  1786^ 

Mary  Anne  Sherman,  wid. 
McKallope,  Susannah,  wid.  married  by  Do.  14  Sept.  1786,  Andrew 

Alexander. 
Mongin,  John  Andrew,  from  Hilton  Head,  married  by  Do.  23  Nov» 

1786  Maxtha  Bull. 
Mongin,  EUz^^beth  Edwards,  of  Willia^  &  Mary,  Hilton  Head, 

bom  30  Dec.  1785,  bapt.  23  Nov.  1786,  by  Do. 
Martell,  Michael  Philip,  French  Schoohnaster  at  Beaufort  mar- 
ried by  Do.  3  Jan.  1787,  Elizabeth  Battoon. 
Martinangele,  Mary,  of  Isaac  &  Elizabeth  of  Dafuskee,  bom  29 

Dec.  1785,  bapt.  24  April,  1787  by  Do. 
Murray,  Elizabeth,  married  by  Do.  8  May,  1787,  Bigoe  Henzie. 
McKee,  Rebeccah,  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  4  July,  1787.    Bapt. 

11  April,  1788  by  Do. 
Mcintosh,  Lachlin,  Bach,  of  St.  Bartholomew's  Parish  married 

by  Do.  29  Dec.  1789,  Martha  Proctor,  Spin. 
May  Diana,  a  free  Mulattoe,  married  by  Lewes,  11  Jan.  1790 

Abraham  Lloyd,  a  free  Mulattoe. 
McKee,  Margaret,  Da.  of  John  &  Margaret,  bom  24  Nov.  1790 

bapt.  11  April,  1791,  by  T.  R.  Collins. 
McKee,  Mary  Eliza,  Da.  of  Paul  &  Elizabeth,  bom  July  25,  1793 

bapt.  Nov.  5,  1793,  by  the  Rev.  Matt.  Tate. 
McKenzie,  Jane,  Wife  to  Solomon,  bapt.  Mar.  16,  1794  by  the 

Rev.  Matt.  Tate. 
McKenzie,  Solomon,  Sn.  of  Solomon  &  Jane,  bapt.  Mar.  16, 

1794  by  Tate 
McEee,  Johp.  Johnson,  Sn.  of  John  &  Margaret,  bom  Sept.  20, 

1793  bapt.  May  18, 1794  by  Tate. 
McKee,  Henrietta,  Da.  of  Do.  and  Do.  bora  9  Feb.  1796. 
Maxcy,  Mary  Matilda,  Da.  of  Milton  and  Mary  Bull,  bom  27 

Dec.  1808,  bapt.  Feb.  25,  1810  by  Campbell,  Parents  sureties. 


140  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Maxcy,  Matilda  Miltonia,  Da.  of  Milton  &  Mary,  bom  6  Mar, 
1811,  bapt.  ApL  7,  1811  by  Campbell,  Parents  sureties. 

Maxcy,  Ann  Bull,  Da.  of  Milton  &  Mary,  bom  23  Sept  1813, 
bapt.  24  Oct  1813. 

Newill,  Thomas,  wid'r.  married  by  Jones,  Jan'y:  6,  1733,  Lovinia 

Lavis,  wid. 
Newill,  Anne,  buried  by  Jones,  25  Sept.  1734. 
Newill,  Thomas,  Junr.  buried  by  Do.  25  Jan'y,  1734. 
Newill,  Lovinia,  wid.  to  Thomas  married  by  Jones  May  18,  1739, 

Joseph  Sommers. 
Nicholls,  Samuel,  married  by  Do.  July  24,  1727,  Jane  Jarvis, 

buried  1736. 
Nicholls,  Samuel,  sn.  of  Sam'l.  and  Jane,  bom  April  1732,  bap- 
tized Sept  23,  1736,  by  Do.  Parents  sureties. 
Nicholls,  Eliza:  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  1734,  bapt,  Sept.  23,  1736, 

by  Do.  Do.  for  sureties.    Married  Oct.  12, 1752  Hugh  Christy, 

Bach. 
Nicholls,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Feb.  4,  1736,  Bapt.  Mch.  16,  1736 

by  Do. 
Nicholls,  John,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  6  Apr:   1735  Catherine 

Thomas,  wid.  Buried  24  Feb'y,  1742. 
Nicholls,  Jane,  wid.  to  Samuel,  married  by  Do.  Sept.  24,  1738  to 

Alexdr.  McPherson,  wid'r. 
Nicholls,  Eliz:  wid.  buried  by  Do.  Oct.  23,  1731    Age  60. 
Nicholls,  Catherine,  Wife  to  John,  buried  by  Do.  Feb'y:  22,  1742. 
Nicholson,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  John,  Bapt.  Oct.  20,  1728  by  D)^son. 
Norman,  James,  married  by  Jones,  Feb'y:  27,    1738,  Frances 

Vemoid  Spin,  buried  29  Oct.  1746. 
Norman,  Ann,  Da.  of  James  &  Frances,  bom  Jan.  9,  1739,  bapt 

Dec.  26,  1740,  by  Jones.    Buried  7  Nov.  1742. 
Norman,  Margt.  Da.  of  Do.  bom  May  7,  1742,  bapt.  Sept  9, 

1742  by  Jones,  buried  Dec.  23,  1745. 
Norman,  Frances,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  May  18,  1744,  bapt  June  18, 

1744  by  Do.    Buried  26  Dec.  1745. 
Norman,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  buried  by  Do.  10  Nov.  1746. 
Norman,  Frances,  Wife  to  James,  buried  by  Do.  23  Oct.  1746. 
Norton,  Jonathan,  of  St.  Helena,  bom  July  14,  1705,  bapt.  May  4, 

1726  by  Do.    Married  by  Do.  May  16,  1732,  Mary  Ann 

Chaplin,  Spin. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER  141 

Norton,  John,  Sn.  of  Jonathan  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  Jan'y  30, 1732, 

bapt.  June  10,   1733,  by  Do.  Parents  sureties.    Married 

Sept.  30,  1767  Martha  Phebe  Perry. 
Norton,  Sarah,  Spin.  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  1,  1734.    Bapt.  Nov. 

17,  1734  by  Do.  Do.  sureties.    Married  by  ChiflFeUy,  Feb:  27, 

1752,  Samuel  Greene,  Bach. 
Norton,  Phebe,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  8,  1736,  bapt.  Sept:  19, 

1736,  Do.  for  sureties. 
Norton,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  18,  1738.    Bapt.  Nov.  12, 

1738  by  Do. 
Norton,  Mary  Ann,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Oct.  21, 1740,  bapt.  Jan'y,  18, 

1740  by  Do. 
Norton,  Jonathan,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  Oct.  3,  1742.    Bapt  Oct.  11, 

1742,  by  Do.    Buried  15  March,  1755. 
Norton,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Dec.  11,  1750,  Bapt.  Jto'y, 

13, 1750  by  ChiffeUy  of  Purysburgh. 
Norton,  John,  Sn.  of  John  & ,  bora  Aug.  24,  1718,  Bapt. 

Feb.  13, 1725,  by  Standish,  John  Norton,  surety. 
Norton,  Martha,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  March  25, 1724.    Bapt.  Feb.  13, 

1725  by  Do. 
Norton,  George,  Sn.  of  George  & ,  bom  Feb:  11,  1726.    Bapt. 

April  18,  1728  by  Jones,  Rowland  &  Elizabeth  Serjeant  & 

Peter  Peterson,  sureties. 
Norton,  John,  buried  by  Jones  Nov.  20, 1732. 
Norton,  William,  Sn.  of  Jonathan  &  Mary  Anne,  bora  Sept.  1, 

1744buriedDec.  11, 1745. 
Norton,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  Oct.  22,  1746.    Bapt.  by  Orr 

John's  Island. 
Norton,  Dorothy  Phebe,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  10,  1751,  Bapt 

March  30, 1752  by  Peasely. 
Neal,  Jacob,  Sn.  of  Jacob  &  Eliz:  bora  March  17,  1753,  Bapt. 

July  14,  1753  by  Do.    Buried  14  Oct  1753,  age  7  mos. 

Hilton  Head. 
Nash,  Will'm.  Chaloner,  Sn.  of  Sam'l.  &  Sarah,  bora  March  20, 

1754.    Buried  by  Baron,  Ch:  Yard,  1  Nov.  1758,  age  4  years. 
Nelson,  Thomas,  Overseer  of  Ireland,  married  by  Peasely  Dec.  22, 

1754  Sarah  Williams,  Spin. 
Neal,  Eliz:  Da.  of  Jacob  &  Eliz:  bora  Aug.  28, 1754. 


142         so.  CA.  mSTOUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 


Nash,  Mary,  Saml.  &  Sarah,  bom  Sept  15, 1755. 
Nash,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  13, 1756. 


Buried  7  Dec. 
1755 

B^>tists. 
Buried  1  Nov. 
1758 
Neal,  Abraham,  Sn.  of  Jacob  &  Eliz:  bom  Aug.  8,  1756. 

NichoUs,  Eliz.  wid.  Da.  of Euhaws,  buried  23  Oct  1755. 

Norton,  Martha,  Da.  of  Jonathan  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  April  20, 

1757.    Bapt  May  30, 1757  by  Lewis. 
Neal,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Jacob  &  Eliz.  bom  May  10,  1758,  b^t 

Aug.  21, 1758  by  A.  Baron. 
Norwood,  John,  Private  in  Capt:  Stuart's  Company  Provincials. 

Buried  25  July,  1759.    Age  23  yrs.  Ch:  Yd. 
Noulson,  Charles,  Bach.  Soldier  oi  Beaufort,  Married  by  Greene 

Jan'y:  — ,  1763,  Sarah  Lowary. 
Newell,  Clemmen,  Bach.  Sddier,  married  by  Do.  May  4,  1763 

Elizb:  CrakUn. 
Norton, ,  W.  of  Jonathan,  buried  by  Rev.  Greene,  12  Jan'y, 

1764. 
Nevey,  William,  buried  by  Rev.  Greene,  26  Sept.  1764. 
Noulson,  Ann,  Da.  of  Charles  &  Sarah,  buried  by  Clerk  21  Aug. 

1765.    Age  2  yrs. 
Norton,  Jonathan,  Sn.  of  Jno.  &  Martha  Phebe,  bom  July  4, 

1768,  buried  12  Nov.  1768. 
Norton,  John,  Sn.  of  Jno.  &  Martha  Phebe,  bom  Oct  21,  1769, 

buried  11  Nov.  1769. 
Nixon,  Elizth:  Da.  of  Jno.  &  Ann  Nixon  bom  Aug.  29,  1764. 

Bapt  Oct.  28,  1771  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Ellington. 
Nixon,  Ann,  Da.  of  Jno.  &  Ann  Nixon,  bom  July  22,  1770,  bs^t 

Oct  28, 1771  by  Ditto. 
Nelson,  Mary,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Sarah,  bom  Dec.  11,  1757. 

Married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Cooper  Nov.  2,  1777  Andrew  Agnew, 

wid'r.    Buried  22  Dec.  1788,  Beaufort  Ch.  Yd.    Age  31  yrs, 

0  mos,  20  days.    Child  bed. 
Neal,  Mary,  widow,  married  by  Lewes,  17  June,  1786,  Thomas 

Sutton. 
Norton,  Elizabeth,  of  Wlliam  &  Mary,  bom  10  Nov.  1785,  bapt 

12  Feb'y,  1786  by  Lewes. 


ST.  Helena's  pabish  register  143 

Oldfidd,  Mary,  bapt  Sept  2, 1714,  by  Guy. 

Qrrick,  Thomas,  married  by  Jones  Jime  27,  1727,  Eliz:  Smith. 

Buried  1  Aug.  1728. 
Overy,  Isaac,  Capt  Buried  by  Do.  27  Aug.  1742,  Age  62. 
O'Bryan,  Mary  Amie,  Da.  of  Patrick  &  Amie,  St.  Helena,  Mar- 
ried by  Peasdy,  March  30,  1752,  Robert  Mitchell,  Bach. 
Qrr,  Janet,  ^in.  Da.  of  William  &  Mary,  married  by  Orr,  Dis- 
senter, July  3, 1774,  Wlliam  Farris,  Wid'r. 
Orr,  Margaret,  Spin.  Da.  of  Do.  married  Ebenezer  Dicks. 
Orr,  James,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Do.  married  by  Peasdy  Sept.  18,  1753 

Eliz.  Dicks,  Spin. 
Orr,. Elizabeth,  Wfe  to  James,  buried  20  Feb*y,  1754,  Age  21, 

Childbed. 
Orr,  Mary,  Da.  of  James  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Feb'y  13,  1754. 

Buried  15  Feb'y,  1754,  age  2  days.    Convulsions. 
Orr,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Rev.  Robert  & Married  by  Robert  Orr, 

Dissenter,  June  13,  1738,  Mary  Daly,  Spin. 
Orr,  Mary,  Da.  of  Henry  &  Mary,  bom  May  16, 1741. 
Orr,  Robert,  Sn.  of  Henry  &  Mary,  bora  Dec.  14,  1743. 
Orr,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  Oct.  29,  1751,  buried  10  Oct.  1754, 

age  3  3nrs.  M.  H. 
Orr,  Amelia,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Feb'y,  4,  1755. 
O'Bryan,  William,  Sn.  of  William  &  Ann,  bora  Oct.  1,  1763, 

bapL  Jan'y:  31,  1763. 
Orde,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elenor,  bom  Sept  30,  1761,  bapt. 

Jan'y.  30, 1763. 
Orr,  Judith,  Da.  of  Henry  &  Mary,  bom  Feb'y:  17,  1763. 
OUver,  Richd.  Bach,  Overseer.  Married  by  Rev.  Green  8  Dec.  1763 

Clementine  Butler,  Wid. 

Ohannan, W.  to  Sennety,  Buried  by  Green  March  22,  1764. 

Orr,  Robart,  Bach,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Green  8  July,  1764 

Sarah  Cowen,  St.  Hdena. 
Oswald,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Constance,  bom  20  March 

1769.    Bapt  Aug.  13 Rev.  Mr.  Streaker. 

Oswald,  Robart,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Constance,  bom  13  Jan'y,  1771. 
Orr,  Robart,  married  15  April,  177-  Susanah  Dicks,  of  Port  Royal. 
Orde,  Elizabeth,  of  Hugh  &  Jane,  Horse  Island,  Bapt.  Dec.  11, 

1784  by  Rev.  S.  C.  Lewes. 


144         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Orde,  Anne,  of  Hugh  &  Jane,  Horse  Do.  bi^t  Dec  11,  1784  by 

Rev.  S.  C.  Lewes. 
Orde,  Jane,  of  Hugh  &  Jane,  Horse  Do.  Bapt  Dec  11,  1784  by 

Rev.  S.  C.  Lewes. 
Oswald,  Elizabeth,  Spin.  St  Helena,  married  by  Do.  18  December 

1786,  Joseph  Scott,  Bach. 
Qrr,  Abraham,  of  Abraham  &  Martha  Johnson,  free  mulattoes, 

bom  28  March,  1778,  bapt  16  July,  1778  by  Do. 
O'Brian,  Michael  from  Ireland,  married  by  Do.  25  March,  1790, 

Mary  Grayson. 
O'Brien,  Mary  Eliza,  Da.  of  Michael  &  Mary,  bom  Jan'y.  27, 

1791,  bapt  March  18, 1791,  by  Gardiner. 
O'Brien,  Michael  James,  Sn.  of  Michael  &  Mary,  bom  Jan.  1, 1793, 

bapt  March  1, 1794,  Rev.  Tate. 
O'Brien,  Sarah  Wigg,  Da.  of  Michael  &  Mary,  born  Feb'y:  16, 

1794  bapt  March  25,  1795  by  Tate. 
O'Brien,  Frances  Eleanor,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  March  23,  1797 

bapt.  July  9, 1797,  Rev.  Mr.  Graham. 

Page,  Sarah,  Spin,  Da.  of  John  & ,  married  by  Jones  April  24, 

1728,  WiUiam  CampUng. 
Page,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  John  &  Hester,  bom  Jan'y  1,  1724.    Bapt 

April  15,  1728,  by  Do.  Josp.  Stent  &  WiUiam  Campling  & 

Becket,  sureties. 

Page,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  9,  1727,  bapt  April  15, 

1728  by  Do.  Rowland  Sarjeant,  Eliz:  Stone  &  Anne  Levy 

Sureties.    Married  by  Boskey  Sept  28,  1748,  John  McLane. 
Page,  William,  Sn.  of  William  &  Jane,  bom  Aug.  5,  1738,  bapt 

Sept.  10, 1738  by  Do. 
Palmer,  Luda,  Da.  of  ColL  John  &  Elizabeth,  Bapt  Nov.  29, 

1730, 
Palmer,  John,  Sn.  of  William  &  Anne,  bom  Sept.  26,  1735.    Bapt 

Dec.  23,  1735. 
Palmer,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  April  15,  1737,  bapt  Sept  10, 

1738. 
Palmer,  Peter,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  5,  1740,  bapt  Dec  29,  1740. 
Pahner,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  26, 1735.    Bapt  Dec  23, 

1735. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PABISH  REGISTER  145 

PaJmer,  Anne,  Wid.  married  April  6,  1735,  Archibald  Hamilton, 

wid'r. 
Parker,  Samuel,  Bach,  or  Georgia,  from  England,  married  April  18, 

1741,  Elizabeth  Lacy,  Spin. 
Parmenter,  Eliz:  wid.  married  Nov.  15,  1741,  John  Stack,  Bach. 
Parmenter,  Anne,  Da.  of  Peter  &  Anne,  Bapt.  Feb'y:  13,  1725, 

by  Standish.    Father  surety. 
Parmenter,  Martha,  Da.  of  Do.,  bom  July  8, 1727.    Bapt.  Feb'y« 

19, 1727  by  Jones. 
Parmenter,  Joseph,  Married  by  Do.  Sept.  18,  1733  Jane  Wright, 

wid. 
Parmenter,  Anne,  Spin,  married  by  Do.  Dec.  9,  1733  John  Floyd, 

wid'r. 
Parmenter,  Anne,  wid.  buried  by  Do.  Dec.  10,  1728. 
Parris,  Elizabeth,  Wife  to  Alexander,  bom  1704,  bapt.  May  2, 

1727  by  Jones.    Buried  26  Nov.  1730. 
Parris,  John,  Sn.  of  Alexander  &  Elizabeth,  bapt.  May  2,  1727 

by  Do. 
Parris,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bapt.  May  2,  1727  by  Do.     Buried 

17  Sept.  1729. 
Parris,  Mary,  Nat:  Da:  of  Alexander  &  Mary  CahiU,  bom  April  25, 

1738,  bapt.  Sept.  22, 1739  by  Do. 
Parris,  Alexander,  wid'r,  married  by  Do.  Jime  IS,  1741,  Mary 

CahiU. 
Parris,  Jane,  Da.  of  Alexander  &  Mary,  bom  Jime  28,   1741. 

Bapt.  Dec.  25,  1741  by  Do.  Buried  27  Dec.  1741. 
Peterson,  Andrew,  buried  by  Do.  26  Nov.  1732. 
Pauling,  William,  Sn.  of  Robfert  &  Elizabeth,  bom  March  17, 1736. 

Bapt.  Jan'y.  18,  1737  by  Do. 
iParsons,  Thomas,  Nat.  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha  Nichols,  bapt. 

Jan.  10,  1733  by  Do. 
Petty,  Richard,  Badi.  married  by  Do.  Dec.  13,  1734,  Sarah  Rose, 

Spin. 
Peters,  Sarah,  wid.  married  by  Do.  Oct.  29,  1740,   Benjamin 

Jones,  wid'r. 
Pond,  Richard,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Aug.  3,  1741,  Bapt. 

Apl.  3, 1742  by  Do. 
Postell,  Anthony,  a  Stranger  fr.  CharlesTown,  buried  by  Do. 

24  Jan'y;  1739. 


146  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Postell,  Mary,  Da.  of ,  married  by  Do.  March  22,   1740, 

James  Giraldeau,  Bach. 
Powell,  James  Edward,  Bach,  Mariner,  Married  Mary  Williams, 

Spin. 
Powell,  Robert  Williams,  Sn.  of  James  Edward  &  Mary,  bapt 

Feb.  19,  1747.    Robt  M^lliams  &  Elenor  Griffith,  Sureties. 
Powell,  Elizabeth,  Wife  to  Wlliam,  buried  by  Jones  29  Oct.  1735. 
Powell,  Mary  A  Soldier's  Wife,  buried  by  Do.  15  Sept.  1739. 
Powell,  John,  married  by  Jones,  Apr.  19,  1744,  Hannah  \I^Ikin- 

son.  Spin.    Buried  14  Jan'y,  1757,  Plantation. 
Poor,  Mary,  Spin.  Da.  of St.  Helena,  Married  by  Do.  Sept  15, 

1740,  William  Finny,  Bach. 
Purdy,  Charles,  married  by  Do.  Aug.  30,  1726,  Mary  Green. 
Purdy,  Mary,  Wife  to  Charles,  buried  by  Do.  3  Aug.  1729. 
Purry,  Charles,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Coll.  Purry,  of  Purrysburghy  Mar- 
ried April  19,  1744,  Sarah  Garvey,  Spin.    Buried  23  July 

1754,  Age  54  yrs.    Murdered. 
Purry,  Lucretia,  Da.  of  Charles  &  Sarah,  bom  Feb'y.  16,  1745. 

Bapt.  April  13,  1746,  buried  14  June,  1746. 
Purry  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  April  23, 1747,  Bapt.  May  28,  1747, 

buried  28  Sept  1747. 
Purry,  Elenor,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept  19, 1751,  bapt.  Ck:t  23,  1751 

by  Peasely.    Jno.  Delagaye,  Mary  Hurst,  &  Elenor  Griffen, 

sureties. 
Peasely,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Rev.  Will'm.  &  Mary,  bom  Sept  5,  1751, 

Bapt  Sept.  27, 1751,  by  Peasely.    Chas.  Purry,  Jas.  Thomas 

&  Wife,  sureties.    Buried  10  Nov.  1751. 
Palmer,  Edmund,  Sn.  of  Coll:  John'&  Elizabeth,  buried  by  Do. 

30  Nov.  1751. 
Peasely,  John,  Sn.  of  Rev.  WiH^m,  &  Mary,  bom  May  17,  1749, 

at  St.  Jno.  New  Foundland.    Bapt.  by  Do.  Buried  29  Oct 

1752.    Flux  &  Fever. 
Price,  Jane,  Wife  to  John,  buried  by  Jones,  28  June,  1743. 
Parker,  Mary,  Nat.  Da.  Daniel  &  Martha  Davison,  Bom  May  6, 

1750,  Bapt.  by  Chitfelly. 
Parker,  Daniel,  Bach.  Taylor  from  Frederico  of  England,  Mar- 
ried by  Peasely,  Aug.  30,  1752,  Martha  Davison,  Wid. 
Perry,  Elizabeth,  Spin,  married  by  Will'm.  Orr  of  Stono.  March, 

19,  1749,  Benjaman  Ladson,  Bach. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER  147 

Perry,  Peter,  married  by  Peasely,  April  24,   1753,    Elizabeth 

Ladson,  Spin. 
Parker,  Daniel,  first  bom,  buried  29  March,  1754. 
Parker,  Joseph,  twin  sns.  Daniel  &  Martha,  bom  8  June,  1753, 

Bapt.  June  13,  1753  by  Do. 
Parker,  Martha,  Wife  to  Daniel,  buried  June  13, 1753. 
Palmer,  William,  Major,  Sn.  to  Coll:  John  &  EUzabeth,  buried 

Feb'y  1, 1754,  age  42,  Plant. 
Parker,  Daniel,  wid'r,  married  by  Do.  Feb.  24,  1754,  Elizabeth 

McQuinn,  Spin. 
Peasely,  Edith,  Da.  of  Rev.  Will'm.  &  Mary,  bom  June  29, 1754, 

bapt.  by  Do.  Mary  &  Edith  Henderson  &  Anthony  Peasely, 

sureties. 
Palmer,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Anne,  Lady's  Isld.,  bom  May  12, 

1746,  bapt.  Dec.  12, 1754  by  Do. 
Palmer,  Chals.  Smilie,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  March  7,  1747,  bapt.  Do. 

by  Do. 
Palmer,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  9, 1750,  bapt.  Do.  by  Do. 
Pdot,  John,  Sn.  of  Frauds  &  Martha,  bora  May  25,  1742. 
Pelot,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Maiy  8,  1743. 
Pdot,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  18,  1744. 
Pdot,  Samud,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  13,  1746. 
Pdot,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  June  5,  1748. 
Pdot,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  30,  1749. 
Pelot,  David,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  June  8,  1752,  buried  14  Oct:  1753. 
Perry,  Peter,  Sn.  of  Peter  &  Eliz:  St.  Hdena,  bom  Nov.  1,  1754, 

Bapt.  March  2,  1755  by  Peasely,  Parents  sureties.    Buried 

at  St.  Hdena  5  Sept:  1757. 
Purchar,  Paul,  Sn.  of  Paul  &  Eliz:  bom  Feb'y:  19,  1753,  bapt. 

Feb'y:  27,  1753  by  Langton.    Bom  at  St.  Jas:  Goose  Creek. 
Purcher,  Mary,  Da.  of  Paul  &  Eliz:  bom  March  17,  1755,  Bapt. 

Apl:  1st,  1755,  by  Chitfelly.    Bn:  in  this  Parish. 
Pepper,  Gilbert,  Bach.  Sn.  to  Daniel,  Esqr.  of  James  Island. 

Married  by  Peasdy  Apl:  23,  1755  Jane  Verdier,  Spin. 
Pockington,  Anne,  wid.  married  by  Do.  June  8,  1755,  Nicholas 

Shedtland,  Bach. 
Powell,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  John  &  Hannah,  bom  Feb'y:  6,  1755, 

Bapt.  Apl.  20,  1755  by  Do.    Married  by  Lewis  31  July,  1785 

Thomas  Witter,  Bach. 


148  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Parmenter,  Anne,  Wife  to  Joseph  of  P.  Royal,  buried  8  ^ril,  175S 

Susp:  Pois:  Plant 
Postell,  Magdalene,  Spin.  Da.  of Married  by  Peasdy,  Sept 

11, 1755  John  M^Uiamson,  Bach. 
Parmenter,  John,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Doroth)ra,  bom  Dec.  28, 1737, 

Buried  27  Nov:  1755.    Consumpt:  Plant 
Parmenter,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  April  29, 1740. 
Parmenter,  Dorothy,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov:  21, 1744. 
Parmenter,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  13, 1750. 
Parmenter,  San^,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  26, 1755. 
Pabner,  Mary,  Da.  of  Will'm.  &  Mary  of  BSlton  Head,  Jan'y:  14 

1755. 
Pope,  James,  Sn.  of  George  &  Sarah,  of  Johns  Island,  Married  by 

Peasdey  28  Aug.  1755  Susanna  Wells,  Spin. 
Pope,  Susanna,  Wife  to  James,  bapt.  Feb.  1,  1756  by  Belcher. 
Parmenter,  Josp:  adult,  Sn.  of  Peter  & ,  bapt.  Feb'y-  2, 17S6 

by  Do. 
Parker,  John,  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Elizabeth,  Bapt.  April  25,  1756  by 

Peasely. 
Peasely,  William,  Sn.  of  Rev.  Will'm:  &  Mary,  bom  May  29, 

1755,  bapt by  Do. 

Perryder,  Hannah,  Da.  of  Michael  &  Hannah  D.  bom  Jime  10, 

1756,  bapt.  June  27,  1756  by  Lewis.    In  P.  Wm.  Parish. 
Perry,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Peter  &  Elizabeth,  bom  March  20,  1756, 

bapt.  June  27,  1756  by  Do. 

Page,  Ruth,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  born  Sept:  15,  1756,  bapt 
Jan.  2,  1757  by  Do. 

Parmenter,  Martha,  Wife  to  Joseph  Parmenter,  Junr.  Buried  at 
Plantn.  9  Nov:  1756.    Flux. 

Parmenter,  Nathaniel,  Sn.  of  Benj:  &  Martha  of  Euhaws,  buried 
at  Euhaws  22  Feb'y:  1756. 

Pope,  James,  Sn.  of  James  &  Susanna,  bom  Sept  14,  1756,  mar- 
ried 9  Jan'y;  1787,  Martha  Scott  of  St.  Helena,  Wdow. 

Palmer,  William,  of  Bermudas  Hilton  Head,  Drowned  10  Feb'y, 

1757,  Buried  at  Fredricka. 

Pdot,  Jonas,  Sn.  of  Francis  &  Martha,  bom  Dec.  26,  1755. 
Powel,  Hannah,  Wid.  to  John  married  by  Pdot,  Dissenter,  May  Hi 
1757  John  Cook,  Carpenter. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  149 

Peroneau,  Samuel,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Saml.  & of  Jams.  Island  of 

CharlesTown,  Mercht.  Married  by  Baron  of  Stono  on  a  visit 

here  Jan.  19,  1758,  Sarah  Tattnall,  Spin. 
Parmenter,  Joseph,  Junr.  Sn.  of  Joseph  & married  Catherine 

Parmenter,  Spin. 
Parmenter,  Catherine,  Da.  of  married  Joseph  Parmenter, 

Junr.  wid'r. 
Perry,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Peter  &  Elizabeth,  bom  March  3,  1758, 

Bapt.  May  28,  1758  by  Hughes. 
Perrydear,  Mary,  Da.  of  Michael  &  Hannah,  bom  Oct.  29,  1758, 

bapt.  May  28,  1758  by  Do.  (sic) 
Parker,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Dec.  26,  1757, 

bapt  July  6, 1758  by  A.  Baron. 
Perrydear,  Hannah,  Wife  to  Michael,  buried  3  May  1759  Catt 

Island. 
Perry,  Thomas,  Bach,  brother  to  Peter  Perry,  married  by  A. 

Baron  Aug.  26,  1758,  Martha  Ladson,  Spin. 
Patterson,  WiUiam,  Sn.  of  Will'm.  &  Mary,  bom  Jan'y.  13,  1760, 

bapt.  Apl.  15,  1760  by  Cooper.    Dead,  Fcver^ 
Perry,  Thomas  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  Bapt.  by  Cooper. 
Patterson,  Nath'l:  John,  Sn.  of  Will'm:  &  Mary,  bora  Dec.  21, 

1762,  bapt.  Jan.  19, 1763. 
Perrydear,  Michad,  wid'r.  married  by  Gordon  March  14,  1760 

Margaret Spin. 

Procktor,  Richard.  Monnsarat.  Married  Nov.  4,   1762,  Elinor 

Griffin. 
Perreno,  Eliz.,  Da.  of  Chas.  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  Aug.  17,  1862, 

bapt.  Oct.  18, 1762. 
Palmer,  Hannah  Becket,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  ,  Cordwainer, 

Bom  July  19,  1763,  bapt.  Sept:  2,  1763  by  Rev.  Green. 

Buried  Sept.  17,  1764.    Quincy. 
Pahner,  William,  buried  Ck:t:  9,  1763. 
Palmeter,  Joseph,  buried  Nov.  14,  1763,  Hilton  Head. 
Perreno,  Estor,  Da.  of  Charles  &  Mary  Ann.  Buried  Feb'y-  7, 

1764. 

Pendervis Da.  of  Josiah  &  Mary,  bom  Apl.  11,  1764. 

Palmer,  William,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Winifred,  Cordwainer,  born 

Sept.  28, 1759,  bapt.  by  Rev.  Barron. 
Parmenter,  Jno.  Junr.  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  married  by  Rev. 

Pdot  Sept:  16,  1764,  Susannah  Savage. 


ISO         so.  CA.  mSTOUCAL  AMD  GENEALOGICAL  liAGAZINE 

Parsons,  John,  Painter,  buried  Dec  25,  1764.    Fits. 
Peters,  Ants  (?)  buried  May  25,  1765. 

Postelthwate,  Edward,  from  Philadelphia  and  Quincy,  Stranger, 

buried  by  Clerk  Jan.  9, 1765.    Age  not  known.  Consumption. 

Pickeran,  Benjamin,  from  Pool,  in  England,  buried  by  Do.  Aug.  14^ 

1765,  age  not  known.  Suddenly. 

Pepper,  Mary,  Wife  to  Mr.  Danid  Pepper,  buried  Sept  30,  1765 

Age  not  known. 
Pope,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  James  &  Susannah,  bom  22  Feb'y,  1764, 

Bapt  June  5, 1768  by  Rev.  Mr.  Cosgrove. 
Pope,  George,  Sn.  of  James  &  Susannah,  bom  26  Oct.  1767,  bapt. 

June  5, 1768  by  Do. 
Parker,  Danl.  Edward,  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Elizabeth,  bom  2  Dec: 

1766.  Bapt  June  26,  1768  by  Do. 

Porteous,  Robert,  Bach,  from  London,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Elling- 
ton Nov.  6,  1771,  Ann  Wigg,  Spin. 
Patterson,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Mary  Patterson,  bom  Oct  27,  1769, 

Bapt  Feb'y.  20 by  Do. 

Porteous,  Mary  Cuthbert,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Ann,  bom  Sept  3, 

1772,  Bapt.  June  15,  1773  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Moreau.    Sarah 

Greene,  Mary  Cuthbert,  William  Hazard  Wigg,  Sureties. 

Buried  14  March,  1774. 
Parmenter,  Sarah,  Wid.  of  Hilton  Head,  married  by  Rev.  Moreau 

16  June,  1774  Lewis  Bona,  Bach. 
Palmer,  Ann,  Da.  of  Tho:  &  \l(nuiifred,  married  by  Moreau,  16  Aug: 

1774  John  Ddar,  Bach. 
Pringle,  Tliomas,  Bach,  married  by  Lewes  28  April,  1785  Barbara 

Miller,  Widow. 
Pahner,  John,  Bach,  of  Lady's  Island,  married  by  Do.  15  Sept: 

1785,  Ann  Sams,  Spin. 
Perry,  Banjamin,  of  Peter  &  Amy,  St.  Helena,  bom  4  April,  1785, 

Bapt.  23  ojf  April  1786  by  Do. 
Porteous,  Ann  Wigg,  of  Robert  &  Ann,  bom  26  Feb'y.  .1786, 

ba^t  19  May,  1786  by  Do.,  buried  27  Aug.  1786.    Fits. 
Peart,  John,  of  James  &  Ann,  of  May  River,  born  8  Jan:  1782, 

Bapt.  22  July,  1786  by  Do. 
Mary  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  6  Sept:  1783,  bapt  22  July  1786 

by  Do. 
Pope,  James,  of  William  &  Sarah,  Hilton  Head,  bom  6  Jan.  1786, 

bapt.  13  Aug.  1786  by  Do. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  151 

Proctor,  Martha,  Spin,  of  Richard  & ,  married  by  Do.  29  Dec: 

1789  Lachlin  Mcintosh. 
Proctor,  Stefdien  Royer,  of  Richard  & bom  30  May,  1784, 

bapt  29  Dec.  1789  by  Do. 
Proctor,  Sarah  Ann,  of  Richard  & ,  bom  3  Sept.  1787,  bapt. 

29  Dec.  1789  by  Do. 
Perrydear,  Adam,  of  Michael  &  Margaret,  married  by  Do.  Eleanoi 

Green,  Spin.  Buried  26  Nov.  1789. 
Pope,  James,  Sn.  of  James  &  Martha,  St.  Helena,  bom  13  Sept. 

1788. 
Pope,  Susanna,  Da.  of  James  &  Martha,  St.  Helena,  bom  8  Aug. 

1790,  bapt  17  Sept  1794  by  Tate. 
Pope,  William,  Sn.  of  James  &  Martha,  St.  Helena,  bom.  May  31 

1792,  bapt  Sept.  17, 1794  by  Tate. 
Pope,  Joseph  James,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Theodora,  Edisto,  bom 

Apl;  18, 1792,  Bapt  Sept  17,  1794  by  Tate. 
Porteous,  Alexander  Rose,  Sn.  of  Robert  &  Ann  of  Beaufort,  bom 

8  Feb'y:  1774,  Alxer.  Rose  &  Sarah  Green,  Sureties. 
Porteous,  James  Cuthbert,  Sn.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  24  Dec  1776, 

Buried  27  Nov.  1779. 
Porteous,  Sarah  Green,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  20  Apl:  1778. 
Porteous,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  21  Feb'y,  1780, 

buried  3  Aug.  1780. 
Porteous,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  2  Nov:  1781. 
Porteous,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  7  Oct.  1783. 
Porteous,  Mary,  Monorieffe,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  20  Apl.  1788. 

Buried  14  Aug.  1795. 
Porteous,  Catherine,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  31  Jan.  1791,  twin, 

Bapt.  by  J.  B.  Campbell,  Parents  sureties. 
Porteous,  Hester,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  31  Jan.  1791.    Both 

died  1  Feb'y:  1791. 
Philips,  \lt^lliam,  Sn.  of  James  &  Susan,  bom  1  March,  1811, 

bapt.  Sept  5, 1813. 
Pinckney,  Charles  Cotesworth,  of  Charles  Cotesworth  &  Carolinei 

bom  31  July,  1812.    Bapt.  1812  by  J.  B.  Campbell,  Parents 

sureties. 
Perry,  Marcus  Aurelius,  of  James  &  Frances,  born  28  Oct.  1796, 

Bapt:  Oct  11,  1812  by  Campbell.    Dr.  Campell  surety. 

(To  be  continued) 


I 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CTIT 

GAZETTE 

CoBo^ied  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

(ConUnued  from  A  pril) 

Married  on  Saturday  evening,  Mr.  Jdm  M.  EbridL,  to  Miss 
Wightman,  both  of  this  City. 

Died,  on  Wednesday  the  dOth  ultimo,  at  his  plantation  in  St 
James,  Santee,  lA^lliam  Douzsaint,  esq.  in  the  34th  year  of  his 
age  a  gentleman  of  agreeable  manners  and  diqx)siti<Mi,  which 
endeared  him  to  a  numerous  and  respectable  drcje  of  acquaint- 
ances.    (M(Miday  Jan.  4, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  David  Bell,  Meaxfaint 
to  Miss  Sarah  Lanneau,  niece  of  Mr.  Basil  Lanneau,  both  of  this 
city. 

Died,  on  the  27th  Ultimo,  after  a  short  and  vidcnt  illness,  at 
his  plantation  in  the  state  of  Georgia,  Roger  Pariier  Saunders,  Esq. 
(Tuesday,  Jan.  5,  1796.) 

Died,  on  Saturday  evening  last,  in  the  65th  year  of  his  age, 
regretted  by  a  numerous  acquaintance,  Walter  Hall,  esq.  He 
had  long  labored  under  a  lingering  indisposition,  idiidi  he  bore 
with  a  fortitude  and  resignation  worthy  of  imitati<Mi. 

Died,  on  Saturday  last,  Mrs.  Andrews,  wife  of  Capt.  Moses 
Andrews,  of  this  dty.    (Monday,  Jan.  11,  1796.) 

On  Sunday  last  the  body  of  Mr.  Barend  Moses  Spitzer  was 
found  on  Sullivan's  Island;  he  had  been  missing  for  upwards  of 
ten  days  past.    (Tuesday,  Jan:  12,  1796.) 

Married,  last  evening,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Parker,  \lllliam  M. 
Parker,  esq.  attorney  at  law,  to  the  agreeable  and  acconqJished 
Miss  Sarah  Lightwood,  daughter  of  Edward  Lightwood,  esq.  of 
this  city,  late  merchant.    (Thursday,  Jan.  14,  1796.) 

Married  on  Friday  last,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Jenkins,  Mr.  Francis 
Lecat,  musician,  to  Mrs.  Rachel  Lopez,  confectioner,  late  of  St 
Domingo,  but  now  both  of  this  dty. 

Died  at  the  Island  of  Jamaica,  at  Montego  Bay,  in  the  month 
of  August  last,  Mrs.  Mary  Courtauld,  wife  of  Mr.  Samuel  Court- 

152 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  153 

auld,  merchant,  and  late  of  this  dty;  the  generous  disposition 
and  benevolent  heart  of  this  lady,  make  her  death  much  lamented 
by  a  numerous  circle  of  acquaintance  and  relatives. 

Died,  on  Friday,  the  first  instant,  at  Combabee,  Mrs.  Day,  the 
amiable  consort  of  William  Day,  esq:  she  has  left  six  young  children 
to  lament  her  imtimdy  fate.    (Monday,  Jan:  18,  1796.) 

Died,  on  Friday  evening  last,  Mr.  John  Major,  of  this  city,  a 
young  man  deservedly  esteemed  by  all  who  knew  him.  (Tuesday, 
Jan:  19, 1796.) 

Married,  yesterday  forenoon,  by  the  Rev.  Dr.  Buist,  Mr.  John 
Jacks,  merchant,  to  Mrs.  Ann  M^lson,  widow  of  Dr.  George  Wilson 
of  Goose  Creek,  deceased.    (Friday,  Jan.  22,  1796.) 

Married,  last  Sunday  afternoon,  by  the  Rev:  Peter  Levrier, 
Mr.  William  Fair,  to  Lady  Margaret  Frances  Babier  de  la  Baume. 

Died,  on  the  15th  instant  at  Round  O,  Master  Darquier  Single- 
ton, son  of  Richard  Singleton,  esq.  of  that  place,  aged  nine  years. 
(Tuesday,  Jan:  26,  1796.) 

Died,  on  board  the  brig  John,  captain  Webb,  on  his  passage 
from  New-York,  Doctor  John  Witherspoon,  late  of  St.  Stephen's 
parish,  in  this  state.    (Saturday,  Jan:  30, 1796.) 

Died,  at  his  plantation,  Horse-Shoe,  Philip  Smith,  esq.  aged 
68  years  (wanting  a  few  days)  this  venerable  and  most  worthy 
man  closed  his  mortal  career  in  such  a  manner  as  bespoke  him 
the  real  and  undissembled  Christian;  for  what  could  be  more 
portraying  of  his  being  a  genuine  disciple  of  the  blessed  Messiah, 
than  his  bearing  the  most  excruciating  illness  for  three  weeks,  with 
unremitted  calmness,  and  perfect  serenity  of  mind?  In  short, 
the  fortitude  and  magnanimity  of  soul  he  exhibited,  say  every 
thing  for  him  that  can  be  said  of  the  most  devout  Christian  and 
the  profounded  philosopher. 

Died,  on  Sunday  evening  last,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Holmes,  the 
amiable  consort  of  Isaac  Holmes,  esq.  collector  for  the  port  of 
Charleston.    (Wednesday,  February  3,  1796.) 

Married,  lately  at  Beaufort,  the  hon.  Robert  Barnwell,  speaker 
of  the  House  of  Representatives  of  this  state,  to  Miss  Eliza  Wigg, 
daughter  of  major  William  Hazard  Wigg. 

Died,  yesterday,  in  the  prime  of  life,  much  lamented  by  all  who 
had  the  pleasure  of  her  acquaintance,  Mrs.  Mary  Wilson,  wife  of 
doctor  Samuel  Wilson,  of  this  dty.    (Tuesday,  Feb:  9,  1796.) 


154         so.  CA.  mSTOUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married  on  Saturday  evening  last,  Mr.  Jdin  M<xik  to  Miss 
Rebecca  Blandford  In^^by,  daughter  of  Mr.  William  In^csby. 

Died,  at  his  plantation,  in  St.  James,  Goose-creek  parish^  on 
Tuesday  the  2d.  instant,  capt  Richard  Goug^  who  served  his 
country  with  fidelity  and  honour  as  a  sddier  in  our  ^orious 
revolution  under  the  conmiand  of  the  late  brigadier  general 
Marion.  He  has  left  an  aged  and  disconsdate  nx>tber,  with  many- 
friends,  to  bewail  his  loss.    (Thursday,  Feb:  11,  1796.) 

Married,  last  evening  by  the  ri^t  reverend  Dr.  Robert  Smith, 
Edward  Darrell,  jun.  esq.  attorney  at  law,  to  Miss  Sarah  White, 
daughter  of  Sims  White,  esq.    (Wednesday,  Feb:  17,  1796.) 

Died,  on  Sunday  the  7th  instant,  in  child-bed,  at  GreenviDe, 
Cheraw  district,  Mrs.  Catherine  Botsford,  in  the  54th  year  of 
her  age,  the  wife  of  the  rev.  Edmund  Botsford,  of  that  place. 
(Thursday,  Feb:  19,  1796.) 

Married,  last  Thursday  evening,  James  M'Call  Ward,  esq. 
attorney  at  law,  to  Miss  Harriott  Swinton,  daughter  of  Hugh 
Swinton,  esq.     (Sat.  Feb.  20,  1796.) 

Married,  on  Sunday  evening  last,  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Frost,  Mr. 
Bayfield  Waller,  to  Miss  Charlotte  Whilden,  both  of  this  dty. 

Died,  in  Christ  church  parish,  on  the  21st  instant,  in  the  morn- 
ing, being  the  third  day  after  her  illness,  Mrs.  Ann  Legare,  rdict 
of  Isaac  Legare,  esq.  at  an  advanced  age.  Having  lived  in  the 
profession  of  the  Christian  faith,  she  died  stedfast  in  the  same, 
in  strong  hope  of  obtaining  through  that  a  better  life. 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  in  the  62d  year  of  his  age,  Mr.  John 
Waring,  of  this  dty.  Displaying  through  his  long  life  all  the 
qualifications  which  are  estimable  in  the  relative  situations  ol 
father,  husband,  friend,  he  was  deservedly  valued  as  a  Member 
of  Sodety.    .    .    .    (Tuesday,  Feb:  23,  17to.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  last,  Mr.  William  B.  Fidds,  to  Miss  Ann 
M.  Black,  both  of  this  dty.    (Thursday,  Feb:  25,  1796.) 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  in  the  bloom  of  life,  much  lamented 
by  all  who  had  the  pleasure  of  her  acquaintance,  Mrs.  Arabella 
Cross,  the  amiable  consort  of  Mr.  William  Cross,  bricklayer,  of 
this  dty.    (Friday,  Feb:  26,  1796.) 

Died,  on  Saturday  morning  last,  in  the  53d.  year  of  her  age, 
Mrs.  Mary  Sinmions,  widow.     (Monday,  Feb:  29,  1796.) 


MAfi&IAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  155 

Married,  on  Thursday,  the  18th.  of  February,  by  the  rev.  Mr. 
Parker,  Benjamin  Huger,  esq:  to  Mrs.  Mary  Allston. 

Died,  suddenly,  on  Tuesday  night  last,  in  St.  John's  parish, 
in  the  68th  year  of  her  age,  Mrs.  Ann  Cordes.  (Tuesday,  Mar:  .1, 
1796.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  pight  last,  at  the  house  of  the  Rev.  Thomas 
Frost,  Roger  Moore  Smith,  esq.  to  Miss  Ann  Downes,  daughter  of 
the  late  Richard  Downes,  esq. 

Death.  On  the  16th  ultimo,  in  96  district,  the  honorable 
Patrick  Calhoun,  senator  of  the  election  district  of  Abbeville. 

Died,  on  Saturday  last,  at  the  house  of  Thomas  Gibbons,  esq. 
in  Savannah,  Daniel  KeymiTdf  esq.    (Wednesday,  Mar:  2,  1796.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  last,  by  rev.  Mr.  Parker,  Ferguson 
Parker,  esq.  attorney  at  law,  to  Miss  Gough,  daughter  of  the  late 
Mr.  John  Gough,  of  St.  Paul's  parish,  planter,  deceased. 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  Mrs.  Mary  Baker,  aged  63  years 
widow  of  Mr.  Richard  Baker.     (Saturday,  March  5,  1796.) 

Died,  on  Monday,  the  15th  ultimo,  ay  his  seat  in  Abbeville 
county,  the  hon.  Patrick  Calhoun,  esq.  in  the  69th  year  of  his  age. 
He  had  served  as  a  member  of  the  legislatiure  in  this  state  for 
many  years.  Was  the  first  person  who  ever  acted  in  that  capacity, 
from  that  part  of  the  state  in  which  he  resided;  and  was  a  member 
of  the  senate  at  its  last  session.  During  the  past  simuner  he  was 
attacked  with  a  lingering  fever,  which  much  enfeebled  his  con- 
stitution. On  his  return  from  Columbia,  he  was  seized  with  a 
bleeding  at  the  nose,  which  exhausted  him  gradually  till  his  life 
came  to  a  dose.  He  was  a  friend  to  virtue  and  piety;  and  a  foe 
to  vice  in  every  form.  The  fidelity  and  patriotism  which  he 
exhibited  as  a  public  character,  are  too  well  known  and  acknowl- 
edged, by  most  of  his  numerous  acquaintance,  to  need  any  en- 
comium or  eulogiuni. 

Died,  on  the  28th  of  February  last,  in  New  Port,  Rhode  Island, 
Capt.  Joseph  Brown;  he  was  a  master  of  a  vessel  out  of  this  port 
for  a  number  of  years  past.    (Monday,  March  7,  1796.) 

Married,  by  the  Rev.  Wm.  Hammet,  on  Saturday  evening  last, 
Mr.  William  Lane,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Stqphenson,  both  of  this 
dty,  and  on  Tuesday  evening,  Mr.  Samud  Pilsbury,  searcher  of 
the  custom-house  office,  to  Miss  Mehitable  Emmerson  Stevens^ 
both  of  this  dty.    (Thursday,  March  10,  1796.) 


156         so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married,  last  evening,  Mr.  Francis  Coram,  to  the  amiable  Miss 
Charlotte  Mortimer,  both  of  this  dty.    (Friday,  March  11, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  at  St.  James,  Hampstead, 
by  the  rev.  doctor  Buist,  Mr.  James  Scot,  of  this  dty,  to  Mrs. 
Porcher,  of  Santee. 

Married,  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  by  the  Rev.  Bishop  Smith 
Doctor  Alexander  Garden,  to  Miss  Harriet  Hockley  Hewie. 
(Saturday,  March  12,  1796.) 

Died,  on  the  9th  instant,  at  his  plantation  near  Beaufort, 
capt.  John  Jo3mer,  in  the  77th  year  of  his  age.  He  removed  to 
this  state  from  Frederica,  in  Georgia,  about  the  year  1750.  He 
was  appointed  in  1754,  to  command  one  of  the  scout  boats  em- 
ployed in  the  then  government  service,  in  which  he  continued 
discharging  his  duty  with  vigilance,  until  it  was  deemed  unnec- 
cessary  to  keep  those  boats  any  longer  in  service;  from  that  time 
he  became  an  industrious  planter,  until  the  American  revolution 
began,  in  whidi  he  took  a  very  early  and  active  part  in  supporting 
the  rights  of  America.  Although  he  had  several  sons  and  a  daugh- 
ter, who  were  married,  he  has  left  no  descendent  but  one  grand 
son  by  Mrs.  Smith,  who  was  the  last  of  his  children.  He  was  an 
affectionate  husband  and  father,  a  kind  friend,  and  a  humane 
master;  he  has  left  a  widow  and  many  friends  regretting  his  death. 
(Monday,  March  14,  1796.) 

Married,  last  evening  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Jenkins,  William  M'Cord^ 
esq.  of  the  Wateree,  to  Miss  Catherine  Muldrop,  youngest  daugh- 
ter of  the  late  Christian  Muldrop,  esq.  his  Danish  majest/s  consul 
for  Scotland.    (Friday,  March  18,  1796.) 

Died,  in  Savannah,  Mr.  Daniel  Coiurse,  merchant  (Sattirday, 
March  19, 1796.) 

Married,  last  evening,  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Blanton,  Mr.  James 
Hughes,  carpenter,  to  Miss  Sarah  Lane,  both  of  this  dty. 

Married,  on  Saturday  evening,  by  the  rev.  Dr.  Buist,  Mr.  Joseph 
Hamilton,  merchant,  to  Miss  Isabella  Steedman.  (Monday, 
March  21, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  at  Beaufort,  Mr.  Samuel 
Lawrence,  of  Augusta,  merchant,  to  Miss  Sarah  Grayson,  daughter 
of  John  Grayson,  esq.  deceased.    (Wednesday,  March  23,  1796.) 

Married,  on  Saturday  evening,  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Furman^  Mr. 
Joseph  Gflbert,  to  Miss  Rebecca  Ruberry,  both  of  this  dty. 
(Thursday,  Mar.  24,  1796.) 


MAfiBIAGE  AMD  DEATH  NOTICES  157 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  Wm.  Stevens  Smith,  esq. 
attorney  at  law,  to  Miss  Juliet  Lee  Waring,  daughter  of  Thomas 
Waring,  sen.  esq.  of  this  dty.    (Saturday,  Mar:  26,  1796.) 

Died,  at  Washington,  in  Georgia,  in  the  prime  of  life,  Mr.  An- 
drew Gordon,  who  went  thither,  in  the  expectation  of  recovering 
his  health,  and  which  he  at  first  found  to  be  measurebly  conducive 
to  the  attainment  of  that  object;  but  after  some  time,  fell  into  a 
relapse,  which  suddenly  terminated  -  in  death.  (Four  lines  of 
verse.)    (Wednesday,  March  30, 1796.) 

Married,  at  Orangebuigh,  on  the  26th  ult  Mr.  George  Gibbes 
Bailey,  of  Kingston,  Jamaica,  to  Miss  Harriet  Lesterjette,  daughter 
of  Lewis  Lesterjette,  esq. 

Married,  at  Georgetown  district,  on  Thursday  the  17th  instant. 
Dr.  James  B.  Mason,  formerly  of  Providence,  Rhode-Island,  to 
Miss  Fanny  Goddard.    (Monday,  April  4,  1796.) 

Married,  at  Waccamaw,  on  the  31st  of  March,  Doctor  Thomas 
Waring,  to  Mrs.  Sarah  Labruce.    (Thursday,  April  7,  1796.) 

Married,  lately,  at  Edgefidd-county,  Ninety-six  district, 
Mr.  John  Gorman,  to  Miss  Nancy  Nickison. 

Married,  on  Wednesday  evening,  Mr.  Thomas  Baker,  to  Miss 
Rachel  Furman,  daughter  of  Rev.  Richard  Furman,  both  of  this 
dty. 

Married,  last  evening,  by  the  Rev.  Doct.  William  HoUingshead, 
Mr.  Peter  Broughton,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Sarah  Swinton,  daugh- 
ter of  Mr.  Hugh  Swinton.    (Friday,  April  8,  1796.) 

Married,  on  Saturday  evening,  Mr.  Louis  Augusta  Legay,  from 
St.  Domingo,  to  the  amiable  and  accomplished  Miss  Rebecca 
Sawyer  Wippy,  of  Edisto.  (Wednesday,  April  13, 1796.) 
p  Married,  lately  in  Orangeburgh  district,  Mr.  John  Ham,  son 
of  capt  Richard  Ham,  to  Miss  Letty  Cargill,  both  of  that  district. 
(Thursday,  April  19,  1796.) 

Married,  yesterday  evening,  by  the  right  rev.  Mr.  Smith,  Jacob 
Emilius  Lr^dng,  esq.  of  the  Island  of  Jamaica,  to  Miss  Corbett, 
daughter  of  Thomas  Corbett,  esq.  of  this  dty. 

Married,  on  the  10th  March  last,  at  Philadelphia,  by  the  rev. 
Heoboiun,  of  the  German  Catholic  church,  Mr.  Joseph  Simond, 
of  this  dty,  merchant,  to  Miss  Soline  Grenon  de  Pinfault,  from 
Auz-Cayes.    (Wednesday,  ^ril  20,  1796.) 

[Break  in  file  from  April  22  to  October  14,  1796] 

{To  be  canHnued) 


ABSTRACTS  OF  RECORDS  OF  THE  PROCEEDINGS  IN 
THE  COURT  OF  ORDINARY,  1764-1771 

CoD^Mled  by  Mabel  L.  Webbex 

(ConHmted  from  April) 

Citation  to  Mary  Bishop  of  Prince  William  parish  to  administer 
the  estate  and  effects  of  Henry  Bishop  late  of  the  same  {Jace 
deceased,  as  nearest  of  Kin    .    .    .    Certified  5th  June,  1766. 

Court  of  Ordinary,  — th  June  1766. 

Upon  a  business  of  Citation  issued  at  the  Instance  of  Newman 
Swallow  of  CharlesTown,  Merchant,  as  greatest  creditor  of  Josq>h 
Bradwell  late  of  St  Georges  parish  planter,  to  dte  the  kindred 
and  Creditors  of  the  said  Josq>h  Bradwell  to  shew  cause,  if  any 
they  could  why  administration  of  the  estate  and  effects  of  the 
said  Josq>h  Bradwell  deceased  should  not  be  granted  to  said 
Newman  Swallow,  and  Caveat  being  Entered  against  the  same  by 
Thomas  Bulline  Junr.  as  nearest  of  Kin,  and  said  Thomas  Bulline 
Junr.  not  appearing  to  sustain  the  same: 

Ordered 'diat  a  special  Citation  be  issued  Citing  the  said  Thomas 
Bulline  Jimr.  to  appear  &  Shew  cause  why  administration  should 
not  be  granted  to  said  Newman  Swallow  on  Friday  20th  instant 

Caveat  being  Entered  against  the  Probate  of  the  Will  of  Andrew 
Hendrie  late  of  St.  Peters  parish  deceased  by  Jean  Mary  Hendrie, 
widow  of  the  deceased  and  Special  citation  being  issued  citing 
the  witnesses  to  the  said  will  to  appear  in  Court  this  day  and  they 
attending  accordingly  were  severally  examined,  the  said  will  was 
received  and  admitted  and  proved,  and  letters  testamentary 
ordered  to  be  Issued  to  the  Executors  therein  named. 

Citation  granted  to  John  Packrow  of  CharlesTown  to  Administ^ 
the  Estate  and  Effects  of  Jean  Packrow,  late  of  St.  Bartholomew's 
parish  as  nearest  Kin,  6  June,  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  George  Green  to  administer  the  Estate  of 

158 


RECORDS  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  159 

Edward  McMahon  of  Williamsburgh  Township  as  nearest  of  Kin, 
to  be  published  and  returned  Certified,  9th  June  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  John  Donnom  of  George  Town  to  Administer 
the  Estate  and  Effects  of  Peter  Cuttino  late  of  Prince  Georges 
parish  Deceased  as  nearest  of  Kin,  to  be  published  and  retiuned 
Certified  10  June  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  Elizabeth  Scott  of  St  Thomas's  parish  to 
administer  the  Estate  &  Effects  of  Joseph  Scott  late  of  same  place 
planter  as  nearest  of  Kin  &  returned  Certified  13  June  1766. 

Citation  to  David  Martin  of  Win3^w  to  Administer  the  Estate 
&  Effects  of  Robert  Thompson  late  of  same  place,  as  nearest  of 
kin  to  be  published  in  parish  Church  of  Prince  George  and  re- 
turned Certified  13  June  1766. 

In  Court  of  Ordinary,  Friday  20th  June  1766. 
Thomas  BuUine  Junr.  appeared  agreeable  to  a  Citation  issued 
for  that  purpose,  to  shew  Cause  why  he  had  Entered  a  Caveat 
against  Letters  of  Administration  being  granted  to  Newman 
Swallow  of  the  Estate  and  Effects  of  Joseph  Bradwell  late  of 
St.  Georges  parish  planter  deceased;  his  Reasons  for  Entering  the 
said  Caveat  being  heard  It  was  ordered  letters  of  Administration 
be  granted  said  Thos.  BulUne  Junr. 

Citation  to  Mary  Read  of  St.  Helena,  Port  Royal  to  administer 
the  Estate  of  James  Read  late  of  same  place  as  nearest  Kin,  to 
be  returned  Certified  20th  June  1766. 

James  Fowler  &  Hannah  Screven  enters  a  Caveat  agt.  Letters 
of  Adminst.  being  granted  to  any  person  on  Est.  of  William 
Screven  late  of  Peedee  until  they  shall  be  heard.    24th  June  1766. 

Citation  to  Robert  McKenzie,  George  Thompson  and  Robert 
McKenzie  Junr.  of  CharlesTown  merchants  to  administer  the  Est. 
of  CorneUus  Ha3rs,  late  of  Amelia  Township  Shoemaker  &  Tanner, 
as  greatest  Creditors.    24  June  1766. 


160         so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Qtation  to  John  Jones  of  St.  John's  parish  in  the  province  of 
Georgia^  to  admistr.  estate  of  William  Gardner  late  of  WiUiams- 
burgh  Township  planter  as  nearest  of  Kin  in  right  of  his  wtfe. 
30  June  1766. 

Citation  to  Susannah  Glover  of  Craven  County  to  administer 
the  Estate  of  George  Glover  late  of  Fishing  Creek,  Craven  County 
as  nearest  of  Kin.    5th  July,  1766. 

Citation  to  Humphry  Summers  of  Colleton  County,  planter  to 
adminstr.  the  Estate  of  James  Nutt  late  of  St  Georges  parish  as 
greatest  Creditor.    Sth  July,  1766. 

Citation  to  Peter  Secare  &  Charles  Baxter  of  GeorgeTown, 
Winyaw  to  Administer  the  Estate  of  Robert  Dureant  (?)  late  of 
same  place.    14  July,  1766. 

Citation  to  Robert  Allyne  of  St  Bartholomews  parish  Colleton 
County  to  adminr.  the  Estate  of  John  Jordon  late  of  St  Pauls 
parish  as  nearest  of  Kin.    18  July,  1766. 

Citation  to  Mary  Furrows  and  Anthony  Albergoty  of  St  Hdena 
parish  to  administer  the  Estate  of  Charles  Furrow  late  of  sanae 
place,  as  nearest  of  Kin  (not  dated). 

Citation  to  Elizabeth  Campbell  of  CharlesTown  to  administer 
the  Estate  of  Alexander  Campbell  late  of  same  place,  Ta^or,  as 
nearest  of  Kin.    31  July,  1766. 

Citation  to  Jane  Maurand  of  CharlesTown  to  Administer  tbe 
Estate  of  Frands  Mounmd  late  of  same  places  as  nearest  of  £10* 
1st  August,  1766. 

Court  of  Ordinary,  Ist  August,  1766. 
Petition  read  of  Newman  Swallow,  pra3dng  that  special  citation 
be  issued  citing  Thomas  Bullion  Junr.  to  appear  in  Ordinary  o& 
Friday  22  inst  to  shew  cause  why  he  had  not  taken  out  letters  of 
Administration  on  the  Estate  of  Joseph  Bradwell  deceased. 
Ordered  same  do  issue  accordingly. 


RECOBDS  OF  COUHT  PROCEEDINGS  161 

Citation  Granted  to  George  Smith  Junr.  of  St.  Thomas's  Parish 
to  Administr.  Estate  of  BasQ  Jordon  of  Chirst  Church  parish  as 
greatest  Creditor.    12  August,  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  Valantine  Cune  of  Craven  County  to 
Administer  the  Estate  of  Andrew  Marks  late  of  same  place  planter, 
as  Nearest  of  Kin.    13  August,  1766. 

Citation  granted  James  Hunter  to  Administer  estate  of  Rev. 
Mr.  Samuel  Hunter  late  of  Prince  Frederick's  parish,  Craven 
County,  deceased,  as  nearest  of  Kin.    13  Aug.  1766. 

Citation  to  William  Nesfidd  late  of  Barbadoes  but  now  of 
CharlesTown  to  administer  the  estate  of  Andrew  Hunter  late  of 
St.  Michaek  parish  as  greatest  Creditor.    19  Aug:  1766. 

Citation  to  William  HoUiday  to  Administer  estate  of  William 
McDonald  late  of  St.  Philips  as  greatest  Creditor.    22  Aug.  1766. 

Citation  to  Sabastion  Fonches  to  administer  estate  of  John 
Adam  Fonches  late  of  Orangeburgh  as  nearest  of  kin.  28  August, 
1766. 

Citation  to  John  Swint  to  administer  Estate  of  Andrew  Seri(?) 
late  of  Black  Mingo,  as  greatest  Creditor.    29  Aug:  1766. 

Citation  to  David  Maull  of  St.  Michael  parish  to  Administer 
estate  of  John  Williams  late  of  same  place,  Taylor,  as  nearest  of 
Kin  in  right  of  his  wife  with  will  annexed.    30Ui  August,  1766. 

In  Court  of  Ordmary,  29th  August  1766. 
Upon  a  Business  of  special  citation  issued  at  instance  of  New- 
man Swallow  on  first  day  of  this  month,  citing  Thomas  Bulline  to 
appear  and  show  cause  why  he  had  not  taken  out  letters  of  admin, 
on  estate  of  Josq>h  Bradwell,  late  of  St.  George's  parish,  planter  and 
said  Bulline  not  appearing  within  time  limited.  Ordered  administra- 
tion be  granted  to  Newman  Swallow  on  said  estate,  as  greatest 
Creditor. 

{To  be  conHnuei) 


■ 


SOUTH  CAROLINA 

HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL 

MAGAZINE 


PUBLISHED  QUARTERLY  BY  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
CHARLESTON,  S.  C. 


VOLUMEXXIII.  No.4  OCTOBER,  1922 


if ai«  Ai  Umiti  SUitu  ej  Amvka 


PUBUCATION  COMMITTEE 

JosiFH  W.  Basnwell,  Hem&y  a.  M.  SMnB, 

A.  S.  Salley,  Jr. 

EDITOR  OF  THE  MAGAZINE 
Mabel  L.  Webbci 


'■  ■  ■       ■'  '■  ■  *' 


CONTEHTS 

Original  Rules  and  Members  of  the  Charlestown  Library  Society  163 

Marriage  and  Death  Notices  from  City  Gazette. ^.205 

Abstracts  of  Records  of  the  Proceedings  in  the  Court  of 
Ordinary,  1764-1771 212 

Index 223 


N.  B.— These  Magazines,  with  the  exception  of  No.  1  of 
Vol.  I|  are  $1.25  to  any  one  other  than  a  member  of  the  South 
Carolina  Hbtorical  Society.  The  Membership  fee  is  $4.00  per 
annum  (the  fiscal  year  being  from  January  to  January),  and 
members  can  buy  back  numbers  or  duplicates  at  tixio  M/CIl 
In  addition  to  receiving  the  Magazines,  members  are  allowed  a 
discount  of  25  per  cent  on  all  other  publications  of  the  Society, 
and  have  the  free  use  of  the  Society's  library. 

Any  member  who  has  not  received  the  last  number  will 

please  notify  the  Secretary  and  Treasurer 

Miss  Mabel  L.  Webber,  | 

South  CafoBna  Historical  Society,  * 

CUzlestoo,  S.  C 


t 


The  South  Carolina 
Historical  and  Genealogical 

Magazine 

VOL.  XXIII  OCTOBER,  1922  No.  4 


ORIGINAL  RULES  AND  MEMBERS  OF  THE  CHARLES- 
TOWN  LIBRARY  SOCIETY 

The  Charleston  Library  Society  owes  its  origin  to  a  number  of 
young  gentlemen  who,  in  1748,  met  and  formed  an  association  for 
the  purpose  of  raising  a  fund  to  purchase  pamphlets  and  magazines 
which  were  published  in  Great  Britain.  They  remitted  to  England 
ten  pounds  sterling,  as  a  fund  to  purchase  such  pamphlets  as  had 
recently  appeared,  acting  at  first  under  verbal  agreement,  and 
without  a  name.  Before  the  close  of  the  year  their  views  became 
more  extensive,  and  on  the  28th  December  they  were  organized 
imder  the  name  of  a  Library  Society,  and  arrangements  were  made 
for  the  acquisition  of  books  as  well  as  of  pamphlets^ 

Officers  were  elected  on  the  1st  of  April,  1749,  and  some  members 
were  added  that  year;  the  association  seems  to  have  inunediately 
filled  a  need  in  the  Province,  and  by  April,  1750,  the  Library 
Society  was  well  organized,  with  rules,  officers,  and  a  respectable 
list  of  members,  as  is  shown  below. 

The  names  of  the  first  members  of  the  Charles-Town  Library 
Society  have  been  preserved  in  two  publications;  Shecut's  Medical 
and  Philosophical  Essays^  printed  in  1819,  and  in  the  Oration 
delivered  by  J.  L.  Petigru  upon  the  first  centenial  of  the  founding 
of  the  Society,  June  13, 1848.  The  names,  as  given  by  Shecut,  are 
as  follows:  Alexander  McCauley,  Patrick  MacKie,  William  Logan, 
James  Grindlay,  Morton  Brailsford,  Robert  Brisbane,  Paul 
Douxsaint,  Alexander  Baron,  John  Sinclair,  John  Cooper,  Peter 
Timothy,  Wm.  Burrows,  Chas.  Stevenson,  John  Neufville,  Jr., 

>  Preface  to  Catalogue  of  the  Charleston  Library  Society,  1876  compiled  by 
Mr.  Arthur  Maz^ck. 

163     * 


164  so.  CA.  mSTOKlCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Thomas  Sacheverell,  Samud  BraOsford,  Thos.  MiddletcHi.  To 
these,  Mr.  Petigni  adds  Josq>h  Wragg  Jr.  and  Samuel  Wragg 
Jr.;  the  authority  for  these  two  lists  seems  to  be  now  missiiig; 
the  original  records  of  the  Society  having  passed  throu^  fires, 
storms  and  wars. 

The  rules  and  list  of  members  appear  in  the  South  Carolina 
GazetU,  April  26, 1750,  as  follows: 

Mr.  Timothy, 

It  having  been  agreed,  at  the  last  general  meeting  of  the  CEL\RL£S- 
TOWN  LIBRARY  SOCIETY,  that  their  RULES  shoM  be 
printed;  I  have  by  order  of  the  President,  herewith  inclosed  you  a 
copy,  which,  with  the  names  of  the  members,  you  are  desired  to  insert 
in  your  next  GazetU.    A  pril  21st,  1 750. 

John  Remington,  Seer,  to  the  Society. 

Rules  of  the  Society  for  erecting  a  LIBRARY,  and  raising  a 
FUND  for  an  ACADEMY  at  CHARLES-TOWN  SOUTH 
CAROLINA;  begun  the  28th  of  December,  1748. 

ARTICLE  I 

The  society  shall  be  called  by  the  name  of  the  CHARLESTOWN 
LIBRARY  SOCIETY. 

II.  The  members  of  the  society  shall  have/twr  general  meetings 
in  the  year,  to  wit,  the  friday  after  the  third  Wednesday  in  March, 
the  second  Wednesday  in  July,  the  friday  after  the  third  Wednesday 
in  October,  and  the  second  Wednesday  in  January,  which  last  shall 
also  be  the  annual  meeting.  The  secretary  shall  give  timely 
notice,  by  an  advertisement  in  the  Gazette,  of  the  hour  and  place  of 
such  a  meeting.  Any  Member  residing  in  Charles-Town,  who 
shall  not  attend  at  a  general  meeting,  shall  for  every  such  failure 
forfeit  ten  shillings  currency. 

III.  At  the  annual  meeting  on  the  second  Wednesday  in  January, 
the  members  met,  shall,  by  majority  of  votes,  elect  the  oflScers  of 
the  Society  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz.  a  President,  Vice  President, 
Treasurer,  Librarian,  Correspondent,  Secretary  and  Steward.  If 
any  officer  shall  die  or  depart  the  province,  the  members  present  at 
the  next  general  meeting,  shall,  by  majority  of  votes,  elect  one  in 
his  stead,  for  the  remaining  part  of  the  year. 

IV.  Any  member  duly  elected  an  officer,  refusing  to  act,  shall 
forfeit  the  sum  of  five  poimds  currency,  and  another  shall  be 


i 


CHARLES  TOWN  UBBA&Y  SOCIETY  165 

immediately  chosen  in  his  room.  But  no  person  shall  be  obliged 
to  servein  any  office  above  once  in  seven  years;  and  country  mem- 
bers shall  not  be  subject  to  the  fine  above  mentioned,  if  they  refuse 
to  act  in  the  office  to  which  they  shall  be  elected. 

V.  At  every  general  meeting,  a  conmiittee  of  twelve  members 
shall  be  appointed  by  the  president,  or  other  officer  who  shall  pre- 
side in  his  absence,  (seven  thereof  to  be  a  quorum)  who  shall  meet 
the  first  Wednesday  in  every  month,  or  oftener  if  the  business  of 
the  society  requires  it,  to  draw  lists  of  books,  and  to  prepare 
business  to  be  laid  before  the  society  at  their  next  general  meeting, 
for  their  consideration. 

Any  member  appointed  to  serve  on  a  committee,  refusing  or 
neglecting  to  give  due  attendance  at  such  committee,  shall  forfeit  a 
sum  not  exceeding  three  pounds,  to  be  adjudged  of  by  a  majority 
of  Ihe  members  present  at  the  next  general  meeting. 

VI.  When  any  person  applies  to  be  admitted  a  member  of  the 
society,  his  name  shall  be  given  in  to  the  secretary,  who  shall  give 
three  days  notice,  by  fixing  an  advertisement  on  the  exchange, 
desiring  the  attendance  of  the  society.  And  the  members  met  in 
pursuance  of  such  notice  shall  have  power  to  admit  or  reject  such 
candidate;  which  admission  or  rejection  shall  be  by  ballot. 

Vn.  The  Society  shall  have  a  common  seal,  composed  of  such 
devices  and  motto,  as  shall  be  appointed  by  the  president  and  the 
conmiitte,  at  any  time  before  the  general  meeting  which  will  be 
on  the  second  Wednesday  in  July  1750. 

Vm.  Every  member  who  hath  already  been,  or  hereafter  shall 
be  admitted  into  the  said  society,  shall  have  a  certificate  of  such 
his  admission,  imder  the  hand  of  the  president  for  the  time  being, 
and  the  conmion  seal  of  the  Society,  and  coimtersigned  by  the 
secretary  for  the  time  being,  in  the  following  form, 
SOUTH-CAROLINA. 

THESE  are  to  certify,  that of 

was  admitted  a  Member  of  the  CHARLES-TOWN  LIBRARY 

SOCIETY,  at held     the Day 

of Anno  Domini And  is  intitled   to  all   the 

Rights  of  a  Member  of  the  said  Society. 

Given  under  my  Hand  and  the  Seal  of  the  Society,  the 

Day  and  Year  above-written. 

Treasurer  President. 


166  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

DC  That  for  raising  a  fund  for  purdiasiiig  books,  pamphlets 
and  papers,  and  a  fund  for  the  uses  after  mentioned,  every  member 
shall  pay  into  the  hands  of  the  treasurer  for  the  time  being,  at 
the  rate  of  five  shillings  cturencey  per  week,  from  the  commence- 
ment of  the  society;  and  the  arrears  of  the  weekly  contributions, 
shall  be  paid  by  every  member  into  the  hands  of  the  treasurer,  at 
every  general  meeting. 

X.  If  any  member  shall  n^lect  to  pay  his  weekly  quota,  and  all 
fines  or  forfeitures  he  may  have  incurred,  at  the  general  meeting, 
or  within  sixiy  days  then  the  next  after,  he  shall  from  thence 
forward  be  utterly  debarred  and  excluded  from  being  a  member  of 
the  society,  and  of  any  right  or  privilege  in  the  books  and  other 
things  belonging  to  the  same.  Members  not  in  the  province,  for 
the  time  they  shall  be  so  absent,  are  hereby  excepted;  provided 
every  such  member  discharge  the  arreas  of  his  weekly  contribution 
for  the  space  of  two  years,  such  defaulter  shall  be  for  ever  excluded 
and  debarr'd  of  any  interest  in  the  society's  stock,  or  any  rights 
to  any  of  the  books,  other  things  or  privil^es  belonging  thereto. 

XI.  After  this  society  has  laid  out  1600  /.  Sterling  on  books, 
only  low.  Sterling  of  the  money  arising  from  fines,  forfeitures  and 
from  weekly  contributions,  and  from  the  donations  which  may  be 
made  to  us,  shall  annually  be  applied  towards  purchadng  books; 
and  the  remainder,  after  the  expences  attending  the  library  are 
paid,  shall  annually  be  let  out  at  interest  on  good  personal  security 
that  funds  may  be  raised,  which  will  be  disposed  of  in  the  following 
manner. 

When  this  society  has  at  interest  as  much  money  as  ^nll  purchase 
instruments  for  a  course  of  experimental  philosophy,  to  the  value 
of  8  or  900  /  Sterling,  and  likewise  a  fund,  which,  at  interest,  will 
annually  produce  300  1  Sterling,  and  the  8  or  900  /  Sterling  shall 
be  immediately  applied  towards  the  piuxiiase  of  those  instru- 
ments; and  the  fund  producing  at  interest  300  /  Sterling  per  annum 
to  a  professor  of  Mathematicks  and  of  natural  and  experimental 
philosophy,  and  to  his  successors  for  ever. 

And  the  residue  of  the  money  afterwards  arising  from  the  fines 
forfeitures  and  weekly  contributions,  and  from  donations  (if  any 
be  made  to  us)  after  the  100  /  Sterling  for  books  and  the  charges 
attending  the  library  are  deducted,  shall  annually  be  let  out  at 
interest  and  continued  at  interest  until  a  fund  is  raised,  which,  at 


J 


CHARLES  TOWN  LIBRARY  SOCIETY  167 

interest,  will  annually  produce  a  salary  of  300  /  Sterling  to  a  pro- 
fessor of and  likewise  200  /  Sterling  which  shall 

forever  be  applied  towards  the  purchasing  of  books;  and  the 
300  /  Sterling  salary  shall  be  immediately  and  forever  afterwards 

applied  towards  the  use  of  the  professor  of and 

his  successors. 

XII,  Two  hundred  or  more  copies,  as  occasion  shall  require,  of 
every  parcel  of  books  sent  over  to  the  society,  shall  be  printed  in 
London,  and  distributed  here  among  the  members,  who  may  send 
to  the  librarian  for  any  of  the  books  they  chuse  to  read,  by  a 
written  order  or  receipt  to  be  given  for  the  same,  which  shall  be 
returned  to  the  Librarian  within  forty-eight  hours  if  pamphlets  or 
papers,  within  six  da}^,  if  a  duodecimo  or  octavo,  eight  days  if  a 
quarto,  and  within  twelve  days  if  a  folio,  allowing  to  every  country 
member,  a  further  time,  at  the  rate  of  a  day  for  every  six  miles 
between  Charles-Town  and  the  place  of  his  residence;  under  the 
penalty  of  five  shillings  current  money  for  every  twelve  hours 
longer  detention  of  each  pamphlet,  every  three  papers  and  each 
book,  unless  the  book,  paper  or  pamphlet  be  really  lost,  in  which 
case  the  person  shall  only  pay  to  such  time  he  certifies  the  loss  to  the 
librarian. 

Xm.  If  any  member  lose,  lend  or  damage  any  paper,  pamphlet, 
or  book,  he  shall  forfeit  double  the  Sterling  cost  thereof,  according 
to  the  then  cost  of  exchange. 

XIV.  AU  books  belonging  to  the  society  shall  be  lettered  as 
usual,  and  upon  the  out  side  of  the  cover  next  to  the  title  page, 
shall  be  impressed  the  words,  CHARLES-TOWN  LIBRARY 
SOCIETY. 

XV.  Any  member  of  this  society  shall  have  liberty  to  dispose 
of  his  share  and  interest  in  the  society's  stock  to  any  person  not  a 
member,  with  the  approbation  of  the  majority  of  the  society  at  a 
general  meeting.  But  no  member  shall  dispose  of  his  share  of  the 
books  or  effects  of  the  society  to  any  other  member;  and  if  any 
member,  as  executor  or  administrator  of  another,  or  by  any  other 
means,  shall  have  a  plurality  of  shares,  he  shall  not  have  any 
greater  privilege  in  voting,  or  taking  our  books,  than  any  other 
member  who  hath  but  one  share. 

XVI.  The  heir  or  devisee  of  any  member  dying,  being  a  minor, 
shall  not  be  chargeable  with  weekly  contributions,  'till  such 


168  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AMD  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

hdr  or  devisee  attains  an  age  capable  of  making  use  of  the  society's 
books.  And  such  minor,  at  the  age  of  sixteen  years,  upon  the 
executor,  trustee  or  guardian  becoming  surety  for  the  returning  of 
the  books  such  heir  or  devisee  shall  borrow,  free  from  damage, 
according  to  the  true  intent  and  meaning  of  the  foregoing  rules, 
and  paying  the  weekly  contributions  after  such  devisee  attain 
such  age,  shall  have  the  right  of  borrowing  the  society's  books  as 
any  other  member. 

XVII.  A  book  shall  be  provided,  in  which  the  secretary  shall 
enter  all  rules  and  orders,  which  now  or  hereafter  may  be  agreed 
upon,  for  the  regulation  of  the  society,  the  names,  time  of  ad- 
mission, deaths  of  the  members,  forfeitures,  the  election  of  the 
oflScers,  and  all  other  proceedings  of  the  society.  And  one  other 
bound  book  shall  be  provided,  in  which  shall  be  entered  a  cata- 
logue of  all  books  imported  for  the  society,  with  the  price  or  cost 
of  each  book,  which  shall  be  lodged  in  the  custody  of  the  librarian. 

XVni.  The  treasurer  for  the  time  being,  shall  out  of  the 
society's  stock,  provide  books,  in  which,  he  is  to  regularly  enter  all 
of  money  paid  and  received  by  him,  with  the  names  of  the  persons 
paying  or  receiving  them.  He  shall  also  provide  a  strong  box  with 
a  lock  and  key  in  which  all  rules  and  orders  of  the  society,  and  all 
money  in  hand  shall  lodged,  and  delivered  to  the  succeeding 
treasurer,  on  his  becoming  boimd  to  the  president  and  vice-presi- 
dent, for  double  the  value  of  the  society's  stock  then  to  be  put 
into  his  hands,  and  to  render  to  the  society  a  just  and  true  account 
of  the  same,  and  all  subscriptions,  fines  and  other  things  (fire  and 
inevitable  accidents  only  excepted)  and  to  deliver  the  same  to  the 
obligees,  the  order  of  the  society,  or  the  next  treasurer,  when 
there-imto  required  by  the  majority  of  the  members  present  at  a 
general  meeting. 

XIX.  At  the  monthly  meeting  next  after  every  general  meeting, 
the  accoimts  of  the  treasurer  shall  be  audited  by  the  conmiittee, 
who  are  to  make  report  thereof  to  the  society  at  their  next  general 
meeting. 

XX.  At  the  annual  meeting  shall  be  provided,  at  the  discretion 
of  the  steward,  a  sufficient  dinner,  for  the  defraying  of  which, 
every  member  shall  pay  into  the  hands  of  the  stevmrd  forty  shillings 
currency  the  week  preceeding. 


CHARLES  TOWN  LIBRARY  SOdETY 


169 


XXI.  No  member,  upon  any  pretence,  shall  presume  to  intro- 
duce any  person  into  the  society,  before  he  has  been  proposed  and 
approved  of  as  a  member. 

XXn.  At  all  meetings  of  the  society,  the  rules  shall  be  read 
immediately  upon  the  presiding  officer's  taking  the  chair,  to 
whom  any  member  about  to  speak  upon  business  shall  address 
himself,  and  in  case  of  debate,  the  president  shall  sum  up  the 
argument  and  propose  them  to  the  vote  of  the  members  present. 

XXin.  If  at  any  time  any  doubt  shaD  arise  concerning  the 
meaning  of  any  of  these  rules,  the  same  shall  be  explain'd  or 
determined  by  the  majority  of  the  members  present  at  the  next 
general  meeting. 

A  LIST  of  the  MEMBERS  of  the  CHARLES-TOWN  LIBRARY 
SOCIETY,  the  21st  of  AprU,   1750. 

Doct.  John  Lining,  President 

p  [Thomas  Smith,  Vice-President 

^  -  John  Sinclair,  Librarian 
James  Sharp,  Steward 
And  Mr.  John  Remington,  Secretary 


8 


Esqrs. 


Mr,  Benjamin  Addison. 

Hector  Beranger  de 
Beaufain 

William  Bull,  jt^n 

Joseph  Blake. 
Jacob  Bond 
James  Bulloch 
William  Boone 
George  Bellinger 
The  Rev,  John  Baxter 

Richard  Beresford 
John  Brailsford 
Morton  Brailsford 
Samuel  Brailsford 
William  Burrows 
Robert  Brisbane 
Alexander  Baron 
John  Butler 
John  Basnett 
Francis  Brown 
William  Bonner 


Esqrs. 


I 


I 


Capt.  Peter  Bostock 
The  Hon.  John  Cleland,  Esq. 
Daniel  Crawfordl -. 
Thomas  CorbettP^^' 

David  Caw 

Samuel  Came 

James  Carson 
j;^  I  James  Crockatt 

Lewis  Caw 

John  Cochran 

John  Cooper 

Dougal  Campbell 

John  Crokatt 

Alexander  Chisolme 
David  Deas    1-, 
John  Draytonj     ^  ' 
The  Rev.  Mr.  Levi  Durand 
Doct.  Thomas  Dale. 

Paul  Douxsaint 

Simon  Dunbar 

James  Davidson 

Benjamin  Dart 


I, 


ii 


170 


so.  CA.  mSTOSICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  UAGAZINS 


i< 


:^ 


I' 


l> 


Banfill  Evance 

William  Fleming    \Esqrs. 

Elias  Foissine 

DocL  Charles  Fyf e 

James  Grindlay 
Christopher  Gadsden 
William  Glen 
William  Gibbes 
David  Graeme 

Lieut,  Col.  Alexander  Heron 
Isaac  Holmes,  Esq, 
Capt,  Joseph  Hatton 

Samuel  Hurst 
William  Harcourt  Hen- 
derson 
Maurice  Harvey 

Doc,  James  Irving 

Andrew  Johnston 
George  Inglis 
^  [Henry  Kennan 

The  Rev.  Mr.  Alexander  Keith 
Thomas  Lynch,  Esq. 

William  Logan 
Henry  Laurens 
Alexander  Livie 
Thomas  Lining 
James  Lenox 
George  Logan 

The  Hon,  William  Middleton, 
Esq, 

Gabriel  Manigault 
Anthony  Mathewes 
Thomas  Middleton 
James  Michie 
Henry  Middleton 
Jacob  Motte 
John  Mayrant 

g  [John  Moultrie 
I  Patrick  Mackie 
*^  [George  Milligam 


ii 


Esqrs, 


I, 


:^ 


i, 


George  Murray 

Alexander  Macaulay 

Richard  Martson 

David  Montaigut 

George  Marshall 

John  McQueen 

John  Neufville 
John  Ouldfield,  Esq; 
Doct,  David  Oliphant 
The  Hon,  Charles  Pinckney,  Esq 
William  Pinckney,  Esq, 

Joseph  Pickering 

John  Pamham 

Charles  Pryce 

Rice  Price 

George  Gabriel  Powell 

John  Palmer 

Benjamin  Perry 
The  Hon,  Andrew  Rutledge,  Esq. 
Patrick  Reid 
John  Raven 
Doct,  John  Rutledge 
Luke  Stoutenburgh 
Benjamin  Smith 
Thomas  Sacheverell 
Alexander  Stewart 

4 

Thomas  Shubrick 
John  Scott,  Merchant 
George  Seaman 
Charles  Stevenson 
[WiUiam  Scott 


:^ 


Messrs, 


Esqrs, 


I 


Messrs. 


Esqrs. 


Alexander  Taylor 
Ralph  Taylor 
Peter  Timoth> 
James  Wright 
Charles  Wray 
James  Wedderbum 
John  Ward 
William  Waties 

Samuel  Wragg  jkw. 

Joseph  Wragg/wn. 

John  Wragg 

Joseph  Wragg 


S1 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER 

Copied  and  arranged  for  printing  by  Joseph  W.  Barnwell  and 

Mabel  L.  Webber 

(Continued  from  July) 

Reeve,  Ambrose,  Bach.  Dr.  bom  in  Kent,  England,  married  by 

Jones,  Dec.  16,  1733  Ann  Stanyame,  Wid.  Buried  26  Nov: 

1749. 
Reeve,  Anne,  Da.  of  Ambrose  &  Anne,  bom  March  12, 1734,  bapt. 

Apl.  13,  1735  by  Peasely.  Parents  sureties,  married  Dec.  28, 

1752  by  Peasely,  Francis  Stuart,  Bach.    Buried  25  [Sic.] 
Reeve,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  March  11,  1735,  bapt.  March  20, 

1735  by  Do.     Do.  for  sureties.    Buried  March  25, 1736. 
Reeve,  Lewis,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  Aug.  5, 1739,  bapt.  Nov.  18, 1739  by 

Do.  Do.  sureties.    Buried  Nov.  14, 1774,  age  35  yrs. 
Reeve,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  11,  1740,  bapt.  Oct.  12, 

1740  by  Do. 
Reeve,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  FebV;  15, 1741.  Bapt.  March  3, 1741 

by  Do.  Buried  March  8, 1741. 
Reeve,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  March  4, 1746,  bapt.  Apl.  13,  1747, 

by  ChiffeUy. 
Reed,  John,  a  Soldier.    Buried  by  Jones,  Feb:  7, 1727. 
Reeves,  Thomas,  Bach,  bom  in  Kent,  England.    Married  by  Do. 

Dec.  11, 1739  Elizabeth  Sarjeant,  widow. 
Reeves,  Margt.  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  bapt.  Apl.  13, 1740  by 

Do.  buried  June  26, 1740. 
Reeves,  Elizabeth,  Wife  to  Thomas,  bora  1700,  buried  by  Do. 

May  4,  1740,  age  40. 
Read,  James,  bmied  by  Do.  20  July,  1732. 
Reynolds,  John,  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Mary,  bom  Jan.  18, 1702,  Dead. 
Reynolds,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  Apl.  18, 1704,  bapt.  Oct.  3, 1714 

by  Guy.  Married  Elenor  Stevens,  Spin.  Buried  Jan:  1739. 
Reynolds,  Constantia,  Da.  of  Do.  born  May  28,  1705,  bapt.  Do. 

by  Do.  married  Francis  Thompson,  Bach. 
Reynolds,  Alice,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Sept.  10, 1706.    Bapt.  Do.  by  Do. 
Reynolds,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Aug.  6, 1708,  bapt.  Dec.  5, 1714 

by  Do.    Married  Samuel  Stevens,  Bach. 

171 


172  so.  CA.  HISTOUCAL  AKD  GEXEALOC3CAL  MACAUXB 

Reynolds,  Charles  Capers,  Sn.  cl  Do.  bom  March   14,  1710. 

Bapt.  Do.  by  Do.  Dyed  y<mng. 
Rtynolds^  JtLoe,  Da.  ct  Do.  bom  Aug.  23, 1711.    Bapt.  do.  by  Da 

Dead. 
Rtyuoldsy  Benjamin^  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Marcfa  8, 1713,  bapt.  da  by 

Do.  Dyed  young. 
Reynolds,  Zacharias,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  1723.    Bapt.  Aug.  17,  1729 

by  Jones.    Dead,  1751. 
Reynolds,  Philq>,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  1729,  bapt  Ang.  17,  1729  by 

Da  Buried  25  July,  1731. 
Re3molds,  WOliam,  Sn.  of  Do.  married  by  Jones,  May  8,  1744 

Eliz:  Trueheart,  widow. 
Reynolds,  Richard,  Bach.  Sn.  of  James  &  Eknor,  Ixhh  27  Sept 

1730.    Bapt.  Dec  25,  1730  by  Da  Married  July  8,  1752 

Sarah  Thomas,  Spin. 
Reynolds,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  26, 1731,  bapt.  May  17, 

1732  by  Do.  Married  by  Peasely,  Sept.  2, 1752  John  Ellis,  Bach, 
Reynolds,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept  7,  1734,  bapt.  June  1, 

1735  by  Do.    Dead. 

Reynolds,  Capers,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  April  21,  1736,  bapt.  June  8, 

1736  by  Do.  Buried  Sept.  26, 1737. 

Reynolds,  Elenor,  Spin.  Da.  of  James  &  Sarah,  bom  Dec.  17, 1738. 

Bapt.  Dec.  31, 1738.  by  Do.  Married  by  Jno.  Belcher  (a  strange 

minister  assumed  to  marry  them  by  a  license  directed  to 

Mr.  Peasely)  Jan.  29, 1756  to  Benjamin  Chaplin  Wid'r. 
Reynolds,  Sarah,  widow  to  James,  married  by  Jones  Apl.  30, 1741 

William  Chaplin,  Bach. 
Rich,  William,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  Nov.  19,  1735,  Martha 

Meredith,  Spin. 
Rich,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Martha,  bom  Nov.  30,  1737,  bapt 

Jan.  22, 1737  by  Do.  — Married  John  Irwin,  Sn.  of  — . 
Rich,  Martha,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  14, 1739,  Bapt.  Nov.  25, 1739 

by  Do.  Married  Josp:  Parmenter,  Sn,  of  Joseph. 
Rich,  Catherin,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  4, 1741.    Bapt.  Jan.  31, 1741 

by  Do. 
Rich,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  17,  1743,  bapt.  Aug.  13, 1744 

by  Do. 
Reynolds,  Benjamin,  Sn.  of  William  &  Jane,  bom  Jan.  4,  1750j 

bapt.  July  7, 1750  by  Peasely. 


ST.  Helena's  pause  segistek  173 

Roan,  Elizabeth,  Widow  from  Georgia,  married  by  Jones  Oct.  10, 

1739  Ralph  Worth,  Bach. 
Rickets,  Catherin,  Spin.  Da.  of  Richard  &  Mary,  bom  Aug.  7, 1726 

bap t.  Sept.  4, 1 726  by  Jones.    William  Hazzard,  Margt :  Watt, 

Judith  Beamor,  Sureties.    Married  by  Jones  March  17,  1739, 

John  Gwin,  Wid'r. 
Rickets,  Mary,  Wife  to  Richard,  buried  by  Do.  5  June,  1736. 
Rickets,  Richard,  wid'r,  [of]  E[ngland],  married  by  Do.  Sept.  26, 

1737.    Elizabeth  Bland,  widow. 
Richards,  Jane,  Da.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  March  14,  1737, 

bapt.  May  3, 1741  by  Do. 
Richards,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  12,  1739,  bapt.  May  3, 

1741  by  Do. 
Roberts,  David,  Wid'r,  married  by  Do.  June  1,  1737,  Magdalene 

Vemoid,  Widow. 
Roberts,  Susanna,  Wife  to  David,  buried  by  Do.  1  Jan:  1736. 
Roberts,  Esther,  Da.  of  David  &  Magdalene,  bom  June  9,  1738. 

Bapt.  June  11, 1738  by  Do.  Buried  6  July.  1738. 
Roberts,  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  June  16,  1739,  bapt.  July  6, 

1739  by  Do. 

Roberts,  Susanna,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  20,  1740,  bapt.  Nov.  21, 

1740  by  Do. 

Roberts,  Magdalene,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  5,  1741,  bapt.  Dec.  7, 

1741  by  Do.  Buried  Oct.  23, 1742. 

Robb,  Elizabeth,  bom  1715,  buried  by  Do.  July  15, 1729. 

Robb,  John,  buried- by  Do.  21  Feb'y.  1739. 

Roeck,  Mary  Magdl:  Da.  of  Jno.  Jacob  &  Magdal'e,  bom  March 

20, 1741.  Bapt.  June  20, 1742  by  Jones. 
Roper,  John,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Jane.    Bom  May  29,  1739,  bapt. 

July  6, 1739  by  Do. 
Ryely,  Mary,  Da.  of  Jomes  and  Deborah,  bom  Dec.  26,  1738, 

bapt.  Jan.  30, 1738  by  Do. 
Rose,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Aquilla  &  Judith,  bom  Sept.  28,  1725, 

bapt  Feb'y:  13,  1725  by  Standish.  Father  surety. 
Rose,  Martha,  Da.  of  Do.  bapt.  March  18, 1727  by  Jones. 
Rose,  Hezekiah,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  1, 1730.    Bapt.  Dec.  21, 1730 

by  Do.    Married  by  Peasely  March   2,   1752,   Elizabeth 

Bromate,  Spin. 
Rose,  Aquilla,  Da.  [Sic.]  of  Aquilla  &  Jane,  bom  June  6, 1733,  bapt. 

Sept.  2, 1733  by  Jones. 


174  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Rose,  Sarah,  Spin,  married  Dec.  13, 1734,  Richard  Petty,  Bach. 
Reeve,  Anne,  wid  to  Ambrose,  nuuried  by  Peasely  March  6,  1 752 

Coll:  Thomas  Wigg,  wid'r. 
Reynolds,  William,  wid'r:  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Mary,  married  Aug. 

11, 1748,  Jane  Reynolds,  Spin. 
Russell,  Elizabeth  Spin,  married  Coll:  Will'm.  Hazzard,  wid'r. 
Reynolds,  Jane,  Da.  of  Benjamin  &  Mary,  married  by  Boskey  of 

Pon  Pon  Aug.  11, 1748,  William  Reynolds,  wid'r. 
Richards,  Robert,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  Sept.  17, 1741. 
Richards,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  16, 1744. 
Richards,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  1, 1747. 
Reynolds,  Elizabeth,  Wife  to  William,  died  1747. 
Reynolds,  Elizabeth,  Da.  to  William  &  Jane,  bom  Aug.  10,  1749 

bapt  Sept.  10,  1749. 
Reynolds,  Amey,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  April  27, 1752,  bapt.  Sept  2, 1752 

by  Peasely.    Richard  Capers,  &  Elizabeth  Ellis,  Sureties. 
Rearden,  Susanna,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Susanna,  bom  Oct.  4^  1752, 

Bapt.  Nov.  9, 1752,  by  Do.  Buried  Nov.  24, 1752. 
Robinson,  Margaret,  Da.  of  John  &  Margt:  bom  Dec.  25,  1752, 

bapt.  Oct.  29, 1753,  by  Do.  Buried  July  27, 1754. 
Rankin,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  Nov.  24,  1753,  bapt. 

March  19,  1754  by  Do.    Jno.  Delagaye  &  Wife  &  Father, 

sureties. 
Rearden,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Susanna,  bom  Jan.  31,  1751. 

Bapt.  Apl.  17, 1754  by  Do.  Buried  in  Ch:  Yard  30  Oct  1756. 

Dropsy.  . 

Robins,  Joseph,  wid'r.  Corporal  in  his  Majesty's  Service  [fromj 

E[ngland],  married  by  Peasely  May  19,  1754,  Mary  Rats- 
ford,  wid. 
Ratsford,  Mary,  wid.  [of]  E[ngland],  married  by  Do.  May  19, 1754 

Joseph  Robins,  wid'r. 
Reynolds,  James,  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Sarah,  St.  Helena,  bom  Sept.  24. 

1753.    Bapt.  May  30, 1754  by  Do. 
Reynolds,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Jane,  bom  May  11,  1754, 

bapt.  Aug.  4, 1754  by  Do. 
Robinson,  Christiana,  Da.  of  John  &  Margaret,  died  9  July,  1754, 

age  13  yrs.  Dropsy. 
Russ,  Benj :  of  Cat  Island,  buried  15  July,  1,754. 
Russell,  George,  Sn.  of  Stephen  &  Judith,  of  Jams  Isld.    Married  by 

Do.  Sept.  20, 1754,  Sarah  Morris,  Wid. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  175 

Ross,  Ann  Agnes,  Da.  of  James  &  Elizabeth,  bapt.  Oct.  29,  1754 

by  Peasely. 
Reynolds,  William,  of  St.  Helena,  buried  at  St.  Helena  25  Nov. 

1754. 
Rich,  Martha,  wid.  to  William.    Married  by  Chiffley  Oct.  24, 1751 

John  Garvey,  wid'r. 
Rose,  Elizabeth,  Da.  Hezekiah  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Sept.  16,  1753. 
Russell,  Jane  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  George  &  Sarah.    Bom  Dec.  15, 

1755.    Bapt.   Jan.   26,    1756  by  Peasely.    Buried  in    the 

Ch:  Yard  5  Oct.  1757. 
Reynolds,  John,  Sn.  of — St.  Helena,  married  by  Peasely  Aug.  13, 

1755,  Elizabeth  Conyers,  Spin. 
Richardson,  John,  Leather  dresser,  &  Breeches  Maker,  married 

by  Do.  Feb'y :  17, 1756,  Pmdence  Fisher,  Spin. 
Russ,  Judith,  wid.  to  Benjamin,  married  by  Do.  Apl.  11,  1756, 

Richard  Dowdee. 
Russ,  Judith  Rachel,  Da.  of  Benj.  &  Judith,  bom  Dec.  1754 

bapt.  Feb'y  2, 1756,  by  John  Belcher. 
Russ,  Benjamin,  Junr.  sn.  of  Do.  buried  Sept.  15, 1753  Cat  Island. 
Russ,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  buried  22  Sept.  1753,  Cat  Island. 
Reynolds,  Jonathan,  Sn.  of  Rich'd  &  Sarah,  of  St.  Helena  bom 

Oct.  1, 1755,  bapt.  Feb'y:  15, 1756  by  Belcher. 
Robinson,  John,  Periaugua  Man,  fr.  Wt.  England.    Buried  at 

St.  Helena  30  Dec.  1755.    Consumption. 
Robins,  Mary,  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Mary,  bom  March  16,  1756, 

bapt.  May  4, 1756. 
Reynolds,  William,  Sn.  of  Will'm.  &  Jane  of  St.  Helena,  bom 

May  8,  1756.    Bapt.  June  27,  1756  by  Lewis  in  P.  Wm. 

Parish.    Buried  at  St.  Helena  14  Oct.  1757. 
Rankin,  Christophr  Poor,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  Hilt:  Head, 

bom  July  25,  1756. 
Russell,  Amelia,  Da.  of  George  &  Sarah  of  Port  Royal,  bom 

Jan.  24, 1757.    Bapt.  March  27, 1757  by  Lewis. 
Reynolds,  Amey,  Da.  of — Married  by  Lewis  March  28,  1757, 

Anthony  Albergotty,  Bach. 
Rose,  John,  Sn.  of  Hezekiah  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Nov.  23, 1756. 
Reynolds,  Sarah  Da.  of  John  &  Elizabeth  of  St.  Helena,  bom 

Aug.  4, 1756,  buried  at  St.  Helena  19  Nov.  1756. 
Reynolds,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  14,  1757.    Bi^t. 

May  28, 1758. 


176  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  ICAGAZINE 

Rearden,  Susanna,  Wife  to  Daniel  the  Tincker,  buried  in  the 

Ch.  Yard  28  Nov.  1757.  abt.  25. 
Reynolds,  Ricard,  Sn  of  Richard  &  Sarah,  bom  Feb'y.  11,  1758 

bapt.  July  2, 1758  by  A.  Baron. 
Reynolds,  Sarah,  Da.  of  William  &  Jane,  bom  ^1.  10, 1758,  bapt. 

July  6, 1758  by  A.  Baron. 
Russell,  Sarah,  Da.  of  George  &  Sarah,  bom  1759,  bapt.  Apl.  22, 

1759  by  Do.    Buried  Apl.  29, 1759,  age  7  weeks. 
Reynolds,  Richd,  Senr.  Father  to  William  Reynolds,  buried  at 

St.  Helena,  Apl.  16, 1758,  age  86  yrs. 
Reynolds,  Jane,  Da.  of  William  &  Jane,  bom  Nov.  14,  1759,  bapt 

Apl.  15, 1760  by  Cooper. 
Reynolds,  Mary,  Da.  of  John  &  Elizabeth  of  St.  Helena,  bom 

Nov.  16,  1759.    Bapt.  Apl.  15,  1760  by  Cooper,  Parents 

sureties. 
Reed,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary  of  St.  Helena,  bom  Sept.  18, 1762, 

bapt.  Oct.  11, 1762. 
Richards,  Fransis  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  Fransis  Richards  & 

Martha  born  Oct.  9, 1762,  bapt.  Oct.  21, 1762. 
Richards,  John,  Sn.  of  Thomas  Fransis  &  Martha,  bom  March  31, 

1764. 
Reynolds,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  March  7,  1764, 

bapt.  May  27, 1764  by  the  Rev.  Green. 
Reynolds,  Ann  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Jane,  bom  Apl.  2,  1764, 

bapt.  May  27, 1764  by  the  Rev.  Green. 
Reynolds,  Elizth.  Wife  to  John,  buried  by  Green  4  June,  1764. 
Robertson,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Elizth.  bom  Apl.  8,  1763, 

bapt.  Jime  29 — ^by  Do.  Mr.  Anmiarr,  Charles,  &  Mary  Bealer, 

&  Elizabeth  Robinson,  sureties. 
Read—,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  July  3, 1764,  buried  9  July,  1764. 
Richards,  Wilm.  Senr.  of  Lady's  Mand,  buried  20  Oct  1764, 

age  70  yrs. 
Rowley,  William,  buried  Nov.  8, 1765. 
Rutledge,  Hugh,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Margarett,  bom  March  11, 1767, 

Bapt.  July  11,  1768  by  the  Rev.  Cosgrave. 
Reynolds,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  James  &  Martha,  bom  March  4, 1770, 

Bapt  Apl.  5,  1770  by  the  Rev.  Pearce.    Married  by  Lewes 

13  Feb'y,  1787,  John  Townshend. 
Read,  James,  Bach.    Married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Ellington,    1771, 

Elizabeth  Bland,  Spin. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  kegistek  177 

Rhodes,  John  Bach,  from  Bridgenorth,  Shropshire,  Married  by 

Rev.  Mr.  Moreau  11  June  1774,  Mary  Talbird,  Spin. 
Rhodes,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary ,^  bom  Jan.  3, 1777,  bapt.  Jan.  17, 

1777,  by  Mr.  Moreau. 
Rhodes,  Nathl.  Henry,  Sn  of  Do.  bom  2  Feb'y,  1783.    Bapt. 

May  1, 1783,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  William  Estwich  (?)  Graham. 
Robertson,  Mary,  wid.  married  by  Lewes  28  April,  1787,  Israel 

Andrews,  wid'r. 
Roney — ^married  by  Do.  1790. 
Rhodes,  Henrietta,  of  John  &  Mary,  bom  24  June,  1790,  bapt 

4  Nov.  1790  by  Do. 
Rhodes,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  28  Jan.  1793,  bapt.  5  Jan.  1794 

John  Island. 
Rhodes,  Mary  Wilkinson,  Da.  of  Nathaniel  Henry  &  Mary,  bom 

8  Jan.  1808.    Bapt.  7  Oct.  1808  by  J.  B.  Campbell,  Parents 

Sureties. 
Rhodes,  John,  Sn.  of  Nathanial  Henry  &  Mary,  bom  11  April,  1809 

bapt.  7  Oct  1810,  by  J.  B.  Campbell,  Do.  siueties. 
Rhodes,  Edward  Leacraft,  Sn.  of  Nathaniel  Henry  &  Mary,  bom 

22  April,  1810,  bapt.  7  Oct  1810  by  J.  B.  CampbeU,  Do. 

sureties. 
Richardson,  Jean  Kerr,  Da.  of  Henry  &  Mary,  bom  29  May,  1811, 

bapt.  23  Oct.  1811  by  J.  B.  Campbell.    Parents  &  Caroline 

Eraser,  sureties. 
Rhodes,  Nathaniel  Henry,  Sn.  of  Nathaniel  Henry  &  Mary,  born 

20  Nov.  1811,  bapt.  12  July,  1812,  by  Campbell,  Parents 

sureties. 
Robertson,  Mary,  of  William  &  Susan,  bom  9  Dec.  1812,  bs^t. 

28  Dec.  1812  by  Do.  Susan  &  Rebecca  Robertson,  sureties. 

Sanders,  Will'm.    A  Soldier,  biuied  by  Jones  1  June,  1737. 
Sarsfield,  Will'm.  Fr.  Georgia,  I[reland],  married  by  Do.  Jan.  27 

1740,  Jane  Taylor,  Spin. 
Savage,  Daniel,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  Sept.  14, 1736,  Mary  Wells, 

Sphi. 
Savage,  John  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  Oct:  27,  1737,  bapt. 

July  11, 1738,  by  Do. 
Savage,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Oct:  6,  1739,  bapt  Nov.  9,  1739 

by  Do. 


178  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Savage,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Dec.  XI,  1741,  bapt.  July  3,  1742 

by  Do. 
Saxberry,  Rachael,  Da.  of  John  &  Rachel,  bom  July  3,  1732, 
bapt.  Apl.  22,  1733  by  Do.  Jas.  &  Ann  Watt  &  Ellz.  Serjeant, 
sureties.    Buried  1 7  of  March,  1 736. 
Saxberry,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  1735,  bapt.  Dec.  10,  1735,  by- 
Do.  Parents  sureties.    Buried  26  March,  1737. 
Saxberry,  Richard,  Junr.,  Buried  by  Do.  7  June,  1736. 
Saxberry,  Mary,  buried  by  Do.  23  March,  1736. 
Scott,  John,  Sn.  of  Edward  &  Mary,  bapt.  Feb.  16,  1727,  by  Do. 

Rev.  Lewis  Jones,  Thomas  Farington  &  Mary  Watt,  Sureties, 

Buried  15  Feb'y;  1729. 
Scott,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Do.  Bapt.  July  21, 1729  by,Do. 
Scott,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  Bom  June  1,  1731,  bapt.  Nov.  7,  1731 

by  Do. 
Scott,  William,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Elenor,  bom  Jan  27,  1731,  bapt. 

June  19, 1733,  by  Do.  Rowld.  &  Eliza.  Serjeant,  sureties. 
Scott,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  July  17, 1724,  bapt.  June  1,  1735 

by  Do. 
Scott,  John,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Apl.  23,  1736.    Bapt.  June  27,  1736 

by  Do.  Married  — ^Henderson,  wid. 
Scott,  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Feb'y;  H,  1737,  Bapt.  March  S, 

1737  by  Do. 
Scott,  Catherine,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct.  10,  1740,  bapt.  Jan.  18, 

1740  by  Do. 
Scott,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  Bapt  Feb.  17,  1747  by  St. 

John.    Edward  &  Sarah  Morris,  &  Ann  Delabeard,  sureties. 
Scott,  Mary,  Wife  to  John,  buried  2  Nov.  1747. 
Scott,  James,  wid'r,  married  by  Jones  IS  June,  1738,  Eliz:  Drake 

Spin. 
Scott,  Richard  Hawkins,  Da.  sic  of  Josp;  &  Elenor,  bapt.  May 

8,  1742  by  Do. 
Sealy,  Hannah,  wid.  married  by  Do.  14  May,  1741,  Samuel  Lacy, 

wid'r. 
Season,  Thomas,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  24  Aug.  1734,  Elizabeth 

Moor,  Spin. 
Season,  Thomas,  Nat.  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha  Nichols,  bapt. 

Jan.  21,  1733  by  Do.  Married  by  Baron  21  Jan.  1759  Margt. 

Wineman. 


ST.  Helena's  pabish  register  179 

Season,  Elizabeth,  wid.  to  Thomas,  married  by  Do.  March  9, 1741 

David  More,  Bach. 
Searles,  James,  Mariner  of  E[ngland],  buried  25  Jan.  1747. 
Serjeant,  Elizabeth,  Spin.  Da.  of  Rowland  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Jan. 

15,  1725.    Bapt.  Feb:  13,  1725  by  Standish,  Rev.  David 

Standish  &  Margaret  Watt,  sureties.    Married  by  Jones 

Aug.  30, 1740  Hillersdon  Wigg,  Bach. 
Serjeant,  Rowland,  of  E[ngland],  buried  25  March  1738. 
Serjeant,  Elizabeth,  wid.  to  Rowland,  married  by  Jones  Dec.  11, 

1739  Thomas  Reeves,  Bach. 
Simms,  Eliz:  Da.  of  Tobias  &  Ann,  bom  Oct.  8,  1739,  bapt. 

Oct:  30, 1739  by  Do. 
Simpson,  Thomas,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  Sept:  13,  1737,  Eliz. 

Jenkins,  wid. 
Sisom,  Elizabeth,  Spin.  Da.  of  Gregory  &  Elizabeth,  born  Apl:  12, 

1727,  bapt.  May  7,  1727  by  Do.  Barnabas  Gilbert,  Susan, 

Gibbes,  &  Margt.  Evans  sureties,  married  by  ChiflEelly  Nov. 

20, 1760,  Daniel  Williams,  Bach. 
Sisom,  Elizabeth,  wife  to  Gregory,  buried  by  Jones,  28  Apl:  1727, 

Child-bed. 
Small,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Esther,  bapt.  May  30, 1730  by  Do. 
Small,  Samuel,  Sn  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  24,  1733,  bapt.  Oct.  24,  1734 

by  Do. 
Shorty,  William,  A  Soldier,  buried  by  Jones  28  Dec.  1728. 
Shorty,  Anne,  Da.  of  Willm.  &  Mary,  bom  Apl.  30,  1727,  bapt. 

June  14, 1727  by  Do.  Hump.  Taylor,  Thos.  Orrick  &  EUzabeth 

Serjeant,  sureties.    Buried  Jan.  1728. 
Shorty,  Mary,  married  by  Do.  6  Feb'y;  1728,  Bryan  Goldrick. 
Sharp,  James,  of — &Anne,bom  1722,  buried  by  Do  25  March,  1731. 
Slack,  John,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  Nov.  15, 1741,  Eliz:  Parmenter 

Wid. 
Smallwood,  Dorothy,  Spin.  Da.  of  James  &  Dorothy  of  E[ngland], 

married  by  Do.  July  15, 1741,  John  Wilson,  Bach. 
Smithy  John,  Bach,  of  Frederica,  Mercht.  of  S[cotland]  married 

June  11, 1749,  Eliz.  Williamson,  Spin. 
Smith,  Mary,  Da.  of  John  &  Eliz.  of  Beaufort,  bom  Nov.  24, 1751. 
Smith,  Thomas,  Bach,  married  by  Jones  March  31,  1736,  Jennet 

Field,  Spin. 
Smith,  Eliz:  married  by  Do.  July  27  1727,  Thomas  Orrick. 


180  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Smith,  Henry,  A  Soldier,  buried  by  Do.  18  Oct;  1728. 

Smith,  James,  buried  by  Do.  4  Feb'y- 1734. 

Sommers,  Joseph,  fr.  Georgia,  of  £[ngland],  married  by  Do.  May 

18,  1739  Lavinia  Newel,  wid. 
Do.  wid'r.  married  by  Do.  March  21, 1740,  Mary  Wilson,  Spin. 
Sonmiers,  Lavinia,  Wife  to  Joseph,  buried  by  Do.  15  Nov.  1739. 
Sommers,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Mary,  bom  Jan:  4,  1740, 

bapt.  March  15, 1740  by  Do. 
Sommers,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Do.,  bom  Apl.  5, 1742,  bapt.  July  9, 1742 

by  Do. 
Sommers,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  2, 1743,  bapt.  March  27, 1744 

By  Do. 
Stanyame,  Thomas,  married  by  Do.  March  29,  1726,  Anne  Bam- 
well,  Spin.    Buried  April  6, 1731. 
Stanyame,  Ann,  wid.  to  Thomas,  married  by  Do.  Dec.  16,  17J3 

Ambrose,  Reeve,  Bach.    Married  next  Thomas  Wigg,  and 

next  John  Gibbes. 
Stanborough,  Hobart,  Buried  by  Do.  March  26, 1739. 
Starling,  William,  Sn.  of  Nathaniel  &  Anne,  bapt.  Feb'y;  20, 1730 

by  Do. 
Stanton,    Eliz:  Spin,  married   by   Do.  May    26,   1742   James 

FitzGerald. 
Stevens,  Richard,  Lieut,  of  a  Man  of  War  of  E[ngland],  married 

Margt:  Whitjnarsh,  wid.  Buried  9  Feb'y;  1747. 
Stevens,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Margt:  bom  June  24,  1736 

bapt.  July  24,  1737,  by  Jones.    Married  by  Rosely  Aug.  27, 

1755,  Mary  Wigg,  Spin. 
Stevens,  Mary  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom.  Sept.  4, 1739,  bapt.  Oct  26, 

1739  by  Jones.    Married  by  Peasely,  May  2,  1754  John 

Gibbes,  Bach. 
Stevens,  Margt:  W.  to  Richard,  buried  18  Aug.  1750. 
Stevens,  Susanna,  Da.  of  Samuel  &  Sarah,  bom  Jan.  7, 1734,  bq)t 

June  1,  1735  by  Jones.    Married  by  Peasdy  March  1,  1753 

William  Bashford,  Bach. 
Stevens,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  March  20, 1738,  bapt.  June  18, 

1739  by  Jones. 
Stevens,  Catherine,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  11,  1741,  bapt.  Nov.  4, 

1741  by  Do. 
Stevens,  Jno.  Reynolds,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  May  19, 1744,  biq>t.  July  9, 

1744  by  Do. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PABISH  REGISTER  181 

Stevens,  James,  married  by  Do.  Feb.  4, 1741,  Judith  Cowen,  Spin. 
Stevens,  James,  Sn.  of  James  &  Judith,  bom  April  6,  1743,  bapt. 

May  9, 1743  by  Do. 
Stobo,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Eliz.  bapt.  Sept.  9, 1750  by  ChiflEelly. 
Story,  Mary,  Spin,  married  by  Jones,  Jan.  9,  1741,  Joseph  Br3raa 

Bach. 
Stone,  Thomas,  Planter  of  E[ngland],  nuuried  Anne  Ferguson, 

buried  21  May,  1738. 
Stone,  John,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Anne,  born  Dec.  20, 1720. 
Stone,  David,  [Bach,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  17,  1723,  married  by 

Garden,  Aug.  31, 1751,  Margt.  Bowman,  Spin. 
Stone,  Sarah,  Spin,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  March  2, 1726,  bapt.  March  30, 

1726  by  Jones,  Richard  Rickets,   Rowland  Serjeant  and 

Eliza;  Serjeant,  sureties.    Married  by  Peasely  Jan.  27,  1752 

Willm;  Williamson,  Bach.  Buried  28  Jan:  1792,  age  65  yrs. 

10  mos.  29  days. 
Stone,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  1729,  bapt.  Dec.  12,  1729 

by  Jones.    Married  by  Peasely,  Aug.  2, 1752  Martha  McLane, 

Spin. 
Stone,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  19, 1731,  bapt.  Jan.  1, 1731  by 

Jones.    Married  by  Peasely  Sept.  18,  1751,  John  (Mvens, 

Bach. 
Stone,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  Apl:  17,  1734.  Bapt.  June  21, 1734 

by  Jones. 
Stone,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Dec.  15,  1736,  bapt.  Dec.  15,  1736 

by  Do. 
Stone,  Anne,  wid.  to  Thomas,  married  John  Conyers. 
Stent,  Joseph,  buried  6  June  1731,  age  35  yrs. 
Simmonds,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Thomas  & — ,  bapt.  Sept.  26, 1714  by  Guy. 
Scott,  Catherine,  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Sarah,  bora  Dec.  23,  1748 

bapt.  July  7, 1751  by  Peasely. 
Shepherd,  Abbaheart,  Sn.  of  George  &  Magdalene  of  Prince 

William's  Parish,  bora  Sept.  8,  1751,  bapt.  Sept.  29,  1751 

by  Do. 
Scott,  Elenor,  Spin.  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Elenor,  married  by  Orr, 

Dissenter,  Dec.  10, 1744,  Thomas  Conyers,  Bach. 
Stanyam,  Mary,  Married  by  Quinsey,  May  27, 1744,  Thomas  Itcn. 
Stevens,  Samuel,  Bach,  of  St.  Helena's  Island,  married  Sarah 

Reynolds,  Spin.  Buried  Jan.  11, 1756  at  St.  Helena. 


182  so.  CA.  mSTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Smallwood,  Anne,  Spin,  Da.  of  James  &  Dorathy  of  England, 

married  by  Melichamp  at  CharlesTown  Feb'y;  4, 1734  Richard 

Wigg,  Bach. 
Stevens,  Alice,  Da.  of  Samuel  &  Sarah,  bom  1733. 
Stevens,  George,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  16, 1735. 
Stevens,  Elenor,  Spin.  Da.  of  Michael  &  Eliz:  of  Edistow,  married 

James  Reynolds,  Bach. 
Saxby,  Sarah,  Spin,  of  pon  pon,  married  James  Reynolds,  wid'r. 
Savage,  Mary,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  Oct.  26, 1744. 
Savage,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  30, 1747,  k^t.  May  IS,  1752 

by  Peasely.    Parents  &  Catherine  Bull,  sureties.     Buried 

21  Oct.  1753. 
Savage,  Susanna,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  May  30, 1750  bapt.  May  15, 1752 

by  Do.  Do.  sureties. 
Stirling,  James,  wid'r.  from  S[cotland],  bom  Aug.  13,  1702  in 

Scotland,  nuuried  by  St.  John  Nov.  6,  1747  Jane  Wood,  wid. 

Buried  25  Sept.  1757. 
Saussure,  Jno:  Danl:  Hector;  Sn.  of  Henry  &  Magdalene  of 

Lausanne,  Switzerland,  bom  Apl.  10, 1736,  married  March  27, 

1760,  Mary  McPherson,  Da.  of  Alexander. 
Saussure,  Herriot,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  6,  1739  in  Purrysburg. 

Married  by  Lewis  Sept.  8, 1756, — ^Batey,  buried  1757. 
Saussure,  Jno.  Henry  Cesar,  Sn  of  Do.    Bom  June  30, 1741  at  Do. 

bapt.  by  ChiflFelley. 
Saussure,  Magdalene  Amelia,  bom  Oct.  27, 1742  in  Do. 
Saussure,  Francis  Lewis,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  July  18, 1745  in  Do. 
Saussure,  Mary  Eliz:  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  19, 1747. 
Saussure,  Benj:  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  2, 1750,  bapt.  Chiffelley. 
Stuart,  Francis,  Bach.  Merchant  of  S[cotland]  married  by  Peasdy 

Dec.  28, 1752,  Anne  Reeve,  Spin. 
Sprowle,  Charlotte,  Da.  of  Alexand:  &  Mary,  bom  Apl.  4,  1753, 

bapt.  June  22, 1753  by  Do. 
Sommers,  James,  Sn.  of  James  &  Mary  from  CharlesTown,  buried 

Aug.  20, 1753,  bur'd.  Meet'g:  H.  Flux  &  Fever. 
Story,  EUicott,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Rowld:  &  Eliz:  of  Jams  Island 

Married  by  Peasely,  Sept.  27,  1753,  Sarah  Williamson,  wid. 

Buried  25  March  1755,  age  26  yrs.    Pleurisy. 
Sommers,  David.  Sn.  of  James  &  Mary,  buried  26  Sept.  1753,  Flux 

&  Fever. 


1 


ST.  HELENA'S  PASISH  REGISTER  183 

Sommers,  Mary,  Wife  to  James,  buried  6  Oct.  1753,  Flux  &  Fever. 
Sheene,  Nicholas,  a  Carpenter  &  Stranger,  of  I[reland],  buried  by 

Peasely  11  Oct.  1753,  aged  about  40.    Sudden. 
Story,  John,  Bach,  Sn.  of  Rowld.:  &  Eliz:  of  James  Island  married 

by  Do.  Nov.  23, 1753,  Elizabeth  Mikell,  Spin. 
Seymour,  Mary,  of  CharlesTown,  married  by  Alex.  Garden  at 

CharlesTown,  Feb.  14, 1726,  Coll:  Thomas  Wigg. 
Stone,  Anne,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  May  26,  1753,  bapt. 

Dec.  6, 1753  by  Peasely. 
Sommers,  James,  Shoemaker,  of  S[cotland],  buried  by  Do.  11  Dec. 

1753,  aged  40:  Fever. 
Savage,  Mary,  Wife  to  Daniel,  buried  28  Feb'y;  1754. 
Sheargold,  Anne,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Sarah,  Pilot,  born  Nov.  1,  1753 

Bapt.  1754  by  Do. 
Savage,  Daniel,  Wid'r,  of  Hilton  Head,  married  by  Do.  July  2, 1754, 

Jane  McKee,  Spin. 
Stuart,  Anne,  Da.  of  Francis  &  Anne,  born  June  10,  1754.    Bapt. 

Aug.  25, 1754  by  Do.  Rev.  Willm:  Peasely,  Mrs.  Grayson,  and 

Miss    Sarah    Mullryne,    sureties.    Died    in    CharlesTown, 

buried  there  19  Aug.  1755,  Teething. 
Scott,  George,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Sarah,  Bom  Oct.  15,  1751,  Bapt. 

Sept.  1, 1754  by  Do. 
Sprowle,  James,  Carpenter,  of  I[reland],  buried  in  Ch:  Yard  15 

Jan.  1755. 
Scott,  Joseph,  Sn,  of  Joseph  &  Sarah,  bom  Dec.  15,  1754,  bapt. 

Aug.  9, 1755  by  Do. 
Story,  WilUam,  Sn.  of  Jno.  &  Elizabeth,  bora  Jan.  10,  1755. 

Bapt.  March  13,  1755.    William  &  Elizabeth  Harvey,  & 

Father  sureties. 
Shepherd,  Mary,  Da.  of  George  &  Magadalen,  bom  Dec.  19,  1753 

bapt.  Nov.  7, 1754  by  Peasely. 
Stone,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  David  &  Margt.  born  Jan.  16, 1754. 
Sealy,  Tabitha,  Spin.  Da.  of  Benjamin  &  Eliz.  born  Dec.  1,  1729 

at  N.  Edisto.  Married  by  Hutson,  D[issenter],  July  14,  1746 

James  Watson.    Buried  July  8, 1755,  at  Plantation. 
Shedtland,  Nicholas,  Bach,  a  Dutch  Cooper,  married  by  Peasely 

June  8, 1755,  Anne  Pockington,  Wid. 
Scantlin,  Rebecca,  Da.  of  David.  &  Margt:  bora  Feb.  15, 1755. 
SmaU,  William,  of  Ewhaws,  Buried  Dec.  24, 1754  at  Euhaws. 


184  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Smith,  Anne,  Da.  of  John  &  Eliza:  P.  Wm.  P.  bom  Oct.  1, 1753. 

Smith,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  Born  Jan.  19, 1755. 

Sealy,  John,  Bach.  Sn.  of  John  &  Hannah,  bom  Jan.  28, 1733-4. 

Married  by  Mr.  Pelot  Sept.  24, 1754  Susanna  Sealy,  Spin. 
Sealy,  Susanna,  Spin,  Da.  of  John  &  Eliz:  married  by  Do.  Do.  for 

date  John  Sealy,  Bach. 
Sealy,  Rebecca,  Da.  of  John  &  Susanna,  bom  Jan.  20, 1766,  buried 

31  Oct.  1757  Euhaws. 
Sealy,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Eliz:  bom  Sept.  30,  1727,  married 

by  G.  Whitfield  June  17, 1754,  Joanna  Staples,  Spin. 
Staples,  Joanna,  Da.  of  — ,  married  by  Do.  June  17,  USA,  Joseph 

Sealy,  Bach. 
Sealy,  Mary,  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Joanna,  bom  Nov.  14, 1755. 
Swain,  John,  pmnp  maker,  married  by  Peasely  April  20,  1756 

Elizabeth  Conyers,  Wid. 
Sterling,  Jane,  W.  to  James,  buried  27  Sept.  1755,  aged  86yis. 

Ch.  Yd. 
Sommers,  William,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary,  buried  7  Dec.  1755, 

aged4yrs. 
Stobo,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Eliza:  bom  Aug.  1,  1753,  bapt. 

May  29, 1756  by  Do. 
Stone,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  Dec.  16,  1754, 

bapt.  by  Do. 
Savage,  Sophia,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Jane,  bom  Jan.  18,  1756,  bapt. 

May  6,  1756  by  Peasely.    Buried  at  St.  Helena  3  Oct.  1756. 

Flux. 
Stuart  — ,  Da.  of  Fran:  &  Anne,  bom  Oct.  10, 1756,  unbaptised 

Buried  m  the  Ch.Yd:  10  Oct.  1756,  aged  1  hr. 
Stevens,  Anne,  Da.  of  Richd.  &  Mary  of  Beaufort,  bom  Dec.  30, 

1756,  baptised  Jan.  3,  1757  by  Lewis  of  P.  William's  Parish. 
Buried  in  Ch:Yd:  25  Oct.  1757.    Convulsions. 

Stone,  WiUm.  Hatcher,  Sn.  of  David  &  Margt:  bom  July  21, 1736. 
Smith,  Robert,  of  the  Scout  Boat  of  E[ngland],  Drowned  and  Lost 

7  Aug.  1757,  aged  24  yrs. 
Scott,  William,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Sarah  of  St.  Helena,  bom  Jan.  28 

1757,  bapt.  by  Lewis. 

Stuart,  — .    Da.  of  Francis  &  Anne,  bom  May  29, 1757,  unbaptz: 

Buried  29  May  1757,  aged  2  hrs. 
Story,  Ellicott,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Oct.  6, 1757. 


ST.  h£lena's  parish  begisteh  185 

Stone,  James,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  Oct.  8, 1757. 
Sealy,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  John  &  Susanna,  bom  June  3, 1757. 
Smith  John,  Carpenter,  of  E[ngland].    Buried  18  Nov.   1757, 

aged  about  50. 
Story,  EUicott,  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bapt.  Jan.  22,  1758  by 

A.  Baron. 
Stone,  John,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  Jan.  13,  1760,  bapt. 

Jan.  27, 1758  [sic]  by  Do. 
Stobo,  Jacob,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Elizabeth,  born  Oct.  6,  1757  bapt. 

June  4,  1758  by  Do.    Jacob  Hurt,  Thomas   Wire  &   the 

Mother,  sureties. 
Stuart,  Christiana,  Da.  of  Francis  &  Anne,  bom  June  17,  1758 

bapt.  July  11, 1758  by  Do.    Buried  7  May,  1759,  aged  11  mos. 

3  days. 
Savage,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Jane,  Bapt.  July  6^.  1758  by  Do. 
Stevens,  Margaret,  Da.  of  Richard  &  Mary,  bapt.  Oct.  19,  1758 

by  Do. 
Stringer,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  —  Bapt.  Apl:  21, 1759  by  Do. 
Scott,  James,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Sarah,  bapt.  Jime  10, 1759  by  Do. 
Stuart,  John  Josph.    Sn.  of  Capt:  John  &  Sarah.    Bom  Charles- 
Town  Nov.  23, 1757,  bapt.  June  20, 1759  by  Do. 
Shergold,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Sarah,  bapt.  by  Do. 
Shepherd,  — ,  Sn.  of  George  &  — ,  bapt.  Dec.  26, 1759  by  Cooper. 
Story,  John,  Sn.  of  John  Eliza:  bapt.  Dec.  26, 1759  by  Do. 
Steele,  James,  married  Anne  Bowry,  Spin.  Buried  30,  Oct.  1759. 
Stobo,  Elizabeth,  Da.  ofjoseph  &  Eliza:  bom  Jan.  2, 1760,  bapt. 

Apl:  15, 1760  by  Cooper,  Parents  sureties. 
Stuart,  James,  Sn.  of  Francis,  &  Ann,  bom  March  8,  1760,  bapt. 

March  20, 1760  by  Sergeant.    Married  by  Lewes  18  May  1785 

Ann  Middleton. 
Stringer,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Joseph.  &  Eliza:  buried  22  Dec.  1762. 
Stuart,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Fran:  &  Ann,  bom  May  11,  1762,  Buried 

7  Aug.  1762. 
Simpson,^  James  Thom,  Sn.  of  James  &  Mary,  bapt.  Feb.  14, 1763. 
Savage,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  March  1,  1763,  bapt. 

July  12, 1763  by  J.  Green. 
Searson,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Margaret,  bom  Dec.  30,  1763 

Bapt.  Aug:  1, 1764  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green. 
Stuart,  Daniel,  Married  by  Do.  Apl:  26, 1764,  Anne  Forguson. 


186  so.  CA.  mSTOUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  BCAGAZINE 

Stuart,  —  Da.  of  Francis  &  Anne,  bom  June  17, 1764,  unbi^tz: 

Buried  17  June,  1764. 
Stone,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  Oct.  8,  1763,  bapt 

July  IS,  1764  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green,  buried  16  July,  1764. 
Stone,  Margerit,  Da.  of  David  &  Margaret,  bom  March  28,  1764, 

Bapt.  July  16, 1764  by  Do.  Parents  sureties. 
Searson,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Margaret,  bom  May  9,  1760, 

bapt.  Aug.  1, 1764  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green. 
Searson,  William,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Margaret,  bom  Aug.  17, 1761, 

Bapt.  Aug.  1, 1764  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green. 
Smith,  James,  from  London,  buried  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green,  23  Sq)t 

1764. 
Shepherd,  — 
Stewart,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Francis  &  Anne,  bom  Aug.  4,  1765. 

Private  baptz:  buried  Sept:  ye  12, 1765,  aged  12  das. 
Stewart,  Danid,  of  Beaufort,  Buried  Oct  ye  6,  1765,  age  not 

known. 
Stone,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Martha,  bom  Dec:  5,  1765,  bapt: 

by  the  Rev.  Feveryear. 
Stone,  Martha,  Wife  of  Thomas,  buried  Oct.  1766,  age  not  known. 
Scott,  Ellinor  Ireland,  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Sarah,  of  St.  H.  bom 

Jan.  23, 1768,  bapt.  June  5, 1768  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Cosgrave. 
Shaw,  William,  Merchant  of  Beaufort,  depart  this  life  29  July  1769. 

Buried. 
Scott,  George,  Sn.  of  Benjamin  &  Elenor,  bora  19  March,  1770 

bap.  May  9, 1770,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Pearce. 
Scott,  David,  Married  May  28,  1770  to  Mary  Ann  Fendin  of 

St.  Helena. 
Sears,  Jeremiah,  Married  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Pearce  Nov.  20,  1770 

Eli7abeth  Green,  Hilton  Head. 
Shecut,  John  Lewis,  Sn.  of  Abraham  &  Mary  Barbary,  horn 

Dec.  4, 1770,  bapt.  Dec.  15,  by  Do. 
Steel,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Catherine,  bom  May  8,  1770,  bapt. 

Dec.  5, 1770  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Pearce. 
DeSaussure,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Danl:  &  Mary,  bom  Apl:  6, 1761 

Bapt.  by  the  Rev.  Archd;  Simson,  Dissenter.  Buried  16  Nov. 

1763  aged  2  yrs.  7  mos. 
DeSaussure,  Henry  W.  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Mary#  born  16  Aug.  1763 

bapt.  By  the  Rev.  Archd.  Simson,  Chancellor  1808.    Married 

Apl:  1785,  Eliza  Ford  of  Morristown,  N.  J.    She  died  1821. 

He  died  26  March,  1839,  aged  76  yrs. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  187 

DeSaussure,  Jane,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  24  July  1765,  bapt.  by  Do. 

Buried  5  Nov.  1765,  aged  4  mos. 
De  Saussure,  Mary  Madgl:  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  5  March 

1767,  bapt.  by  Do.    Died  early  in  life. 
De  Saussure,  Alexander  McPberson,  Sn.  of  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom 

9  Nov.  1768,  bapt.  by  Do.  buried  15  Nov.  1758, 6  days  old. 
De  Saussure,  Sarah  Amelia,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  19  Aug. 

1770,  bapt.  by  Do.  Married  about  1795,  Alex:  L.  Edwards. 

of  Charleston. 
Sheargold,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Eliza:  bom  22  Sept.  1775, 

Bapt.  16  July  1776  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Moreau. 
Shecutt,  Abram.  Louis,  Sn.  of  Abram.  &  Mary,  bom  20  May,  1775. 
DeSaussure,  Eliza  Washington,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Mary,  bom  6  Oct. 

1777,  bapt.  14  Oct.  Do.  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Gawerly,  Dissenter 

Married    about    1800    Andrew    Burnet,    Planter    of    St. 

Bartholomew. 
Scantlin,  James,  Bach.    Married  by  Lewes  28  Apl:  1785  Margaret 

Cook,  Spin. 
Simpson,  Green,  Bach,  from  England,  married  by  Do.  9  June,  1785 

Elizabeth  Mary  Grive. 
Stoney,  Elizabeth  Mary,  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  Lady's  Island,  bom 

27  Sept.  1784.    Bapt.  9  June,  1785  by  Do. 
Sutter,  John  Tippin,  Buried  19  June,  1785,  aged  3  yrs.    Fits. 
Sten,  David,  Bach,  from  State  of  R.  I.  Married  by  Lewes,  23  Jime 

1785  Winnefred  Knight,  Widow. 
Simons,  James,  of  James  &  Sarah,  Beaufort,  bapt.  31  July,  1785 

by  Do. 
Sams,  Ana,  Spin,  of  Dataw  Island,  married  by  Do.  15  Sept.  1785 

John  Pahner. 
Sutler,  Susanna,  Widow,  married  by  Do.  14  March,  1786,  Archibald 

Campbell  Clark. 
Simons,  Sarah,  Buried  14  Jan:  1786.    Child-bed. 
Sutton,  Thomas,  Wid'r:  Married  by  Do.  17  Jan:  1786,  Mary  Neil, 

wid. 
Simons,  Charles  Dewar,  of  James  &  Sarah,  bom  6  June,  1786, 

bapt.  25  June,  1786  by  Do.  * 
Sayxe,  Sarah  Bell,  of  Jeremiah  &  Elizabeth  of  Hilton  Head,  born 

6  March,  1786,  bapt.  30  June,  1786  by  Do. 
Sherman,  Mary  Ann,  Wid.  married  26  July,  1786,  John  McTuroos. 


188  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  BCAGAZINE 

Scott,  Joseph,  Bach.  St.  Helena,  married  18  Dec.  1786,  Elizabeth 

Oswald,  Spin. 
Scott,  Martha,  wid..  Da.  of  Jonathan  Norton,  married  by  Lewis 

Jan.  1787  James  Pope,  Bach,  of  St.  Helena. 
Saltus,  Mary  Lawson,  of  Francis  &  Sarah,  bom  12  Feb'y,  1787, 

bapt.  9  Apl:  1787  by  Do. 
Stuart,  Ann,  Da.  of  James  &  Ann,  bom  20  Dec.  1786,  bapt 

30  Sept:  1787  by  Do.  Married  the  Rev.  Christian  Hanckel. 
Saltus,  Sonchey,  Da.  of  Francis  &  Sarah,  buried  7  Nov.  1788 

aged  3  yrs.  5  mos.    Worm  Fever. 
Smith,    Archibald,    Bach.    Married    by    Do.     11    June,    1789, 

Margaret  Joyner,  Spin. 
Smith,  John  Joyner,  of  Archibald  &  Margaret,  bora  20  May,  1790, 

bapt.  8  Sept.  1790  by  Do.  John  &  Ann  Joyner,  sureties. 

Married  May  27,  1813  by  Rev.  John  B.  Campbell,  Mary 

Gibbes  Bamwell. 
Saltus,  Susanna,  of  Francis  &  Sarah,  Buried  by  Do.  16  Sept.  1790. 
Stuart,  James,  Sn.  of  James  &  Ann,  bom  IS  apl:  1788,  married  by 

Campbell  14  Dec.  1809,  Mary  Martha  Campbell. 
Stuart,  Francis,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Ditto  &  Ditto,  bom  14  May  1791. 
Stuart,  Thomas  Middleton,  Sn.  of  Ditto,  bom  28  Dec.  1794. 
Stuart,  Lewis  Reeve,  Sn.  of  Ditto  &  Ditto,  bom  4  Apl:  1796. 
Stuart,  John,  Sn.  of  Ditto  &  Ditto,  bom  16  March,  1800. 
Stuart,  Henry  Middleton,  Sn.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  13  March,  1803. 
Smith,  Robert  Bamwell,  Sn.  of  James  &  Mary  Ann  Gough,  bom 

21  Dec.  1800,  bapt.  30  Apl:  1805  by  Hicks.    Parents  sureties. 
Smith,  Claudia,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  1  Aug.  1802,  bapt.  30  Apl: 

1805  by  Do. 
Smith,  Enuna,  Da.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  18  Nov.  1803,  b^t.  30  Apl: 

1805  by  Do. 
Smith,  Alfred,  Sn.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  1  Apl:  1805,  bapt.  30  Apl: 

1805  by  Do. 
Smith,  Edward,  Sn.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bapt.  16  Oct.  1808  by  Do. 

Taylor,  Jane,  Spin.    Married  by  Jones,  Jan:  27,  1740,  Will'm. 

Sarsfield,  Bach. 
Taylor,  William,  Sn.  of  John  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  Jan.  9,  1737, 

bapt.  March  26, 1738  by  Do. 
Taylor,  Mary,  buried  by  Do.  2  July,  1739. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  189 

Tennant,  William,  buried  by  Do.  23  July,  1732. 

Thomson,  Francis,  School  Master,  of  E[ngland],  married  by  Do. 

Constantia  Reynolds. 
Thomson,  Anne,  Da.  of  Francis  &  Constantia,  bom  Nov.  13, 1737, 

Bapt.  Dec.   11,   1737  by  Jones.    Married  Nov.   13,   1753 

Charles  Capers. 
Thomson,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  1739,  bapt.  Oct.  14, 1739  by  Do. 

Buried  4  Nov.  1745. 
Thomson,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  buried  by  Do.  15  Nov.  1745. 
Thomson,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.    Buried  15  Nov.  1745. 
Thomson,  Constantia,  Wife  of  Francis,  buried  24  Nov.    1741, 

age  35  yrs. 
Thomas,  Catherine,  Widow,  married  by  Do.    Apl:  6,  1735,  John 

Nichols  Bach. 
Thresher,  Elizabeth,  Wife  to  John,  Buried  by  Do.  19  March,  1741. 
Tolson,  George,  Sn.  of  Ensign  Willm:  &  Margt;  bom  Apl:  20, 1740 

bapt.  May  18,  1740  by  Do. 
Tolson,  Andrew,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  18, 1742,  bapt.  Aug.  28, 1742. 

by  Do. 
Toomer,  Ruth,  Da.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  born  June  20,  1738, 

bapt.  March  25,  1739  by  Do. 
Townshend,  Mary,  Wife  to  Edward  from  Georgia,  of  £[ngland], 

buried  by  Do.  27  Oct.  1742. 
Tozar,  Ephraim,  Married  by  Do.  Jan:  1, 1730,  Hannah  Walmsley. 
Tozar,  Hannah,  buried  by  Do.  16  July,  1736. 
Tucker,  Nathaniel,  Bach,  of  CharlesTown,  Joyner,  from  Bum'd. 

married  by  Hutson,  Dissenter,  Aug.  1,  1749,  Sarah  Hazzard, 

Spin. 
Tucker,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Nathaniel  &  Sarah,  bom  Oct.  16,  1750, 

bapt.  Jan:  13, 1750,  buried  30  May,  1753.    Hazz.  Plant. 
Tnmker,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bom  Aug.  22,  1751, 

bapt.    Dec.  5, 1751  by  Peasely. 
Toomer,  Caleb.  Sn.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  March  28,  1742, 

bapt.  May  13, 1742  by  Jones. 
Tobias,  Joseph,  Bach.    Married  by  Do.  Dec.  21,  1743  Margt. 

McLoud,  wid. 
Tobias,  Benjamin,  Bach,  married  by  Jones,  Jime  22,  1742,  Anne 

Floyd,  Wid. 
Tmeheart,  Elizabeth,  wid.  married  by  Do.  May  8,  1744,  William 
ynolds,  Bach. 


190  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Thomas,  Elizabeth,  Spin,  married  by  Quinsey,  Aug.  7,  1744, 

John  Fendin,  Bach. 
Thomas,  Sarah,  Spin,  married  by  Peasely  July  8,  1752  Richard 

Reynolds,  Bach. 
Tucker,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Nathaniel  &  Sarah,  bom  May  29,  1752 

bapt.  Feb'y;  11,  1753  by  Do.  Capt:  Pritton,  Thos.  Hazzard, 

&  Martha  Daly,  sureties. 
Talbot,  Mary,  Da.  of  Henry  &  Mary,  bom  Sept.  21,  1751,  bapt 

FebV;  5, 1753  by  Do.    Married  June  1 1, 1774  John  Rhodes  of 

Brideworth,  Shops. 
Talbot,  William,  Sn.  of  Do.  bora  July  23, 1753,  bapt.  OcL  13, 1753 

by  Do.  Buried  22  Sept:  1756,  Plant. 
Tucker,  Sarah,  W.  to  Nathaniel,  buried  by  Do.    20  Feb'y:  1754, 

Hazz.  Plant. 
Tucker,  Edward,  Bach,  Master  of  a  Schoaner,  married  by  Do. 

15  Sept:  1754,  Mary  Hazzard. 
Tmchet,  Susanna,  Da.  of  Anthony  &  Susanna,  bom  Aug.  26, 1754, 

bapt.  Aug.  28, 1754  by  Do.  &  Buried  30  of  Aug.  1754. 
Tmchet,  Susanna,  W.  to  Anthony,  buried  30  of  Aug.  1754,  aged  32^ 

Child-bed. 
Trunker,  WiUiam,  Buried  30  Sept.  1754. 
Tailfer,  Mary,  wid.  to  Pat  Tailfer,  of  CharlesTown,  buried  12  Oct 

1755,  aged  54,  Ch:Yd. 
Talbot,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Henry  &  Mary,  bora  Ju;  12,  1755,  bapt. 

Sept.  12,  1755  by  Peasely.    Married  29  June,  1780,  Christian 

Crawford,  Spin. 
Tucker,  Mary,  Da.  of  Edward  &  Mary  of  Beaufort,  bom  1756, 

bapt.  Dec.  5, 1756  by  Lewis,  of  P.  William's  Parish. 
Thorpe,  Israel,  a  scout  Boat  Man,  Drowned  10  Feb'y:  1757, 

buried  at  Fredrica. 
^Tattnell,  Josiah,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  of  Stono,  bora 

Feb'y:  8,  1740,  mar:  by  Mr.  Baron.    May  21,  1768,  Mary 

Mullryne. 
Tattnall,  Sarah,  Spin.  Da.  of  Do.  born  Dec.  6,  1742,  married  by 

Baron  of  Stono,  then  being  on  a  visit  to  this  Parish,  Jan.  19, 

1758,  Samuel  Peroneau. 
Toomer,  Henry,  of  the  Lookout,  married  Dec.  5,  Sophia  Clerk,  wid. 
Talbird,  Ann,  Da.  of  Henry  &  Mary,  born  March  2,  1758,  bapt. 

Aug.  2,  1758  by  A.  Baron. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  191 

Tweedy,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  William  &  Mary,  bapt.  June  13,  1758 

by  Do. 
Tweedy,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Ami,  born  Sept.  IS,  1757, 

bapt.  June  13, 1758  by  Do. 
Tucker,  Edward,  Sn.  of  Edward  &  Mary,  bapt.  Feb'y;  17,  1760  by 

Cooper. 
Toomer,  John,  Father  to  Caleb,  of  St.  Helena,  Planter,  buried 

14  Feb'y:  1760,  Gout. 
Tattnell,  Josiah,  Sn.  of  Josiah  &  Mary,  born  Dec.  4, 1762,  bapt.  by 

Green.    [Erased  in  original.] 
Toomer,   Caleb,   Bach.   St.   Helena.    Married   Feb'y;   5,   1763 

Sarah  Scott. 
Toomer,  Joshua,  Bach,  St.  Helena,  married  Feb'y;  5,  1763,  Cath- 
arine Scott. 
Thorpe,  Saml:  St.  Helena.  2  Da.  Mary  Ruth  &  Sarah  at  a  Birth 

of  Saml.  &  Ann,  Jan.  6, 1763,  bapt.  March  27, 1763. 
Tattnell,  John  MuUryne,  Sn.  of  Josiah  &  Mary,  bom  Dec.  4,  1763 

bapt.  Feb'y;  25, 1763  by  the  Rev.  Green. 
Tucker,  Ede,  Da.  of  Edward  &  Mary,  bom  July  4,  1763,  bapt.  by 

Rev.  Green. 
Toomer,  Joshua,  Sn.  of  Henry  &  Sophia,  bom  11  Jime,  1763, 

bapt.  Sept:  8, 1763  by  Do. 
Tweedy,  William,  Buried  by  Do.  28  Feb.  1764. 
Tennant,  James,  from  Augustaine,  biuied  by  Do.  Oct.  13, 1763. 
Tailcr,  Thomas  of  Lady  Island,  married  by  Rev.  Teal,  26  Apl: 

1764  to  Mary  Devant. 
Tafler,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Elisha  &  Elizabeth  of  Hilton  Head,  bom 

2  Sept:  1763,  bapt.  Oct.  30, 176-  by  the  Rev.  Green. 
Toomer,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Joshua  &  Catherine,  bom  Feb.  18,  1768 

bapt.  June  5, 1768  by  Rev.  Cosgrave. 
Taylor,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  Feb.  19,  1770, 

bapt.  July  30, 1770  by  Rev.  Mr.  Peace. 
Taylor,  John,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  Apl;  21,  1768,  bapt. 

unknown  by  Rev.  Streaker. 
Tumar,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Jos.  &  Catherine  Hawkins,  bom  July  16, 

1770,  bapt.  Jan.  1775,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Pierce. 
Thorp,  Samuel,  of  Lady's  Island,  buried  by  Lewes  on  Lady's 

Island,  Dec.  12, 1784,  aged  18  yrs.  7  mos.  Consumption.' 
Tippin,  Thomas  Scantlin,  of  Thomas  &  Margaret,  bom  21  Feb: 

1785,  bapt.  28  Apl:  1785  by  Lewis. 


192  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Toomer,  Sarah,  of  St.  Helena,  married  by  Do.  3  Nov.  1785,  John 

Fendin,  of  St.  Helena. 
Talbird,  Catherine,  of  Thomas  &  Christian,  buried  23  Sept  1787, 

age  lyT.6  mos.  Worms. 
De  Treville,  John  Laboularderie,  bom  at  Louisburg,  26  Jan; 

1742,  bapt.  Jan.  28,  1742,  married  27  Dec.   1778,  Sarah 

Wilkinson. 
DeTreville,  Robert  Laboularderie,  of  John  &  Sarah,  bom  26  Jan. 

1782,  bapt.  3  Sept:  1783  by  Gourlay,  Dissenter. 
DeTreville,  Harriett  Laboularderie,  of  Do,  bom  7  Oct.  1783  bapt 

6  Dec.  1787. 
Taylor,  John,  Sn.  of  John  Taylor,  buried  Aug.  28, 1762. 
Taylor,  William,  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  28  Feb.  1780,  bapt  5 

Apl:  1785  by  Lewes,  Private. 
Taylor,  Robert  Devant,  of  Do.,  Upper  Indian  land,  bom  20  Jan; 

1785,  bapt.  5  Apl:  1785  by  Do.  Private. 
Townshend,  John  of  Wadmalaw  Island,  married  13  Feb:  1787 

Elizabeth  Reynolds. 
Talbird,  Catherine,  of  Thomas  &  Christian,  bom  20  Sept.  1783, 

bapt.  20  Oct.  1783  by  Gowerly,  buried  23  Sept.  1787. 
Talbird,  James  Doharty,  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  12  May,  1781  bapt 

21  June,  1781  by  Do. 
Talbird,  Benjamin,  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  3  Aug.  1782,  bapt.  4  Aug. 

1782  by  Do.  Buried  13  Aug.  1782. 
Talbird,  Henry  David,  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  22  Aug.  1783,  b^t  22 

Sept.  1783  by  Do.    Buried  23  Aug.  1783. 
Talbird,  Ann,  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  28  Dec.  1787,  bapt.  Feb:  1788 

by  Do. 
Talbird,  Elizabeth,  of  Ditto  &  Ditto. 
Talbird,  Margt.  Hislop,  of  Ditto  &  Ditto. 
Talbird,  Thomas  Jay,  of  Ditto  &  Ditto. 
Talbird.  Christiana,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Ann. 
Vaughan,  Abigail,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Arabella,  bom  Apl:  24,  1740, 

bapt.  July  5, 1740  by  Jones. 
Vinyard,  Anne,  married  by  Do.  Jan.  11, 1729,  Charles  Elliot. 
Vemoid,  Magdalene,  wid.  married  by  Do.  June  1,  1737,  David 

Roberts,  wid'r. 
Vemoid,  Frances,  Spin,  married  by  Do.  Feb.  27,  1738,  James 

Norman. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  193 

Vemoid,  Mary  Anne,  Spin,  married  by  Do.  Sept.  19,  1739,  John 

Irwin,  Bach. 
Vernon,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Barbara,  born  June  19,  1750,  bapt. 

Aug.  2, 1751  by  Peasely. 
Verdicr,  Jane,  Spin.  Da.  of  Andrew  of  Okatee  Creek,  Esq.  married 

by  Do.  Apl:  23, 1755,  Gilbert  Pepper,  Bach. 
Vcrdier,  John  Mark,  Sn.  to  Do.  bom  24  Aug.  1759,  bapt.  Jan.  4, 

by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Amar.    Married  by  Lewes  1  Dec.  1785, 

Elizabeth  Grayson. 
Verdier,  Malacar,  Sn.  to  Do.  bom  29  Nov.  1762,  bapt.  Feb.  3, 1762 

by  the  Rev.  John  Green.    Buried  Aug.  5, 1770,  aged  5  yrs. 

8mos. 
Verdier,  Andrew,  Departed  this  life  18  Feb:  1766,  Consumption. 
Verdier,  Eliza  Mary,  Da.  to  John  Mark  &  Elizabeth,  bom  2  Jan. 

1787,  bapt  14  May,  1787  by  Lewes. 

Verdier,  John,  a  Frenchman,  buried  9  Nov.  1788,  Dysentery. 
Verdier,  John  Mark,  Sn.  of  John  Mark  &  Elizabeth,  bom  30  Nov. 

1788,  bapt.  2  Apl:  1789  by  Do. 

Verdier,  James  Robert,  Sn.  of  Do.  &  Do.  bom  9  Feb:  1791,  bapt. 

by  Rev.  Mr.  Gardnier. 
Verdier,  Isabelle  Susanna,  Da.  of  Ditto  &  Ditto,  bom  15  Feb: 

1795,  Bapt.  9  July,  1797,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Graham. 
Verdier,  Henry,  Sn.  of  Alexander  &  Eleanor  Verdier,  bom  1812, 

bapt.  17  Dec..  1812  by  Cambell,  Parents  sureties  &  John  Bell. 
Verdier,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  Caroline,  bom  3  Nov.  1817,  bapt. 

13  May,  1818. 

Verdier,  Alexander  H.  married  Mary  E.  O'Brien,  wid.    She  died 

July  1806.    23  Sept:  1809  he  married  Elinor  Fleming. 
Verdier,  Alexander  Grayson,  Sn.  of  Alexander  H.  &  Mary  E.  bom 

14  Jan;  1804. 

Vcrdier,  Elenor,  Wife  to  Alexander  H.  buried  21  Nov.  1814. 
Verdier,  Margaretta  Anna,  Da.  of  John  M.  &  Caroline,  bom  21  Oct. 

1820,  bapt.  Nov.  9,  1822,  by  Hanckel  &  Parents  &  Mr.  John 

Bell  sureties. 
Verdier,  James  Montgomery,  Sn.  of  Jno.  &  Caroline,  bom  13 

March,  1822,  bapt.  Nov.  9, 1822,  by  Do.  Parents  &  Mr.  John 

Bell,  sureties. 
Wall,  Thomas,  a  Stranger,  buried  27  Jan.  1746. 
Walker,  Eliz:  Da.  of  Samuel  &  Mary,  bom  Oct.  28,  1739,  bapt. 

Oct.  30, 1739  by  Jones. 


194  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Walker,  John,  buried  by  Do.  14  Feb'y,  1728. 

Walmsley,  Hannah,  Da.  of  John  & — born  1712,  bapt.  Dec.  24, 1726 

by  Do.  Father  surety.    Married  Jan:  1, 1730,  Ephraim  Tozar. 
Walter,  Michael,  a  Periagua  Man,  buried  10  Oct:  1749. 
Waight,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  William  &  EUzabeth,  bom  March  4, 1749 

bapt.  Jan.  13,  1750  by  ChiflFelly  of  Purrysburg. 
Wannel,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Hannah,  bom  Dec.  22,  1726, 

bapt.  May  4, 1732  by  Jones. 
Wannel,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Feb.  7, 1727.    Bapt.  May  4,  1732 

by  Do. 
Wannel,  Zachariah,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  18,  1731  Bapt.  May  4, 

1732  by  Do. 
Wannel,  Susannah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Apl:  3, 1734,  bapt.  Jan;  7, 1734 

by  Do.  Parents  sureties. 
Wannel,  Josias,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  22,  1736,  bapt.  March  31, 

1 737  by  Do.  Do  sureties. 

Wannel,  Thomas,  The  Father,  bom  1706,  buried  by  Do,  17  Oct: 

1738  aged  32. 

Wannel,  Hannah,  Wid.  to  Thomas,  married  by  Do.  Jime  15,  1740 

James  Dicksey,  Bach. 
Wannel,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  May  12,  1727 

bapt.  Nov.  2, 1731. 
Wannel,  Hannah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  24, 1730,  bapt.  Nov.  2, 1731. 
Wannel,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  March  27, 1733,  bapt.  Jan.  7, 1734 

by  Do.  Parents  sureties. 
Wannel,  Esther,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  16,  1736,  bapt.  Jan:  9, 

1737  by  Do. 
Wannel,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  May  2,  1739,  bapt.  Sept.  19, 1742 

by  Do. 
Wannel,  Susanna,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  16,    1741,  bapt.  Sq)t.  19, 

1742  by  Do. 
Ward,  Henry  Groby,  Buried  20  Jan:  1745. 
Warren,  Joseph,  Mariner,  married  by  Do.  Dec.  17,  1739  Elizabeth 

Matson. 
Warren,  Joseph,  Sn.  of  Joseph  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Oct.  16,  1740, 

bapt.  Nov.  9, 1740  by  Do. 
Warwood,  Elinor,  a  Soldier's  Wife,  buried  by  Do.  15  Sept.  1739. 
Wastcoat,  Nicholas,  buried  by  Do.  13  Sept.  1744. 
Watt,  Margaret,  Wife  to  Lieut:  James  of  the  Indn't.  Comp. 

Buried  by  Do.  14  Sept:  1729. 


ST.  HELENA'S  PARISH  REGISTER  195 

Watt,  Anne,  Spin.  Da.  of  Lieut:  James  &  Margt.  married  by  Do. 

Jan.  6, 1733,  William  Lyford,  Wid'r. 
Watt,  James,  Lieut:  in  Capt:  Masseys  Comp.    Married  by  Do. 

June  1, 1734  Frances  Cox,  Widow,  and  buried  7  Jime  1734. 
Watson,  Mary,  Da.  of  Samuel  &  Sarah,  born  1719,  bapt.  Sept.  4, 

1726  by  Do.  Father  surety. 
Watson,  Martha,  Spin,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  1721,  bapt.  Sept.  4,  1726 

by  Do.  Father  surety,  married  by  Hutson,  Dissenter  Jime  16, 

1745  WiUiam  Davis,  Bach. 
Watson,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  1724,  bapt.  Sept.  4,  1726  by  Do. 

Do.  sureties,  married  by  Hutson  July  14,   1746,  Tabitha 

Sealy,  Spin. 
Watson,  Sarah,  wid.  to  Samuel,  married  by  Jones  Jime  27,  1727 

Thomas  Hardwick. 
Webb,  Daniel,  a  Soldier,  buried  by  Do.  23  Sept.  1731. 
Weatherly,  Isaac,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Sarah,  born  Oct.  13,  1719  on 

John's  Island,  married  by  Peasely  Dec.  7, 1754  Martha  Waight 

wid. 
Weatherly,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Sarah,  born  Aug.  26, 1736 

bapt.  June  12, 1737  by  Jones. 
Weatherly,  Robert,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  March  18,  1739,  bapt.  Nov. 

21, 1740  by  Do. 
Weatherly,  Sarah,  Wid.  to  Thomas,  married  by  Do.  Nov.  21, 1740 

Edward  Broughton. 
Wigg,  Collo:  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Sarah,  married  Feb.  14, 

1726  Mary  Seymour,  Spin,  of  Chas.  Town. 
Wigg,  Do.  Married  6  March,  1752,  Anne  Reeve,  Wid.  by  Peasely. 
Wigg,  Catherine,  Spin.  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  born  Sept.  20, 1729 

bapt.  Nov.  14,  1729  by  Jones  in  Charles  Town.    Married  by 

ChiflFelly  of  Purrysburg  Apl:  22, 1750,  William  Hazzard,  Bach. 

Buried  31  Jan:  1790. 
Wigg,  Richard,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan:  11,  1727  in  Charles  Town. 

Married  by  Lewis,  July  4, 1757  Mary  Galloway,  Spin.    Buried 

12  March,  1758,  aged  30  yrs. 
Wigg,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  16, 1731,  bapt.  Jan:  17, 1731 

by  Jones.    Bom  in  Beaufort.    Married  Sept.  7,  1755  John 

Cattell,  Bach. 
Wigg,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  March  16, 1733,  bapt.  May  27, 1735 

by  Jones,  born  in  Beaufort,  married  by  Peasely,  Apl:  14, 1754 

John  Grayson.    Died  17  Oct:  1806,  aged  73. 


196  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Wigg,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Apl:  24,  1737,  bapt  i^l:  25,  1735 

by  Jones.    Bom  in  Charles  Town,  buried  25  Apl:  1737. 
Wigg,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Oct  13,  1741,  bapt  Oct.  20,  1741 

by  Do.  Bn.  at  Wiggsberry,  buried  21  Oct  1741. 
Wigg,  Thomas  Edward,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Jan.  29,  1743,  bapt 

Feb.  11, 1743  by  Do.  Do.  Do. 
Wigg,  Mary,  Wife  to  Collo:  Thomas,  buried  at  Plantation,  28  Nov. 

1750.  Wiggs. 
Wigg,  Capt  Richard,  Sn.  to  Richard  &  Sarah,  married  by  Melli- 

champ  at  Charles  Town  Feb'y4, 1734,  Anne  Smallwood,  Spin. 

Buried  30  March,  1745. 
Wigg,  Sarah,  Spin,  Da.  of  Richard  &  Anne,  born  July  21,  1736, 

married  by  Peasely  Feb'y;  14,  1754,  Robert  Fairchild,  Wid'r. 

Died  20  Sept  1770,  aged  34  yrs. 
Wigg,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  13, 1738,  bapt  Dec.  2,  1738  by 

Jones,  married  Jan.  9, 1755,  John  Joiner,  wid'r. 
Wigg,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  20,  1740,  bapt.  Oct  7,  1740 

by  Do.  Married  Aug.  27,  1755  Richard  Stevens,  Bach,  by 

Peasely.    Buried  16  July,  1763,  aged  25. 
Wigg,  Anne,  Wid.  to  Capt:  Richard,  married  by  St.  John  Sept  12, 

1749,  Thomas  Beswicke,  Wid'r. 
Wigg,  Edward,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Sarah,  bom  Nov.  27, 1715, 

married  by  Jones  22  Feb.  1738,  Mary  Hazzard,  Spin.    Died 

1755.    Went  to  —  for  to  recover  —  but  died  in  —  after  his 

arrival  at  that  place.    Buried  — , 
Wigg,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Edward  &  Mary,  bora  Nov.  14,  1743,  bapt 

Dec.  18, 1743  by  Jones. 
Wigg,  Eliza:  Catherine,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Oct.  18,  1745,  bapt.  by 

Whitfield.    Buried  16  Dec.  1745. 
Wigg,  WiUm.  Hazzard,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Nov.  28, 1746,  bapt.  by  Do. 
Wigg,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  bora  Nov.  28, 1746,  bapt.  by  Do. 
Wigg,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Jan:  18,  1748,  bapt.  by  St  John 

Jno.  &  Martha  Barnwell,  &  Eliz.  Wigg,  sureties,  buried  4  Aug. 

1751. 
Wigg,  Anne,  Da.  of  Do.  born  July  19, 1751,  bapt  Sept:  1, 1751  by 

Peasely,  Hillers'd  &  Eliz:  Wigg  &  Elenor  Griffin,  sureties. 

Married  6  Nov.  1771,     Robert  Porteous,     Bach.     Buried 

22Feb'y;1791. 
Wigg,  Hillersdon,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Richard  &  Sarah,  married  by  Jones 

Aug.  30, 1740,  Eliz:  Serjeant,  Spin,  buried  15  Oct.  1753. 


ST.  Helena's  parish  register  197 

Wigg,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Hillersdon  &  Eliz:  born  Nov.  13,  1742,  bapt. 

Dec.  15, 1742  by  Do. 
Wigg,  Edward,  Sn.  of  Do.  born  June  5, 1745,  bapt.  Dec.  6, 1745  by 

Whitfield. 
Wigg,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Jan.  14, 1750,  bapt.  Apl:  14, 1751 

by  ChiffeUy. 
Willijuns,  Sarah,  Da.  of  James  &  Anne,  bom  Dec.  19,  1735,  bapt. 

Dec.  13, 1736  by  Jones,  married  Dec.  22, 1754  Thomas  Nelson. 
Williams,  Anne,  Spin.  Da.  of  Do.  born  July  31, 1738,  bapt.  Oct.  28, 

1739  by  Jones,  married  by  Peasely,  June  27,  1756  Axtell 

Hutchinson,  Bach. 
Williams,  James  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  June  14,  1740,  bapt. 

Sept.  16, 1740  by  Jones. 
Williams,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Do.  born  Apl:  17,  1742,  bapt.  Oct.  8, 

1742  by  Do. 
Williams,  Mary,  Da.  of  Do.  born,  May  20, 1744,  bapt.  Oct.  6, 1744 

by  Do.  Edward  Tucker  &  Wife,  sureties.    Married  Nov.  8, 

1762,  Andrew  Aggnew  of  St.  H.  Wid'r.    Buried  14  Feb.  1776 

aged  31  yrs.  8  mos.  21  days,  Child-Bed.    Beaufort  Ch:  Yd: 
Williams,  Kezia,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  July  28, 1745. 
Williams,  Willm.  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  May  18, 1749.    Bapt.  Oct.  9, 1751 

by  Peasely. 
Williams,  Anne,  Wife  to  James,  Buried  by  Do.  17  Jan.  1752. 

Buried  on . — 
Williams,  Anne,  Wife  to  Thomas,  buried  by  Jones  22  Jime  1743. 
Williams,  Daniel,  Bach,  of  Wales,  married  by  Chiflfelly,  Nov.  20, 

1750  Elizabeth  Syson,  Spin. 
Williams,  Anne,  Da.  of  Daniel  &  Eliz:  bom  Sept.  11,  1751,  bapt 

Oct.  6, 1751  by  Peasely,  buried  20  Nov.  1751. 
Williams,  Elenor,  Wife  to  John  Williams,  bom  1714,  bapt.  May  26, 

1734  by  Jones. 
Williams,  Mary  Anne,  Da.  of  John  &  Elenor,  bom  Feb:  16,  1733, 

bapt.  May  26, 1734  by  Do.  Married  Abraham  David. 
Williams,  Elenor,  Spin,  Da.  of  John  &  Elenor,  bom  June  24,  1736 

bapt.  June  12, 1737  by  Do.  Buried  2  March,  1755. 
Williams,  Alexander,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  30, 1738,  bapt.  Nov.  12, 

1738  by  Do.  Dead. 
Wilson,  Mary,  Spin,  married  by  Do.  March  21,  1740,  Josp.  Sum- 
mers wid'r. 


198  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Wilson,  John,  Bach,  nmrried  by  Do.  July  IS,  1741,  Dorothy  Small- 
wood,  Spin. 
Wilson,  James,  Sn.  of  John  &  Dorothy,  bapt.  Sept.  25, 1 743  by  Do. 
Wilson,  William,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  June  25,  1743,  Hannah 

Andrews  Spin. 
Wilson,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  William  &  Hannah  Mar,  bapt.  June  10, 1744 

by  Do. 
Wilson,  Mildridge,  Da.  of  James  &  — ,  bapt.  Dec.  7, 1747  by  Do. 
Wilson,  Margt:  Wid.  married  by  Do.  Dec.  26,  1733,  Benj:  Wood- 
ward Bach. 
Wilkinson,  Elizabeth,  wid.  married  by  Do.  Oct.  12,  1733,  Simon 

Jones,  Bach. 
Wilkinson,  Hannah,  Spin.  Da.  of  Robert  &  Elizabeth,  bom  May  7!^^ 

1726,  married  by  Do.  Apl:  19, 1744  John  PoweU,  WidV. 
Wire,  Thomas,  Nat:  Sn:  of  Hugh  &  Catherine  Thomas,  bora 

Jan:  20, 1734  bapt.  July  14, 1735  by  Do. 
Wire,  Hugh,  Bach,  of  Ireland,  married  by  Do.  May  30,  1738 

Dorothy  Mellichamp,  Spin. 
Wire,  Hugh,  Sn.  of  Hugh  &  Dorothy,  bom  May  5,  1740,  bj^t. 

May  20, 1740  by  Do. 
Wire,  Thomas,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  16,  1741,  bapt.  Oct.  5, 1741 

by  Do. 
Wells,  John,  Wid'r,  married  by  Do.  Jan.  6, 1740,  Susanna  Cole,  wid. 
Wells,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Charles  &  Frances,  bom  Sept.  18,  1734, 

bapt.  June  21, 1739  by  Do. 
Wells,  Pmdence,  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Sept.  18,  1736,  bapt.  June  21, 

1739  by  Do. 
Wells,  Mary,  Spin,  married  by  Do.  Sept.  14, 1736,  Daniel  Savage, 

Bach. 
Wigg,  Hillersdon  St.  John,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  July  1, 

1748,  bapt.  by  St.  John.    Married  Aug.  16,  1771,  Mary 

Dunlap,  Died,  7  Jan:  1796. 
Winter,  Mary,  Wid.  married  by  Jones  June  19, 1733,  John  Mande- 

viUe,  Wid. 
Winter,  Mary,  maried  by  Do.  June  19, 1739,  John  Flinn. 
Wolferston,  Lawrence,  wid'r.  married  by  Do.  Apl;  11,  1744,  Mary 

Christian,  Spin.  Buried  10  Apl:  1754,  aged  50. 
Wolferston,  Mary,  Da.  of  Lawrence  &  Margaret,  buried  by  Peasely, 

22  Aug.  1751,  aged  12  yrs.    Dropsy. 


ST.  Helena's  pause  ilegister  199 

Wolferston,  Laurence,  Sn.  of  Lawrence  &  Mary,  born  Sept.  8, 1745. 
Wolferston,  Francis,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  June  11, 1750,  bapt.  Jan.  27, 

1752  by  Peasely. 
Worth,  Ralph,  a  Sergeant,  married  Oct.  10, 1739,  Elizabeth  Roan, 

wid.  Dead. 
Worth,  Rebekah,  Da.  of  Ralph  &  Elizabeth,  bom  May  7,  1742, 

bapt.  May  17, 1742  by  Jones. 
Worse,  Ralph,  Buried  27  Dec.  1727. 
Wood,  William,  Capt:  Mariner  from  Frederica,  of  £[ngland], 

buried  by  Do.  10,  Oct.  1743. 
Wood,  John,  Sn.  of  John  &  — ,  an  Orphan  about  11  yrs.  of  age, 

bapt.  Aug.  19, 1744  by  Do. 
Woollwich,  Job,  Servant  to  Capt:  Robert  Williams,  buried  by  Do. 

30  Sept  1743. 
Woodward,  James,  Sn.  of  Coll:  John  &  Elizabeth,  bom  July  6, 1727 

bapt.  Aug.  9^  1727  by  Do.  Rev.  Lewis  Jones  &  Thomas  &  Anne 

Stanyame,  siurties. 
Woodward,  Coll:  John,  buried  by  Do.  18  Jan.  1726. 
Woodward,  Benj:  married  by  Jones,  Dec.  26,  1733,  Margaret 

Wilson,  Wid. 
Woodward,  Lavinia,  Da.  of  Benj.  &  Margt,  bom  Aug.  10,  1737, 

bapt.  Sept.  6, 1737  by  Do. 
Woodward;  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Richd:  &  Eliz.  bom  June  23,  1738, 

bapt.  Dec.  26, 1738  by  Do. 
Wright,  Jacob,  Capt:  of  a  Scout  Boat,  buried  by  Do.  9  Jan:  1738. 
Wright,  Benj :  Bach.  Sn.  of  Jacob  &  Jane,  married  by  Do.  Anne  Da. 

of  Jno.  Gauntlet,  Spin.  Buried  1  March,  1739. 
Wright,  Jane,  Wid,  to  Jacob,  married  by  Do.  Sept.  8,  1733,  Josp. 

Parmenter. 
Wyat,  Anne,  bom  1712,  bapt.  Dec.  29, 1727  by  Dyson. 
Wyat,  Edward,  bom  1706,  bapt.  Dec.  29, 1727  by  Do. 
Wyat,  Hannah,  bom  1701,  bapt.  Dec.  29, 1727  by  Do. 
Wyat,  Ebenezer,  Buried  by  Jones,  5  July,  1737. 
Williamson,  William,  of  E[ngland],  married  by  Peasely  Jan.  27, 

1752  Sarah  Stone,  Spin,  in  Charles  Town,  1752. 
Wright,  Elizabeth,  Spin.  Da.  of  John  &  Jane,  married  by  Langhom 

of  Pon  Pon,  Apl:  2, 1751,  John  Gordon,  Bach. 
Waight,  William,  Bach.  Sn.  of  Isaac  &  Mary,  of  John's  Island,  mar. 

Elizabeth  Field,  Spin. 


200  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AMD  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Waterman,  Anne,  Spin,  married  by  Jones  May  13,  1733,  Thomas 

Bartlett 
Whitmarsh,  John,  Married  MargL  Barnwell,  Spin. 
Williams,  Mary,  Spin.  Da.  of  Robert  &  Margaret  of  £[ngland], 

married  James  £dw.  Powell,  Bach. 
Williamson,  Elizabeth,  Spin,  Da.  of  John  &  Mary,  married  June  11 

1749  John  Smith,  Bach. 
Whitmarsh,  Margt:  Wid.  to  John  married  Rich'd  Stevens. 
Waight,  Anne,  Spin.  Da.  of  Isaac  &  Mary  of  John's  Isl'd,  married 

Charles  Fields,  Bach.  Dead,  1752. 
Wright,  Helen,  Spin.  Da.  of  John  &  Jane,  married  Jemmit  Cobley, 

Bach. 
Waight,  Isaac,  Bach,  Sn.  of  Isaac  &  Mary  of  Jno.  Isl'd  bom  on 

Aug.  22,  1722  married  Apl.  26,  1745  Martha  Fripp,  Spin. 

Buried  12  Jan.  1754.  Epilep: 
Wood,  Daniel,  of  S[cotland],  buried  2  Feb:  1734. 
Wood,  Jane,  Wid.  to  Daniel  of  S[cotland],  married  by  St.  John, 

Nov.  6, 1747,  James  Stirling,  wid'r. 
Williamson,  Sarah,  Wid.  to  William,  married  by  Peasely,  Sq)t  27 

1753,  Ellicott  Story,  Bach. 
Wilkinson,  Robt.  Sn.  of  Robert  &  Elizabeth,  bom  June  19,  1721 

bapt.  by  Orr,  Dissenter,  Married  by  Lewes  July  6,  1757 

Mary  Burton,  Spin. 
Wilkinson,  Eliz:  Da.  of  Do.  bom  Aug.  17,  1730,  bapt.  by  Orr. 

Married  by  Peasely  Oct.  6, 1752  Isaac  Barton,  Bach. 
Waight,  William,  Sn.  of  William  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Dec.  2, 1751, 

bapt.  June  10, 1752  by  Peasely.    Buried  June  17, 1752. 
Wade,  William,  wid'r.  of  England,  married  by  Do.  July  12,  1752 

Mary  Grave,  wid. 
Waight,  Isaac,  Sn.  of  Isaac  &  Martha,  of  St.  Helena,  bom  May  30 

1746. 
Walker,  Sarah,  Spin.  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Mary  of  E[ngland,]  born 

May   15,   1735  in  Northampton.    Married  by  Langhome 

Apl.  30, 1752,  Albert  Ackarman,  Bach. 
Waring,  Mary,  Da.  of  John  &  Anne  of  Jeehaw,  bom  Sept.  27, 1752 

bapt.  July  7, 1753  by  Peasely. 
Wigg,  Elenor,  Da.  of  Edward  &  Mary,  bom  Sept.  8,  1753,  bapt. 

Dec.  15, 1753  by  Do. 
Wildman,  Leonard,  Dutch,  married  by  Do.  Jan.  9,  1754,  Mary 

Harris,  wid. 


ST.  Helena's  paiosh  ilegistee  201 

Watson,  Capt:  Willm.  of  the  Scout  Boat,  married  by  Do.  Feb.'y  6, 

1754,  Ann  Hatcher,  Spin. 
Welch,  Zachariah  Carlisle,  Sn.  of  John  &  Ann,  Cordwamer,  bom 

Jan.  27, 1752,  bapt.  June  15, 1754. 
Waight,  Elizabeth,  W.  of  Wilhn:St.  Helena,  buried  9  March,  1754. 
Walter,  John,  Sn.  of  Michael  &  Ann  Mary,  buried  6  April,  1754. 
Waight,  WiUiam,  Sn.  of  WiUiam  &  Elizabeth,  bom  Jan.    27, 

1754,  bapt.  May  5, 1754,  by  Baron  of  Pon  Pon. 
Webb,  Jacob,  a  Carpenter,  buried  18  Aug.  1754,  aged  58,  Drowned. 
Waight,  Martha,  Wid.  to  Isaac,  married  by  Peasely,  Dec.  7, 1754, 

Izaac  Weatherly,  Bach. 
Williams,  Daniel,  Sn.  of  Danl:  &  Eliz:  St.  Helena,  bom  Dec.  7, 

1754,  bapt.  Jan.  19,  1755  by  Do.  Jams  Steele  &  Parents 

sureties. 
Williams,  John,  Bach.  St.  Helena,  buried  11  March,  1755. 
Watson,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  James  &  Tabitha,  bom  March  20, 1748. 
Watson,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Do.,  bom  Dec.  6, 1749. 
Watson,  Samuel,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  22, 1751. 
Watson,  James,  Sn.  of  Do.  bom  Dec.  20, 1753. 
Walker,  Briga,  Sn.  of  Thomas  &  Mary,  bom  July  8,  1755,  buried 

18Jan.  1756,  St.H. 
Wright,  Daniel,  Euhaws,  buried  19  Apl:  1753. 
Watson,  Tabitha,  Wife  to  James,  buried  9  July,  1755,  aged  26. 

Euha-. 
Williamson,  Jno.  Bach.  Sn.  to  John  &  Mary,  P.  Wm.  Parish, 

married  by  Peasely  Sept.  11 ,1755,  Magdalene  Postell. 
Wells,  Susanna,  Spin.  Da.  of —  Bapt.  Feb:  1, 1756  by  Peasely. 

Married  by  Belcher  Aug.  28, 1755  to  James  Pope. 
Walker,  Andrew,  Collector,  of  S[cotland],  Beaufort,  buried  9  Dec. 

1755. 
Wigg,  Mary,  Wid.  to  Edward,  married  by  Baron  Feb.  24,  1758, 

James  Cuthbert. 
Wigg,  Mary,  Da.  of  Richard  &  Elizabeth  Mary,  bapt.  Jan.  22, 1758 

by  A.  Baron. 
Wilson,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  John  &  Christian  of  Capt:  Stuart's 

Comp:  bom  June  6, 1759,  bapt.  June  17, 1759  by  A.  Baron. 
Wells,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  John  &  Anne  bapt.  June  27, 1758  by  Do. 
Westcott,  Willm;  married  by  Baron,  Aug.  5, 1759,  Anne  Beswicke, 

Spin. 


202  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Wineman,  Margt:  Da.  of  Leonard  &  Mary,  married  by  Do.  21 

June  1759,  Thos.  Searson,  Bach. 
Waight,  Jacob,  married  by  Green  28  Oct  1762,  Margret  Bamwefl. 

St.  H. 
Weatherly,  George,  married  by  Mr.  Green  Jan.  1 1763,  Mary  Con- 
years,  St.  Helena. 
Williams,  Daniel,  Da.  (sic)  of  Dan.  Eliz:  St.  Helena,  bom  Dec  10, 

1760.  bapt.  Jan.  9, 1763. 
Walcut,  Abraham,  Da.  sic.  of  Abraham  &  Jan:  St  Hel;  bom  July 

15, 1752,  bapt.  March  31, 1762. 
Waight,  William,  wid'r,  married  Jan:  25,  1763,  Sebe  Jenkins, 

St.  H. 
Westcott,  William,  Da.  sic  William  &  Anne,  St  Helena,  bom 

Sept  17, 1762,  bapt  Oct  17, 1762. 
Wall,  Benjamin,  wid'r,  a  Stranger,  married  by  Green  May  3, 1763 

Ann  Watson,  wid. 
Williams,  James,  nat.  sn.  of  Eliz.  bom  March  11,  1763,  bapt 

May  3, 1763. 
Wilkinson,  Robert,  Sn.  of  Robert  &  Mary,  bom  Sept.  1,  1760 

buried  Sept.  17, 1760. 
Wilkinson,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Mary,  bom  Nov.  8,  1761, 

Married   by  Gourlay   27   Dec.    1778,   John  Laboularderic 

DeTreville. 
Wildman,  Leonard,  wid'r  Dutch,  buried  Nov.  1, 1763. 
Waight,  Margt.  Wife  to  Jacob,  buried  by  Do.  Oct  11, 1763  Chi— 
Waight,  Phebe,  Da.  to  William  &  Sebe,  bom  Sept.  27— bapt. 

Oct.  9, 1 763  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green.    Buried  Oct.  16, 1 763. 
Wildman,  Leonard,  wid'r,  buried  Nov.  1, 1763. 
Williams,  Charles,  Bach,  married  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green,  21  June, 

1764,  Mary  Lowell. 
Warein,  Ann,  Da.  to  John  &  Ann,  bom  Nov.  11,  1763,  bapt 

Oct.  16  1764  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Green. 
Williams,  Charles  Furrow,  Sn.  of  Charles  &  Mary,  bom  Jan.  17, 

1765  bapt.  Apl.  13, 1766  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Feveryear. 
Wilkinson,  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Mary,  bom  5  Jan:  1764, 

bapt.  June  19,  1768  by  Rev.  Cosgrave.    Departed  this  Kfe 

29  Oct  1768. 
Westcott,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Anne,  bom  — ,  bjq>t  June 

26,  1758  by  Do. 


ST.  Helena's  pasish  register  203 

Watson,  Sarah,  Da.  of  Joseph  &  Ann,  bom  10  Feb'y;  1768,  Bapt. 

July  3, 1768  by  Do. 
Waight,  Isaac,  Sn.  of  WiUm:  &  Phebe,  bom  March  3,  1767,  bapt. 

Nov.  27,  1767,  married  by  Lewis,  11  Oct.  1789,  Mary  Ann 

Guerard. 
Wilkinson,  Mary,  Da.  of  Robert  &  Mary,  bora  13  Jan.  1769, 

bapt.  Aug.  7, 1769,  married  by  Rev.  Mr.  Streeker  6  Dec.  1787 

John  Adams. 
Waight,  Abraham,  Sn.  of  WiUiam  &  Phebe,  bom  March  24,  1769, 

Bapt.  May  25,  Do.  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Lewis  of  John's  Island. 
Wainwright,  Margrit,  Da.  of  Benj.  &  Ann,  bom  1756,  bapt.  Oct.  29, 

17  —  by  the  Rev.'  Mr.  Peirce. 
Wainwright,  Ann,  Da.  of  Benj.  &  Ann.  bom  Apl.  23,  1759,  bapt. 

Dec.  5, 1770  by  Do. 
Wright,  Benj:  Bach,  from  Ludlow,  Great  Britain,  married  by  the 

Rev.  Mr.  Ellington  Feb.  16-  Barbary  Kibler,  wid. 
Webb,  Esther,  Da.  of  Thomas  &  Jane,  bom  Oct.  13,  1772,  bapt. 

Jan.  23, 1772  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Ellington. 
Westem,  Mafgt.  Elizabeth,  Da.  of  William  &  Mary  of  Beaufort, 

bom  4  Jan:  1775  Bapt.  by  the  Rev.  Moreau,  Joseph  Williams  & 

Mary  Glenn,  Sureties. 
Westem,  Mary,  Da.  of  William  &  Mary  of  Beaufort,  born  17,  Apl: 

1777,  bapt.  July  6,  177-  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Graham,  Mrs. 

WiUiams  &  the  Mother,  and  E.  Evans,  sureties. 
Williams,  Pmdence,  wid.  buried  by  Lewis  21  June,  1785  aged  65. 
West,  Joseph  Elliott,  of  James  Dalton  West,  and  Isabella,  his 

Wife,  bapt.  4  July  1785  by  Lewis,  buried  8  July,  1785,  aged  3. 
Wood,  John  Thomas,  of  Thomas  &  Ann,  Beaufort,  bapt.  31  July, 

1785  by  Lewis. 
Wigg,  Thomas  John,  of  Hilderson  St.  John,  by  Mary,  his  Wife, 

bom  4  July,  1782,  bapt.  1  Aug.  1785  by  Do. 
Williams,  Lydia  Ann,  of  Daniel  &  Eliz:  Lady  Isld.  born  3  Sept. 

1785,  bapt.  15  Sept.  1785  by  Do. 
West,  James  Elliott,  of  James  Dalton  &  Isabella,  bom  5  Nov. 

1785  bapt.  24  Sept.  1786,  by  Do. 
Witter,  Thomas,  Bach,  married  by  Do.  31  July,  1785,  Elizabeth 

Powel,  Spin. 
Witter,  James  Powell,  of  Thomas  &  Elizabeth,  bapt.  7  Nov.  1786  by 

Do. 


204  so.  CA,  mSTOKICAL  AMD  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Waight,  Phebe,  of  William  &  Phebe,  married  by  Do.  23  May,  1787, 

William  EUiott,  Bach. 
Witter,  Jonathan,  of -married  by  Do.  24  Dec.  1788,  Elizabeth 

Hogg,  Spin. 
Wilcox,  Abigail,  Wife  to  Samuel  from  Hartford  in  the  State  of 

Connecticut,  buried  by  Do.  1  May,  1789,  aged  20  yrs.  6  mos. 
Ward,  Sarah,  of  Elisha  &  Penelope,  bom  6  Apl:  1783,  bapt. 

7FebV,179— byDo. 
Wigg,  Mary,  of  William  &  Hester,  bom  2  March,  1774,  married 

by  Do.  29  July,  1790  Coll:  Edward  Bamwell,  wid'r. 
Wigg,  William  Hutson,  of  Do.  bom  17  Nov.  1777,  bapt.  by  Camp- 
bell, John  Radcliffe,  surety. 
Wilkins,  Willm.  Bumey  Given,  Sn.  of  Chas:  &  Henrietta  Matilda 

bom  7  Apl:  1813,  bapt.  22  Sept.  1813,  Sarah  Carwill,  surety. 
Waight,  Phoebe  Louisa,  Da.  of  Isaac  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  22  March 

1792,  bapt.  1812,  married  13  Dec.  1812  Thomas  Fuller. 
Waight,  Mary  Ann,  of  Isaac  &  Mary  Ann,  bom  11  Sept.  1794, 

bapt.  1812,  married  14  July  1814,  William  McQueen. 
Waight,  Robert,  S.  of  Do.  bom  22  Feb.  1798,  bapt.  Dec.  1815. 

Young,  Sarah,  Wife  of  Isaac  &  Georgia,  of  England,  buried  by 

Jones,  15  Sept.  1739  age  49. 
Yets  —  Sn.  of  James  &  Hannah,  Cordwainer,  bom  25  July,  1763. 
Yancey,  Nathaniel  Bamwell,  of  James  &  —  Yancey,  bapt.  23  Oct. 

1785  by  Lewes. 
Yates,  Sarah  Clark,  of  Samuel  &  Deborah,  bom  17  Feb.  1787, 

bapt.  19  Apl.  1787  by  Do. 

NOTE 

An  explanatioii  of  the  way  in  which  this  register  was  saved  during  the 
Confederate  War,  may  be  of  interest.  Capt  Edward  Bamwell  for  many  years 
warden  of  St.  Helena's  Parish  had  it  in  his  possession  when  he  died  in  1860. 
When  Beaufort  was  evacuated  in  November  1861,  his  widow,  Mrs.  Sarah 
Caroline  Bamwell  (bom  Richardson)  took  it  with  her,  preserved  it  during  the 
war,  and  after  jt  was  over  sent  it  to  Mr.  Robert  Bamwell  Rhett,  Editor  of 
the  Charleston  ''Mercury,"  at  his  request,  to  allow  him  to  obtain  certain  infor- 
mation about  his  family.  He  kept  it  until  he  removed  to  HuntsviUe,  Ala., 
and  left  it  with  the  Charleston  Library  Society.  Some  years  afterwards,  at 
the  request  of  the  Vestry,  it  was  retumed  to  them. 


MARRIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  FROM  THE  CITY 

GAZETTE 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

(CofUinued  from  July) 

Married  on  Tuesday  evening  last  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Jenkins, 
Ellas  L3rnch  Horry,  esq.  to  the  amiable  Miss  Jennings,  daughter  of 
Daniel  Jennings  esq.  deceased,  late  of  this  city  merchant.  (Friday, 
Oct.  28, 1796.) 

Died,  On  Thursday  morning  last,  in  the  35th  year  of  his  age, 
after  a  severe  indisposition  of  fifteen  days  continuance,  Mr.  Adam 
Ewing,  of  this  dty,  merchant.  During  a  residence  of  near  sixteen 
years,  such  was  his  cheerful  disposition,  affable  demeanor,  benevo- 
lence, and  int^;rity  in  his  dealings,  as  to  gain  him  many  friends  in 
this  dty,  who  now  sincerely  lament  his  early  death.  He  has  left 
behind  him  to  mourn  his  loss,  six  small  children,  who  about  two 
years  ago  had  the  unhappiness  to  be  deprived  of  their  mother.  His 
remains  were  conveyed,  on  the  evening  of  the  day  he  died,  to  the 
Presb3rterian  church,  attended  by  a  large  concourse  of  dtizens, 
who  were  consdous  of  the  virtues  which  endeared  him  to  sodety. 
A  discoiu^  well  adapted  to  the  occasion,  was  delivered  by  the 
rev.  doctor  Buist,  the  pastor  of  that  congregation.  (Saturday, 
Oct.  29, 1796.) 

Married  on  Thursday  evening  last,  in  St.  James's  parish  by  the 
rev.  Mr.  Pugson,  Bazil  Lanneau,  esq.  to  Miss  Anne  Vinyard, 
daughter  of  Mr.  John  Vinyard  deceased.  (Wednesday,  Nov.  2, 
1796.) 

Married  on  Saturday  evening  last,  by  the  rev.  Thomas  Mills, 
Alexander  Petrie^  esq.  to  Miss  Mary  Evans,  daughter  of  the  late 
George  Evans,  esq.  of  St.  George's  parish,  Dorchester.  (Friday, 
Nov.  4, 1795.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  by  the  rev.  Doctor  Keith, 
James  Mathewes,  esq.  to  Miss  Frances  Doughty,  daughter  of 
Thomas  Doughty,  esq. 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  after  a  lingering  illness,  which  he 
bore  with  great  patience  and  resignation,  Mr.  Thomas  Mont- 
gomery, of  this  dty,  merchant,  aged  40.    His  remains,  attended  by 

205 


206  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

a  number  of  his  friends  and  acquaintances,  was  recently  interred  in 
the  Presbyterian  burying  ground  of  this  dty.  (Saturday,  Nov.  5, 
1796.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  by  the  rev.  George  Buist,  Mr. 
Thomas  Malcon,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Cooper.  (Tuesday,  Nov.  8, 
1796.) 

Died,  on  the  25th  idtimo  at  his  plantation  in  Laurens  County, 
district  of  Ninety-Six,  Patrick  Cunningham,  esq;  aged  S3  years; 
his  death  is  truly  lamented  by  a  large  circle  of  acquaintance  in  the 
county  in  which  he  redded.  He  has  left  a  widow  and  several 
children  who  sensible  feel  the  loss  of  a  beloved  and  tender  parent 
(Wednesday,  Nov.  9, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening,  by  the  rev.  Dr.  Isaac  Keith,  cz^t 
Samuel  Hayward,  commander  of  the  ship  Gadsden,  to  Miss  Mary 
Legare,  daughter  of  Daniel  Legare  jun,  esq.  deceased,  of  this  dty 
(Saturday,  Nov.  12, 1796). 

Died,  lately  in  Pennsylvania,  at  the  seat  of  John  Penn,  esq.  on 
Schuyskill,  near  Philadelphia,  near  Phylidelphia,  James  Heyward, 
Esq.  of  this  city.  Mr.  Heyward  served  reputably  as  a  volunteer 
in  the  American  Army  at  the  siege  of  Charleston,  in  our  late 
Revolutionary  war;  and  afterwards  held  a  commission  of  captain 
lieutenant  in  the  city  corps  of  artillery.  It  may  be  truly  said  of 
him,  that  he  was  a  warm  friend,  an  affectionate  relation,  a  worthy 
citizen,  a  brave  and  benevolent  man. 

Snatched  hence,  bereav'd  of  vital  breath, 
Clasp'd  in  the  cold  embrace  of  death; 
Snatch'd  from  bright  scenes  without  alloy. 
Domestic  comfort,  social  joy — 
Good,  pleasiu-e,  ease,  that  charm  our  race 
Gay  fortune's  plimi  and  smiling  face, 
In  the  full  hour  of  manhood's  bloom, 
Lo!  Heyward  sleeps  in  yonder  tomb! 
The  sprightly  note,  convivial  bowl — 
The  feast  of  friendship,  flow  of  soul. 
Or  joy  more  gently  sweet  and  gay. 
Stirs  not  his  cold  unconscious  clay. 
Deaf  to  affection's  tender  tone 
The  sigh  of  grief,  the  sorrowing  moan; 
Torpid  and  deaf  the  insensate  ear 
Hears  not  her  voice  it  loved  to  hear. 
[Thirty  more  lines  of  a  like  nature.]     (Monday,  Nov.  14, 1796) . 
Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Jenkins 


UAELRIAGE  AND  DEATE  NOTICES  207 

Henry  Deas,  eqs.  to  Miss  Margaret  Horry,  daughter  of  the  late 
Elias  Horry,  esq. 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  by  the  right  rev.  Bishop 
Smith,  Mr.  John  White,  to  Miss  Jane  Purcell,  daughter  of  the 
rev.  Doctor  Henry  Purcell. 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  by  the  Right  Rev.  Bishop 
Smith,  Francis  Sinmions,  esq.  to  Miss  Ruth  Lowndes,  esq.  (Thurs- 
day, Nov.  17, 1796.) 

Died,  on  Wednesday,  the  16th  instant  after  a  lingering  illness, 
Mrs.  Elizabeth  Axson,  in  the  80th  year  of  her  age.  (Monday, 
Nov.  21, 1796.) 

On  Sunday  departed  this  life,  after  a  short  illness,  Mr.  Samuel 
Legare,  merchant  of  this  city;  a  man  of  the  greatest  integrity  of 
heart  and  benevolent  disposition.     (Tuesday,  Nov.  22, 1796.) 

Died,  on  Sunday  evening  last,  Mr.  Robert  Beard,  tin  plate 
worker,  in  S5th  year  of  his  age  .  .  his  remains  were  decently 
interred  in  the  cemetery  of  St.  Philip's  church.  [Verses]  (Thurs- 
day, Nov.  24, 1796.) 

Died,  in  St.  Bartholomew's  parish,  at  Mr.  Robert  Brown's  on 
the  19th  of  November  last,  Mr.  Roger  Champneys,  after  many 
months  sickness,  aged  49  years. 

Died,  at  the  Round  O,  on  the  24th  November  last,  Mr.  George 
Butler,  in  the  24th  year  of  his  age,  much  lamented  by  those  who 
had  the  pleasure  of  his  acquaintance. 

Died  suddenly,  at  Providence,  (R.  I.)  on  the  4th  ultimo,  Mr. 
John  Francis,  merchant,  in  the  34th  year  of  his  age.  (Friday, 
Dec.  2, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  at  Washington  village,  by 
the  rev.  Mr.  Levrier,  Mr.  John  Gardner,  to  the  very  amiable 
Miss  Susannah  Conyers. 

Departed  this  life  on  Tuesday  last,  after  a  short  illness.  Miss  Ann 
Pickering,  daughter  of  the  late  Joseph  Pickering,  esq.  .  .  . 
(Saturday,  Dec.  3, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  last,  by  the  Rev.  Dr.  Buist,  Charles 
Elliott  Rowand,  esq.  to  Miss  Henrietta  Sommers,  eldest  daughter  of 
John  Sommers  deceased. 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  by  the  Rev.  Dr.  Buist, 
Mr.  Archibald  Duncan,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Peggy  Spiers,  eldest 
daughter  of  Mr.  James  Spiers,  of  this  dty. 

Died,  at  the  Sweet  Springs,  in  Virginia,  on  the  2d  ultimo, 


206  so.  CA.  mSTOEICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Col.  William  Thompson,  of  Belleville,  in  this  state,  in  the  67th 
year  of  his  age.  In  his  death  a  disconsolate  widow  has  to  lament 
the  loss  of  an  affectionate  husband,  children  the  loss  of  a  fond 
parent  and  the  citizens  at  large  the  loss  of  a  patriot  who  early 
stept  forth  in  the  defence  of  their  liberty.  By  all  who  knew  him 
he  will  be  ever  held  in  grateful  rememberance. 

"Behold  another  chief  laid  lowl  Withdrawn  by  the  all  con- 
quering hand  of  time,  he  hath  departed  for  those  blessed  r^ons 
where  nought  but  happiness  exists.  .  .  .'  [Twelve  more  lines 
of  eulogy.]    (Monday,  Dec.  5, 1796.) 

Died,  on  Tuesday  last,  Mrs.  Love  Stone,  the  amiable  relict  of 
Benjamin  Stone,  deceased,  late  of  James  Island.  She  ivas  an 
affectionate  wife,  a  fond  and  indulgent  parent,  and  a  friend  to  the 
distressed.    .    .    .    (Thursday,  Dec.  8, 1796.) 

Married,  at  Chachan,  in  St.  John's  parish,  on  Wednesday  the 
30th  ulto,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Parker,  John  Cordes  Prioleau,  esq.  to 
Miss  Marianne  Cordes,  daughter  of  the  late  Samuel  Cordes,  esq. 
of  St  John's  Parish.    Friday,  Dec.—  1796.) 

Married,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  by  the  right  rev.  bishop 
Smith,  Mr.  Edward  Edwards,  to  Miss  Mary  Wakefield,  both  of 
this  city. 

Died,  on  Saturday  morning,  in  the  49th  year  of  her  age,  Mis. 
Leah  Depass,  wife  of  Mr.  Ralph  Depass,  of  this  dty ...  she 
was  an  excellent  wife,  a  tender  and  affectionate  parent,  a  sincere 
riend,  and  a  good  mistress.    .    .    .    (Tuesday,  Dec.  13, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  last,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Jenkins,  Mr.  James 
Troup,  esq.  Attorney  at  Law,  to  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Pagett,  both  of 
this  dty.     (Friday,  Dec.  16,  1796.) 

Married,  on  Saturday  last,  by  the  Rev.  Dr.  Jenkins,  Mr.  William 
Primrose  Harrison,  to  Mrs.  Lucretia  Miklazewiez,  both  of  this  dty. 

Died,  at  his  seat,  Windsor  Hill,  in  St.  James  Parish,  Goose 
Creek,  on  the  11th  instant,  William  Moultrie  junr.  esq.  (Monday, 
Dec.  19,  1796.) 

Died,  on  Monday  the  12th  instant,  at  Winnsborough,  after  a 
long  and  lingering  illness,  which  he  bore  with  the  greatest  forti- 
tude, David  Evans,  esq.  (a  native  of  South  Wales)  aged  60  years. 
For  fifteen  years  past  he  resided  at  Winnsborough,  and  filled 
many  public  offices  of  trust  and  confidence,  the  duties  of  which  he 
discharged  with  the  strictest  integrity  and  honor.  As  an  honest 
man,  a  loving  husband,  a  tender  and  affectionate  father,  a  kind 


MAIUUAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  209 

master,  and  a  friend  to  the  poor,  he  was  ever  known.  .  .  His 
remains  were  the  day  following,  interred  in  the  family  cemetery, 
in  the  Protestant  Episcopal  Church  yard  at  Mount  Zion  College.  . 
(Wednesday,  Dec.  21, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Wednesday  evening  last,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  HoUin- 
head,  Charles  Tew,  esq.  to  Miss  Mary  Morgan,  both  of  this  city. 

Married  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  by  the  Rev.  David 
Clarke,  D.D.  of  Virginia,  Mr.  Jonathan  O'Hara,  lately  from 
Philadelphia;  to  the  amiable  Miss  Peggy  Ready,  of  Savannah. 
(Thursday,  Dec.  22, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Sunday  evening  last,  by  the  rev.  Dr.  William 
HoUinshead,  Mr.  Jabez  Withers  Johnson,  to  the  amiable  and 
much  accomplished  Miss  Catharine  Quackinbush,  both  of  this 
city. 

Died,  on  the  25th  inst.  near  his  seat,  on  his  return  from  the 
legislature,  the  honorable  Jacob  Bond  I'On,  esq.  In  him  his 
family  have  experienced  the  most  afflicting  and  irreparable  loss  of  a 
tender  and  affectionate  parent;  the  conmiimity  has  sustained  the 
loss  of  an  honest  and  useful  member  of  society,  and  the  poor  a 
humane  and  benevolent  friend.    (Wednesday,  Dec.  28, 1796.) 

Married,  on  Saturday  evening  last,  by  the  rev.  doctor  Gallagher, 
Mr.  Mathew  Shields,  to  Miss  Margaret  Kirby,  both  of  this  dty. 
(Thursday,  Dec.  29, 1796.) 

Died,  a  few  days  ago,  at  his  plantation  in  Prince  Williams 
parish,  James  Maine,  esq.  (Friday,  Dec.  30, 1796.) 

Died,  on  Thursday  evening  last,  Mr.  Samuel  Bonsall,  in  the 
62d  year  of  his  age,  an  old  and  respectable  inhabitant  of  this  dty. 
(Wednesday,  Jan.  4,  1797.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  at  Mrs.  Porter's  seat,  in 
St.  George's  parish,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Pogson,  Mr.  Edward  Hughes, 
to  Miss  Louise  Mathews,  daughter  of  Mr.  George  Mathews,  of 
this  dty. 

Married,  last  evening,  Mr.  Thomas  Flint,  to  Miss  Sarah  For- 
shaw,  both  of  this  dty.    (Thursday  Jan.  5, 1797.) 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  Robert  J.  Tumbull,  esq.  to 
Miss  Claudia  Gervais,  daughter  of  John  Lewis  Gervais,  esq.  both 
of  this  dty. 

Married,  on  Tuesday  evening  last,  at  the  house  of  James  Ben- 
tham,  esq.  East  Bay,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Jenkins,  Mr.  James  Rdd, 


210  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

to  Miss  Eleanor  Gale  Philips,  daughter  of  col.  James  Philips  of  the 
Island  of  Jamaica  deceased.    (Thursday,  Jan.  12, 1797.) 

Married,  last  evening,by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Mills,  George  Cabome 
esq.  to  Mrs.  Cam,  of  this  city. 

Died,  on  Sunday  evening  last,  in  the  47th  year  of  his  age, 
Mr.  Barnard  Richardson,  carp)enter,  much  lamented  by  a  numerous 
acquaintance.    (Friday,  Jan.  13,  1797.) 

Died,  very  suddenly,  on  the  31st  of  December  last,  at  the  planta- 
tion of  Mr.  Alexander  R.  Chisolm,  near  Beaufort,  where  he  was 
buried,  Mr.  Pierce,  aged  53  years.  The  inhabitants  of  this  state, 
but  particularly  the  cultivators  of  cotton,  have  to  lament  the  loss 
of  this  most  useful  and  extraordinary  mechanical  genius,  Mr.  Pierce 
arrived  not  long  since  from  the  Paterson  Cotton  Manufactory,  in 
the  Jersejrs,  and  had  very  nearly  completed  a  most  astonishing 
Water  machine,  for  ginning,  spinning,  and  weaving  of  cotton, 
which  he  had  brought  to  such  perfection,  as  led  him  to  conceive  he 
would  obtain  the  very  high  premium  offered  by  the  English  East 
India  Company  for  the  best  model  of  a  machine  for  the  ginning 
of  that  article. 

Departed  this  life,  on  Sunday  evening,  Mrs.  Susanna  Bee,  the 
worthy  and  much  lamented  consort  of  Joseph  Bee,  esq.  in  the 
thirty-ninth  year  of  her  age;  adorned  with  all  that  heaven  or  earth 
could  bestow  to  make  her  truly  amiable.     (Sat.  Jan.  14,  1797) 

Died,  on  Saturday  the  14th  inst.  Mrs.  Sarah  Thomas,  wife  of 
Mr.  Francis  Thomas,  of  this  city.     (Monday,  Jan.  16, 1797.) 

Married,  on  Sunday  evening  last,  Capt.  Samuel  Cameron,  to  the 
amiable  Miss  Martha  Dunbar,  of  this  city. 

Died,  on  Friday  evening  last,  after  a  lingering  illness,  which  he 
bore  with  Christian  fortitude,  Mr.  Patrick  Dougherty,  a  sail- 
maker,  of  this  city.  His  remains  were  interred  in  the  Roman 
Catholic  Church,  of  which  he  was  a  member,  on  Sunday  evening, 
attended  by  his  relations  and  friends.      (Tuesday,  Jan.  18, 1797.) 

Died,  yesterday  morning,  Mr.  Edgar  Wells,  merchant  of  this 
city.  His  friends  and  acquaintances  are  invited  to  attend  the 
funeral  this  afternoon,  at  four  o'clock. 

Died,  on  the  2d  inst.  at  Long-Cane,  in  Abbeville  county,  district 
of  Ninety-Aix,  in  the  80th  year  of  his  age.  Doctor  John  De  La  Howe. 
As  a  practitioner  of  physic,  he  was  eminent  in  this  country,  for  up- 
wards of  30  years  past;  as  a  man  of  extensive  learning  he  had  few 


HASSIAGE  AND  DEATH  NOTICES  211 

equals,  and  his  benevolence  endeared  him  to  all  who  knew  him. 
About  twelve  years  ago  he  retired  to  Abbeville  county,  of  which  he 
was  made  a  judge;  there  his  whole  time  was  spent  in  assisting 
those  who  stood  in  need  of  his  advice.  By  his  last  will,  having  no 
children,  he  has  left  his  estate  to  support  a  public  school  in  Abbe- 
ville county.     (Wednesday  Jan.  18, 1797.) 

Died,  on  Wednesday  night,  the  14th  of  December,  at  Presqu'isle, 
his  Excellency  Anthony  Wayne,  commander  in  chief  of  the  federal 
army. 

Extract  of  a  Utter  from  Captain  Henry  De  Butts,  to  the  secretary 
of  war,  dated  Fresqu'isle,  December  15th,  1796, 

"It  is  with  extreme  concern  I  discharge  the  melancholy  duty  of 
announcing  to  you  the  death  of  Major  General  Anthony  Wayne, 
who,  after  an  exceeding  painf id  visitation  of  the  gout,  expired  this 
morning  between  the  hours  of  2  and  3  o'clock. 

This  disorder  attacked  him  about  the  17th  idtimo,  during  a  very 
favourable  passage  from  Detroit  hither,  where  we  arrived  on  the 
evening  of  the  succeeding  day — it  by  turns  affected  his  feet,  knees 
and  hands,  with  a  considerable  degree  of  inflammation  and  a  great 
degree  of  pain,  until  about  the  30th,  when  the  violence  of  both 
beginning  gradually  to  abate,  inspired  flattering  hopes  of  his 
speedy  recovery:  alas!  it  appeared  that  the  gout  had  taken  posses- 
sion of  his  stomach,  where  it  remained  with  unconquerable  obsti- 
nacy and  extreme  torture,  until  it  put  a  period  to  his  existance. 
His  remains  will  be  interred  to-morrow,  within  the  fort,  with 
military  honors." 

Died,  on  Tuesday  last,  Mr.  Edgar  Wells,  merchant,  and  was 
interred  on  Wednesday  evening,  at  the  Methodist  Episcopal 
church.  He  was  the  first  person  that  joined  that  society  in  this 
dty,  and  continued  a  member  of  it  during  the  remaining  part  of 
his  life.  .  .  .  He  was  the  loving  kind  affectionate  husband;  the 
fond  generous  benificent  father;  and  the  benevolent,  humane 
master.  ...  An  oration  was  delivered  on  the  occasion,  by 
the  Rev.  Doctor  Coke.    .    .    .    (Saturday,  Jan.  21 1797.) 

The  body  of  a  man  was  lately  found  on  Sewee  Bay,  in  a  sailor's 
dress,  but  so  disguised  that  it  was  not  possible  to  know  who  ne 
might  have  been.  A  watch  found  upon  him  is  left  with  the 
Printer  here  of,  with  a  view  of  leading  to  a  discovery.  It  is  a 
yellow  metal  watch,  with  a  chased  case. 


212  so.  CA.  mSTOKICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Married,  on  Saturday  evening  last,  by  the  Rev.  Dr.  Keith, 
Jacob  Ford,  esq.  to  Miss  Ann  Motte  Peronneau,  youngest  daughter 
of  Arthur  Perronneau,  deceased,  late  merchant  of  this  dty. 
(Monday,  Jan.  23, 1797.) 

Married,  last  evemng,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Jenkins,  Mr.  James 
Poyas,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Ann  Frierson,  both  of  this  dty. 
(Wednesday,  Jan.  25, 1797.) 

Died,  on  the  4th  ihst.  at  Leogane,  capt.  Benjamin  Parker,  late 
master  of  the  schooner  Three  Friends,  belonging  to  this  port. 
A  few  days  before  his  death  capt.  Parker  had  taken  his  passage 
in  the  schooner  Alexander,  having  determined  to  abandon  his 
vessel,  as  there  was  no  prospect  of  her  being  aquitted.  Walking  on 
the  deck  he  by  some  accident  fell  down  the  hatchway;  he  was  so 
much  injured  by  the  fall  that  he  died  shortly  after.  He  was  a 
native  of  Newbury-Port. 

[The  same  paper  gives  the  arrival  of  the  schooner  Alexander^ 
Newcome,  master,  14  days  from  Leogane.]  (Thursday,  Jan.  26, 
1797.) 

On  Monday  evening  was  married,  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Mills,  Mr. 
John  Izard  Wright,  esq.  youngest  son  of  Alexander  Wright,  esq. 
to  Miss  Rebecca  Izard,  eldest  daughter  of  Ralph  Izard,  jun.  esq. 

Married,  on  Thursday  Evening  last,  by  the  rev.  Mr.  Furman, 
Mr.  James  Lawson,  to  the  amiable  Miss  Beattay,  both  of  this  dty, 
(Saturday,  Jan.  18,  1797.) 

Married,  by  the  rev.  Parson  Frost,  on  Saturday  last,  George 
Manson,  ship  carpenter,  to  the  amiable  relict  of  the  deceased  Cap- 
tain Jacob  MiUigan,  harbor-master  of  this  port.  (Monday, 
Jan.  30, 1797.) 

(To  be  continued) 


ABSTRACTS  OF  RECORDS  OF  THE  PROCEEDINGS   IN 
THE  COURT  OF  ORDINARY,  1764-1771 

Compiled  by  Mabel  L.  Webber 

(Continued  from  Jidy) 

Citation  granted  to  David  Maull  of  St.  Michael  parish  in 
Berkley  County  to  Administer  the  Estate  of  John  Williams  late  of 
same  place,  Taylor,  as  nearest  of  kin  right  of  his  wife  with 
will  annexed.    31th  August  1766. 

In  Court  of  Ordinary,  29th  August  1766. 

Upon  a  Business  of  special  citation  issued  at  instance  of  Newman 
Swallow  on  first  of  this  month,  citing  Thomas  Bulline  to  appear  and 
shew  cause  why  he  had  not  taken  out  Letters  of  Administration  on 
the  Effects  of  Joseph  Bradwell  late  of  St.  Georges  planter  agreable 
to  order  of  this  Court;  said  Bulline  not  appearing  within  the  time 
limited  in  the  said  Citation,  Ordered  Letters  of  Administration  be 
granted  to  Newman  Swallow  as  greatest  Creditor. 

Citation  to  William  Loocock  of  CharlesTown  to  admin,  the 
estate  of  John  August  Frinck  late  of  Black  Mingo  as  greatest 
Creditor.    1  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  Margt.  Housleighter  of  Orangeburgh  Township  to 
administer  the  Estate  of  Martin  Hauslighter  her  Husband  late  of 
same  place  as  nearest  of  Kin.    3  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  Michael  Scheurer  of  Broad  River  to  administer  the 
Estate  of  Jesse  Perriman  late  of  same  place  as  greatest  Creditor. 
4  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  Thomas  Mitchell  of  Prince  Geroges  parish  Winyaw 
to  administer  on  estate  of  John  Mitchell  late  of  Prince  Frederick's 
parish  as  nearest  of  Kin.    6  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  John  Stuart  &  Qo.  of  Prince  George's  parish  Mer- 
chants, to  administer  estate  of  Ebenezer  Dunnam  Junr.  late  of 
same  place  Taylor,  as  greatest  Creditors.    8  Sept.  1766. 

213 


214  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Citation  to  Thomas  Corbett  of  CharlesTown  Merchant  to 
administer  estate  of  William  Clement  late  of  St  Bartholomew  as 
greatest  Creditor.    13  Sept.  1766. 

Gtation  to  John  Boomer  of  St.  Michael  parish,  to  administer 
the  Estate  of  Robert  Steedman  late  of  same  place  as  next  Friend. 
13  Sept  1766. 

John  Collier  enters  caveat  against  probate  of  will  of  Thomas 
Collier  late  of  Saltcatshers  deceased  mitil  he  shall  be  heard 
16  Sept  1766. 

Citation  to  Mary  Parmenter  of  CharlesTown  to  administer  the 
estate  of  Ephraim  Michell  late  of  St.  Bartholomew  deceased  as 
nearest  of  Kin.    18  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  Elizabeth  Turquet  of  St.  Philips  Parish  to  administer 
estate  of  John  Denton  late  of  same  place  deceased  as  nearest  of 
kin.     19  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  Charlotte  Combe  of  St.  Michads  parish  to  ad- 
minister the  Estate  of  Paul  Combe  late  of  same  place  as  nearest 
kin.    19  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  Andrew  Robertson  &  James  Graham  of  ChsTown 
Merchants  to  administr.  on  the  estate  of  Henry  Hopkins  late  of 
same  place  Mariner  as  greatest  Creditors. 

Citation  to  Frances  Williams  of  Prince  Fredericks  parish  of 
Craven  County  to  administer  on  the  estate  of  David  Williams  of 
same  place  as  nearest  of  Kin.     26  Sept.  1766. 

Citation  to  John  Ward  and  Peter  Lbger  of  CharlesTown  mer- 
chants to  administer  on  estate  of  Thomas  Hall  Junr.  of  St.  Bartholo- 
mew parish  as  greatest  creditors. 

Citation  to  Thomas  Godfrey  and  Thomas  Gadsden  to  administer 
estate  of  Thomas  Lyol  Brumby  late  of  Prince  Georges,  Wnyaw. 
29  September,  1766. 

Citation  to  Jane  Pepper  of  St  Helena  parish  to  administer  the 
effects  of  Gilbert  Pepper  late  of  the  same  place,  as  nearest  of 
Kin.    29  September,  1766. 


RECORD  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  215 

Citation  to  Thomas  Liston  to  administer  the  estate  of  Richard 
Reynolds  late  of  St.  Helena  parish  in  behalf  of  Middleton  Liston 
and  Hope  as  greatest  Creditors.    1  October,  1766. 

Citation  to  Thomas  Liston  of  ChsTown  Merchant  to  administer 
on  the  Estate  of  Thomas  Taylor  late  of  St.  Johns  parish  John  Island 
in  behalf  of  Middleton  Liston  and  Hope  as  greatest  Creditors. 
1  October,  1766. 

In  the  Com't  of  Ordinary,  2ed.  October,  1766 

Mr.  Rutledge  produced  the  Nuncupative  Will  of  Thomas  Colyer 
deceased,  and  the  same  appearing  to  be  within  the  limitations  in 
the  Statute  of  the  29th  Car.  Q.C.S  (?)  And  Caveat  bemg  entered 
against  the  same,  by  John  Colyer,  and  the  said  John  Colyer, 
having  neglected  to  give  in  his  reason  for  Entering  the  said  Caveat 
within  the  time  limited  by  the  Rules  of  the  Court,  the  said  Will  was 
admited  and  deemed  good  and  lawful.  And  on  Representation 
being  made  of  the  great  distance  the  Witnesses  to  this  Will  lived 
from  ChsTown,  &  the  inconvenience  &  Expence  that  wd.  be 
attended  in  bringing  them  to  Town.  It  was  ordered  that  a  Dedimus 
do  Issue  to  Stephen  Bull  Esq.  of  Sheldon  impowering  him  to 
Examine  the  several  witnesses  to  the  said  will,  and  administer  the 
usual  oath  to  the  Executrix  there  in  named. 

Quere  wether  or  not  an  Oath  before  a  Magistrate  can  be  ad- 
mitted as  Evidence  in  the  Court  of  Ordinary,  if  not  Quere  whether 
or  not  a  Nimcupative  will  can  be  admitted  on  a  protors  (Proctor?) 
ascerting  that  it  was  within  the  limitations  of  the  Act  of  Chs.  Q,  29 
no  positive  proof  appearing  that — ^was,  Quere,  whether  has  the 
Ordinary  a  right  to  delegate  Authority  in  this  case:  Admit  before 
the  several  E —  to  this  will  can  be  examined  concerning  the  same, 
one  of —  should  died;  in  this  case  it  does  not  come  within  Stat —  of 
29  C.Q.  and  it  is  being  re  —  as  above  —  be  of  no  effect;  therefore 
illegal. 

Citation  to  Daniel  He)rward,  Thomas  Keyword  &  John  Heyward 
to  administer  the  estate  and  Effects  of  Samuel  Heyward  late  of 
St.  Helena  parish  deceased  as  nearest  of  Kin.    1  October,  1766. 

Citation  to  Robert  Gowdy  &  John  Savage  of  Ninety  Six  to 
Administer  the  Estate  of  John  M'Cluer  late  of  the  same  place  as 
greatest  Creditord,  2  Oct.  1766. 


216  so.  CA.  HISTOIUCAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Citation  to  Brian  Cape  of  St.  Michaels  parish  to  administer  the 
estate  of  Jonathan  Cape  late  of  Prince  William  parish  as  nearest 
of  Kin.    2  October,  1766. 

Citation  to  Mary  Forchaud  of  St.  Philips  Parish  to  administer 
estate  of  Thomas  Higgins  late  of  St.  Ardrews  parish  as  greatest 
Creditor.    3  Oct.  1766. 

Citation  to  Anthony  White  to  administer  estate  of  Lawrence 
Fitzgerald  late  of  Prince  Fredericks  parish  Craven  County  as 
Greatest    Creditor.  7  Oct.  1766. 

Oct.  8,  1766.  John  Rutledge  enters  a  Caveat  in  Behalf  of 
Elizabeth  Lyolbrombey  as  widow  and  next  of  kin  of  Thomas 
Lyolbremby  in  Behalf  of  Joseph  Doubourdieu  at  George  Town 
Mercht.  as  Attorney  to  Laroche  Dela  Villette  &  Montaignt  (?)  as 
greatest  Creditors  by  Bonds  from  said  Lyolbrembey 

Citation  to  Robert  Gowdy  of  Ninety  Six  to  administer  the 
estate  of  Alex'r  Muirhead  late  of  the  same  place  as  greatest  Credi- 
tor. 8  Oct.  1766. 

Citation  granted  Leonard  Sanmiat  of  Congarees  to  administer 
on  the  estate  and  effects  of  Peter  Poole  late  of  same  place  as 
nearest  of  Kan.    8  Oct.  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  Daniel  DeSaussure  of  Prince  William  parish 
to  Administer  on  the  Estate  of  Thomas  Jones  late  of  same  place  as 
greatest  Creditor.    10  October,  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  Elizabeth  Turquet  to  administer  on  the 
Estate  of  Charles  Turquet  late  of  St.  Helena  parish  Mercht. 
deceased  as  nearest  of  Kin.    10  October  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  Ann  Stewart  Henry  Stewart  and  Lewis 
Reeves  to  administer  estate  of  Francis  Stewart  late  of  St.  Helena  as 
nearest  of  Kin.    11  October,  1766. 

Citation  to  Isaac  Fendin  to  adminr.  on  the  estate  of  Martha 
Fendin  late  of  the  Parish  of  St.  Helena  widow,  as  nearest  of  Kin. 
Oct.  15, 1766. 

Citation  to  Mary  Ann  Fendin  to  admr.  on  estate  of  Abraham 
Fendin  late  of  St.  Helena  parish,  planter,  as  nearest  of  Kin. 
Oct.  17. 1766. 


KECOfiD  OF  COXJUT  PROCEEDINGS  217 

Citation  to  Henry  Ladson  and  Martha  Phebe  Perry  to  adminr. 
on  the  estate  of  Thomas  Perry  late  of  St.  Helena  parish,  planter  as 
nearest  of  kin,    Oct.  17, 1766. 

Citation  to  Purchas  Morgin  to  administer  on  the  Estate  of 
John  Morgin  late  of  St.  Pauls  parish  planter,  Her  Husband,  as 
nearest  of  Kin.    Oct.  24,  1766. 

Citation  granted  to  Frances  Oram  to  adminr.  on  the  estate  of 
Joseph  Oram  late  of  St.  Thomas's  Parish,  planter  Dec'd  as  next  of 
kin,  his  widow.    Oct.  25, 1766. 

Citation  to  John  Ashbell  of  Granville  County  to  administer  on 
the  estate  of  Solomon  Ashbell  late  of  same  place  as  nearest  of  Kin. 
27  October  1766. 

Citation  to  James  Lingard  of  St.  Philips  parish  to  administer  on 
the  estate  of  Stephen  Peak  late  of  Prince  Georges  parish  Winyaw 
planter  with  will  annexed  28th  October  1766. 

Citation  to  Robert  Wilson  to  adminr.  on  estate  of  James  Charl- 
mers  late  of  CharlesTown  Mamr.  as  greatest  Creditor.  Oct.  31, 
1766. 

Craven  County.  We  the  Subscriber  do  Hereby  certify  from 
under  Our  hands  there  where  as  Ephream  Lyles  of  the  Coimty 
aforesaid  Deceased  who  died  Intestate  &  with  out  a  will  do  free 
give  up  the  Right  of  Administration  to  his  Brother  John  Lyles  as 
witness  our  hands  This  29th  day  of  Oct'r  1766. 

his 
In  presents  of  Eliazer  X  Moberly 

Mark 
her 

Tho:  Tlettiiall  (?)  Ann  X  Moberly 

Mark 


To  the  Court  of 
Ordinary. 


218  so.  CA.  HISTORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Citation  to  Newman  Swallow  of  CharlesTown  Merchant  to 
administer  on  the  estate  of  Paul  Cumbui  of  St.  Michaek  parish 
Carpenter  as  Greatest  Creditor.  31  Oct.  1766. 

Citation  to  John  Scott  of  CharlesTown  Mercht.  to  adminr. 
estate  of  The  Rev'd  Abraham  Imer  late  of  Saxagotha  Townsh^  as 
greatest  creditor.    Nov'r.  3d.  1766. 

Citation  to  John  Lyles  to  adminr.  estate  of  Ephraim  Lyles  late 
of  Craven  County  Planter  as  nearest  of  Kin.    Nov.  3, 1766. 

Citation  to  Bartholomew  Ball  of  St.  Mark's  Parish  to  administer 
on  the  estate  of  Jno.  Brown  late  of  the  said  Parish  planter  as  nearest 
of  Kin.    Nov.  4, 1766. 

* 

Citation  to  Dan'l  Bruce  of  CharlesTown  to  adminr.  on  the 
estate  of  James  Edie  late  of  St.  Michaels  parish  Taylor,  as  greatest 
Creditor.    Nov.  3, 1766. 

Citaticm  to  Mary  Fiske  of  Broad  River  to  administer  on  the 
estate  of  George  Fiske,  of  Craven  Coimty  deceased,  as  nearest  of 
Kin.    Nov.  6,  1766. 

Citation  to  Patrick  Dunlap  of  St.  Philip's  Parish  to  administer 
on  the  estate  of  Dav'd  Cree  late  of  sd.  Parish  Shoemaker  as 
greatest  Creditor.    Nov.  6, 1766. 

Citation  to  Andrew  Robonson  and  James  Greeam  to  admin,  on 
the  estate  of  Henry  Hopkins  late  of  CharlesTown  merchant  as 
greatest  creditor.    Nov.  8, 1766. 

James  Andrews  enters  a  Caveat  against  administn.  being  granted 
to  Patrick  Dunlap  on  the  estate  of  Dav'd  Cree  imtil  he  is  heard. 
Nov.  10, 1766. 

Citation  to  William  Truelove  to  administer  on  the  estate  of 
Joseph  Atkinson  late  of  St.  Michl.  Parish,  Tallow  Chand'r  as 
greatest  Creditor.    Nov.  11, 1766. 

Qtation  to  Jacob  Whitsal  to  adminr.  on  the  estate  of  Thos. 
Colt  late  of  Jackson  Borough,  Carpenter  as  greatest  Credr. 
Nov.  11, 1766. 


RECORD  OF  CX>URT  PROCEEDINGS  219 

Maiy  Fishbume  to  administer  on  estate  of  Thos.  Fishbume  late 
of  St.  Bartholomew  Parishplanteras  nearest  of  Kin.    Nov.  11, 1766. 

Dr.  Robert  Wilson  to  administer  on  the  estate  of  Thos.  Ford,  Dr. 
late  of  Edistow  as  greatest  Creditor.    Nov.  11, 1766. 

Elizabeth  Lyolbrumbey  as  nearest  of  kin,  &  Joseph  Dubourdieu 
as  greatest  Creditor  to  administer  on  estate  of  Thos.  Lylobromby 
parish  Prince  George,  Craven  County.    Nov.  11, 1766. 

Jacob  &  Thos.  Cowan  of  St.  Helena  parish  to  administer  estate  of 
Isaac  Cowan  of  said  parish  planter,  as  next  of  Kin.    Nov.  14, 1766. 

Jacob  &  Thos.  Cowan  to  administer  on  estate  of  Beamor  Cowan 
late  of  St.  Helena,  Carpenter,  as  next  of  Kin.  Nov.  14, 1766. 

Robert  Testard  to  administer  on  estate  of  Mary  Testard  widow 
of  St.  Michaels  parish  as  next  of  kin.    Nov.  14, 1766. 

Dorothy  Hughes  to  administer  on  the  estate  of  Joseph  Atkinson 
late  of  St.  Michaeb  parish.  Tallow  Chand'r  as  greatest  Creditor. 
Nov.  IS,  1766. 

Wm.  Glen  to  administer  on  the  estate  of  John  Allison  late  of 
St.  Andrew's  parish,  Minr.  as  greatest  Creditor.    Nov.  15, 1766. 

George  Davis,  of  CharlesTown,  Carver,  to  administer  on  the 
estate  of  Jno.  Hanmierton  Esq:  formerly  of  this  Province,  as 
nearest  of  Kin.    Nov.  15, 1766. 

Andrew  Lord  to  administer  on  the  estate  of  Revd. — ^Lonsdale 
late  of  Prince  Wms.  Parish  as  greatest  Creditor.    Nov.  17, 1766. 

20th  Nov.  1766.  Jas  Parsons  enters  a  Caveat  on  behalf  of 
Elizabeth  Lyolbrombey  as  widow  and  next  of  Kin  of  Thos.  Lyol- 
brombey  against  admon.  of  the  estate  of  said  Thos.  Lyolbrombey 
being  granted  to  Joseph  Dubourdieu  or  any  other  Person. 

Citation  to  Robert  Mills  of  St.  Michaeles  parish,  Taylor  to 
administer  on  the  estate  of  Robert  Smith  of  said  Parish,  as  greatest 
Creditor.    Nov.  21, 1766. 

Citation  to  Elizabeth  Westbury  to  administer  the  estate  of 
Wm.  Westbury  late  of  St.  John's  Parish  her  Husband,  as  next  of 
Kin.    Novr.  22, 1766. 


220     '      so.  CA.  mSDORICAL  AND  GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Citation  granted  to  John  Cheesborough  of  St.  Philips  parish  to 
Administer  on  the  Estate  of  Margaret  Godfrey  late  of  Prince 
Georges  parish  WiayB,w  as  nearest  of  Kin.  24  Nov.  1766. 

Isabel  Thompson  of  St.  Bartholomew  parish  widow  to  administer 
on  the  estate  of  John  Thompson  late  of  same  place  as  next  of  Kin. 
25  Nov.  1766. 

Charles  Atkins  &  Plowden  Weston  of  CharlesTown,  Merchants 
to  Administer  on  the  Estate  of  John  Cooper  of  St.  Paul's  parish  as 
greatest  Creditor. 

Isabel  White  of  the  Waxsaws  Craven  County  to  administer  on 
the  estate  of  George  White  late  of  the  same  place  as  next  of  Kin. 
2  Dec.  1766. 

James  Parsons  on  behalf  of  the  Children  of  Silas  Miles  enters  a 
Caveat  against  the  proving  of  any  supposed  will  of  the  said  SOas 
until  he  shall  be  heard  on  the  said  Childrens  behalf.  4    Dec.  1766. 

James  Parsons. 

Withdrawn.  J.  P. 

Sarah  —  enters  Caveat  against  Ltrs.  of  Adminr.  being  granted 
to  Charles  Atkins. 

Sarah  Nash  of  Prince  Williams  parish  to  administer  on  the 
estate  of  Samuel  Nash  late  of  St.  Bartholomews  parish  as  nearest  of 
Kin.    8  Dec.  1766. 

John  Godfrey  enters  a  Caveat  against  administration  being 
granted  to  John  Cheesborough  on  the  Estate  of  Margt  Godfrey 
late  of  Prince  Georges  parish,  until  he  is  heard.    Dec.  12, 1766. 

James  Chappie  to  administer  on  the  estate  of  Benjamin  Chappie 
late  of  Prince  Fredericks  parish  Craven  county  nearest  of  kin. 
17  Dec.  1766. 

In  Court  of  Ordinary,  19  Dec.  1766.  Upon  business  of  Citation 
issued  at  instance  of  Joseph  Duburdeau  and  Elizabeth  Lyol  Brumby 


RECORD  OF  COURT  PROCEEDINGS  221 

to  cite  kindred  and  creditors  of  Thomas  Lyolbmmby  late  of  Prince 
George  parish  Win3raw.  .  .  .  Mr.  Parsons  as  Proctor  for  said 
Elizabeth  moved  that  she  be  granted  administration  of  the  estate 
solely,  as  being  nearest  of  kin;  ordered  that  said  Elizabeth  be 
granted  letters  of  administration  upon  her  giving  sufficient  security. 

William  Williamson  of  St.  Bartholomews  parish  granted  adminis- 
tration to  the  estate  of  James  Williamson  of  same  place  as  nearest 
of  Kin.    22  Dec.  1766. 

Thomas  Burdell  of  Berkley  County  granted  administration  on 
estate  of  Thomas  Burdell  Junr.  Late  of  same  place  Carpenter,  as 
nearest  of  Kin.  30th    Dec.  1766. 

John  Rae  of  Peedee  in  Prince  George  parish  to  administer  on 
the  estate  of  Henry  Buckholt  late  of  the  same  place  as  greatest 
Creditor.    31st  Dec.  1766. 

{To  be  continued) 


INDEX 


Ackennan,  Albert,  10, 200. 

Ackerman,  Stephen,  81. 

Adam,  Thomas,  38,  80. 

Adams,  Miss,  31.- 

Adams,  Ann,  97. 

Adams,  Catherine,  9. 

Adams,  Da\dd,  9,  10,  39, 40,  61, 105. 

Adams,  Edmund,  9. 

Adams,  Elizabeth,  6,  7, 10, 11. 

Adams,  Jane,  11. 

Adams,  John,  11. 

Adams,  Margaret,  9. 

Adams,  Martha,  9. 

Adams,  Mary,  10. 

Adams,  Nathaniel,  9  (3),  10, 46,  60. 

Adams,  Sarah,  76. 

Adams,  WilUam,  6,  9,  10,  11,  12,  13, 

64, 116. 
Addison,  Benjamin,  169. 
Agnew,  Alexander,  11. 
Agnew,  Andrew,  10,  11  (9),  12(4),  13, 

197. 
Agnew,  Andrew  James,  11, 13. 
Agnew,  Ann,  11, 13. 
Agnew,  Archibald,  11. 
Agnew,  Charles  John,  11. 
Agnew,  Dorothy,  11. 
Agnew,  James  Andrew,  13. 
Agnew,  John  Leacraft,  12. 
Agnew,  Margaret,  12. 
Agnew,  Mary,  11, 12, 13. 
Agnew,  Moses,  11. 
Agnew,  Sarah,  12. 
Albergotti,  Amy,  12  (2). 
Albergotti,  Anthony,  10,  11,  12  (2), 

124, 160, 175. 
Albergotti,  Magdalen,  10, 133. 
Albergotti,  Mary,  10. 
Albergotti,  Prudence,  10. 
Albergotti,  Sarah,  12,  23. 
Albergotti,  Ulyssess  Anthoi^,  9. 
Albergotti,  WOliam,  12. 
Alexander,  Andrew,  12, 139. 
Alexander,  Hector,  27. 
Allen,  Arabella,  12, 139. 
Allen,  John,  9. 
AUen,  William,  10,  65. 
Allison,  Ann,  10. 
Allison,  George,  10. 
Allison,  Jacob,  28. 
Allison,  John,  219. 
Alh'son,  Margaret,  10  (2). 


Allison,  Sarah,  10. 

Allston,  George,  33, 

Allston,  John,  33. 

Allston,  Mary,  155. 

Allyne,  Robert,  160. 

Amateur  Socie^,  28. 

Ammarr,  Rev.,  20. 

Anderson,  Hugh,  29, 93. 

Anderson,  John,  77. 

Anderson,  Margaret  Elizabeth,  12. 

Anderson,  Maiy,  12. 

Anderson,  WiUiam,  12. 

Andrews,  Hannah,  10, 198. 

Andrews,  Israel,  12, 1/7. 

Andrews,  James,  218. 

Andrews,  Capt.  Moses,  152. 

Anthony,  Abraham,  12  (2). 

Anthony,  Charles  Powell,  12. 

Anthony,  Mary,  12. 

Anthony,  Stephen,  12. 

Appleton,  Thomas,  11. 

Arcadians,  51. 

Archdale,  Gov.,  2. 

Arnold,  George,  10. 

Ash,  Mrs.,  27. 

Ash,  John,  4, 12. 

Ash,  Mary,  70. 

Ash,  Richard,  95. 

Ash,  Samuel,  12,  59. 

Ashbell,  John,  217. 

Ashbell,  Solomon,  217. 

Askew,  Ann,  12,  44. 

Askew,  Archibald,  12. 

Askew,  Margaret,  12. 

Askew,  Thomas,  10, 12, 44, 117,  139. 

Atkins,  Charles,  220. 

Atkinson,  Joseph,  218,  219. 

Audebert,  Ann,  42, 96. 

Audebert,  John,  94. 

Audry,  John  Baptiste,  76. 

Axon,  Elizabeth,  207. 

Bailey,  Elizabeth,  13,  53. 
Bailey,  George  Giblx^,  157. 
Bailey,  Henry,  13,  74. 
Bailey,  Martha,  13. 
Bailey,  Mary,  13. 
BaUey,  Ralph,  100. 
Bailey,  Sarah  Patterson,  101. 
Bailw,  West,  13. 
Baird,  Archibald,  38. 
Baker,  Capt.  Francis,  6. 


223 


224 


INDEX 


Baker,  Martha,  74. 

Baker,  Mary,  6,  155. 

Baker,  RichieLrd,  155. 

Baker,  Thomas,  157. 

Baker,  William,  74. 

Baldwin,  Robert,  83. 

Ball,  Bartholomew,  218. 

Ballentine,  James,  74. 

Bankson,  Andrew,  92. 

Baptist  Church  in  Charlestown,  4. 

Barksdale,  George,  21,  22,  23. 

Barksdale,  John,  22. 

Barksdale,  Margaret,  22,  23. 

Barksdale,  Mai^,  21,  23. 

Barlow,  Cathenne,  22. 

Barlow,  George,  19. 

Barlow,  Henry,  19. 

Barlow,  Mary,  22, 106. 

Barlow,  Sarah,  19. 

Barlow,  Thomas,  22. 

Barnes,  David,  21. 

Barnes,  Isaac,  21. 

Barnes,  James,  82. 

Barnes,  Martha,  21,  22,  23. 

Barnes,  Mary,  21. 

Barnes,  Paul  Hamilton,  23. 

Barnes,  Sarah,  22. 

Barnes,  William,  21,  22,  23,  135. 

Bamet,  Ann,  4. 

Bamet,  George,  4. 

BamweU,  Anne,  14, 15  (2),  22,  23,  24 

(2),  180. 
Bamwdl,  Anne  Middleton,  22. 
Barnwell,  Bower  Williamson,  24. 
Barnwell,  Bridget,  15, 17. 
Barnwell,  Caroline,  24. 
BamweU,  Catherine,  15  (2),  16>  59. 
Barnwell,  Charlotte  Bull,  25. 
BamweU,  Edward,  19,  22,  24  (3),  25, 

204. 
BamweU,  Col.  Edward,  24,  204. 
BamweU,  Eliza.  24. 
BamweU,  EUzabeth,  15, 17, 21, 23, 24, 

25. 
BamweU,  EUzabeth  Waight,  21. 
BamweU,  EUzabeth  Wigg,  24. 
BamweU,  Emma,  25. 
BamweU,  Esther  Hutson,  24. 
BamweU,  Esther  Wigg,  23. 
BamweU,  Harriet  Meta,  25. 
BamweU,  Hetty  Heyward,  25. 
BamweU,  James  Cuthbert,  22. 
BamweU,  Jean  Hay,  22. 
BamweU,  John,  8, 14,  15  (2),  17,  19, 

20,  25  (3),  46,  47.  59, 114, 120. 
BamweU,  Col.  John,  14,  39. 
BamweU,  Gen.  John,  22,  24. 
BamweU,  John  Bemers,  19,  21,  22. 
BamweU,  John  Gibbes,  24. 


BamweU,  Joseph  W.,  8,  46, 102, 171. 
BamweU,  Margaret,  15  (2),  200, 201 
BamweU,  Maria  Henrietta,  25. 
BamweU,  Martha,  15  (2),  17, 20, 59. 
BamweU,  Martha  Ann,  25. 
BamweU,  Martha  Chaplin,  19. 
BamweU,  Mary,  14, 18,  20, 24, 39,62. 
BamweU,  Mary  Bower,  22, 25. 
BamweU,  Mary  Cuthbert,  22. 
BamweU,  Mary  Georgiana,  99. 
BamweU,  Mary  Gibbes,  19,  24,  25, 

188. 
BamweU,  Maty  Hutson,  22. 
BamweU,  Mary  Wigg,  25. 
BamweU,  Nathaniel,  14,  15,  21,  22, 

24,  25. 
BamweU,  Col.  Nathaniel,  8, 14, 17  (2), 

18, 19,  20.  24j  46,  105. 
BamweU,  Nathanidl  Bemers,  24. 
BamweU,  Phoebe  Sarah,  20, 53. 
BamweU,  Richard,  18. 
BamweU,  Robert,  15,  17,  25, 153. 
BamweU,  Robert,  Gibbes,  25. 
BamweU,  Robert  Woodward,  24. 
BamweU,  Sarah,  20,  23,  25  (3),  52. 
BamweU,  Sarah  Caroline,  204. 
BamweU,  Sarah  Woodward,  24. 
BamweU,  Thomas  Osbom,  25. 
BamweU,  William,  25. 
BamweU,  WiUiam  Bower,  24. 
BamweU,  WiUiam  Washington,  23. 
BamweU,  WUUam  Wigg,  24. 
Baron,  Rev.  Alexander,  11, 19, 51,62, 

149, 163,  169,  176. 
Barr,  AUen,  79,  80. 
Barrard,  Ann,  13. 
Barrard,  Michael,  13. 
Barron,  or  Barrow,  Anne,  18, 115. 
Barron,  Michael,  18. 
Barrow,  Anne,  115. 
Barry,  Robert,  18. 
Bartlett,  Thomas,  13,  200. 
Barton,  Anne.  19, 20. 
Barton,  EUzabeth,  17,  19,  20. 
Barton,  Isaac,  17, 19,  20  (2),  200. 
Barton,  John,  17. 
Barton,  Rob^  Wilkinson,  19. 
Barton,  Thomas,  113. 
Barton,  WUUam,  17, 19,  20, 107. 
Bashford,  Sarah,  19. 
Bashford,  Susannah,  18, 19. 
Bashford,  WUUam,  17, 18, 19, 180. 
Basnett,  John,  169. 
Batey,— ,  19, 182. 
Battoon,  Elizabeth,  139. 
Baume,  Lady  Margaret  Frances  6a- 

bier  de  la,  153. 
Baumgartner,  Thomas,  86. 
Baxter,  Rev.  John,  169. 


INDEX 


225 


Baynard,  Abigail,  41. 

Baynard,  Elizabeth,  6. 

Baynard,  Elizabeth  Ann,  40. 

Baynard,  Elizabeth  Grimball,  4 

Baynard,  Thomas,  40. 

Baynard,  WiUiam,  17,  39,  40, 105. 

Baynard,  William  Grimball,  40. 

Bcal,  Catherine,  18  (2),  106. 

Beal,  Edward,  18. 

Beale,  CoL,  34. 

Bealer,  Ann,  52. 

Bealer,  Charles,  20. 

Bealer,  John,  20. 

Bealer,  Mary,  20,  176. 

Beamor,  Col.  John,  13. 

Beamor,  Judith,  13,  173. 

Beard,  James,  92. 

Beard,  Margaret,  20. 

Beard,  Mary,  31,  76. 

Beard,  Robert,  207. 

Beare,  Andrew  Collins,  23. 

Beare,  Catherine,  23. 

Beare,  Hannah,  23. 

Beare,  Joseph,  23. 

Beare,  Joseph  Christopher,  23. 

Bearsley,  Mary,  103. 

Beatty,  Miss,  212. 

Beaufain,  Hector  Beranger  de,  169. 

Becket,  John,  13. 

Becket,  Mary,  112. 

Becket,  Thomas,  13. 

Becu,  Benjamin,  13. 

Becu,  Giles,  13. 

Becu,  John  Michael,  13. 

Bee,  Joseph,  210. 

Bee,  Susanna,  210. 

Belcher,  Rev.  John,  50,  61, 148, 172. 

Bellinger,  Edmund,  81. 

Bell,  Andrew,  8, 13, 20,  57. 

Bell,  Ann,  20. 

BeU,  David,  152. 

Bell,  Elizabeth,  13. 

Bell,  Henrietta,  25. 

BeU,  John,  13,  25, 193. 

Bell,  John  McKee,  25. 

Bell,  Robert,  13. 

Bell,  Theodore  Augustus,  25. 

Bell,  William,  13,  20. 

Bellinger,  George,  169. 

Bellinger,  John,  25. 

Bellinger,  John  Scottow,  25. 

Bellinger,  Rebecca,  25. 

Bellinger,  William,  36. 

Bennett,  John,  18, 19,  20. 

Bennett,  Magdalen,  26. 

Bennett,  Margaret,  18, 19,  20. 

Bennett,  Thomas,  18. 

Bennett,  William,  19. 

Bentham,  James,  209. 


Berkley,  Elizabeth,  98. 

Berkley,  John,  98. 

Bemers,  Anne,  14. 

Berresford,  Ann,  31. 

Berresford,  Richard,  31,  169. 

Berry,  Hannah,  16, 115. 

Besselieu,  Philip,  26. 

Beswicke,  Anne,  13, 18,  201. 

Beswicke,  Charles,  13. 

Beswicke,  Deborah,  13, 14. 

Beswicke,  John,  14. 

Beswicke,  Sarah,  13. 

Beswicke,  Thomas,  13, 14,  111,  196. 

Betterson,  Ann,  18. 

Betterson,  David,  18, 19  (2). 

Betterson,  Elizabeth,  18,  19,  65. 

Betterson,  Hannah,  18. 

Betterson,  Jonathan,  18, 19. 

Betterson,  Jonathan  Romack,  19. 

Betterson,  Mary,  18. 

Betterson,  SaraJi,  18, 19. 

Betterson,  William  Romac,  19. 

Bettison,  see  Betterson. 

Bibbie,  George,  22. 

Bishop,  Henry,  158. 

Bishop,  Mary,  158. 

Black,  Ann,  21. 

Black,  Ann  M.,  154. 

Black,  Charles,  21. 

Black,  Elizabeth,  21, 129. 

Bhick,  James,  21  (4).  24. 

Black,  Rachel,  21  (4). 

Black,  Sarah,  21, 40. 

Black,  William,  21. 

Blackstone,  John,  14. 

Blackwood,  John,  21. 

Blackwood,  Margaret,  21. 

Blackwood,  Mary,  21. 

Blair,  William,  74. 

Blake,  Joseph,  169. 

Blakely,  Luke,  18, 135. 

Bland,  Elizabeth,  14, 17, 18, 134, 176. 

Bland,  Geor^je,  17,  18,  20,  57. 

Bland,  Harriet,  74. 

Bland,  Mary,  18,  20. 

Bland,  Richard,  14, 17,  73. 

Bland,  William  Bowman,  20. 

Blanton,  Rev.,  156. 

Bodron,  Clement,  14,  15. 

BoUer,  Martha,  125. 

Bolleau,  Thomas,  92. 

Bona,  Anne,  15. 

Bona,  Ann  Agnes,  21. 

Bona,  Elizabeth,  16. 

Bona,  Hannah.  120. 

Bona,  Henry,  24. 

Bona,  Jacob,  15,  20. 

Bona,  John,  15. 

Bona,  Judith,  16. 


226 


INDEX 


Bona,  Lewis,  15,  21,  24, 150. 

Bona,  Maiy  Margaret,  15. 

Bona,  Sarah,  21,  24. 

Bond,  Jacob.  169. 

Bonneau,  Benjamin,  23. 

Bonner,  William,  169. 

Bonsall,  Samuel,  209. 

Booker,  John,  96. 

Boomer,  John,  213. 

Boone,  William,  12,  22,  23, 169. 

Borthwick,  Alexander,  75. 

Boskey,  Rev.,  144,  174. 

Bosomworth,  Rev.,  127. 

Bostick,  Capt.  Peter,  169. 

Boswood,  Samuel,  1. 

Botham.  Rev.,  104. 

Botsford,  Catherine,  154. 

Botsford,  Rev.  Edmund,  154. 

Boury,  Elizabeth,  19. 

Boury,  Joseph,  19. 

Boury,  Susannah.  19. 

Bower,  William,  3. 

Bowles,  Tobias,  29. 

Bowman,  James,  22, 110. 

Bowman,  Margaret,  17, 181. 

Bowman,  Martha,  14, 104, 122. 

Bowman,  Mary,  20. 

Bowman,  Thomas,  18,  21. 

Bowry,  Anne,  16,  185. 

Bowry,  Daniel,  16. 

Bowiy,  Elizabeth,  16. 

Bowiy,  JosoDh,  16,  20. 

Boweiy,  William,  20. 

Boyd,  Catherine,  21. 

Boyd,  John,  21. 

Boyd,  Isabella,  21. 

Boyd,  Robert,  22,  138. 

Boyn,  battle  of,  136. 

Bracy,  Eugenia,  96. 

Bradbury,  Jane,  19. 

Bradbucy,  Thomas,  19. 

Braddock,  David  Cutler,  15, 16, 128. 

Braddock,  John  Cutler,  16. 

Braddock,  Mary,  16. 

Bradwell,  Joseph,  81,  95,  158,  160, 

161,  213. 
Bradwell,  Nathaniel,  73. 
Brady.  Michael,  92. 
BraOsford,  John,  169. 
Brailsford,  Morton,  163, 169. 
Brailsford,  Samuel,  164, 169. 
Brailsford,  William,  23, 120. 
Branford,  Ezekial,  4. 
Branford,  Rebecca,  4. 
Brayfield,  Rev.,  102. 
Breed,  Timothy,  15, 115. 
Brewton,  Miles,  83. 
Brisbane,  Robert,  163, 169. 
Brisbane,  William,  29. 


Brittain,  Charies,  14. 
Broadbelt,  Jane,  15. 
Broadbelt,  Janet,  15. 
Broadbelt,  William,  15. 
Breadhead,  John,  92. 
Bromate,  Elizabeth,  17, 173. 
Bromate,  Rd^ecca,  17. 
Bromate,  Robert,  17. 
Bromley,  Thomas,  37. 
Broughton,  Edward,  15, 195. 
Broughton,  Mary,  6. 
Broughton,  Peter,  157. 
Brown,  Daniel,  27. 
Brown,  Elizabeth,  18,  19. 
Brown,  Francis,  169. 
Brown,  Honour,  18  (2). 
Brown,  James,  59. 
Brown,  John,  15,  18,  19, 218. 
Brown,  Joseph,  27. 
Brown,  Judith,  15,  16. 
Brown,  Martha,  78. 
Brown,  Maiy,  15, 18. 
Brown,  Robert,  207. 
Brown,  Samuel,  14. 
Brown,  William,  78. 
Browne,  Capt.  Joseph,  155. 
Bruce,  Darnel,  218. 
Bruce,  Eleanor,  19. 
Bruce,  Peter  Henry,  19. 
Branson,  George,  93. 
Biyan,  Catherine,  16. 
Biyan,  Elizabeth,  16. 
Biyan,  Hugh,  15,  16. 
Biyan,  Jonathan,  16  (2). 
Biyan,  Josq>h,  16  (2),  181. 
Biyan,  Mary,  16. 
Buche,  Ann,  24. 
Buche,  John,  24. 
Buche,  John  Henry,  24. 
Buckholt,  Henry,  221. 
Buddmg,  William,  92. 
Buist,  Frances,  lOO. 
Buist,  Rev.  George,  206. 
Bull,  Arthur,  16,  20. 
Bull,  Bumaby,  18,  21. 
Bull,  Catherine,  108. 
Sull,  Charlotte,  55. 
Bun,  Lucy.  21. 
Bull,  Martha,  139. 
Bull,  Sarah,  16. 
BuU,  Stephen,  16(2),  21,  81. 
Bull,  Wimam,  18,  34,  169. 
BuU.  Hon.  William,  34. 
Bulline,  Thomas,  158,  159,  213. 
Bulloch,  James.  169. 
Burchie,  Daniel,  16. 
Burchie,  Hannah,  16. 
Burchie,  Johannes,  16. 
Burdell,  Thomas,  221. 


INDEX 


227 


Burger,  Nancy,  21. 
Burgess,  Aim,  75. 
Burke,  Margaret,  127. 
Burned  House  Greek,  Edisto,  7. 
Burnet,  Andrew,  187. 
Burrell,  John,  37. 
Burrows,  William,  163,  169. 
Burton,  Benjamin,  17,  20,  123. 
Burton,  Charles,  16. 
Burton,  Elizabeth,  16,  17,  20. 
Burton,  John,  125. 
Burton,  Leonard,  16,  18. 
Burton,  Margaret,  20,  119. 
Burton,  Mary,  17,  200. 
Burton,  Sarah,  16. 
Burton,  Thomas,  16,  17,  18. 
Bush,  Abraham,  45. 
Bush,  Edward,  17,  60. 
Bush,  Elizabeth,  17. 
Bushine,  Joseph,  17. 
Butler,  ClemUna,  19,  143. 
Butler,  George,  207. 
Butler,  John,  17,  19, 169. 
Butler,  Rebecca,  17. 
Butler,  Sarah,  19. 

Cabome,  George,  209. 

Cadman,  Anne,  46. 

Cadman,  Peter,  46. 

Cady,  Lavinia,  120. 

Cafry,  Towras,  46. 

Cahill,  Mary,  46,  145. 

Calder,  Archibdd,  46. 

Calder,  John,  40,  46. 

Calder,  Martha,  46,  75. 

Calder,  Mary,  46. 

Calder,  Mary  Ann,  40. 

Calder,  Sarah,  40. 

Calder,  William,  75. 

Calf  Pen  Bay,  94. 

Calhoun,  Patrick,  155. 

Calvin,  John,  51. 

Cam,  Mrs.,  210. 

Cameron,  Samuel,  210. 

Campbell,  Alexander,  160. 

Campbell,  Anne,  49. 

CampbeU,    Archibald,    20,    52,    53, 

121.  54. 
CampbeU,  Archibald  Chaplin,  55. 
Campbell,  Catherine,  46,  49,  50,  51. 
Campbell,  Catherine  Amarinthiai  54, 

Campbell,  Catherine  Elliott,  55. 
Campbell,  Charles,  50,  53. 
Campbell,  Colin,  54,  55. 
Campbell,  Dougal,  169. 
Campbell,  Edward,  51. 
Campbell,  Elizabeth,  160. 
Campbell,  Hugh,  46,  49,  50,  51,  56. 


Campbell,  James,  81. 

Campbell,  Jane,  53. 

Campbell,  John,  50. 

Campbell,  Rev.  J.  B.,  54,  120,  126, 

188,  193. 
Campbell,   John   Barnwell,    53,   54, 

55  (2). 
Campbell,  Mary,  52,  81. 
Campbell,  Mary  Ann,  49. 
Campbell,  Mary  Martha,  54,  188. 
Campbell,  Phoebe  Sarah,  53,  54  (2). 
Campbell,  Sarah,  50,  55,  120. 
Campbell,  William,  53. 
Campling,  WiUiam,  46,  52,  144. 
Cantey,  John,  37. 
Cape,  Bryan,  215. 
Cape,  Jonathan,  215. 
Capers,  — ,  52,  133. 
Capers,  Anne,  46,  50,  51,  53,  (2). 
Capers,  Charles,  50,  51,  53(2),    54 

189. 
Capers,  Constance,  51. 
Capers,  Elizabeth,  49,  53,  60,  129. 
Capers,  Elizabeth  Rachel,  53. 
Capers,  Hannah,  46,  49,  61. 
Capers,  Joseph,  53. 
Capers,  Joseph  Ellicott,  46,  49,  67. 
Capers,  Mary,  9,  46,  50,  54. 
Capers,  Rachel,  53. 
Capers,  Rebecca,  46. 
Capers,   Richard,  46(3),  50,   53(2), 

174. 
Capers,  Sarah,  54,  110. 
Capers,  Susan,  46. 
Capers,  Thomas,  49,  50. 
Capers,  William,  46. 
Capes,  Charles,  74. 
Cardross,  Lord,  3. 
Cargill,  Letty,  157. 
Carlisle,  Anne,  51. 
Carlisle,  Zachariah,  51(2). 
Carmen,  Deborah,  48,  111. 
Carmichael,  William,  32. 
Came,  Samuel,  169. 
Carson.  James,  169. 
Carrvile,  Sarah,  204. 
Cary,  James,  47. 
Cary,  Jane,  47. 
CaiVj  John,  47. 
Caskms,  John,  75. 
Cater,  Ebenezer,  72. 
Cathcart,  Andrew,  35. 
Cattell,  Elizabeth,  51. 
CatteU,  John,  47,  50,  51,  114,  195. 
Catterton,  Hannah,  53. 
Catterton,  Mark,  53. 
Catterton,  William,  53. 
Caw,  David,  169. 
Caw,  Lewis,  169. 


228 


INDEX 


CeUe,  Athar,  52. 

Chadwick,  EHzabeth,  74. 

Chabners,  James,  217. 

Champneys,  Roger,  207. 

Chandler,  Rev.  Isaac,  43. 

Chaplin,  Ann,  51. 

Chaplin,   Benjamin,   49,   50(2),   51, 

52,  128,  172. 
Chaplin,  Eleanor,  51,  52. 
Chi^lin,  Elizabeth,  47,  50.  51,  52. 
Ch^lin,    John,    47,    49(2),    50(2), 

51,  129. 

Chaph'n,  John  Saxby,  51. 
Chaplin,  Martha,  15,  47,  52,  53. 
Chaplin,  Maiy,  51,  53. 
Chi^lin,  Mary  Ann,  47,  49,  140. 
Chaplin,  Phoebe,  47,  49,  50,  51,  121. 
Chaplm,  Sarah,  47,  49,  50(2),  51(2), 

(30,  65,  96,  100. 
Chaplin,  Sarah  To(»ner,  50.  59. 
Chaplin,  Thomas,  47,  52(2). 
ChapUn,  WiUiam,  31,  47,  50,  51(2), 

52,  53,  172. 
Chaplin,  William  Fr^,  52. 
ChapUn,  William  Pitt,  52. 
Chapman,  John,  59. 
Chapman,  William,  2. 
Chappie,  Benjamin,  220. 
Chappie,  James,  220. 
Chapstick,  James,  72. 
Char],  Noulson,  52. 

Charleston,  Library  Society,  Orig- 
inal  Rules  and  Members,  163. 

Cheesborough,  John,  219 

Chiffelle,  Rev.  Henry,  57,  67,  103, 
116,  182. 

Chinners,  Thomas,  82. 

Chisholm,  Alexander,  169,  210. 

Chishohn,  Isabell,  79. 

Chisholm,  William,  79. 

Christian,  Jane,  47. 

Christian,  John,  47. 

Christian,  Mary,  47. 

Christy,  Henry,  47. 

Christy,  Hugh,  49,  140. 

Christy,  Maiy,  47. 

Christy^  Sarah,  47. 

Churchill,  Frances,  32. 

City  Gtaette^  Marriage  and  Death 
Notices  from,  26,  72,  152,  205. 

Claric,  Elizabeth,  44,  50. 

Clarke,  Francis,  75. 

Clark,  Geoige,  49,  50,  51,  61. 

Clark,  James,  44,  97,  100. 

Clark,  Joseph  George,  50. 

Clark,  Martha,  44,  97. 

Clark,  Sarah,  44. 

Clark,  Sarah  Rosamond,  54. 

Clark,  Sophia,  50,  51,  190. 


Clark,  Susannah,  54. 

Oaricson,  Aaron  Loocock,  33. 

Clarkson,  Elizabeth,  33. 

Clarkson,  William,  26. 

Claybum,  Frances,  36. 

Claybum,  John,  36. 

Clemmons,  Thomas,  53. 

Clerk,  Frances  Maiy,  47. 

Clerk,  John.  47. 

Cleland,  John,  169. 

Clement,  William,  213. 

Clerk,  Maiy  Ann,  47. 

Clerk,  WilUam,  47. 

Clou<^,  Valentine,  35. 

Cobley,  Mrs.,  106. 

Cobley,  Eleanor,  103. 

Cobley,  Jemmitt,  47,  200. 

Cobum,  Pridlla,  33. 

Cochran,  James,  52. 

Cockran,  Elizabeth,  4$,  134. 

Cochran,  John,  48,  169. 

Codner,  Ann,  4,  6. 

Codner,  Charles,  4. 

Clancy,  Margaret,  11. 

Codner,  Grace,  4. 

Codner,  Richard,  4. 

Codner,  Sabina,  4,  6. 

Codner,  Provicience,  4,  6. 

Colar,  Andrew,  52. 

Colcock,  Charles  Jones,  31. 

Cole,  Ann,  50,  51.  52. 

Cole,  James,  47. 

Cole,  John,  47,  50,  51,  52,   117. 

Cole,  Paul,  47,  48,  49,  52. 

Cole,  Richard,  47. 

Cole,  Susannah,  47,  49,  51,  198. 

Collier,  John,  213,  215. 

Collier,  Thomas,  213,  215. 

Collins,  Jeremiah,  52. 

Collins,  Mary,  52. 

Collins,  Rev.  T.  R.,  139. 

Colt,  Thomas,  218. 

Colyer,  See  Collier. 

Combe,  Charlotte,  214. 

Combe,  Paul,  214,  217. 

Comings,  Thomas,  93. 

Connant,  Anne,  47. 

Connant,  John,  47,  128. 

Connor,  Roger,  52. 

Conyers,  Eleanor,  116. 

Conyers,  Elizabeth,  48(3),  50,    175, 

184. 
Conyers  John,  48,  49,  116,  181. 
Conyers,  Mary,  202. 
Conyers,  Richard,  48,  52. 
Conyers,  Sarah,  52. 
Conyers,  Susannah,  207. 
Conyers,    Thomas,    48,     50,     116, 

181. 


INDEX 


229 


Conyers,  William,  48,  50. 

Cook,  Ann  Elizabeth,  52. 

Cook,  Hannah,  52,  59. 

Cook,  James,  130. 

Cook,  John,  51,  52,  92,  148. 

Cook,  Laurence,  50,  51,  52. 

Cook,  Margaret,  52,  187. 

Cook,  Mary,  50. 

Cook,  Rose,  50,  51,  52. 

Cookson,  — ,  50. 

Cooper,  Rev.,  20,  52. 

Cooper,  Elizabeth,  206. 

Cooper,  John,  1(53,  169,  220. 

Coram,  Edwajtl,  92. 

Coram,  William,  92. 

Coram,  Francb,  156. 

Corbett,  Miss,  157. 

Corbett,  Thomas^  157,  169,  213. 

Cordes,  Ann^  155. 

Cordes,  Mananne,  208. 

Cordes,  Samuel,  208. 

Cosgrove,  Rev.,  52,  62, 138. 

Coste,  Rev.,  27. 

Coster,  Charles,  48. 

Coster,  Joseph,  48. 

Coster,  Peter,  48. 

Cotell,  Benjamin,  6. 

Cotterell,  John,  B.,  75. 

Cotton  manufactory,  210. 

Couie,  John,  76. 

Couley,  Chnstianna,  48. 

Couley,  Gabriel,  48. 

Couley,  John,  48. 

Course,  Daniel,  156. 

Court    of    Ordinary,    Abstracts    of 

Proceedings,  34,  77, 158,  212. 
Courtauld,  Mary,  152. 
Courtauld,  Samuel,  152. 
Cowan,  Beamor,  219. 
Cowan,  Isaac,  219. 
Cowan,  Jacob,  219. 
Cowell,  — -,  48. 
Cowell,  Susanna,  48. 
Cowen,  Jane,  51. 
Cowen,  John,  48,  49,  50(2),  51. 
Cowen,  Judith,  4B. 
Cowen,  Margaret,  51. 
Cowen,    Sarah,    48,    49,    51,    114, 

143. 
Cowen,  Thomas,  52,  219. 
Cox,  Elizabeth,  51. 
Cox,  Frances,  49,  195. 
Cox,  John,  49,  58,  74. 
Cox,  Sarah,  51. 
Cox,  Thomas,  50,  51. 
CrakHn,  Elizabeth,  142. 
Cranmore,  Margaret,  49. 
Cranmore,  Thomas,  49. 
Crawford,  Catherine,  54. 


Crawford,  Christiana,  54,  190. 

Crawford,  Daniel,  169. 

Crawford,  David,  54. 

Crawford,  Sarah  B.,  53. 

Crec,  David,  218. 

Crockett,  James,  36,  38,  169. 

Crockatt,  J6hn,  169. 

Crookshanks,  David,  52. 

Crosby,  Anne,  49. 

Crosby,  Elizabeth,  49. 

Crosby,  John,  49. 

Croskeys,  Anne,  49,  101,  115. 

Croskeys,  Jemima,  30. 

Croskeys,  Tohn,  30. 

Cross,  Arabella,  154. 

Cross,  Charles  John  Carr,  54. 

Cross,  Elenor,  4S, 

Cross,  Elizabeth,  48. 

Cross,  Hannah,  54(2). 

Cross,  James  WiUiam  Mongin,  54. 

Cross,  John,  54(2). 

Cross,  Mary,  54. 

Cross,  Sarah,  48,  112. 

Cross,  Thomas,  48,  57. 

Cross,  William,  154. 

Crotly,  Margaret,  49. 

Crotfy,  Mary,  49. 

Crotfy,  Thomas,  49. 

Cubaun,  George,  27. 

Cuddy,  Ann,  53. 

Cuddy,  Elizabeth,  53. 

Cuddy,  Jane,  51. 

Cuddy,  John,  53. 

Cuddy,  Robert,  53. 

Culbotson,  Elizabeth  Ann,  54. 

Culbertson,  John,  54. 

Culbertson,  Penelope,  54. 

Culbertson,  Sarah,  54. 

CuUiatt,  James,  L.,  29. 

CulliaU,  Sarah,  29. 

CuUin,  Margaret,  74. 

Cumbui,  See  Combe. 

Cundall,  Elizabeth,  50,  51. 

Cundall,  Thomas,  50,  51. 

Cunningham,  Mrs.,  27. 

Cunningham,  Harriot,  53. 

Cimningham,  John,  27. 

Cunningham,  Martha,  53. 

Cunningham,  Pamela,  30. 

Cunningham.  Patrick,  30,  206. 

Cupit,  Joseph,  49. 

Curry,  Jacob,  51. 

Curry,  Mary,  51. 

Curry,  Peter,  51. 

Curtis,  Frands  Silvester,  32. 

Cusack,  James  Loocock,  31-^2. 

Cussins,  George,  36. 

Cuthbert,  Alice  Louisa  Screven,  55. 

Cuthbert,  Anne,  54,  55. 


230 


INDEX 


Cuthbert,  Edward,  55. 

Cuthbert,   George,   39,   40,   49,   52, 

106. 
Cuthbert,    James,    21,    51,    52,    53, 

54(2),  201. 
Cuthbot,   James  Hazzard,   20,   52, 

54. 
Cuthbert,  Jean,  21. 
Cuthbert,  Jean  Hay,  53. 
Cuthbert,  John,  51,  54,  55. 
Cuthbert,  John  Alexander,  53,  54. 
Cuthbert,  Louisa  Elizabeth,  55. 
Cuthbert,  Ludus  S.,  24. 
Cuthbert  Maiy,  21,  52,  53,  54,  55. 
Cuthbert,  Mary  Porcher,  55. 
Cuthbert,  Robert  Barnwell,  54. 
Cuthbert,  Sarah,  54(2). 
Cuthbert,  Sarah  Barnwell,  54,  55. 
Cuthbert.  William  Henry,  54. 
Cuttino,  Peter,  159. 

Dale,  Richard,  59. 

Dale,  Dr.  Thomas,  169. 

Dalton,  Elizabeth,  55. 

Dalton,  Hannah,  59. 

Dalton,  Hannah  Peridear,  59. 

Dalton,  James,  59. 

Dalton,  William,  55,  133. 

Daly,  Daniel,  58. 

Daly,  Jane,  55,  56. 

Dafy,  John,  58. 

Daly,  Joseph,  58. 

Daly,  Judith,  58. 

Daly,  Martha,  190. 

Daly,  Mary,  58,  143. 

DalzU,  Anne,  55. 

Dalzil,  Hannah,  55. 

Dalzil,  John.  55. 

Dalzil,  Judith,  55. 

Daniel,  Agnes,  80. 

Daniel,  John,  80. 

Daniel,  Margaret,  55,  115. 

Darrell,  Benjamin,  26. 

Darrell,  Edward,  154. 

Dart,  Bejamin,  169. 

David,    Abraham,    58,    59(2),    107, 

197. 
Davidson,  James,  169. 
Davidson,  Martha,  58,  146. 
Davis,  Catherine,  58. 
Davb,  Edward,  55,  58,  116. 
Davis,  Elizabeth,  58,  59,  123. 
Davis,  Elizabeth  Tyrril,  58. 
Davis,  Frauds,  55. 
Davis,  Frederick,  55. 
Davis,  George,  219. 
Davis,  James,  58. 
Davis,  Jeremiah,  58. 
Davis,  John,  58. 


Davis,  Margaret,  58. 

Davis,  Martha,  55,  58,  59. 

Davis,  Mary,  57. 

Davis,  Rebecca,  58. 

Davis,  Samud,  58. 

Davis,  Sarah,  55. 

Davis,  WiUiam,  42, 55, 5Z,  58, 59, 195, 

Dawson,  Christq^her,  55. 

Dawson,  Lavinia,  55. 

Dawson,  Richard,  55. 

Day,  Mrs.,  153. 

Day,  William,  153. 

Dean,  Anne,  56. 

Dean,  Eleanor,  56. 

Dean,  Elizabeth,  56. 

Dean,  James,  56. 

Dean,  Morris,  72. 

Dean,  Nathaniel,  59. 

Dearing,  Ebenezer  Little,  74. 

Deas,  David,  169. 

Deas,  Henry,  206. 

Deas,  John,  77. 

Debore,  Maiy,  56. 

Debutts,  Capt.  Henry,  211. 

D'Harriett,  Benjamin,  5. 

Delebere,  Anne,  56. 

Ddebere,  George,  55,  56. 

Delebere,  Jane,  55,  56(2),  67. 

Ddebere,  John,  55,  56(2),  67. 

Delebere,  Kenneth,  19. 

Delebere,  John  Kinard,  56. 

Ddebere,  Mary,  56. 

Ddebere,  Sarah,  56,  133. 

Dc  La  Howe,  Dr.  John,  210,  211. 

Delaveaux,  Rev.  I.,  120. 

Ddegal,  Catherine,  46,  56. 

Delegall,  Edward,  57. 

Ddegall,  Eleanor,  56,  57. 

Dd^all,  Eleanor  Clement,  57. 

Ddegall,  Jane,  56,  57. 

Ddegall,  Margaret,  58. 

Dd^all,  Marsh.,  49. 

Del^all,  Marseil  Margaret,  56. 

DdegaU,  Philip,  55,  57,  58. 

Dd<^all,  Phibp,  Jr.,  56. 

Ddegall,  Sophia,  56. 

Ddc^ye,  John,  56,  102. 

Denisp  Mr.,  29. 

Dennis,  Lawrence,  4,  5,  6. 

Denton,  John,  214. 

DqMiss,  Ralph,  208. 

Depass,  Leah,  208. 

Deoaussure,  Benjamin,  182. 

DeSaussure,  Alexander  McPherson, 

187. 
DeSaussure,   Daniel,   81,    186,    187, 
•     216. 

DeSaussure,  Eliza  Washington,  187. 
DeSaussure,  Elizabeth,  127. 


INDEX 


231 


DeSaussure,  Francis  Lewis,  182. 
DeSaussure,  Harriott,  19,  182. 
DeSaussure,  Heniy,  182. 
DeSaussure,  Henry  William,  186. 
DeSaussure,  Jane,  187. 
DeSaussure,    John    Daniel    Hector, 

182. 
DeSaussure,  John  Henry  Cesar,  181. 
DeSaussure,  Louis,  59. 
DeSaussure,  Magdalene,  182. 
DeSaussure,  Magdalene  Amelia,  182. 
DeSaussure,  Mary,  186, 187. 
DeSaussure,  Mary  Elizabeth,  182. 
DeSaussure,  Mary  Magdalen,  187. 
DeSaussure,  Sarah  Amelia,  187. 
DeTreville,     Harriett     Laboulardie, 

192. 
DeTreville,  John,  60,  192. 
DeTreville,  John  Laboularderie,  60, 

202. 
DeTreville,    Robert    Laboularderie, 

192. 
DeTrevflle,  Sarah,  192. 
Deval,  Elizabeth,  57. 
Deval,  James,  57. 
Devant,  Isaac,  59. 
Devant,  Mary,  191. 
Devant,  Tabitha,  59. 
Deveant,  James,  59. 
Deveant,  Lydia,  59. 
Deveaux,    An<h-ew,    36,    56,    59(5), 

130. 
Deveaux,  Andrew,  Jr.,  15. 
Deveaux,  Anne,  56,  58,  59* 
Deveaux,  Anne  Elizabeth,  56. 
Deveaux,  Caroline,  60. 
Deveaux,  Catherine,  59(5),  130 
Deveaux,  Elizabeth,  56,  60. 
Deveaux,  Hannah,  12,  56,  69. 
Deveaux,  Jacob,  60. 
Deveaux,  James,  56,  58. 
Deveaux,  John,  56. 
Deveaux,  John  Palmer,  56. 
Deveaux,  Lucy,  56. 
Deveaux,  Martha,  59. 
Deveaux,  Sarah,  56,  60. 
Deveaxix,  Thomas,  55. 
Deveaux,  William,  59. 
Deverge,  Madame,  27. 
Diana,  Mary,   130. 
Dickinson,  John,  72, 
Dick,  Miss,  52. 
Dick,  Fred,  93. 
Dick,  Marv,  49,  58. 
Dicks,    Ebenezer,    57,    58(7>,    117, 

143. 
Dicks,  Elizabeth,  58,  143. 
Dicks,  Isabella,  58. 
Dicks,  Margaret,  58(5). 


Dicks,  Susannah,  58,  143. 
Dicksey,  James,  194. 
Didier,  Benjamin,  59. 
Didier,  Benjamin  Wilson,  59. 
Dingle,  Alexander,  92. 
Dixsey,  James,  56,  57. 
Dixsey,  Hannah,  57. 
Dixsey,  Rachel,  57. 
Dixsey,  Sarah,  57. 
Doctors,  169,  170. 
Dohearty,  James,  57. 
Donavan,  Elizabeth,  80. 
Donnom,  John,  159. 
Dorong,  John,  59. 
Dossett,  Mary,  51,  59. 
Doubourdieu,  Joseph,  216. 
Doughty,  Frances,  205. 
Doughty,  Patrick,  210. 
Doughty,  Thomas,  205. 
Douglas,  George,  57. 
Douglas,  Jane,  57. 
Douglas,  Margaret,  57. 
Douglas,  Mary,  17,  57. 
Dowdee,  Richard,  59. 
Douxsaint,  Paul,  163,  169. 
Douxsaint,  William,  152. 
Dowdee,  Richard,  175. 
Downes,  Ann,  155. 
Downes,  Richard,  155. 
Doyley,  Daniel,  83. 
Drake,  Elizabeth,  57,  178. 
Drayton,  Eliza,  32. 
Drayton,  Glenn,  32. 
Drayton,  John,  29,  169. 
Drayton,  Susannah,  29. 
Driggers,  Mathew,  35. 
Drummond,  Mary,  57. 
Dubose,  Elizabeth,  27. 
Dubose,  Samuel,  27. 
Dudley,  Ann,  59. 
Dudley,  Benjamin,  59. 
Dudley,  John,  59. 
Dunbar,  Martha,  210. 
Dunbar,  Simon,  169. 
Duncan,  Archibald,  207. 
Duncombe,  Rev.,  11. 
Dunford,  Elizabeth,  57. 
Dunford,  Joseph,  57. 
Dunlap,  Abraham,  57. 
Dunlap,  Alexander,  57,  59. 
Dunlap,  Elizabeth,  13,  57,  59. 
Dunlap,  James,  57(3). 
Dunlap   Mary,  198. 
Dunlap,  Patrick,  218. 
Dunlap,  Sarah,  59. 
Dunlap,  William,  3. 
Dunnam,  Ebenezer,  213. 
Durand,  Rev.  Len,  169. 
Durant,  Robert,  160. 


232 


INDEX 


Dwight,  Thomas,  93. 

Dyer,  Joanna,  48,  57. 

Dyson,  Rev.  Edward,  56,  60,  102. 

Dyssli,  Samuel,  89. 

Eaton,  John,  77. 

Eaton,  Samuel,  45. 

Ebrick,  John  M.,  152. 

Edee,  Ann,  60. 

Edee,  Amy,  60. 

Edee,  William,  60. 

Edgar,  WiUiam,  60. 

Edie,  James,  218. 

Edin,  Elizabeth,  62,  63. 

Edin,  George,  62,  63. 

Edin,  Joshua,  63. 

Edin,  Tabitha,  61. 

Edin,  William,  56,  61. 

Edings,  Joseph,  4. 

Edings,  Tabitha,  66. 

Edisto  Island,  1-7. 

Edwards,  Alexander  L.,  187. 

Edwards,  Digby,  61,  62,  67. 

Edwards,  Edward,  208. 

Edwards,  Isaac,  61. 

Edwards,  Isaac  Evans,  61. 

Edwards,  James,  82. 

Edwards,  John,  62. 

Edwards,  Joseph  Brown,  74. 

Edwards,  Judith,  61. 

Edwards,  Martha,  61,  62. 

Edwards,  Sarah,  61. 

Edwards,  Sophia,  49,  61. 

Edwards,  Unah,  82. 

Ehney,  Eberhard,  78. 

Elbert,  William,  61. 

Elfe,  Benjamin,  32. 

Ellington,  Rev.  Edward,  21,63,68, 127. 

Elliott,  Aquilla,  60. 

Elliott,  Barnard,  63. 

Elliott,  Barnard  Berresford,  63. 

Elliott,  Catherine,  63. 

Elliott,  Charles,  60,  192. 

Elliott,  Elizabeth,  62,  63. 

Elliott,  Esther,  64. 

Elliott,  G.  P.,  25. 

Elliott,  Grey,  103,  106. 

Elliott,  George  Parsons,  64. 

EUiott,  Mary,  42,  62,  63,  96. 

Elliott,  Mary  Barnwell,  63. 

Elliott,  Nathaniel,  62. 

Elliott,  Phoebe,  63,  64. 

Elliott,  Phoebe  C  aroline,  63 

Elliott,  Ralph  Emms,  62,  63. 

Elliott,  Sabma,  6. 

Elliott,  Sarah,  62. 

Elliott,  Stephen,  25,  63  (2),  64. 

Elliott,  Susan  Parsons,  63. 

Elliott,  Thomas,  63. 


EUiott,  WilHam,  4,  6,  61,  62  (4),  63 

(8),  64  (3),  136,  204. 
Ellis,  Anne,  60,  61. 
Ellis,  Ann  Maiy,  63. 
Ellis,  Ann  Sarah,  63. 
Ellis,  Charles,  64. 

Ellis,  Edmund,  49, 60,  61, 62, 63, 112. 
Ellis,  Eleanor,  62,  63. 
Ellis,  Elizabeth,  62,  63,  174. 
EUis,  Elizabeth  Capers,  64. 
Ellis,  James,  6,  62,  63. 
Ellis,  John,  60,  61,  62,  63, 172, 
Ellis,  John  Edmund,  63. 
Ellis,  John  Green,  63 
Ellis,  Margaret,  9,  60,  63. 
EUis,  Martha,  62. 
Ellis,  Martha  HamUton,  63. 
Ellis,  Mary,  61,  63. 
EUis,  Maiy  Ann  Sarah,  62. 
EUis,  Morgan,  60,  61,  107. 
EUis,  Rachel,  13,  60. 
Ellis,  Natham'el  Greene,  63. 
EUis,  Richard,  63  (2),  64. 
Ellis,  Sarah  McKee,  64. 
Ellis,  Susannah,  63,  64. 
ElUs,  Thomas  60 
EUis,  WUliam,  60,  79. 
Emsden,  Ambrose,  62. 
Emsden,  WUUam  Hazzard,  62. 
Ernst,  Elizabeth,  33. 
Evance,  BanfiU,  170. 
Evans,  Rev.,  21,  61. 
Evans,  David,  208. 
Evans,  Elizabeth,  61,  62. 
Evans,  George,  205. 
Evans,  John,  47,  60,  61,  68. 
Evans,  Jonathan,  34. 
Evans,  Margaret,  60, 122. 
Evans,  Mar>%  205. 
Evans,  Mary  Ann,  60. 
Evans,  Martha,  62. 
Evans,  Middleton,  49,  61. 
Evans,  Randolph,  60. 
Evans,  Rowland,  60. 
Evans,  Sarah,  60,  62. 
Evans,  WUUam  60,  61,  62,  75,  95. 
Ewing,  Adam,  205. 

Fair,  WiUiam,  153. 
FairchUd,  — ,  18. 
FairchUd,  Christiana,  70. 
FaurchUd,  EUzabeth,  69, 125. 
FairchUd,  Mary  Anne,  69. 
FairchUd,  Richard,  69. 
FairchUd,  Robert,  69,  70,  196. 
FairchUd,  Robert  Archtt)ald,  70. 
FairchUd,  Sarah,  69(2),  70. 
FairchUd,  TTiomas,  70. 
Fairfield  plantation,  98. 


INDEX 


233 


Fanning,  Gilbert,  76. 

Fanning,  Lemuel  Palmer,  76. 

Farrington,  Hannah,  64. 

Farrington,  Thomas,  64, 178. 

Farris,  Mary,  64. 

Farris,  William,  64,  143. 

Fayssoux,  Dr.  Peter,  27. 

Fell,  Elizabeth,  68. 

FeU,  William,  68. 

Fell,  Zachary,  68. 

Fellowship  Society,  28. 

Fendin,  Abraham,  216. 

Fendin,  Elizabeth,  9,  64,  67,  69,  70. 

Fendin,  Isaac,  64,  216. 

Fendin,  Jacob,  64,  69. 

Fendin,  John,  61,  64(8),  69,  70,  190, 

192. 
Fendin,  Martha,  61,  64(7),  67,  116, 

216. 
Fendin,  Maiy,  64,  67,  111. 
Fendin,  Mary  Ann,  186,  216. 
Fendin,  Sarah,  64. 
Fendin,  Susannah,  69. 
Fendin,  Thomas,  61. 
Fendin,  William,  64. 
Fendin,  William  Henry,  69. 
Fening,  Elizabeth,  120. 
Ferguson,  Anne,  69,  181, 185. 
Ferguson,  Eleanor,  69. 
Ferguson,  James,  69. 
Ferguson,  Jane,  68. 
Ferguson,  John,  68,  69. 
Ferguson,  Margaret,  69. 
Ferguson,  Maiy,  68,  69. 
Ferguson,  Thomas,  31, 68. 
Ferguson,  William,  68,  80. 
Ferris,  Christopher,  68. 
Ferris,  Janet,  68. 
Ferris,  Tames,  68. 
Ferris,  Mary,  68. 
Ferris,  Rachel,  68. 
Ferris,  William,  68. 
Feveryear,  Rev.  see  Fcvricr. 
Fevrier,  Rev.  John,  21, 125,  186. 
Fewkers,  Ann,  64. 
Fewkers,  Mary,  64. 
Fewkers,  Thomas,  64. 
Ficklin,  Eliza,  27. 
Fickling,  John  Verdier,  71. 
Fickling,  Joseph,  100. 
Fickling,  Samuel,  39,  45. 
Fickling,  Sarah,  71. 
Fickling,  William,  71,  125. 
Field,  Charles,  65,  200. 
Field,  Elizabeth,  65,  70,  199. 
Field,  Isabella  Caroline,  70. 
Field,  James,  65. 
Field,  Jennet,  64, 179. 
Field,  John.  64,  65(8). 


Field,  ^hn  Cato,  70. 

Field,  Keziah,  65. 

Field,  Mary,  64,  65, 116. 

Field,  Richard,  65. 

Field,  WiUiam,  49,  65. 

Fields,  William,  154. 

Fife,  Dr.,  65. 

Fife,  Anne,  65. 

Fife,  John,  65. 

Fife,  Margaret,  65. 

Finn,  Mary,  65. 

Finney,  John,  17,  65,  68. 

Finney,  Mary,  65. 

Finney,  Sarah,  65. 

Finney,  WiUiam,  65, 146. 

Fishbume,  Mr.,  75. 

Fishbume,  Mary,  218. 

Fishbume,  Thomas,  218. 

Fisher,  Edward,  69. 

Fisher,  Prudence,  69,  175. 

Fiske,  George,  218. 

Fiske,  Mary,  218. 

Fitzgerald,  Elizabeth,  65. 

Fitzgerald,  James,  65,  180. 

Fitzgerald,  John,  65. 

Fitzgerald,  Lawrence,  216. 

Fitzpatrick,  Elizabeth,  65. 

Fit^)atrick,  William,  35,  78. 

Flanders,  Henry,  25. 

Fleming,  Anne,  56. 

Fleming,  Charlotte,  69. 

Fleming,  Elinor,  193. 

Fleming,  John,  79. 

Fleming,  Sarah,  57. 

Reming,  William,  170. 

Flinn,  Rev.  Alexander,  99. 

Flinn,  Anne,  67. 

Flinn,  Charles,  68. 

Flinn,  Florence,  65. 

Flmn,  John,  65,  67,  68, 198. 

Flmn,  Mary,  65,  67,  68. 

Flinn,  Sarah,  68. 

Flint,  Thomas,  209. 

Florence,  Itahr,  9. 

Florishton,  Elizabeth,  52. 

Flower,  Amelia,  65, 129. 

Flower,  Edward,  66. 

Flower,  Elizabeth,  14,  66. 

Flower,  John,  66. 

Flower,    Col.    Joseph    Edward,    65, 

66(4),  69. 
Flower,  Maiy,  66. 
Flower,  Richard  Woodward,  66. 
Flower,  Sarah,  65. 
Floyd,  Ann,  66,  68,  128, 189. 
Floyd,  Henry,  66, 128. 
Floyd,  John,  66,  68, 128, 145. 
Flud,  Daniel,  26. 
Flud,  James,  92. 


234 


INDEX 


Flud,  WiDiam,  94. 

Fochaud,  Mary,  215. 

Foissine,  Ellas,  170. 

Fonches,  Adam,  161. 

Fonches,  Sabastion,  161. 

Foot,  John,  66. 

Forbes,  John,  83. 

Ford,  Benjamin,  36. 

Ford,  Eleanor,  36. 

Ford,  Eliza,  186. 

Ford,  Jacob,  212. 

Ford,  Thomas,  36,  218. 

Foreshaw,  — ,  75. 

Forshaw,  Sarah,  209. 

Forsythe,  William,  66. 

Foster,  Mary,  68, 132. 

Fowke,  Chanler  Dinwiddle,  75. 

Fowler,  James,  80, 159. 

Fox,  Anne,  66. 

Fox,  Benjamin,  66. 

Fox,  David,  66(7). 

Fox  Elizabeth,  66(6). 

Fox,  James,  66. 

Fox,  Jonathan,  66. 

Fox,  Margaret,  66. 

Fox,  Richard,  66. 

Fox,  Thomas,  66. 

Frampton,  Elizabeth,  67. 

Frampton,  John,  67. 

Frampton,  Hannah,  46, 67. 

Francis,  John,  207. 

Franklin,  Richard,  67, 102. 

Franklin,  Susannah,  67, 113. 

Franklin,  Thcnnas,  67. 

Franklin,  William,  67. 

Eraser,  Caroline,  177. 

Frazier,  James,  70. 

Freeman,  Anne,  68. 

Freeman,  Elizabeth,  68. 

Freeman,  William,  68. 

Frentz,  Frederick,  69. 

Frentz,  Margaret,  69. 

Frentz,  John,  69. 

Frierson,  Ann,  212. 

Frinck,  John  August,  213. 

Frink,  Rev.,  11. 

Fripp,  — ,  71. 

Fripp,  Amy,  69,  70. 

Fripp,  Ann,  70. 

Fripp,  Archibald,  70. 

Fripp,  Elizabeth,  66,  67,  68,  69,  70, 

71, 105. 
Fripp,  Hamilton,  71. 
Fripp,  Hannah,  70. 
Fripp,  Henrietta  Caroline,  71. 
Fripp,  Isaac,  70. 
Fripp,  John,  66(8),  67(6),  68,  69,  70, 

77,  111. 


FriK>.  Martha,  52,  66(6),  67,  68,  70, 

111,200. 
Fripp,  Mary,  67,  68. 
Fripp,  May,  66. 
Fripp,  Paul,  67,  69,  70. 
Fripp,  Rebecca.  69. 
Fripp,  Sarah,  61,  66,  68,  69. 
Fripp,  Tabitha,  69,  70. 
Fripp,  Thomas,  70. 
Fripp,  Thomas  Hann,  70. 
Fripp,  William,  66,  69,  70. 
Fripp,  William  Edings,  70. 
Frost,  Rev.  Thomas,  155,  212. 
Fuller,  Elizabeth,  71,  137. 
Fuller,  Mary,  71. 

FuUer,  Thomas,  24,  70.  71,  74,  20t 
FuUer,  William,  74. 
Fulton,  David,  83. 
Fumival,  Charlotte,  67. 
Fumival,  Hannah,  138. 
Fumival,  John,  67. 
Fumival,  Mary,  67. 
Furman,  Rev.  Richard,  156, 157, 211 
Furman,  Rachel,  157. 
Furrow,  Charies,  68, 109, 160. 
Furrow,  Maiy,  160. 
Fyffe,  Dr.  Charies,  38, 170. 

Gadsden,  Christ<^er,  170. 
Gain,  Francis,  92. 
Gallagher,  Rev.,  209. 
Galloway,  Mary,  107, 195. 
Garden,  Dr.  Alexander,  156. 
Garden,  Benjamin,  34. 
Garden,  CoL  Benjamin,  1 10. 
Gardner,  Alice,  109,  110. 
Gardner,  Ann,  109. 
Gardner,  Benjamin,  108. 
Gardner,  Edward,  109,  110. 
Gardner,  Elizabeth,  109. 
Gardner,  James,  109. 
Gardner,  John,  110,  207. 
Gardner,  Samuel,  110. 
Gardner,  William,  109, 160. 
Garvey,  Catherine,  106. 
Garvey,  James,  106. 
Garvey,  John,  102(2;,  106,  107,  175. 
Garvey,  Judith,  102. 
Garvey,  Martha,  106,  107. 
Garvey,  Michael,  107. 
Garvey,  Sarah,  105,  146. 
Gaudee,  Catherine,  56,  102. 
Gaudee,  Mary,  102. 
Gauntlet,  Ann,  199. 
Gauntlet,  John,  199. 
Gayner,  Isaac,  102. 
Gayner,  Nicholson,  102. 
Gazyley,  Joseph,  102. 


INDEX 


235 


Gazyley,  Joseph  Sherwin,  102. 

Gazyley,  Saran,  102. 

George,  Mrs.,  27. 

George,  James,  27. 

Gervais,  Claudia,  209. 

Gervais,  John  Lewis,  209. 

Gibb,  Dr.  — ,  38 

Gibbes,  CoL  John,  14,  105, 106. 

Gibbes,  John,  106, 180(2). 

Gibbes,  Mary,  14,  17, 105. 

Gibbes,  Sarah,  24. 

Gibbes,  Robert,  36. 

Gibbes,  Susan,  179. 

Gibbes,  WilUam,  83, 170. 

Gibbons,  Elizabeth,  17, 107. 

Gibbons,  Thomas,  155. 

Gibbs,  see  Gibbes. 

Gibson,  Anna  Maria,  110. 

Gibson,  Gideon,  35.     . 

Gibson,  Robeit,  110. 

Gibson,  William  Marks,  110. 

Gignilliat,  James,  109. 

Gilbert,  Barnabas,  102,  111,  179. 

Gilbert,  Elizabeth,  102,  122. 

Gilbert,  Joseph,  156. 

Gilbert,  Searles,  102. 

Gilbert,  Susannah,  67,  102(2). 

Gilchrist,  Patrick,  102. 

Giraldeau,  see  Girardeau. 

Girardeau,  Emily,  25. 

Girardeau,  James,  102, 146. 

Girardeau,  John,  102. 

Girardeau,  Mary,  102. 

Givens,  Agnes,  1()8. 

Givens,  Ann  Sarah,  106. 

Givens,  Charles,  22,  106, 109, 110. 

Givens,  Elizabeth,  131. 

Givens,  George  Washington,  109. 

Givens,  Hannah,  104,  122. 

Givens,  Jane,  107 

Givens,  John,    104,   106,   107,   108, 

109, 122,  181. 
Givens,  Margaret,  106,  108. 
Givens,  Martha,  106,  110. 
Givens,  Mary,   106,  107,   108,   109, 

110. 
Givens,  Mary  Barlow,  109. 
Givens,  PhiUp,  14,  18,  104,  105,  106, 

122. 
Givens,  Philip  Solomon,  106. 
Glaze,  John,  81. 
Glen,  William,  170,  219. 
Glenn,  Mary,  203. 
Glenn,  Thomas,  102  (2). 
Glover,  George,  160. 
Glover,  Susannah,  160. 
(k>dard,  Fanny,  157. 
Godard,  Rene,  27. 
Godfrey,  Bridget,  107. 


Godfrey,  Elizabeth,  107. 

Godfrey,  John,  220. 

Godfrey,  Margaret,  219,  220. 

Godfrey,  Robert,  107. 

Godfrey,  Sarah,  109. 

Godfrey,  Thomas,  34,  214. 

Godwin,  Rev.  Edward,  105. 

Goldrick,  Biyan,  102,  179. 

Goldrick,  John,  102. 

Goldsmith,  John,  93. 

Goldsmith,  Thomas,  102. 

Gondy,  Anthony,  86. 

Gordon,  Andrew,  157. 

Gordon,  Eleanor,  103. 

Gordon,  Elizabeth,  103,  106,  107. 

Gordon,  James,  38. 

Gordon,  John,  46,  103  (3),  106,  107, 

199. 
Gordon,  Sarah  Frances,  106. 
Gorman,  John,  157. 
Goudin,  Isaac,  92. 
Gough,  Beasley,  103. 
Gough,  Miss,  155. 
Gough,  John,  9,  155. 
Gough,  Magdalen,  103  105, 107. 
Gough,  Martha  103. 
Gough,  Mary,  103 
Gough,  Mary  Ann,  105 
Gough,  Richard,  17,  154. 
Gough,  Susannah,  103. 
Gough,  William,  8,  9,  103(10),  105, 

107,  112. 
Gough,  William  Bearsley,  107. 
Gourerley,  Rev.,  21,  129,  192. 
Gourley,  John,  76. 
Gowdy,  Robert,  215,  216. 
Graham,  Francis,  105, 108. 
Graham,  James,  214. 
Graham,  Martha,  105. 
Graham,  Sarah,  110. 
Graham,  Thomas,  105, 110. 
Graham,  Rev.  William  Estwick,  11, 

12,  13,  22,  24,  53,  110. 
Graeme,  David,  170. 
Grame,  Francis,  93. 
Grant,  Ilary,  31. 
Graves,  Anne,  105, 112. 
Graves,  Benjamin,  105. 
Graves,  Jonathan,  103. 
Graves,  John,  92,  103,  108. 
Graves,  John  Wineman,  108. 
Graves,  Martha,  127. 
Graves,  Maiy,  103,  104,  105,  200. 
Graves,  Nathaniel,  104,  105. 
Graves,  Samuel,  108. 
Graves,  Stephen,  104,  105. 
Graves,  Susannan,  108. 
Graves,  see  also  Greves. 
Gray,  James,  108. 


236 


TtWSEX 


Gny,  John,  109. 

Gray,  Tosiah,  109. 

Gray,  Sarah,  109. 

Grayson,  Edward  James,  111. 

Grayson,  Elizabeth,  109, 193. 

Grayson,  Elizabeth  Maiy,  111. 

Grayson,  James,  111. 

Grayson,  John,  106,  108,  109,  111, 

125.  156,  195. 
Grayson,  John  Robert,  1 10. 
Grayson,  Mary,  108,  110,  144. 
Grayson,  Mary  Susan,  111. 
Grayson,  Saraii,  108,  131,  156. 
Grayson,  Sophia,  111. 
Grayson,  Susannah  110,  125. 
Grayson,  Susan  Saltus,  111. 
Grayson,  Thomas,  110,  111. 
Grayson,  Thomas  Wigg,  110. 
Grayson,  Wiib'am  John,  110,  111. 
Greaves,  Greives,  Grives,  sec  Greves. 
Green,  Rev.,  20,  21,  62. 
Greene,  Abigail,  104. 
Green,   Anne,    104    105,    107,    108, 

109,  110. 
Green,  Benjamin,  66, 105,  106,  107. 
Green,  Catherine,  107,  108. 
Greene,  Charles  Thompson,  110. 
Green,  Charlotte,  104. 
Greene,  Daniel,  104,  105. 
Green,  Daniel  John,  54,  61,  108,  109, 

110. 
Greene,  Eleanor,  110. 
Green,  Elizabeth,  104,  106,  107,  108, 

186. 
Green,  Elizabeth  Anne,  104. 
Greene,  Frands,  107. 
Green,  George,  158. 
Green,  John,  77,  104, 106, 109. 
Greene,  Francis  Thomas,  104. 
Green,  James,  106. 
Greene,  James,  F.,  108. 
Greene,  Kev.  John,  108(3). 
Greene,  Tosiah,  18, 106, 107, 108. 
Greene,  Margaret,  22. 
Greene,  Mary,  104, 109,  146. 
Green,  Maiy  Anne,  105. 
Green,  Maiy  Hazzard,  108. 
Greene,  Mary  Roper,  104. 
Green,  Nathaniel  51,  104,  106,  108, 

110. 
Greene,  Margaret,  110. 
Greene,  Phoebe,  104, 108. 
Greene  Robert,  110. 
Green,  Samuel,  105,  106,  107,  141. 
Green,   Sarah,   104,   105,    106,   107, 

108. 
Greene,  Sarah  Malecare,  108. 
Green,  Susan,  106. 
Greene,  Susannah,  104,  108,  110. 


Green,  Thomas,  104,  105, 107, 108. 

Green,  William,  107. 

Greene,  see  Green. 

Greenland,  Elizabeth,  104, 105. 

Greenwood,  William,  77. 

Gn^ory,  William,  108. 

Gregson,  James,  28. 

Gregson,  Mary,  28. 

Greves,   Alexander,    103,    104,   105, 

106, 108. 
Greves,  Anne,  103,  108. 
Greves,  Elizabeth,  103. 
Greves,  Elizabeth  Mary,  107, 187. 
Greves,  James,  108. 
Greves,  John  Bemherd,  104. 
Greves,  Robert,  106. 
Greves,  Thomas,  103,  104. 
Greves,  see  also  Graves,  and  Grive. 
Grey,  Charles,  104,  105. 
Griffin,  Miss,  106. 
Griffin,  Eleanor,  149. 
Griffith,  Eleanor,  146. 
Griffith,  Elizabeth,  104,  134. 
Griffith,  Isaac,  104. 
Grimball,  Amanda,  95. 
Grimball,  Ann,  40,  41,  42,  43. 
Grimball,  Arthur,  99,  100. 
Grimball,  Benjamin  Jenkins,  101. 
Grimball,  Berkley,  99,  100. 
Grimball,  Caroline,  96. 
Grimball,  Catherine,  10,  40,  41, 105. 
Grimball,  Charies,  45,  97. 
Grimball,  Charles  Isaac,  44,  97. 
Grimball,  Charlotte  Manigault,  100. 
Grimball,  Delancy  Izard,  100. 
Grimball,  Edward  Trenhobn,  100. 
Grimball,  Eliza,  96, 98,  99. 
Grimball,  Eliza  Ann,  101. 
Grimball,  Eliza  Trenhobn,  100. 
Grimball,  Elizabeth,  17,  40,  41,  43, 

44,  105. 

Grimball,  Elizabeth  Berkley,  99, 100, 
Grimball,  Esther,  43,  95. 
GrimbaU  Family,  1,  39,  94. 
Grimball,       GabrieOa       Manigault, 

100  (2). 
Grimball,  George  Elliott,  99. 
Grimball,  Harriette  M.,  100. 
Grimball,  Hany  Morris,  100. 
Grimball,  Helen  Margaret,  100. 
Grimball,  Henry  Bailey,  100. 
Grimball,  Isaac,  6,  7,  42,  44-45, 101. 
Grimball,  Isaac  Paul,  101. 
Grimball,  Jane,  95. 
Grimball,  John,  2,  6,  40,  41.  42,  43, 

45,  94.  95,  96-100. 
Grimball,  John  A.,  96. 
Grimball,  John  Berkley,  98,  99,  100. 
Grimball,  Joseph,  42,  43, 96. 


INDEX 


237 


Grimball,  Joshua,  6,  42,  43,  94,  95. 
GrimbalU  Laura,  96. 
Grimball,  Leroy,  96. 
Grimball,  Lewb  M.,  99. 
Grimball,  Lewis  Morris,  100. 
Grimball,  Margaret  Ann  Morris,  100. 
Grimball,  Martha,  40,  95,  97. 
Grimball,  Mary,  2,  3,  40,  41,  43,  44, 

49,  94,  95, 105, 106. 
Grimball,  Mary  Ann,  40. 
Grimball,  Mary  Magdalen,  42. 
GrimbaU,  Paul,  1-7,  39-45,  95,  96, 

•100,  105. 
Grimball,  Paul  Chaplin,  100,  101. 
Grimball,  Paul  Javez,  95. 
Grimball,  Pauline,  101. 
Grimball,  Providence,  2,  5,  6,  41, 

45  95. 
Grimball,  Rebecca,  6,  45. 
Grimball,  Samuel,  6. 
Grimball.  Sarah,  43,  44,  95,  97. 
Grimball,  Sarah  Robert,  95. 
Grimball,  Thomas,  2,  6,  7,  41,  42,  45, 

96,  98, 99. 
Grimball,  Thomas  Hanscome,  101. 
Grimball,  WiUiam,  101. 
GrimbaU,  William  H.,  99. 
Grimball,  W^lUam  Heyward,  99. 
Grimk£,  Ann,  41. 
Grimk^,  John  Paul,  40,  41,  100. 
Grimk£,  Providence,  40. 
Grindlay,  James,  77,  163,  170. 
Grive,  Daniel  John,  109 
Grive,  John,  109. 
Grive,  Mary,  109. 
Grive,  Thomas  William,  109. 
Grive,  see  also  Greve. 
Guerard,  Amelia,  110. 
Guerard,  Ann,  110. 
Guerard,  David,  110. 
Guerard,  Elizabeth,  55. 
Guerard,  Goddin,  110. 
Guerard,  Dr.  Jacob  D.,  55. 
Guerard,  Mary  Ann,  110,  203. 
Guerard,  Mary  Luda,  111. 
Guerard,  Sophia,  55. 
Guerin,  Wimam,  79. 
Guianeay,  Henry,  104. 
Guinn,  Catherine,  107, 108. 
Guinn,  Elizabeth,  107. 
Gumn,  George,  107. 
Guinn,  John,  107, 108. 
Guinn,  Mary,  107. 
Guinn,  Richard,  107. 
Guinn,  Roger,  107. 
Gunswigg,  Frances,  34,  35. 
Guttery,  Gilbert,  104. 
Guy,  Edward,  106. 
Guy,  Elizabeth,  59,  106. 


Guy,  Rev.  William,  111. 
Gwin,  John,  173. 

Habersham,  Ann,  121. 

Habersham,  Ann  Hutson,  121. 

Habersham,  John,  22, 121. 

Habersham,  Maria  Elliott,  121. 

Hames,  Deborah,  13, 48,  111(2). 

Haines,  Elizabeth,  111. 

Haines,  Mary,  111. 

Haines,  Thomas,  111. 

Haines,  William,  48,  111. 

Hale,  Aime,  119. 

Hale,  Elizabeth,  119. 

Hale,  James,  119(2),  120. 

Hall,  Baynard  Rush,  40. 

Hall,  George  Abbott,  29. 

Hall,  Isaac,  112. 

Hall,  John,  40. 

Hall,  Maria,  29. 

Hall,  Mary.  33,  111,  112,  116. 

Hall,  Richard,  29. 

HaU,  Thomas,  64,  67,  111,  116,  214. 

Hall,  Walter,  152. 

Hallonquist,  Charles  Frederick,  120. 

Hallonquist,  D.  D.,  120. 

Hallonquist,  Eliza  Marion,  120. 

Hallonquist,  Euphemia  Isabelle,  120. 

Hallonquist,  Lawrent  Daniel,  120. 

Hallonquist,  Marion,  120. 

Halsall,  Susannah,  120. 

HalsaU,  William,  120. 

Ham,  John,  157. 

Ham,  Kichard,  157. 

Hamilton,  Ann,  4,  112,  117. 

Hamilton,  Archibald,  3,  4,  112,  145. 

Hamilton,  David,  112. 

Hamilton,  Dorcas,  3,  4. 

Hamilton,  Elizabeth,  112,  119,  124. 

Hamilton,  George,  112. 

Hamilton,  Hannah,  117. 

Hamilton,  Henrietta,  120. 

Hamilton,  James,  92. 

Hamilton,  John,  2,  3. 

Hamilton,  Joseph.  117,  156. 

Hamilton,  Magdalen,  103, 112. 

Hamilton,  Martha,  3,  4. 

Hamilton,  Mary,  2.  3. 

Hamilton,  Mary  Rnodes,  120. 

Hamilton,  Paul,  3,  4,  98,  120. 

Hamlin,  Samuel,  78. 

Hammerton,  John,  219. 

Hammet,  Rev.  William,  155. 

Hampstead,  156. 

Hanckel,  Rev.,  55. 

Hanckel,  Ann,  121. 

Hanckel,  Christian,  121. 

Hanckel,  Sarah  Reeve,  121. 

Hancock,  Prudence,  111. 


238 


INDEX 


Hancock,  Richard,  13,  104,  134. 

Hancock,  Thomas,  111. 

Hand,  Elizabeth,  66,  111. 

Hand,  John;  111. 

Hand,  Martha,  HI. 

Hanscome,  Eliza,  101. 

Hanshaw,  John,  111. 

HaTO>oldt,  John  G.,  33. 

Hard,  Anne,  119. 

Hard,  Eleanor,  119. 

Hard,  John,  119. 

Hardwick,  Ann,  57. 

Hardwick,  George,  113. 

Hardwick,  Sarah,  112,  113,  131. 

Hardwick,  Thomas,  112,  113,  195. 

Hardwick,  William,  112. 

Harris,  Anne,  44, 112, 117,  118(3). 

Harris,  Benjamin,  1 18. 

Harris,  Catherine,  48. 

Harris,  Elizabeth,  112. 

Harris,  Elizabeth  Anderson,  26. 

Harris,John,  112,  117. 

Harris,  Mary,  112,  118,  200. 

Harris,  Sarah,  113. 

Harris,  Thomas,  32. 

Harris,  Dr.  Tucker.  26. 

Harris,   William,    105,    112,    117(3), 

118(2). 
Harrison,  Rev.,  19. 
Harrison,  Elizabeth,  112. 
Harrison,  Francis,  118. 
Harrison,  Hannah,  112,  117. 
Harrison,  John,  118. 
Harrison,  Mary,  112,  118. 
Harrison,  Michael,  118. 
Harrison,  Primrose,  208. 
Harrison,  Thomas,  16,  112,  118. 
Harrison,  WiUiam,  27, 112. 
Harsking,  Fanny,  120. 
Harsking,  John,  120. 
Hart,  AbigaU,  81. 
Hart,  Rev.  Oliver,  97. 
Hart,  WiUiam,  81. 
Hartstien,  Henry  Julius,  121. 
Hartstien,  Mary,  121. 
Harvey,  Anne,  1 18. 
Harvey,  Benjamin,  27. 
Harvey,  Dorcas,  36. 
Harvey,  Elizabeth,  57,  113,  117,  118, 

119,  183. 
Harvey,  Frances  Mary,  1 14. 
Harvey,  Hazzard,  113,  119. 
Harvey,  Maurice,  36,  170. 
Harvey,  Maurice  William,  113. 
Harvey,  Samuel  Benjamin,  113. 
Harvey,  Sarah,  119. 
Harvey,  Thomas  Eleazer,  117. 
Harvev,  William  113, 117, 118, 119(2), 

133,  183. 


Hasleton,  Frands,  1 13. 

Hasleton,  Elizabeth,  113. 

Hasleton,  Richard,  113. 

Hasleton,  Sarah,  112,  113. 

Hastings,  Archibald,  117. 

Hasting  plantations,  117. 

Hatcher,  Anne,  117,  201. 

Hatcher,  James,  113,  118. 

Hatcher,  Jane,  116,  134. 

Hatcher,  Margaret,  58,  116,  117. 

Hatcher,  Sarah,  113,  118. 

Hatcher,  Thomas,  113,  116,  117,  118- 

Hatton,  Elizabeth,  121. 

Hatton,  Capt.  Joseph,  170. 

Hatton,  Marion,  121. 

Haverford  College,  Pa.,  85. 

Hawkins,  Dr.  T.,  96. 

Hawkins,  William,  118. 

Hay,  Jean,  51. 

Haydon,  John,  112. 

Hayden,  Martha,  112. 

Haydon,  Mary,  112. 

Hays,  Cornelius,  159. 

Hayward,  Samuel,  206. 

Hazel,  Ann  Margaret,  121. 

Hazel,  Rebecca,  120,  121. 

Hazel,  Thomas,  120. 

Ha^l,  WiUiam,  120,  121. 

Hazleton,  See  Hasleton. 

Hazzard,  Anne,  114. 

Hazzard,  Catherine,  116, 117,  119. 

Hazzard,  Dorthy,  114. 

Hazzard,  Elizabeth,  114, 132. 

Hazzard,  John,  114. 

Hazzard.  Mary,  114,  120,  190,  196. 

Hazzard,  Mary  Ann  Wigg,  116. 

Hazzard,  Sarah,  47, 114,  117,  189. 

Hazzard,  Thomas,  114,  190. 

Hazzard,  Thomas  Edward,  118. 

Hazzard,  WflUam,  48,  113,  114,  116. 

117,  118,119.120,173,  195. 
Hazzard,  Col.  Wflliam,  113,  114,  174. 
Hazzard,  WilUam  Wigg,  120. 
Heape,  Benjamin,  58,  117. 
Heape,  Mary,  117. 
Heape,  Sarah,  58,  117. 
Hedderly,  Mary,  119. 
Hedderly,  Philips,  1 19. 
Hedderly,  Sarah,  119. 
Henderson,  Mar>',  58. 
Henderson,  WiUiam  Ilarcourt,    116, 

170. 
Hendrie,  Andrew,  80,  158. 
Hendrie,  Jean  Mary,  158. 
Henney,  Ann,  116,  118.  119. 
Henney,  Elizabeth,  118. 
Henney,  John.  116,  118,  119(2) 
Henny,  Mary  Ann,  116. 
Henzie,  Bigoe,  120. 


INDEX 


239 


Heratman,  Valentine,  118. 

Heron,  Col.  Alexander,  170. 

Hewie,  Harriet  Hockley,  156. 

Hext,  David,  4. 

Hext,  Martha,  3. 

Hext,  Matthew,  137. 

Heward,  Charles,  25. 

Heyward,  Daniel,  94,  116,  155,  215. 

Heyward,  Col.  Daniel,  116,  117,  119, 

134. 
Heyward,  Edward,  Barnwell,  121. 
Heyward,  Elizabeth,  119. 
Heyward,  Esther,  121. 
Heyward,  Hester,  116(2). 
Heyward,  James,  119,  206. 
Heyward,  John,  51,  215. 
Heyward,  Maria,  23,  120. 
Heyward,  Mary,  116,  117. 
Heyward,  Nathaniel,  24, 116,  121. 
Heyward,  Panchita,  99. 
Hayward,  Samuel,  215. 
Heyward,  Thomas,  116,  215. 
Heyward,  Thomas,  Sr.,  74. 
Heyward,  William,  117. 
Hicks,  Caroline  Lavinia,  120. 
Hicks,  Rev.  Galen,  24,  54,  71,  111. 
Hicks,  Elizabeth,  48,  115, 116. 
Hicks,  Hannah,  115. 
Hicks,  John,  115, 116. 
Hicks,  Mary,  115,  122. 
Hicks,  Matthew,  18,  115. 
Hicks,  Sarah,  120. 
Higgins,  Thomas,  215. 
HiU,  Hannah,  115. 
HiU,  Henry,  16,  115. 
Hill,  Jonathan,  92. 
HiD,  John,  116. 
HiD,  Joseph,  116. 
Hill,  Mary,  110. 
Hill,  Rebecca,  116. 
HiU,  Sarah,  115. 
HUton  Head,  20. 
Hinds,  James,  1 15. 
Hinds,  Jane,  116. 
Hinds,  Margaret,  115. 
Hinds,  Patrick,  57,  115,  116,  132. 
Hinson,  Alexander,  104,  115. 
Hird,  Isaac,  115,  120. 
Hird,  John,  120. 
Hird,  Margaret,  115,  117. 
Hird,  Mark,  55,  115, 117,  118(2). 
Hird,  Maiy,  117,  118(2),  120. 
Hird,  Phoebe,  118. 
Hitchens,  Thomas,  115. 
Hobbs,  Richard,  115. 
Hodges,  Sarah,  15, 115. 
Hoflf,  John  Ernest,  78. 
Hogg,  Andrew,  57,  115, 117,  118. 


Hogg,  Anne,  10,  47,  117(2),  118(2), 

120. 
Hogg,  Elizabeth,  117,  120,  204. 
Hogg,  George,  117(2),  118, 119. 
Hogg,  Hannah,  115,  127. 
Hogg,  John,  49,  115,120. 
Hogg,  Margaret,  120. 
Hogg,Mary,  115,  116, 117. 
Hogg,  Nancy,  118(2). 
Hogg,  WiUiam,  117, 120. 
Holcomb,  Rev.,  131. 
HoUiday,  William,  161. 
HoUingshead,  Rev.  WiUiam,  157,  209. 
HoUybush,  John,  35. 
HoUybush,  Sarah,  35,  36. 
Holman,  Mary,  4. 
Holman,  PricUla,  27. 
Holmes,  Elizabeth,  153. 
Holmes,  Isaac,  153,  170. 
Holmes,  Isabella,  115. 
Holmes,  Mary,  1 15. 
Holmes,  Ralph,  115. 
Holmes,  WUtiam,  115. 
Hooper,  SwaUow  and  Co.,  37. 
Hooper,  Thomas,  37. 
Hope,  WilUam,  119. 
Hopkins,  Henry,  218. 
Hopkins,  Henry,  214. 
Hopkins,  Thomas,  92. 
Hoppy,  Mary,  117. 
Hoppy,  Samuel,  117. 
Horlbeck,  John,  76. 
Horry,  EUas,  206. 
Horry,  EUas  Lynch,  205. 
Horry,  Margaret,  206. 
Houdeighter,  Margaret,  213. 
Housleighter,  Martin,  213. 
Houseal,  Christiana  Margaretta,  120. 
Houseal,  John  Bernard,  120. 
Houseal,  Maiy,  120. 
Houston,  Sir  John,  33. 
Howard,  WUliam,  120. 
HoweU,  John,  83. 
Howland,  F.  C,  100. 
Huddy,  Lieut.  Charles,  47, 116. 
Huger,  Benjamin,  155. 
Hugg,  George,  115,  116. 
Hughes,  Dorthy,  219. 
Hughes,  Edward,  209. 
Hughes,  Mary  Ussher,   120,   130. 
Hughes,  James,  156. 
Hughes,  Robert,  116. 
Hulet,  EUzabeth,  116. 
Hulet,  John,  116. 
HuU,Wmiam,  119. 
Hunt,  Joseph,  65,  116. 
Hunter,  Andrew,  161. 
Hunter,  James,  161. 


24D 


INDEX 


Hunter,  Rev.  Samuel,  161. 
Hurst,  Mary,  117. 
Hurst,  Samuel,  117,  170. 
Hussey,  John,  58, 117. 
Hussey,  Margaret,  117. 
Hutduns,  Sarah,  29. 
Hutchinson,  Anne,  119(3). 
Hutchinson,  Axtell,  118, 119(3),  197. 
Hutchinson,  John,  119. 
Hutchinson,  rrovidence,  5, 41,  42. 
Hutchinson,  Ribton,  5. 
Hutchinson,  Thomas,  6. 
Hutson,  Ann,  14,  120. 
Hutson,  Mary,  31. 
Hutson,  Richard,  31. 
Hutson,  Thomas,  31. 
Hutson,  Rev.  Wm.,  14,  68, 103. 

Iklar,  Ann,  125. 

Iklar,  Ann  Pahner,  125. 

Iklar,  John,  125,  150. 

Imer,  Rev.  Abraham,  217. 

Indian  Land,  52. 

Inglesby,  Rebecca  Blandford,  154. 

Inglesby,  William,  154. 

Inglis,  Alexander,  30. 

Inglis,  Catherine,  30. 

Inglis,  George,  170. 

Inns,  Sarah,  122. 

Inns,  Thomas,  104,  112. 

Inns,  William,  122. 

I'On,  Jacob  Bond,  209. 

Irvine,  Ann,  125. 

Irvine,  Kenneth,  125. 

Irvin,  Mary  Ann,  124. 

Irving,  Jacob  i¥!milius,  157. 

Irving,  Dr.  James,  170. 

Irwin,  John,  122,  124,  125,  193. 

Irwin,  John  Samuel,  124. 

Irwin,  Marv  Ann  122,  124 

Irwin,  Ritch  James,  124. 

Irwin,  William,  124. 

Iten,  Ann,  123,  124. 

Iten,  Grace,  123. 

Iten,  Joseph,  123. 

Iten,  Maiy,  123. 

Iten,  Rebecca,  124. 

Iten,  Thomas,  123,  124,  181. 

Itinger,  Christiana,  124. 

Itinger,  Conradt,  124. 

Itinger,  Mary,  Ann,  124. 

Itting,  Conrad,  125. 

Izard,  Henry,  33. 

Izard,  Ralph,  33,  212. 

Izard,  Rebecca,  212. 

Jacks,  John,  153. 
Jackson,  Elizabeth,  123. 
Jackson,  Henry,  58,  123. 


[acob,  Susannah,  124. 

[affray,  Edward,  73. 

[affray,  James,  31. 
Jarvis,  Jane,  122,  140. 
Jaudon,  Elizabeth,  94. 

{audon,  Esther,  95. 
emmison,  Anne,  124. 
Jemmerson,  Thomas,  124. 

Jenkins,  Ann,  43,  82,  124. 
enkins,  Ann  Ninian,  40. 
Jenkins,  Benjamin,  44,  70. 
enkins,  Caroline  Olivia,  126. 
Jenkins,  Charles  Jones,  99. 

{enkins,  Christopher,  45,  122. 
enkins,  Eliza,  101. 

Jenkins,    Elizabeth,    70,    104,     122, 
124,  125,  179. 

{enkins,  Isaac,  44,  45,  126. 
enkins,  Isaac  Grimball,  98. 
Jenkins,  Isabella,  126.  ^  C  U 

{enkins,  James,  82. 
enkins,  John,  42,  45,  121,  124. 
Jenkins,  Joseph,  40, 47, 121, 124(5)  125. 
[enkins,  Joseph  Jr.,  20. 
[enkins,  Margaret  Mary,  126. 
[enkins,  Mary,  124. 
Jenkins,  Phod>e,  121,  122,  124,  202. 

{enkins.  Providence,  98. 
enkins,  Richard,  125. 
{rakins,  Robert,  98. 
enkins,  William,  98. 
{ennings,  Miss,  205. 
ennings,  Daniel,  205. 
Jervey,  Jane,  113. 
Jervey,  John,  122. 
Jervey,  See  also  Garvey. 

}eter,  James,  35. 
evins,  See  Givens. 
John,  PhiUp,  123. 
[ohnson,  Benjamin  Jenkins,  126. 
[ohnson,  Elizabeth,  119. 
Johnson,  Jacob,  125. 
Johnson,  Jabez  Withers,  209. 
Johnson,  Jane,  122. 
[ohnson,  John,  122,  125,  126. 
Johnson,  Joseph  Fldtliny,  126. 
Johnson,  Margaret,  122,  131,  138. 

{ohnson,  Mary  Whaley,  126. 
ohnson,  Peggy,  125. 
Johnson,  Rebecca,  125. 
Johnson,  Richard,  126. 
Johnson,  Sarah,  125. 
Johnson,  William,  125,  126. 
Johnston,  — 124. 

Johnston,  Andrew,  26,  77,  170. 
ohnston,  George,  34. 
Joiner,  see  Joyner. 
ones,  Mrs.,  76. 
Jones,  Ann,  123,  124,  125. 


1 


INDEX 


241 


Jones,  Benjamin,  145. 
Jones,  Catherine,  122. 
Jones,  Charles,  6. 
Jones,  Cornelius,  123. 
Jones,  Elizabeth,  123,  124,  125. 
Jones,  Elizabeth  Sarah,  125. 
Jones,  James,  123. 
Jones,  Jane,  124,  126. 
Jones,  Jesse,  126. 

{ones,  John,  5,  6,  124,  126,  160. 
ones,  Rev.  Lewis,  8-27,  46-71,  102, 

172,  marriage  of,  60,  122. 
Jones,  Lydia,  123. 
Jones,  Margaret,  122,  123. 
Jones,  Maiy,  126. 
Jones,  Mary  Amelia  Harriet,  126. 
Jones,  Robert,  92. 
Jones,  Samuel,  4,  6,  125. 
Jones,  Sarah,  4,  123. 
Jones,    Simon,    122,    123,    124(3), 

198. 
Jones,  Thomas,  92, 126,  216. 
Jones,  WiUiam,  123,  124,  125. 

{onson,  John,  93. 
ordan,  Basil,  161. 
Jordan,  John,  37,  78,  79,  160. 
Jordan,  sarah,  3/,  79. 
Jourdon,  Daniel,  93. 
Joyner,  Anne,  124,  125. 
Joyner,  Catherine,  123. 

{oyner,  Elizabeth,  125,  126. 
oyner,  Elizabeth  Margaret,  126. 
Joyner,  Isabdla,  125. 
Joyner,  James,  69,  125. 
Joyner,  John,  70,  123,  124,  125(2), 

196. 
Joyner,  Capt.  John,  (death  of),  156. 
Joyner,  Margaret,  125,  188. 
Jo)mer,  Mary,  124. 
Joyner,  Maiy  Ann,  126. 
Joyner,  Phoebe,  123. 
Joyner,  Richard,  124. 
Joyner,  Sarah  (Hiver,  125. 
Joyner,  Susan,  126. 
Joyner,  William,  109,  123,  125. 
Joyner,  William,  Howlett,  125. 
Juhan,  Maria,  27. 

Karr,  Mary,  127. 

Karr,  Thomas,  127. 

Karr,  William,  127. 

Kean,  John,  32. 

Kecly,  Ann,  76. 

Keely,  Susannah,  27. 

Keene,  Buckingham,  77. 

Keer,  Rev.  Patrick,  79. 

Keith,  Rev.  Alexander,  170. 

Keith,  Rev.  Isaac,  DJ).,  205,  206. 

Keith,  James,  93. 


Kelly,  Edmund,  77. 
Kelsall,  Elizabeth,  127. 
Kelsall,  John,  81,  127. 
Kelsall,  Mary,  127. 
Kelsall,  Roger,  127. 
Kelsall,  William,  127. 
Kelscy,  R.  W.,  85. 
Kenna,  J.,  72. 
Kennan,  Henry,  170. 
Kennedy,  Daniel,  126. 
Kennedy,  Enoch,  127. 
Kennedy,  Jane,  127. 
Kenneci^^,  Margerv,  126,  127. 
Kennedy,  Michael,  126,  127. 
Kershaw,  Charles,  76. 
Kershaw,  Joseph,  29. 
Kershaw,  Maiy  Eyre,  76. 
Kibler,  Barbary,  203. 
Kirby,  Margaret,  209. 
Kundall,  see  Cundall. 
King,  Charles,  127. 
King,  Margaret,  127. 
King,  Mary,  127. 
King,  Richard.  127. 
King,  Thomas,  127. 
Knapp,  Timothy,  127. 
Knights,  Winifred.  127,  187. 
Knowles,  Elizabetn,  127. 
Knowles,  George,  127. 
Kynock,  Alexander,  78. 

Labruce,  Sarah,  157. 
Lacy,  Elizabeth,  127,  128,  145. 
Lacy,  Samuel,  115,  127,  178. 
La(bon,  Benjamin,  129,  146. 
Ladson,  Darius  Susanna,  130. 
Ladson,  Elizabeth,  50,   128,   129(5), 

147. 
Ladson,  Henry,  216. 
Ladson,  John,  Cannaway,  120,  130. 
Ladson,  Joseph,   129. 
Ladson,  Martna,  149. 
Ladson,  Mary  Jane  129. 
Ladson,  Sarah,  49,  128,  129,  130. 
Ladson,  Sarah  Phoebe,  129. 
Ladson,  Samuel,  128,  129,  130. 
Ladson,  Thomas,  53,  129. 
Lady's  Island,  18. 
Lafar,  Jo8q>h,  27,  28. 
Lafit,  Mary.  128. 
Lance,  Lambert,  83. 
Lane,  Sarah,  156. 
Lane,  WiUiajn,  155. 
Langhome,  Rev.  WHliam,  10,   103, 

200. 
Langton,  Rev.,  147. 
Lanneau,  Basit  152,  205. 
Lanneau,  Sarah,  152. 
Laroche,  Isaac,  128. 


242 


INDEX 


Laroche,  Sarah,  128. 

Laroche,  Step  Dyer,  128. 

Lassons,  David,  93. 

Laurens,  Henry,  78,  170. 

Lavis,  Lavinia,  128,  140. 

Lavis,  William,  55,  128. 

Lawrence,  Richard  Grayson,  131. 

Lawrence,  Samuel,  131,  156.  . 

Lawrence,  Sarah,  131. 

Lawson,  James,  212. 

Lawson,  John,  92. 

Lawton,  Mary,  41. 

Lawton,  WilUaia.  39. 

Leacraft,  Mrs.,  18. 

Leacraft,  Amelia,  105,  108,  129. 

Leacraft,  Elizabeth,  12. 

Leacraft,  John,  12,  21,  65,  129. 

Lebby,  Elizabeth,  130. 

Lebby,  Nathaniel,  130. 

Lebby,  Robert,  130. 

Lecat,  Francis,  152. 

Lechmere,  Catherine,  12,  130. 

Lee,  Richard,  128. 

Lefong,  Susannah,  103. 

Legay,  Louis  Augusta,  157. 

Legare,  Ann,  154. 

Legare,  Daniel,  206. 

Legare,  Isaac,  154. 

Legare,  May,  206. 

Legare,  Samuel,  207. 

Lcger,  Peter,  214. 

Legge,  Miss,  99. 

Legg,  — ,  129. 

Lehre,  William,  76. 

Leigh,  Mr.,  38. 

Lenoir,  T.  J.,  96. 

Lenox,  Tames,  170. 

Leonard,  Margarite,  100. 

Leigh  Edgerton,  78. 

LesUe,  Lieut-Gen.  Alexander,  30. 

Lcsterjette,  Harriett,  157. 

Lesterjette,  Lewis,  157. 

I-evrier,  Rev.  Peter,  153. 

Levy,  Anne,  47,  111,  128. 

Lewes,  Elizabeth  Mary  Hooper,  130. 

Lewes,  John  Daniel,  130. 

Lewes,  Mary,  130. 

Lewes,    Rev.    Stephen    Christopher, 

12,  109,  125,  127,  marriage  of, 

130. 
Lewfs,  William  Bower,  130. 
Lewis,  Rev.,  19. 
Lewis,  William,  128. 
Lewin,  Henry,  128. 
Ley,  Thomas,  93. 
Leyton,  John,  128. 
L^rton,  Mary,  128. 
Lcorton,  Ricliard,  128. 
U/eland  plantation,  32. 


Lightwood,  Edward,  152. 

Lightwood,  Sarah,  152. 

Lindauer,  Elizabeth,  76. 

Lindauer ,  Henry,  76. 

Lindsey,  H.  B.,  100. 

Lindgard,  James,  217. 

Lining,  Dr.  John,  169. 

Lining,  Thomas,  170. 

Linkley,  Ann,  2,  4. 

Linkley,  Christopher,  2,  4,  5. 

Linkley,  Mary,  4. 

Linkley,  Sarah,  4. 

Linkley's  Island,  41. 

Linton,  Catherine  Hamilton,  130. 

Linton,  Hannah  Hamiltoxi,  130 

Linton,  John  130 

Linton,  Mary,  130. 

Lbton,  Thomas,  214. 

Little,  Samuel  37,  92. 

Livie,  Alexander,  170. 

Livingston,  Eleanor,  31,  129. 

Livingston,  George,  129. 

Livingston,  Henry,  44. 

Livingston,  Rev.  William,  44. 

Lloyd,  Abraham,  130. 

Lloyd,  Ann,  130. 

Lloyd,  John,  130. 

Lloyd,  Joseph,  130(2). 

Lloyd,  Josiah,  130. 

Lloyd,  Sarah,  130(2). 

Lloyd,  Thomas,  130. 

Lloyd,  WilUam,  130. 

Lloyd,  See  also  Floyd. 

LodLWood,  Joshua,  28. 

Lockwood,  Margaret,  28. 

Logan,  George,  170. 

LogSLn,  John,  73. 

Logan,  WiUiam,  163,  170. 

Lonedale,  Rev.,  219. 

Loocock,  William,  83,  213. 

Lopez  Rachel,  152. 

Lord,  Andrew,  219. 

Lords  Proprietors,  1,  2. 

Loughton,  David,  4. 

Lousserre,  Mrs.,  58. 

Lovekin,  Agnes,  18. 

Lovely,  WiUiam,  74. 

Lowary,  Sarah,  52,  142. 

Lowell,  Mary,  202. 

Lowndes,  Ruth,  207. 

Lowre,  Leoline,  128. 

Lubbock,  Edwyn,  Kirby  Sandwitch, 

131. 
Lubbock,  Melisa  Sarah  Chisolm,  131 
Ludwell,  CoL,  2. 
Lyall,  David,  75. 
Lyford,  Anne,  128. 
Lyford,  James,  128. 
Lyford,  John,  128. 


INDEX 


243 


Lyford,  Mary,  15,  128. 
Lyford,  William,  67,  128,  195. 
Lyles,  Ephraim,  217,  218. 
Lyles,  John,  217,  218. 
Lynch,  Thomas,  36,  170. 
Lyolbromby,    Elizabeth,    216,    219 

220,  221. 
Lyolbromby,  Thomas,  214. 
Lyon,  John,  74. 
Lyon,  Thomas  I.,  74. 

McCall,  John,  26. 
M'Callum,  James,  32. 
McCants,  Joseph,  28. 
McCants,  Mary,  29. 
McCants,  Rachel,  28. 
M*Cants,  William,  29. 
McCauley,  Alexander,  163,  170. 
McCluer,  John,  138. 
McCluer,  Mary,  138. 
McCluer,  Robert  Fairchild,  138. 
McCluer,  William  Davis,  138. 
M'Cord,  William,  156. 
McDonald,  Elizabeth,  80. 
McDonald,  William,  161. 
McDowell,  Archibald,  38,  77. 
McDowell,  John,  77. 
McDowell,  Martha,  77. 
McDowell,  Alexander,  34. 
McFadden,  Robert,  C,  101. 
Mcferling,  David,  132. 
McferUng,  Magdalen,  132. 
McGilvery,  El^beth,  132, 133. 
McGUveiy,  John,  114, 132. 
McGuire,  Terence,  132. 
McHerry,  Margaret,  115,  132. 
Mcintosh,  Lachlan,  139,  150. 
McKallope,  Susannah,  12,  139. 
McKay,  See  McKee. 
McKee,  Allen,  138. 
McKee,  David,  135(3),  136(2),  137, 

138(5). 
McKee,  Elizabeth,  125,  138. 
McKee,  George.  132. 
McKee,  Hannah,  12, 139. 
McKee,  Henrietta,  139. 
McKee,  Jane,  135, 183. 
McKee,   John,    71,    125,    132,    137, 

138(2). 
McKee,  John  Johnson,  139. 
McKee,  Margaret,  138. 
McKee,  Martha,  21,  135. 
McKee,  Maiy,  136(2),  137,  138. 
McKee,  Paul,  138. 
McKee,  Rebecca,  139. 
McKee,  Sarah,  137. 
McKee,  Thomas,  137. 
McKee,  William,  132, 138. 
McKelvey,  James,  92. 


McKelvey,  James,  Sr.,  92. 

McKelvey,  John,  92. 

M'Kensie,  John,  31. 

McKenzie,  Jane,  139. 

McKenzie,  Robert,  159. 

McKenzie,  Solomon,  139. 

McKie,  Patrick,  163,  170. 

McKoy,  Alexander,  137. 

McKoy,  MsLiy,  137. 

McLane,  Elizabeth,  135,  136,  137. 

McLane,  John,  131,  134,  135,  136, 

137,  144. 
McLane,  Josiah,  137. 
McLane,  Sarah,  131,  136. 
McLean,  Allen,  104,  113,  131(9) 
McLean,  Alexander,  131. 
McLean,  Charles,  131. 
McLean,  Margaret,  131,  136. 
McLean,  Martha,  131. 
McLeod,  Ann,  132. 
McLeod,  Enos,  132. 
McLeod,  John,  4, 122,  130,  131,  132. 
McLeod,  Christiana,  70. 
McLeod,  Margaret,  131,  132,  189. 
McLoud,  See  McLeod. 
McLure,  John,  215. 
McMahon,  Edward,  159. 
McMahon,  Jane,  81. 
McMahon,  John,  81. 
McMannis,  Eleanor,  137. 
M'Nichol,  George,  77. 
M'Nichol,  John,  77. 
McNish,  James,  138. 
McNish,  John,  138. 
McNish,  Mary  Catherine,  138. 
McPharling,  Thomas,  136. 
McPherson,  Alexander,  132,  140,  182. 
McPherson,  Jane,  132. 
McPherson,  Mary,  132, 182. 
McPherson,  Sarah,  132. 
McQueen,  John,  170. 
McQueen,  William,  204. 
McQuinn,  Alexander,  135. 
McQuinn,  Elizabeth,  135,  147. 
McQuinn,  Lettice,  135. 
McRae,  Dr.  David,  96. 
McTier,  Jane,  132. 
McTuroos,  John,  139,  187. 
Macho,  Bernard,  12,  139. 
Macky,  Mimgo,  41. 
Maggot,  See  Meggett. 
Maine,  James,  209. 
Major,  John,  153. 
Malcom,  Thomas,  206. 
Manchester,  New  England,  6. 
Mandevil,  Eleanor,  132. 
Mandevil,  John,  132,  135,  198. 
Mandevil,  Mary,  132,  135. 
Manigault,  Elizabeth,  99. 


244 


INDEX 


Manigault,  Gabriel,  170. 

Manigault,  Margaret,  25. 

Manigault,  Peter,  37. 

Manson,  George,  212. 

Mare,  Eleanor,  132. 

Mare,  William,  132. 

Marion,  Francis,  93. 

Marion,   Brig.   Gen.   Francis,  (death 

notice),  28. 
Marion,  Gabriel,  93. 
Markley,  Jacob,  92. 
Marquess,  Mary,  134. 
Marquess,  Pricilla,  134. 
Marquess,  Samuel,  134. 
Mamage  and  Death  Notices,  26,  72, 

152,  205. 
Marsh,  Col.  Joseph,  30. 
Marsh,  Susan,  30. 
Marshall,  George,  170. 
Marshall,  Thomas,  80. 
Marshland  plantation,  2. 
Martel,  Michael  Philip,  139. 
Martin,  David,  159. 
Martin,  William,  134. 
Martinangel,  Abraham,  136. 
Martinangel,  Elizabeth,  139. 
Martinangel,  Frands,  132. 
Martinangel,  Isaac,  135,  139. 
Martinangel,   Mary,   132,   135,   136, 

139. 
Martinangel,  Philip,  68, 132,  135, 136. 
Martson,  Richard,  170. 
Mason,  Dr.  James,  B.,  157. 
Mason,  Mary,  139. 
Mason,  Robert,  139. 
Mason,  Samuel,  139. 
Mason,  W^illiam,  32. 
Mathewes,  Anthony,  170. 
Mathewes,  Christiana,  132. 
Mathewes,  P^lizabeth  Stanyame,  26. 
Mathewes,  James,  205. 
Mathewes,  John  Raven,  26. 
Mathewes,  William,  132,  135. 
Mathews,  George,  209. 
Mathews,  Louise,  209. 
Matson,  Elizabeth,  132,  194. 
Maul,  David,  161,  213. 
Maurand,  Frands,  160. 
Maurand,  Jane,  160. 
Maxcy,  Ann  Bull.  140. 
Maxcy,  Mary  Bull,  139, 140. 
Maxcy,  Mary  Matilda,  139. 
Maxcy,  Matilda  Miltonia,  140. 
Maxcy,  Milton,  139, 140. 
May,  Anne,  134. 
May,  Diana,  139. 
Mayee,  Quiatist,  136. 
Mayrant,  John,  170. 
Maxwell,  Henry,  28. 


Maxwell,  Sarah,  43. 
MaxweU,  William,  43,  80,  81, 94. 
Mazyck,  Stephen,  92. 
Means,  Robert,  22. 
Meggett,  Elizabeth,  138. 
Meggett,  James,  132. 
Meggett,  James  Bowers,  138. 
Meggett,  Magdalen,  66, 132. 
Meggett,  Martha,  132. 
Meggett,  Mary  Martha,  138. 
Meggett,  WiUlam,  138(3). 
Meleken,  George,  1 16,  134, 135, 136. 
Melekin,  James  Hatcher,  136. 
Melekin,  Jane,  134, 135, 136. 
Melekin,  Margaret,  135. 
Melichaznp,  Rev.,  182. 
Meliqhampe,  Darothy,  133, 198. 
Meelichampe,  Sarah,  133. 
Mellichamp,  WiUiam,  133. 
Melleiur,  Jacob,  136. 
Melvin,  David,  132,  133. 
Menely,  Henry,  81. 
Meredith,  Edward,  133. 
Meredith,  Martha,  133, 172. 
Meyer,  John,  137. 
MicheU,  Ephraim,  214. 
Michie,  James,  170. 
Middleton,  Miss,  33. 
Middleton,  Ann,  21,  137(2),  185. 
Middleton,  Arthur,  33. 
Middleton,  Elizabeth,  70, 137. 
Middleton,  Heniy,  137(2),  170. 
Middleton,  John,  92. 
Middleton,  Stephen,  137. 
Middleton,  Thomas,  137, 164, 170. 
Middleton,  WiUiam,  170. 
Middlewood,  Stephen,  137. 
Mikell,  Anne,  135, 136. 
MikeU,  Elizabeth,  40,  113, 133.      ^ 
Mikell,  Ephraun,  40,  41,  132,  133, 

135. 
Mikell,  John,  135, 136. 
MikeU,  Josiah,  100, 136. 
MikeU,  Mary,  135. 
MikeU,  Sarah,  136. 
MUcdl,  Martha,  136. 
MikeU,  WnUam,  100. 
MikeU,  WiUiam  Joseph,  136. 
MUes,  Mary,  116,  134. 
MUes,  William,  134. 
MUdazewiez,  Lucretia,  208. 
MUes,  SUas,  220 
Miller,  Ann,  76. 
MUler,  Barbara,  138, 150. 
MiUer,  Elizabeth,  31. 
MUler,  Eve,  135. 
MUler,  Charles,  135. 
MiUer,  James,  31. 
MUler,  Mary,  55, 133,  135. 


! 


INDEX 


245 


Miller,  Nicholas,  135(2). 

MUler,  William,  26. 

Milligan,  Capt.  Jacob,  212. 

Milligen,  George,  137, 170. 

Milligen,  Jean,  137. 

Milligen,  Thomas,  137. 

Mills,  John,  32. 

Mills,  Lieut.  Col.  John,  31. 

Mills,  Robert,  219. 

Mills,  Rev.  Thomas,  205. 

Milk,  WiUiam,  31. 

Milton,  Richard,  133. 

Minnie^,  John,  76. 

Mitchell,  Ann,  135. 

Mitchell,  Dr.  Edward,  41. 

Mitchell,  John,  213. 

Mitchel,  Moses,  80. 

Mitchell,  Mary  Anne,  135. 

Mitchell,  Robert,  134, 135, 143. 

Mitchell,  Thomas,  213. 

Moberly,  Ann,  217. 

Moberly,  Eliazer,  217. 

Mollertee,  John  David,  133. 

Mongin,  Elizabeth  Edwards,  139. 

Mongin,  John  Andrew,  139. 

Mongin,  Mary,  139. 

Mongin,  WilUam,  139. 

Monk,  John,  154. 

Montaigut,  David,  170. 

Montego  Bay,  152. 

Montgomery,  Thomas,  205. 

Monrow,  Daniel,  79,  80. 

Moon,  Alexander,  133. 

Moon,  Duncan,  133. 

Moon,  Sarah,  133. 

Moor,  Elizabeth,  133,  178. 

Moor,  Nichael,  134. 

Moore,  Catherine,  99. 

Moore,  David,  134. 

Moore,  Capt.  James,  30. 

Morand,  Francis,  136. 

Morand,  John,  136. 

More,  David,  179. 

Moreau,  Mrs.,  15. 

Moreau,  F.,  11. 

Moreau,  Rev.  Charles  Frederic,  11, 

53,  70. 
Morgan,  Mrs.  10. 
Morgan,  Ann,  11, 133. 
Morgan,  Catherine,  133. 
Morgan,  Elizabeth,  133. 
Morgan,  John,  133. 
Morgan,  Joshua,  46, 133. 
Morgan,  Lewis,  133. 
Morgan,  Reese,  135. 
Morgan,  Mary,  209. 
Morgan,  Susa^mah,  52, 133. 
Morgin,  John,  216. 
Morgin,  Purchas,  216. 


Morgridge  Timothy,  11. 

Morris,  Edward,  56,  133,  134,  135. 

Morris,  Col.  Lewis,  99. 

Morris,  Margaret  Ann,  99. 

Morris,  Mary  Ann,  134. 

Morris,  Sarah,  134,  135,  174,  178. 

Morris,  Thomas  Edward,  134. 

Morrison,  Mary,  80. 

Morrison,  Robert,  27. 

Mortimer,  Charlotte,  156. 

Mortimer,  Prudence,  111,  134. 

Morton,  Gov.,  1. 

Moses,  David,  136. 

Moses,  Elizabeth,  135, 136(2). 

Moses,  WiUiam,  14,  134,  135,  136(2). 

Mosse,  George,  139. 

Mosse,  Marianne,  139. 

Motte,  Abraham,  33. 

Motte,  Col.  Isaac,  32. 

Mott,  Jacob,  170. 

Moultrie,  John,  170. 

Moultrie,  WiUiam,  33,  208. 

Muirhead,  Alexander,  216. 

Muldrop,  Catherine,  156. 

Muldrop,  Christian,  156. 

MuUens,  John,  48,  134. 

MuUer,  Amelia,  30. 

MuUer,  Major,  30. 

Mulryne,  Mrs.,  20. 

Mullryne,  Claudia,  62,  134,  136. 

Mullryne,  John,  62. 

Mullryne,  Col.  John,  46,  134,  136. 

Mullryne,  Mary,  59, 134. 

Mulliyne,  Sarah,  61,  136,  183. 

Mun^dl,  Catherine,  75. 

Munroe,  William,  99. 

Murphy,  Mary  Ajin,  18,  135. 

Murphy,  Thomas,  135. 

Mxirray,  Anne,  134. 

Murray,  Charles,  137. 

Murray,  EUzabeth,  120. 

Mxirray,  Frands,  137. 

Murray,  George,  170. 

Murray,  Gilbert,  104,  134. 

Murray,  John,  134. 

Murray,  Lawrence,  134. 

Murray,  Sarah,  134. 

Murray,  William,  134. 

Murrough,  Alexander,  134,  136. 

Murrough,  Elizabeth,  134, 136. 

Murrough,  Mary,  136. 

Myers,  Ann  Mary,  135,  136,  137(5). 

Myers,  Daniel,  135,  136,  137(4),  138. 

Myers,  Elizabeth,  136. 

Myers,  Henry,  138. 

Myers,  Jacob,  135. 

Myers,  James,  138. 

Myers,  Jesse,  138. 

Myers,  John,  134,  137,  138(8). 


246 


INDEX 


Myers,  Mary,  137,  138(8). 
Myers,  Sarah,  137. 
Myers,  Thomas,  138. 
Myers,  Susannah,  22, 138. 
Myers,  William,  138. 

Nash,  Mary,  142. 

Nash,  Samuel,  141,  142,  220. 

Nash,  Sarah,  141,  220. 

Nash,  William  Chaloner,  141. 

Neal,  Abraham,  142. 

Neal,  Archibald,  3. 

Neal,  Elizabeth  141(3),  142(2). 

Neal,  Jacob,  141(3),  142(2). 

Neal,  Mary,  142, 187. 

Neal,  Sarah,  142. 

Neilson,  Anna,  82. 

Nelson,  Ena,  78. 

Nelson,  Mary,  11,  142. 

Nelson,  Sarah,  142. 

Nelson,  Thomas,  141,  142,  192. 

Nelson,  WiUiam,  78,  79. 

Nesfield,  WiUiam,  161. 

NeufviUe,  John,  163, 170. 

Newell,  Anne,  140. 

Newell,  Clemmen,  142. 

Newell,  Lavinia,  140, 180. 

Newell,  Thomas,  128, 140(2). 

Newington,  John,  35,  82. 

Newman,  Jamesj  92. 

NichoUs,  Catherme,  140. 

NichoDs,  John,  140, 189. 

Nichols,  Elizabeth,  49,  140, 142. 

Nichols,  Jane,  132,  140. 

Nichols,  Martha,  145,  178. 

Nichols,  Samuel,  122,  140(5). 

Nicholson,  Daniel,  140. 

Nicholson,  John,  140. 

Nights,  John,  92. 

Nikison,  Nancy,  157. 

Norman,  Ann,  140. 

Norman,  Francis,  140. 

Nonnan,  James,  140. 

Norman,  John,  140. 

Nonnan,  Margaret,  140. 

Norton,  Elizabeth,  141. 

Norton,  Dorothy  Phoebe,  141. 

Norton,  Elizabeth,  142. 

Norton,  George,  141. 

Norton,  Jane,  141. 

Norton,  John,  141(5). 

Norton,  Jonathan,  46, 47, 140, 141(7), 

142,  188. 
Norton,  Martha,  141,  142. 
Norton,  Martha  Phoebe,  142. 
Nixon,  Ann,  142. 
Nixon,  Elizabeth,  142. 
Nixon,  John,  142. 
Norman,  James,  192. 


Norton,  Mary  Ann,  141(7),  142. 
Norton,  Phoebe,  141. 
Norton,  Sarah,  105,  141. 
Norton,  William,  141. 
Norwood,  John,  142. 
Noulson,  Ann,  142. 
Noulson,  Charles,  52,  142. 
Noulson,  Sarah,  142. 
Nutt,  James,  160. 

O'Brien,  Francis  Eleanor,  144. 

O'Brien,  Mary  Eliza,  144. 

O'Biian,  Michael,  108, 144(5). 

O'Brien,  Michael  James,  144. 

O'Brien,  Sarah  ^g,  144. 

O'Bryan,  Ann,  134, 143. 

O'Bryan,  Patrick,  143. 

O'Biyan,  Maiy  Anne,  143,  193. 

O'Bryan,  WUham,  143. 

OdingseU,  Ann,  4. 

Odingsell,  Charles,  4,  5,  94. 

Ogle,  Dorothy,  3. 

Ogle,  Thomas,  3 

Oglethorp's  Regiment,  20. 

Olannan,  Sennety,  143. 

O'Hara,  Jonathan,  209. 

Olcott,  Major  Timothy,  73. 

Oldfidd,  Mary,  143. 

Oliphant,  David,  170. 

Oliver,  Richard,  143. 

Olman,  Joseph,  27. 

Oram,  Frances,  717. 

Oram,  John,  '*17. 

Orde,  Anne,  144. 

Orde,  Eleanor,  142. 

Oide,  Elizabeth,  143. 

Orde,  Hugh,  143, 144. 

Orde,  Jane,  143, 144. 

Orde,  John,  143. 

Orr,  Abraham,  144. 

Orr.  Amelia,  143. 

Orr,  Elizabeth,  143. 

Orr,  Henry,  58, 143. 

Orr,  Janet,  68, 143. 

Orr,  James,  58, 143. 

Orr,  Judith,  143. 

Orr,  Maxgaret,  57,  143. 

Orr,  Mary,  143. 

Orr,  Robert,  58, 143. 

Orr,  Rev.  William,  48,  57,  113,  143. 

Orrick,  Thomas,  143, 179(2). 

Osborne,  Capt.,  72. 

Osbom,  Elizabeth,  22. 

Oswald,  Constance,  143. 

Oswald,  Elizabeth,  144, 188. 

(Dswald,  Joseph,  143. 

Oswald,  Robert,  143. 

Ouldfield,  John,  170. 

Oveiy,  Capt.  Isaac,  143. 


INDEX 


247 


Packrow,  Jean,  158. 

Packrow,  John,  158. 

Page,  Elizabeth,  131,  144. 

Page,  Hester,  144. 

Page,  Jane,  144. 

Page,  John,  144, 148. 

Page,  Joseph,  144. 

Page,  Maiy,  148. 

Page,  Ruth,  148. 

Page,  Sarah,  46, 144. 

Page,  William,  144. 

Pagett,  Elizabeth,  208. 

Pahner.   Ann,   112,   125,   144,    145, 

147, 150 
Palmer,  Charles  Smilie,  147. 
Palmer,  Edmund,  146. 
Pahner,  Elizabeth,  144,  146, 147. 
Palmer,  Hannah  Becket,  1^. 
Palmer,  James,  147. 
Palmer,  Job,  74. 

Pahner,  John,  144, 150,  170,  187. 
Pahner,  Col.  John,  60,  144,  146,  147. 
Palmer,  Luda,  144. 
Pahner,  Mary,  147,  148. 
Palmer,  Peter,  144. 
Palmer,  Samuel,  74. 
Pahner,  Thomas,  149,  150. 
Pahner,  William,  144,  147,  148,  149. 
Palmer,  Major  William,  147. 
Pahner,  Winifred,  149,  150. 
Palmeter,  Joseph,  149. 
Parker,  Rev.,  152. 
Parker,  Capt.  Benjamin,  212. 
Parker.  Daniel,  58,   135,   146,   147, 

148,  149,  150. 
Parker,  Daniel  Edward,  150. 
Parker,  Elizabeth,  148, 149,  150. 
Parker,  Ferguson,  155. 
Parker,  John,  148. 
Parker,  Joseph,  147. 
Parker,  Martha,  147. 
Parker,  Mary,  146. 
Parker,  Samuel,  128,  145. 
Parker,  William  M.,  152. 
Parker's  Ferry,  30. 

Parmenter,  ^^e,  66,  128,  145,  148. 
Parmenter,  Benjamin,  148. 
Parmenter,  Catherine,  149. 
Parmenter,  Dorothea,  148. 
Parmenter,  Dorothy,  148. 
Parmenter,  Elizabeth,  145, 179. 
Parmenter,  John,  148,  149. 
Parmenter,   Joseph,    148,    149,   172, 

199. 
Parmenter,  Martha,  145,  148. 
Parmenter,  Mary,  148,  149,  214. 
Parmenter,  Nathaniel,  148. 
Parmenter,  Peter,  145,  148. 
Parmenter,  Sarah,  15, 148, 150. 


Parmenter,  Thomas,  7, 148. 

Pamham.  John,  170. 

Parris,  Alexander,  46, 145. 

Parris,  Elizabeth,  145. 

Parris,  John,  145. 

Parris,  Mary,  145. 

Parsons,  James,  219. 

Parsons,  John,  150. 

Parsons,  Ralph,  64. 

Parsons,  Thomas,  145. 

Parsons,  William,  64. 

Paterson,  Peter,  112. 

Paterson,  William,  27. 

Patreau,  William,  43. 

Patterson,  Elizabeth,  150. 

Patterson,  Mary,  149,  150. 

Patterson,  Nathaniel  John,  149. 

Patterson,  William,  149. 

Pauling,  Elizabeth,  145. 

Pauling,  Robert,  145. 

Pauling,  William,  145 

Peak,  Stephen,  217. 

Pearce,  John,  92. 

Pearce,  Feter,  92. 

Pearce,  Robert,  92. 

Peart,  Ann,  150. 

Peart,  I.,  53. 

Peart,  James,  150. 

Peart,  John,  150. 

Peart,  Mary  Elizabeth,  150. 

Peasely,  Daniel,  146. 

Peasely,  Edith,  147. 

Peasely,  John,  146. 

Peasely,  Mary,  146,  147,  148. 

Peasely,  Rev.  William,  8-27,  46-71, 

104,  146,  147,  148,  171. 
Pelot,  Rev.,  20,  51, 184. 
Pelot,  David,  147. 
Pelot,  Francis,  147(7),  148. 
Pelot,  James,  94, 147. 
Pelot,  John,  147. 
Pelot,  Jonas,  148. 
Pelot,  Joseph,  147. 
Pelot,  Martha,  147(7),  148. 
Pelot,  Mary,  147. 
Pelot,  Samuel,  94,  147. 
Pemberton,  Ann,  44. 
Pemberton,  Charles,  44. 
Pemberton,  Charles  Sawyer,  44. 
Pemberton,  Elizabeth,  44. 
Pemberton,  Rebecca,  44. 
Pendal,  John,  36. 
Pendal,  Richard,  36. 
Pendarvis,  Josiah,  149. 
Pendarvis,  Mary,  149. 
Penn,  John,  206. 
Pepper,  Charlotte,  109. 
Pepper,  Daniel,  147,  150. 
Pepper,  Gilbert,  147, 193,  214. 


248 


INDEX 


Pq>pcr,  Jame,  214. 

Pepper,  Mary,  150. 

Peppin,  Mathew,  75. 

Percy,  Catherine  Anna,  53. 

Percy,  Re\'.  W  illiam,  D.D.,  53. 

Periagua,  112. 

Peronncau,  Ann  Motte,  212. 

Peronneau,  Arthur,  212. 

Peronneau,  Samuel,  149,  190. 

Perott,  PhiUp.  92. 

Perreno,  Charles,  149. 

Perreno,  Elizabeth,  149. 

Perreno,  Esther,  149. 

Perreno,  Mary,  149. 

Perriman,  Jesse,  213. 

Perry,  Amy,  150. 

Perry,  Benjamin,  150,  170. 

Perry,  Elizabeth,  77,  146,  147,  148, 

149. 
Perry,  Frances,  141. 
Perry,  James,  151. 
Perry,  Joseph,  148. 
Perry,  Marcus  Aurelius,  151. 
Perry,  Martha,  149. 
Perry,  Martha  Phoebe,  141,  216. 
Perry,  Peter,  77,  128,  147,  148,  149, 

150. 
Perry,  Thomas,  149,  216. 
Perryclear,  Adam,  110,  151. 
Perryclear,  Hannah,  148,  149. 
Perryclear,  Margaret,  151. 
Perr>xlear,  Mary,  149. 
Perryclear,  Michael,  148,  149,  151. 
Pert,  Sarah,  6. 
Pert,  William,  6. 
Peters,  A,,  150. 
Peters,  Sarah,  123,  145. 
Peters,  William,  75. 
Peterson,  Andrew,  145. 
Peterson,  Peter,  17. 
Petigru,  James  Louis,  163. 
Petrie,  Alexander,  205. 
Petty,  Richard,  145,  173. 
Peyton,  Richard  Henry,  33. 
Philips,  Eleanor  Gale,  210. 
Philips,  James,  151. 
Philips,  Col.  James,  210. 
Philips,  Susan,  151. 
Philips,  William,  151. 
Pickeran,  Benjamin,  150. 
Pickering,  Ann,  207. 
Pickering,  Joseph,  170,  207. 
Pierce,  Mr.,  210. 

Pierce,  Rev.  James,  11,  21,  53,  63. 
Pilsbury,  Samuel,  155. 
Pinckney,  Rev.  C.  C,  25. 
Pinckney,  Caroline,  151. 
Pinckney,    Charles,   30,   36,   37,  42, 

80,  170. 


Pinckne>',    Charles    Cotcswortli,    63, 

151. 
Pinckney,  Frances,  30. 
P*inckney,  William,  42,  170. 
Pinfault,  Soline  Grenon  de,  157. 
Pitman,  Elizabeth,  6. 
Pitman,  Sarah,  6. 
Poaug,John,  33. 
Piatt,  Tliomas,  93. 
Pockington,  Anne,  147,  183. 
Pogson,  Rev.,  205. 
Point  of  Pines  plantation,  41,  100. 
Poke,  Miss,  27. 
Poke,  Gen.,  27. 
Pond,  John,  145. 
Pond,  Mary,  145. 
Pond,  Richard,  145. 
Poole,  Peter,  216. 
Poor,  Mary,  65,  146. 
Pope,  George,  148,  150. 
Pope,  James,  148,  150(2),  151,   188, 

201. 
Pope,  Joseph,  150. 
Pope,  Joseph  James,  151. 
Pc^,  Martha,  151. 
Pope,  Sarah,  148,  150. 
Pope,  Susannah,  148,  150,  151. 
Pope,  Theodora,  151. 
Pope,  WiUiam,  150,  151. 
Porcher,  Mrs.,  156. 
Porcher,  Paul,  96. 
Porcher,  Samuel,  96. 
Porteous,  Alexander  Rose,  151. 
Porteous,  Ann,  150, 151. 
Porteous,  Ann  Wigg,  150. 
Porteous,  Catherine,  151. 
Porteous,  Elizabeth,  151. 
Porteous,  Hester,  151. 
Porteous,  Jane,  151. 
Porteous,  James  Cuthbert,  151. 
Porteous,  John,  151. 
Porteous,  Mary  Cuthbert,  150. 
Porteous,  Mary  Moncrie£f,  151. 
Porteous,  Robert,  150,  151. 
Porteous,  Sarah  Green,  151. 
Postell,  Andrew,  81. 
PostcU,  Anthony,  145. 
Postell,  Catherine,  73. 
Postell,  Magdalen,  148,  201. 
Postell,  Mary,  102,  146. 
Postelthwate,  Edward,  150. 
Potter,  John,  99. 
Powell,  Elizabeth,  146,  147. 
Powell,  George  Gabriel,  170. 
Powell,  Hannah,  51,  147,  148. 
Powell,  James  Edward,  146,  200. 
Powell,  John,  146,  147,  148,  198. 
Powell,  Mary,  146. 
Powell,  Robert  Williams,  146. 


INDEX 


249 


PoweU,  William,  146. 
Poyas,  James,  212. 
Prentis,  Peter,  75. 
Price,  Bethia,  31. 
Price,  Jane,  146. 
Price,  John,  146. 
Price,  Rice,  170. 
Price,  William,  31. 
Pringle,  Mr.,  22. 
Pringle,  Thomas,  138,  156. 
Prioleau,  John  Cordes,  208. 
Prioleau,  Mary  Magdalen,  4 
Prioleau,  Samuel,  42. 
Pritton,  Capt.,  190. 
Proctor,  Martha,  139,  151. 
Proctor,  Richard,  149,  151. 
Proctor,  Sarah  Ann,  151. 
Proctor,  Stephen  Royer,  151. 
Pryce,  Charles,  170. 
Purry,  Mrs.,  20. 
Purry,  Charles,  46. 
Purcell,  Rev.,  75. 
Purcell,  Dr.  Henry,  207. 
Purcell,  Jane,  207. 
Purchar,  Elizabeth,  147. 
Purchar,  Paul,  147. 
Purdy,  Charies,  104,  146. 
Purdy,  Mary,  146. 
Puny,  Col,  146. 
Purry,  Charles,  105,  146. 
Purry,  Eleanor,  146. 
Purry,  George,  146. 
Purry,  John  Peter,  85. 
Puny,  Lucretia,  146. 
Puny,  Sarah,  146. 

Quackinbush,  Catherine,  209. 
Quince,  Parker,  33. 
Quince,  Washington,  33. 
Quinsey,  Rev.,  14,  60. 

Rae,  John,  221. 

RanJun,  Christopher  Poor,  175. 

Rankin,  John,  174,  175. 

Rankin,  Mary,  174,  175. 

Raper,  Robert,  77. 

Ratsford,  Mary,  174. 

Raven,  John,  170. 

Ravenel,  Daniel,  92,  93, 

Ravenel,  Henry,  92. 

Ravenel,  James,  92. 

Read,  James,  159,  171,  176. 

Read,  John,  176. 

Read,  Mary,  159,  176. 

Ready,  Peggy,  209. 

Rearden,  Daniel,  176. 

Rearden,  Susannah,  174,  176. 

Reed,  John,  171,  176. 

Reeve,  Anne,  171,  174,  182,  195. 


Reeve,  Elizabeth,  171. 

Reeve,  Lewis,  171. 

Reeve,  Sarah;  171. 

Reeve,  Thomas,  171,  179. 

Reeves,  Ambrose,  14,  171,  174,  180. 

Reeves,  Elizabeth,  171. 

Reeves,  Lewis,  216. 

Reeves,  Margaret,  171. 

Reeves,  Thomas,  171. 

Reid,  James,  209. 

Reid,  Patrick,  170. 

Remington,  John,  164,  169. 

Reynolds,  Alice,  171. 

Reynolds,  Amy,  11,  69,  174,  175. 

Reynolds,  Ann,  176. 

Reynolds,  Benjamin,  172(2),  174. 

Reynolds,  Capers,  172. 

Reynolds,  Charles  Capers,  171. 

Reynolds,  Constantia,  171,  189. 

Reynolds,  Eleanor,  50,  172(2). 

Reynolds,   Elizabeth,   60,   172,    174, 

175,  176,  192. 

Reynolds,  James,  171,  172,  174,  176, 

182 
Reynolds,   Jane,    172(2),    174,    175, 

176. 
Reynolds,  John,  48,  171,  175,  176. 
Reynolds,  Jonathan,  175. 
Reynolds,  Martha,  176. 
Reynolds,    Mary,    171,     172,    174, 

176. 
Reynolds,  Philip,  172. 
Reynolds,    Richard,    80,    171,    172, 

174,  175,  176,  190,  214. 
Reynolds,  Sarah,  47,  80,  171,  172, 

174,  175,  176,  181. 
Reynolds,   William,    172,    174,    175, 

176,  189. 
Reynolds,  Zacharias,  172. 
Rhett,  Robert  Barnwell,  204. 
Rhett,  Thomas  M.,  24. 
Rhodes,  Edward  Leacraft,  177. 
Rhodes,  Henrietta,  177. 
Rhodes,  J.  M.,  11. 

Rhodes,  John,  177. 

Rhodes,  Mary,  177. 

Rhodes,  Mary  Wilkinson,  177. 

Rhodes,  Nathaniel  Henry,  177. 

Rice,  Mrs.,  29. 

Rich,  Catherine,  172. 

Rich,  Martha,  106,  172,  175. 

Rich,  Mary,  172. 

Rich,  WiUiam,  133,  172,  175. 

Richard,  Thomas  Francis,  176. 

Richards,  Elizabeth,  174. 

Richards,  Francis  Tliomas,  176. 

Richards,  Jane,  173. 

Richards,  Martha,  176. 

Richards,  Mary,  173,  174. 


250 


INDEX 


Richards,  Robert,  174. 
Richards,  WilUam,  173,  174,  176. 
Richardson,  Barnard,  210. 
Richardson,  Hcniy,  177. 
Richardson,  Jean  Kerr,  25,  177. 
Richardson,  John,  69,  175. 
Richardson,  Maiy,  177. 
Richardson,  Sarah  C,  22. 
Rickets,  Catherine,  104,  173. 
Rickets,  Mary,  173. 
Rickets,  Richard,  14,  173. 
Rippon,  Hannah,  43,  96. 
Roan,  EHzabeth,  172,  199. 
Robb,  Elizabeth,  173. 
Robb,  John,  173. 
Robert,  Ann,  40,  41. 
Robert,  Elias,  94. 
Robert,  Elizabeth,  94,  95. 
Robert,  Jacques,  94. 
Robert,  James,  94. 
Robert,  Judith,  112. 
Robert,  Peter,  41,  95,  112. 
Roberts,  David,  173,  192. 
Roberts,  Esther,  173. 
Roberts,  George,   173. 
Roberts,  Magdalene,  173. 
Roberts,  Susannah,  173. 
Robertson,  Andrew,  214. 
Robertson,  Elizabeth,   176. 
Robertson,  Dr.  James,  30. 
Robertson,  John,  32. 
Robertson,  Maiy,  12,  177. 
Robertson,  Rebecca,  177. 
Robertson,  Sarah,  176. 
Robertson,  Susan,  177. 
Robertson,  Thomas,  176. 
Robertson,  William,  177. 
Robins,  Joseph,  174,  175. 
Robins,  Mary,  175. 
Robinson,  Abigail,  75. 
Robinson,  Andrew,  21*^. 
Robinson,  Christiana.  174. 
Robinson,  John,  75,  174,  175. 
Robinson,  Margaret,  174. 
Robinson,  Tho?.,  20. 
Robinson,  William,  74,  76. 
Roeck,  John  Jacob,  173. 
Roeck,  Magdalen,  173. 
Roeck,  Mary  Magdalen,  173. 
Rogers,  Rev.  Dr.  William,  30. 
Roil,  Jonathan,  93. 
Roney,  — ,  177. 
Roper,  Jane,  173. 
Roper,  John,  173. 
Roper,  Joseph,  173. 
Rose,  — ,  114. 
Rose,  Alexander,  151. 
Rose,  Aquilla,  173. 
Rose,  Arthur,  24. 


Rose,  Elizabeth,  173,  175. 

Rose,  Hezekiah,  17,  175. 

Rose,  John,  175. 

Rose,  Judith,  173. 

Rose,  Martha,  173. 

Rose,  Sarah,  145,  173. 

Rose,  William,  81. 

Rosely,  Rev.,  180. 

Ross,  Ann  Agnes,  175. 

Ross,  Elizabeth,  175. 

Ross,  James,  175. 

Rowan,  Charles  Elliott,  207. 

Rowan,  Robert,  78,  79. 

Rowe,  James,  35. 

Rowely,  William,  176. 

Royal,  Rebecca,  123. 

Rubeny,  Rebecca,  156. 

Ruden,  Peter,  81. 

Rumph,  Elizabeth,  32. 

Russ,  Benjamin,  174,  175. 

Russ,  Judith,  175. 

Russ,  Judith  Rachel,  175. 

Russ,  Richard,  59. 

RusseU,  Amelia,  175. 

Russell,  Elizabeth,  114,  174. 

Russell,  George,  34, 135, 174,  175,  176. 

Russell,  Jane  Elizabeth,  175. 

Russell,  Judith,  174. 

Russell,  Sarah,  175,  176. 

Russell,  Stephen,  174. 

Rutledge,  Andrew,  170. 

Rutledge,  Hugh,  176. 

Rutledge,  John,  36,  79,  170. 

Rutledge,  Margaret,  176. 

Rutledge,  Thomas,  176. 

Ryely,  Deborah,  173. 

Ryely»  James,  173. 

Ryely,  Mary,  173 

Sacheverell,  Thomas,  164,  170. 

Sabb,  Morgan,  123. 

St.  Georges,  Barbadoes,  44. 

St.  Helena's  Parish  Register,  8,  46, 

102,  171,  204. 
St.  John,  Miller,  76. 
St.  John,  Rev.  Richard,  13,  47. 
St.  John's  Parish,  Militia  list,  92. 
St.  Julian,  Benjamin,  92. 
St.  Julian,  Henry  de,  92. 
Salley,  A.  S.  Jr.,  46. 
Saltridge,  Lydia,  79. 
Saltridge,  WiUiam,  79. 
Saltus,  Francis,  188. 
Saltus,  Mary  Lawson,  188. 
Saltus,  Sarah,  188. 
Saltus,  Sonchcy,  188. 
Sammat,  Leonard,  216. 
Sams,  Ann,  150,  187. 
Sams,  Robert,  42. 


INDEX 


251 


Sanders,  William,  177. 
Sarsfield,  WilUam,  177,  188. 
Saunders,  Roger  Parker,  152. 
Saussure,  See  De  Saussure. 
Savage,  Daniel,  135,  177,  178,  182, 

183(2),  184,  185,  198. 
Savage,  Jane,  137,  184,  185. 
Savage,  John,  177,  215. 
Savage,  Mary,  177,  178,  182,  183. 
Savage,  Sarah,  178,  185. 
Savage,  Sophia,  184. 
Savage,  Susannah,  149,  182. 
Savage,  Susannah  Parsons,  62. 
Savage,  William,  182. 
Saxberry,  See  Saxby. 
Saxby,  John,  178. 
Saxby,  Mary,  178. 
Saxby,  Rachel,  178. 
Saxby,  Richard,  178. 
Saxby,  Sarah,  178,  182. 
Sayre,  Elizabeth,  187. 
Sayre,  Jeremiah,  187. 
Sayre,  Sarah  Bell,  187. 
Scantlin,  David,  183. 
Scantlin,  James,  52,  187. 
Scantlin,  Margaret,  183. 
Scantlin,  Rebecca,  183. 
Scheiu-er,  Michael,  213. 
Schmidt,  George  Henry,  73. 
Scott,  Mrs.,  19. 
Scott,  Rev.  Alexander,  95 
Scott,  Benjamin,  186. 
Scott,  Catherine,  178,  181, 191. 
Scott,  David,  186. 
Scott,  Edward,  178. 
Scott,  Eleanor,  178,  181, 186. 
Scott,  Eleanor  Ireland,  186. 
Scott,  Elizabeth,  79,  159,  178,  186. 
Scott,  George,  178,  183,  186. 
Scott,  James,  57, 156,  178, 185. 
Scott,  John,  170,  178. 
Scott,   Joseph,   144,   159,   178,   181, 

183(2),  184,  185,  186,  188. 
Scott,  Major,  70. 
Scott,  Martha,  148,  188. 
Scott,  Mary,  178. 
Scott,  Ralph,  81. 
Scott,  Richard,  178. 
Scott,  Richard  Hawkms,  178. 
Scott,  Sarah,  181,  183(2),  184,  185, 

191. 
Scott,  Thomas  GuUiem,  79. 
Scott,  WiUiam,  170, 178, 184, 185. 
Screven,  Hannah,  80,  159. 
Screven,  Martha,  28. 
Screven,  Samuel,  7. 
Screven,  Thomas,  28. 
Screven,  WUliam,  80,  159. 
Scrivnor,  Mrs.,  29. 


Scrivnor,  James,  29. 

Sealy,  Ann,  45, 97. 

Sea^,  Benjamin,  183. 

Sealy,  Dorcas,  44. 

Sealy,  Elizabeth,  183,  185. 

Sealy,  Hannah,  127, 178, 184. 

Seaty,  Joanna,  184. 

Sealy,  John,  44,  94,  184,  185. 

Sealy,  Joseph,  7, 184. 

Seaty,  Mary,  184. 

Sealy,  Rebecca.  44,  97,  184. 

Sealy,  Sarah,  97. 

Sealy,  Susanna,  184,  185. 

Sealy,  Tabitha,  44, 183, 195. 

Sealy,  William,  97. 

Seaman,  George,  170. 

Searles,  James,  179. 

Sears,  Jeremiah.  186. 

Searson,  Margaret,  185,  186. 

Searson,  Samuel,  185. 

Searson,  Thomas,  94,  133,  178,  185, 

186,  202. 
Searson,  William,  186. 
Searsons,  Elizabeth,  134, 179. 
Season,  See  Searson. 
S6csLTe,  Peter,  160. 
Seewee  Bay,  211. 
Sergeant,  Elizabeth,  17, 171,  179. 
Sergeant,  Rowland,  13,  17,  66,  104, 

112,  123,  179. 
Sen,  Andrew,  161. 
Seyers,  Elizabeth  G.,  138. 
S^nnour,  Maiy,  183, 195. 
Slmrp,  Anne,  179. 
Sharp,  James,  169,  179. 
Shaveneau,  John,  92. 
Shaw,  WiUiam,  186. 
Sheargold,  Anne,  183. 
Sheargold,  Elizabeth,  187. 
Sheargold,  Robert,  183,  185,  187. 
Sheargold,  Sarah,  183,  185, 187. 
Shecut,  Abraham,  186, 187. 
Shecut,  Abraham  Lewis,  187. 
Shecut,  John  Lewis,  186. 
Shecut,  Mary,  186,  187. 
Skecuiy    Medical    and    PkUosophkal 

EssaySf  163. 
Shedtland,  Nicholas,  147, 183. 
Sheed,  Isabella,  33. 
Sheed,  Dr.  William,  33. 
Sheen,  Nicholas,  183. 
Shepherd,  Abbaheart,  181. 
Shepherd,  George,  181,  183. 
Shepherd,  Magdalene,  181, 183. 
Shq)herd,  Mary,  183. 
Shergold,  5>ee  Sheargold. 
Sherman,  Mary  Anne,  139,  187. 
Shields,  Mathew,  209. 
Shorty,  Anne,  179. 


252 


INDEX 


Shorty,  Mary,  102,  179. 

Shorty,  William,  179. 

Shrewsbury,  Rebecca,  31. 

Shubrick,  Thomas,  170. 

Simmonds,  Sarah,  181. 

Simmonds,  Thomas,  181. 

Simmons,  Ebenezer,  4. 

Simmons,  Francis,  207. 

Simmons,  Marv,  6,  154. 

Sinmis,  Ann,  1^9. 

Sinmis,  Elizabeth,  179. 

Simms,  Tobias,  179. 

Shnond,  Joseph,  157. 

Simons,  Charles  Dewar,  187. 

Simons,  James,  187. 

Simons,  Sarah,  187. 

Simpson,  Rev.  Archibald,  53. 

Simpson,  Green,  107,  187. 

Simpson,  James,  185. 

Simpson,  Mar>',  185. 

Simpson,  Thomas,  122,  179. 

Sinclair,  John,  163,  164,  169. 

Singleton,  Darquier,  153. 

Singleton,  Richard,  153. 

Sisom,  Elizabeth,  179,  197. 

Sisom,  Gregory,  179. 

Sison,  Mrs.,  42,  96. 

Skirving,  William,  31. 

Slack,  John,  179. 

Small,  Esther,  179. 

Small,  Mary,  179. 

Small,  Samuel,  179. 

Small,  William,  179,  183. 

Smallwood,  Anne,  182,  196. 

Smallwood,  Dorothy,  179,  182,  198. 

Smallwood,  James,  179,  182. 

Smerdon,  Elias,  33. 

Smith,  Rev.,  11. 

Smith,  Alfred,  188. 

Smith,  Anne,  184. 

Smith,  Archer,  78. 

Smith,  Archibald,  125,  188. 

Smith,  Benjamin,  170.  » 

Smith,  Claudia,  188. 

Smith,  Edward,  188. 

Smith,  Elizabeth,  22,  143,  179,  184. 

Smith,  Emma,  188. 

Smith,  George,  161. 

Smith,  Dr.  George,  7. 

Smith,  Henry,  180. 

Smith,  Henry  A.  M.,  85. 

Smith,  J.  J.,  24. 

Smith,  James,  180,  186,  188. 

Smith,  Jane,  184. 

Smith,  John,  5,  179,  184,  185,  200. 

Smith,  John  Joyner,  188. 

Smith,  Josiah,  99. 

Smith,  Margaret,  188. 

Smith,  Mar>s  179. 


Smith,  Mary  Ann  Gough,  1S8. 

Smith,  Philip,  153. 

Smith,  Robert,  219. 

Smith,  Rev.  Robert,  32, 184. 

Smith,  Robert  Barnwell,  188. 

Smith,  Roger,  Moore,  155. 

Smith,  Thomas,  64,  169,  179. 

Smith,  William  Stevens,  157. 

Smyth,  Catherine,  119. 

Snock,  Sidonious,  S3. 

Sonmiers,  David,  182. 

Sommers,  Henrietta,  207. 

Sommers,  James,  182,  183  (2). 

Sommers,  John,  184,  207. 

Sommers,  Joseph,  140,  180,  197. 

Sommers,  Lavinia,  180. 

Sommers,  Mary,  180,  182,  183,  184. 

Sonmiers,  Samuel,  180. 

Sommers,  William,  184. 

South  Carolina  Society,  28. 

Spencer,  Ann,  124. 

Spiers,  James,  207. 

Spiers,  Peggy,  207. 

^itzer,  Barend  Moses,  152.- 

Sprowle,  Alexander,  182. 

Sprowle,  Charlotte,  182. 

Sprowle,  James,  183. 

Sprowle,  Mary,  182. 

Stack,  John,  145. 

Stanborough,  Hobart,  180. 

Standish,  Rev.,  David,  55,  60,    123, 

173  179. 
Stanton,'  Elizabeth,  65,  180. 
Stanyame,  Ann,  171,  180,  199. 
Stanyame,  James,  26. 
Stanyame,  Marv,  123,  181. 
Stanyame,  Thomas,  15,  180,  199. 
Stanyame,  William,  80,  81. 
Stanvame,  William,  Jr.,  80,  81 
Staples,  Joanna,  184. 
Starling,  Ann,  180. 
Starling,  Nathaniel,  180. 
Starling,  William,  180. 
Steedman,  Isabella,  156. 
Steedman,  Robert,  213. 
Steel,  Catherine,  186. 
Steele,  Dr.  James,  16,  185. 
Steel,  John,  186. 
Sten,  David,  127,  187. 
Stent,  Joseph,  144,  181. 
Stephens,  Mary  Ann,  106. 
Stenphenson,  Elizabeth,  155. 
Sterhng,  James,  184. 
Sterling  Jane,  184. 
Stevens,  Alice,  182. 
Stevens,  Anne,  185. 
Stevens,  Eleanor,  171,  182. 
Stevens,  Elizabeth,  180,  182. 
Stevens,  George,  182. 


INDEX 


253 


Stevens,  James,  48,  181. 
Stevens,  John  Reynolds,  180. 
Stevens,  Margaret,  180,  185. 
Stevens,  Mary,  185. 
Stevens,  Mary  Anne,  180. 
Stevens,  Mehitable  Emerson,  155. 
Stevens,  Michael,  182. 
Stevens,  Richard,  180,  184,  185,  196, 

200. 
Stevens,  Samuel,  171,  180, 182. 
Stevens,  Sarah,  180,  182. 
Stevens,  Susannah,  17,  180. 
Stevenson,  Charles,  163,  170. 
Stewart,  Alexander,  170. 
Stewart,  James  Rousom,  31. 
Stewart,  see  also  Stuart. 
Stirling,  James,  182,  200. 
Stitt,  Richard,  92. 
Stobo,  Ann,  3S. 

Stobo,  Elizabeth,  180,  184,  185(2). 
Stobo,  Jacob,  185. 
Stobo,  Joseph,  180,  184,  185(2) 
Stobo,  Sarah,  184. 
Stone,  Anne,  49,  181,  183. 
Stone,  Benjamin,  207. 
Stone,  David,  17,  181,  183,  184,  186. 
Stone,  Tames,  181,  185. 
Stone,  Jane,  181. 
Stone,  John,  181,  185. 
Stone,  Lo\'e,  208. 
Stone,  Margaret,  183,  184,  186. 
Stone,  Martha,  183,  184,  185,  186. 
Stone,  Mary,  122,  181. 
Stone,  Sarah,  181,  186,  199, 
Stone,  Samuel,  186. 
Stone,  Thomas,  112,  113, 181, 183  (2), 

184,  185,  186. 
Stone,  William  Hatcher,  185. 
Stoney,  Elizabeth,  187. 
Stoney,  Elizabeth  Mary,  187. 
Stoney,  John,  187. 
Story,  Elizabeth,  105,  182,  183,  184, 

185. 
Story,  EUicott,  182,  184,  185,  200. 
Story,  John,  133,  183  (2),  184,  185. 
Story,  Mary,  16,  104,  181. 
Story,  Rowland,  182,  183. 
Story,  William,  183. 
Stoutenburge,  Luke,  170. 
Streaker,  Rev.,  11,  53,  138. 
Streekwcll,  Rev.  125. 
Stringer,  Elizabeth,  185. 
Stringer,  Joseph,  185. 
Stroble,  John,  76. 
Strohedcer,  Anne,  100. 
Stuart,  Mrs.,  19. 
Stuart,  Capt.  52. 
Stuart,  Anne,  183,  184,  185,  186, 188, 

216. 


Stuart,  Christiana,  185. 

Stuart,  Daniel,  185,  186. 

Stuart,  Francis,  171,  182,  183,  184, 

185,  186,  216. 
Stuart,  Francis  Henry,  188. 
Stuart,  Henry,  216. 
Stuart,  Henry  Middleton,  188. 
Stuart,  James,  54,  137,  185,  188  (8). 
Stuart,  John,  188. 
Stuart,  Capt.  John,  185. 
Stuart,  John  Joseph,  185. 
Stuart,  Lewis  Reeve,  188. 
Stuart,  Mary,  Martha,  54. 
Stuart,  Middleton,  25. 
Stuart,  Sarah,  185. 
Stuart,  Thomas  Middleton,  188. 
Simmiers,  Humphry,  160 
Simuners,  see  also  Sonmiers. 
Sutcliff,  John,  31. 
Sutter,  John  Tippin,  187. 
Sutter,  Susannah,  54, 187. 
Sutton,  Helen  Louise,  100. 
Sutton,  Thomas,  142, 187. 
Stuart,  James,  54, 137, 185, 188. 
Swadler,  Mrs.,  16. 
Swain,  Elizabeth,  20. 
Swain,  John,  20,  50,  184. 
Swallow,  Ann  Joanna,  74. 
Swallow,  Newman,  37,   74,   81,    158, 

160,  161. 
Swint,  John,  161. 
Swinton,  Harriott,  154. 
Swinton,  Hugh,  154,  157. 
Swinton,  James,  94. 
Swinton,  Slary,  40. 
Swinton,  Sarah,  157. 
Swiss  Settlers,  in  S.  C,  85. 
Symmes,  Daniel,  72. 
Syson,  See  Sison. 

Tailer,  Elisha,  191. 
Tailer,  Elizabeth,  191. 
Tailer,  Thomas,  191. 
Talbir^  Ann,  190. 
Talbird,  Ann,  192. 
Talbird,  Benjamin,  192. 
Talbird,  Catherine,  192(2). 
Talbird,  Christian,  192. 
Talbird,  Christiana,  192. 
Talbird,  Elizabeth,  192. 
Talbird,  Henry,  190. 
Talbird,  Henry  David,  192. 
Talbird,  James  Doharty,  192. 
Talbird,  Margaret  Hislop,  192. 
Talbird,  Mary,  177,  190. 
Talbird,  Thomas,  54,  190,  192. 
Talbird,  Thomas  Jay,  192. 
Talbird,  William,  190. 
Talbot,  See  Talbird. 


254 


INDEX 


Talifcr,  Marv,  190. 
Talifer,  Patrick,  190. 
Tallman,  Charles,  72. 
Tart,  Nathan,  30. 
Tarver,  John,  28. 
Tate,  Rev.  Mathew,  73,  139. 
Tate,  John,  92. 
Tate,  Capt.  John,  75. 
Tattnall,  Elizabeth,  190. 
Tattnall,  John  MuUryne,  191. 
Tattnall,  Joseph,  11. 
Tattnall,  Josiah,  190,  191. 
Tattnall,  Mary,  191. 
Tattnall,  Sarah,  149,  190. 
Tattnall,  Thos,  14,  190. 
Taylor,  Alexander,  76,  170. 
Taylor,  Humphrey,  1/9. 
Taylor,  Jane,  177,  188. 
Taylor,  John,  188,  191,  192. 
Taylor,  Mary,  123,  188,  191,  192. 
Taylor,  Ralph,  170. 
Taylor,  Robert  92. 
Taylor  Robert  Devant,  192. 
Taylor,  Thomas  191,  192,  214. 
Taylor,  William,  188,  192. 
Teale,  Rev.  William,  108. 
Tennant,  Mrs.,  30. 
Tennant,  James,  191. 
Tennant,  William,  189. 
Tennant,  Rev.  William,  30. 
Testard,  Maiy,  219. 
Testard,  Robert,  219. 
Tew,  Charles,  209. 
Thomas,  Catherine,  140,  189,  198. 
Thomas,  Elizabeth,  64,  190. 
Thomas,  Francis,  210. 
Thomas,  Robert,  72. 
Thomas,  Sarah,  172,  190,  210. 
Thompson,  Archibald,  83. 
Thompson,  Isabel,  219. 
Thompson,  John,  219. 
Thompson,  Robot,  159. 
Thompson,  Col.  William,  207. 
Thomson,  Dr.,  59. 
Thomson,  Anne,  50,  189. 
Thomson,  Constantia,  189. 
Thomson,  Francis,  171,  189. 
Thomson,  James  Hamden,  28. 
Thomson,  Mary,  189. 
Thomson,  William,  189. 
Thorpe,  Ann,  191. 
Thorpe,  Israel,  190. 
Thorpe,  Mary  Ruth,  191. 
Thorpe,  Samuel  191(2). 
Thorpe,  Sarah,  191. 
Thresher,  Elizabeth,  189. 
Thresher,  John,  189. 
Tillinghast,  Dr.  Henry,  27. 
Timothy,  Peter,  163,  170. 


Tippin,  Margaret,  191. 

Tippin,  Thomas,  191. 

Tippin,  Thomas  Scantlin,  191. 

Tobias,  Benjamin,  68,  189. 

Tobias,  Joseph,  132,  189. 

Todhunter,  Joseph,  78. 

Tolson,  Andrew,  189. 

Tolson,  George,  189. 

Tolson,  Margaret,  189. 

Tolson,  William,  189. 

Tonge,  Rev.  John,  11,  108. 

Toomer,  Caleb,  35,  189,  191. 

Toomer,  Catherine,  191. 

Toomer,  Catherine  Hawkins,  191. 

Toomer,  Constantia,  35,  37. 

Toomer,  Elizabeth,  189(2),  191. 

Toomer,  Heniy,  51,  190,  191. 

Toomer,  John,  189,  191. 

Toomer,  Joseph,  191. 

Toomer,  Joshua,  191. 

Toomer,  Ralph,  35,  37. 

Toomer,  Ruth,  189. 

Toomer,  Sarah,  70,  124,  192. 

Toomer,  Sophia,  191. 

Touberbuheier,    Rev.,    See    Zanber- 

buhler. 
Tourtellet,  Ann,  72. 
Townsend,  John,  176,  192. 
Townshend,  George,  189. 
Townshend,  Mary,  189. 
Tozar,  Ephraim,  189,  194. 
Tozar,  Hannah,  189. 
Ttapier,  Paul,  38. 
Ttenholm,  Ann,  32. 
Trenhohn,  Helen,  100. 
Trenholm,  William,  32. 
Troup,  James,  208. 
Truchet,  Anthony,  190. 
Tnichet,  Susanna,  190. 
Trueheart,  Elizabeth,  172,  189. 
Truelove,  William,  218. 
Trunker,  Mary,  189. 
Trunker,  Samuel,  189. 
Trunker,  William,  189,  190. 
Tubb,  Griffeth,  35. 
Tucker,  — ,  11. 
Tucker,  Edward,  77,  114,  190,  191, 

197. 
Tucker,  Ede,  191. 
Tucker,  Elizabeth,  189. 
Tucker,  Mary,  190,  191. 
Tucker,  Nathaniel,  114,  189,  190. 
Tucker,  Sarah,  190. 
Tucker,  Sarah,  189,  190. 
Tucker,  Thomas,  190. 
Tuke,  John,  78. 
Tumar,  See  Toomer. 
Tumbull,  Robert  J.,  209. 
Turquct,  Charles,  216. 


INDEX 


255 


Turquett,  Elizabeth,  124,  216. 
Tweedy,  Mary,  191. 
Tweedy,  Thomas,  J91. 
Tweedy,  WiUiam,  191(2). 

Vanderhorst,  Elias,  79. 

Vaughn,  Abigafl,  192. 

Vaughn,  Arabella,  192. 

Vaughn,  Robert,  192. 

Verdier,  Andrew,  193. 

Verdicr,  Alexander,  193. 

Verdier,    Alexander    Grayson,    120, 

193. 
Verdier,  Alexander  H.,  193. 
Verdier,  Caroline,  193. 
Verdier,  Eleanor,  193(2). 
Verdier,  Elizabeth,  193. 
Verdier,  H.,  120. 
Verdier,  Henry,  193. 
Verdier,  Isabelle  Susanna,  193. 
Verdier,  James  Montgomery,  193. 
Verdier,  James  Robert,  193. 
Verdier,  Jane,  147,  193. 
Verdier,  John,  121,  193. 
Verdier,  John  M.,  193. 
Verdier,  John  Mark,  25,  109,  193. 
Verdier,  M.,  120. 
Verdier,  Malacar,  193. 
Verdier,  Margaretta  Anna,  193. 
Verdier,  Rebecca,  125. 
Vemoid,  Frances,  140,  192. 
Vemoid,  Magdalene,  173,  192. 
Vemoid,  Mary  Ann,  122,  193. 
Vernon,  Barbara,   193. 
Vernon,  John,   193. 
Vinyard,  Ann,  60,  192,  205. 
Vinyard,  John,  205. 
Vose,  — ,  25. 

Wade,  William,  105,  200. 

Waggener,  John,  35. 

Waight,  Abraham,  203. 

Waight,  Ann,  65,  200. 

Waight,  Elizabeth,  14,  194,  200,  201. 

Waight,  Isaac,  12,  65,  66,  110,  199, 

200(2),  201,  203,  204(2). 
Waight,  Jacob,  202. 
Waight,  Martha,  200,  201. 
Waight,  Mary,  199,  200. 
Waight,  Mary  Ann,  204. 
Waight,  Phoebe,  62,  63,  71,  203, 204. 
Waight,  Phoebe  Louisa,  204. 
Waight,  Robert,  204. 
Waight,  William,  8,   14,    194,   199, 

200.  201,  202,  203,  204. 
Wainwnght,  Ann,  203. 
Wainwnght,  Benjamin,  203. 
Wainwnght.  Margaret,  68,  203. 
Wakefield,  Mary,  208. 


Walcut,  Abraham,  202. 
Walker,  Rev.,  25. 
Walker,  Andrew,  201. 
Walker,  Briga,  201. 
Walker,  Elizabet,  193. 
Walker,  John,  194. 
Walker,  Mary,  193,  200,  201. 
Walker,  Samuel,  193. 
Walker,  Sarah,  10,  200. 
Wall,  Benjamin,  202. 
WaU,  Thomas,  193,  200,  201. 
Waller,  Bayfield,  154. 
Wahnsley,  Hannah,  189, 194. 
Walter,  Ann  Mary,  201. 
Walter,  Martha,  32. 
Walter,  John,  201. 
Walter,  Michael,  194,  201. 
Walter,  Richard,  32. 
Wannel,  Esther,  194. 
Wannel,  Hannah,  56,  194(2). 
Wannel,  Joseph,  194. 
Wannel,  Josias,  194. 
Wannel,  Mary,  194(2). 
Wannel,  Susannah,  194(2). 
Wannel,  Thomas,  194(2). 
Wannel,  Zachariah,  194. 
Ward,  Elisha,  204. 
Ward,  Henry  Groby,  194. 
Ward,  John,  170,  214. 
Ward,  Capt.  John,  92. 
Ward,  John  McCall,  154. 
Ward,  Penelope,  204. 
Ward,  Sarah,  204. 
Waring,  Benjamin,  78. 
Waring,  John,  154. 
Waring,  Joseph,  78. 
Waring,  Juliet  I-^,  157. 
Waring,  Ann,  200,  202. 
Waring,  John,  200,  202. 
Waring,  Mary,  200. 
Waring,  Morton,  98. 
Waring,  Thomas,  78,  157. 
Waring,  Dr.  Thomas,  157. 
Warren,  Elizabeth,  194. 
Warren,  Joseph,  132,  194. 
Warwood,  Eleanor,  194. 
Waterman,  Ann,  13,  200. 
Waties,  WiUiam,  170. 
Watson,  Ann,  202,  203. 
Watson,  Elizabeth,  108,  201. 
Watson,  James,  183,  195,  201. 
Watson,  Joseph,  203. 
Watson,  Martha,  57,  195. 
Watson,  Mary,  195. 
Watson,  Samuel,  195,  201. 
Watson,  Sarah,  112,  195,  201,  203. 
Watson,  Tabitha,  201. 
Watson,  Capt,  William,  117,  201. 
Watson,  William  Durrett,  57. 


256 


INDEX 


Watt,  Ann,  57,  115,  128,  195. 
Watt,  Tames,  57,  102,  115,  123. 
Watt,  Lieut,  James,  47,  49,  194,  195. 
Watt,  Margaret,  57,  102,  194,  195. 
Watt,  Mary,  123. 
Watt,  Morgan,  60. 
Wattle,  Thomas,  48. 
Wa>'ne,     Major-General     Anthony, 

211. 
Weatherly,  Elizabeth,  195. 
Weatherly,  George,  202. 
Weatherly,  Isaac,  195,  201. 
Weatherly,  Robert,  195. 
Weatherly,  Sarah,  15,  195(4). 
Wcatherb^,  Thomas,  195. 
Webb,  Capt.,  153. 
Webb,  Daniel,  195. 
Webb,  Esther,  203. 
Webb,  Jacob,  201. 
Webb,  Jane,  203. 
Webb,  Thomas,  203. 
Webber,  Mabel  Louise,  8,  18,  26,  34, 

39,  46,  72,  77,  94,  102,  152,  158, 

171,  205,  212. 
Wedderbume,  James,  170. 
Webber,  William,  92. 
Welch,  Ann,  201. 
Welch,  John,  201. 
Welch,  Zachariah  Carlisle,  201. 
Wells,  Anne,  201. 
Wells,  Charles,  198. 
Wells,  Edgar,  210,  211. 
Wells,  Elizabeth,  201. 
Wells,  Frances,  198. 
Wells,  John,  49,  198,  201. 
Wells,  Mary,  177, 198. 
Wells,  Prudence,  198. 
Wells,  Sarah,  198. 
Wells,  Susannah,  148,  201. 
West,  Isabella,  203. 
West,  James  Elliott,  203. 
West,  Joseph  Dalton,  203. 
West,  Joseph  Elliott,  203. 
Westbarry,  Ann,  119. 
Westbury,  Elizabeth,  219. 
Westbcrry,  Jonathan,  79. 
Westberry,  Sarah,  79. 
Westbury,  WUUam,  219. 
Westcott,  Ann,  202. 
Westcott,  Mary,  202. 
Westcott,  William,  13,  201,  202(2). 
•  Weston,  John,  82. 
Weston,  Margaret  Elizabeth,  203. 
Weston,  Mary,  203. 
Weston,  Plowden,  35,  36,  220. 
Weston,  William,  203. 
Wetsell,  Frederick,  74. 
Weyman,  Mrs.,  30. 
Weyman,  Edward,  30. 


Whaley,  Edward,  41. 

Whaley,  Francis  Marion,  100. 

WTialey,  Thomas,  100. 

Wheeler,  John,  92. 

Wheeler,  WiUiam,  92. 

Whilden,  Charlotte,  154. 

Whippy,  Ann,  44. 

Whippy,  John,  44. 

Whippy,  Mary,  44. 

Whippy,  Rebecca,  44. 

Whippy,  Rebecca  Sawyer,  157. 

White,  Anthony,  216. 

White,  Anthony  Martin,  36. 

White,  Christopher,  Gadsden,  32. 

White,  George,  220. 

White,  Isabel,  220. 

White,  John,  207. 

White,  Sarah,  154. 

White,  Sims,  154. 

Whitfield,  Rev..  14,  57.  116,  184. 

Whitmarsh,  John,  75.  200. 

Whitmarsh,  Margaret,  180,  200. 

Wigg,  Anne,  13,  124,  150,  197. 

Wigg,  Catherine,  114,  195. 

Wigg,  Edward,  114,    196,  197,  200, 

201. 
Wigg,  Eleanor,  200. 
Wigg,  Eliza,  153. 
Wigg,  Elizabeth,  50,  195,  197. 
Wigg,  Elizabeth  Catherine.  196. 
Wigg,  Elizabeth  Mary,  201. 
Wigg,  Hester,  204. 
Wigg,  Hillersdon,  116,  179,  196,  197. 
Wigg,  Hillersdon  St.  John,  198,  203. 
Wigg,  19,  24,  49,  51,  180,  196,  198, 
Wigg,  Mary,  19,  24,  49,  51,  180,  196, 

198,  200,  201,  203(2). 
Wigg,  Richard,   13,    107,   116,   124, 

182,  195,  196,  201. 
Wigg,  Sarah,  106,  116,  195,  196,  197. 
Wigg,  Thomas,  116,  180,  198. 
Wigg,  Col.  Thomas,  8,  46,  174,  IS3, 

195,  196, 
Wigg,  Thomas  Edward,  196. 
Wigg,  Thomas  John,  203. 
Wigg,  Maj.  William  Hazzard,  150, 

153,  196. 
Wigg,  WiUiam  Hutson,  204. 
Wiggsbcrry  plant,  196. 
Wightman,  Miss,  152. 
Wilcox,  Abigail,  204. 
Wilcox,  Samuel,  204. 
Wildman,  Leonard,  117,  200,  202. 
Wilkins,  Charles,  204. 
Wilkins,  Elizabeth,  44. 
Wilkins,  Henrietta  Matilda,  204. 
Wilkins,  John,  3. 
Wilkins,  Martin  L.,  99. 
Wilkins,  Maiy,  3. 


INDEX 


257 


Wilkins,  Paul,  3. 

Wilkins,    William    Burney    Givens, 

204. 
Wilkinson,  Elizabeth,   17,   122,   198, 

200,  202. 
Wilkinson,  Hannah,  146,  198. 
Wilkinson,  Mary,   11,  202,  203. 
Wilkinson,    Robert,    17,    198,    200, 

202    203. 
Wilkinson,  Sarah,   192,  202. 
Williams,  Alexander,  197. 


Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 

202, 
Williams 
Wflliams 
Williams 

203. 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 

213. 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 

202. 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 
Williams 


Anne,  118,  197. 
Chanes,  119,  202(2). 
Charles  Furrow,  202. 
Daniel,  35,  179,  197,  201, 
203. 

David,  83,  214. 
Eleanor,  197. 
Elizabeth,  197,  201  202(2), 

Frances,  35,  83,  214. 
James,  197,  202. 
James  Thomas,  197. 
John,  35,   161,   197,  201, 

Joseph,  203. 

Kezia,  197. 

Lydia  Ann,  203. 

Margaret,  200. 

Mary,  11,  146,  197,  200, 


Mary  Ann,  58,  197. 

PhiUp,  35. 

Prudence,  203. 

Robert,  127,  146,  200. 

Capt,  Robert,  199, 

Sarah,  119,  141,  197. 

William,  197. 
Williamson,  Elizabeth,  179,  200. 
Williamson,  James,  220. 
Williamson,  John,  81,  148,  200,  201. 
Williamson,  Magdalen,  81. 
Williamson,  Maiy,  54,  200,  201. 
Williamson,  Sarah,  192,  200. 
WUliamson,  WiUiam,  181,  199,  220. 
Williamson,  William  Bower,  19. 
Williman,  Mr.,  32. 
Wilson,  Eliza,  26. 
Williman,  Christopher,  75. 
Williman,  Mary,  /5. 
Wilson,  Ann,  153. 
Wilson,  Christian,  201. 
Wilson,  Dorothy,  198. 
Wilson,  Elizabeth,  201. 
Wilson,    George,  153 
Wilson,  Hannah,  198 
Wilson,  James,  198. 
Wilson,  John  26,  179,  198,  201. 
Wilson,  Leighton,  76. 


Wilson,  Margaret,  198. 
Wilson,  May,  153,  180,  197. 
Wilson,  Math.,  92. 
Wilson,  MUdridge,  198. 
Wilson,  Robert,  217,  218. 
Wilson,  Sabina,  81. 
Wilson,  Samuel,  153,  198. 
Wilson,  WiUiam,  198. 
Winbom,  Susannah,  39. 
Winbom,  Thomas,  39. 
Wineman,  Leonard,  202. 
Wineman,  Margaret,  178,  202. 
Wineman,  Mary,  202. 
Winningham,  Henry,  92. 
Winningham,  Isaac,  93. 
Winningham,  James,  93. 
Winter,  Mary,  68,  132,  198. 
Wire,  Dorothy,  198. 
Wire,  Hugh,  133,  198. 
Wire,  Thomas,  198. 
Wish,  Benjamin,  26. 
Withers,  Rebecca,  29. 
Withers,  WiUiam,  29. 
Witherspoon,  Dr.  John,  153. 
Whitsal,  Jacob,  218. 
Witter,  Elizabeth,  203. 
Witter,  James,  35,  82. 
Witter,  James  Powell,  203. 
Witter,  Jonathan,  120,  204. 
Witter,  Joanna,  35,  82. 
Witter,  Thomas,  147,  203. 
Wolferston,  Francis,  199. 
Wolferston,  Laurence,  47,  198,  199. 
Wolferston,  Margaret,  198. 
Wolferston,  Mary,  198,  199. 
Wood,  Ann,  203. 
Wood,  Daniel,  200. 
Wood,  Jane,  200. 
Wood,  Jonathan,  93. 
Wood,  John,  199. 
Wood,  John  Thomas,  203. 
Wood,  Thomas,  203. 
Wood,  Wmiam,  199 
Woodbcrry,  Jonah,  78. 
Woodberry,  John,  78. 
Woodhough,  WUliam,  70. 
WoodviUe,  Miss,  41. 
WoodviUe  plantation,  31. 
Woodward,  Benjamin,  198,  199. 
Woodward,  EUzabeth,  199. 
Woodward,  James,  199. 
Woodward,  John,  75. 
Woodward,  Col.  John,  199. 
Woodward,  Lavinia,  199. 
Woodward,  Margaret,  199. 
Woolwich,  Job,  199. 
Worse,  Ralph,  199. 
Worth,  Elizabeth,  199. 
Worth,  Rebecca,  199. 


Worth. 
Wragg, 
Wr.gg, 
Wragg, 
Wragg, 
Wragg, 


Ralph,  172,  199. 
John,  170. 
Joseph,  164,  170. 
Joseph,  Jr.,  170. 
Samuel,  164,  170. 
Samuel,  Jr.,  170. 
?harles,  170. 
Aleiander,  212. 
Benjamin,  199, 203. 
Charles,  35. 
Daniel,  201. 
Elizabeth,  103,  199. 
,  200. 

.,  95. 

9. 

7,  94,  170. 

cGill,  72. 

i,  199(2),  200. 

>,  200. 

d,  212. 


Wyatt,  Ann,  199. 
Wyatt,  EbcDCEer,  199. 
Wyatt,  Edwaid,  199. 

Wyatt,   Hannah,    J99. 

Yancey,  James,  204. 

Yancey,  Nathaniel  Bamwell,  204. 

Yates,  — ,  108. 

Yates,  Deborah,  201. 

Yates,  Samuel,  204. 

Yates,  Sarah  Clark,  204. 

Yets,  Hannah,  204. 

Yets,  James,  204. 

Young,  Isaac,  204. 

Young,  Sarah,  204. 

Young,  William,  79. 


LIST  OF  PUBLICATIONS 

OF  THE 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 


COLLECTIONS 

Vol.  I,  1857,  $3.00;  Vol.  II,  1858,  $3.00;  Vol.  HI;  1859, 
out  of  print  VoL  IV,  1887,  unbound,  $3.00,  bound,  $4.00; 
Vol  V,  1897,  paper,  $3.00. 

PAMPm 


Journal  of  a  Vosrage  to  Charlestown  in  So.  Carolina  by 
Pelatiah  Webster  in  1765.  Edited  by  Prof.  T.  P.  Harrison, 
1898.  75c. 

The  History  of  the  Santee  CanaL  By  Prof.  F.  A.  Porcher. 
Wiih  an  Appendix  by  A.  S.  Salley,  Jr.,  1903.  75c. 

THE  SOUTH  CAROLINA  HISTORICAL  AND 
GENEALOGICAL  MAGAZINE 

Volume  I,  1900,  Edited  by  A.  S.  Salley,   Jr. 

No.  1  out  of  print.    Nos.  2-4,  $2.00  each. 

Volume  n  to  IX,  1901-1908,     Edited  by  A.  S.  SaDey,  Jr. 

Unbound  $5.00  each. 

Vohime  X  to  XX,  1909-1919,  Edited  by  Mabel  L.  Webber. 

Unbound  $5.00  each. 

Members  get  a  discount  of  25  per  cent  on  the  above  prices. 
Address:    South  Carolina  Historical  Society, 

Charleston,  S.  C.