A history of Spartanburg county, Part 28

Author: Writers' Program. South Carolina
Publication date: 1940
Publisher: [Spartanburg] Band & White
Number of Pages: 344


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REYNOLDS, JOHN S .: Rcconstruction in South Carolina, 1865-1877. The State Company, Columbia, S. C. 522 pp.


. RUSHTON, JESSIE ELEANOR: (Thesis : University of South Carolina.) The Development of Education in Spartanburg County Prior to 1876. 87 type- written pages.


SAYE, REV. JAMES H. : Memoirs of Major Joseph McJunkin, Revolutionary Patriot. First printed in the Richmond, Va., Watchman and Observer in 1847; reprinted by the Greenwood, S. C., Index-Journal, 1925. Reprinted also in 1898 in the Picdmont Headlight, Spartanburg, S. C., from the origi- nal manuscript (lent for that purpose by the Reverend John D. Bailey, to whom the widow of James H. Saye gave it) ; reprinted from the Headlight "forms" in pamphlet form-100 copies-for Bailey. 43 pages and index. See letter from Bailey in scrapbook in Kennedy Free Library-printed in Headlight, Aug. 3, 1898. One of the most valuable sources for upper South Carolina Revolutionary history.


SCHWENSEN, KAI: The History of the 102nd M. P. Privately printed by subscription, 1919. 78 pp.


SHIPP, ALBERT M. : History of Methodism in South Carolina. Southern Meth- odist Publishing House, Nashville, Tenn., 1882. 648 pp.


SIMKINS, FRANCIS B. : The Tillman Movement in South Carolina. Duke Univ. Press, Durham, N. C., 1926. 274 pp. with index.


SIMMS, WILLIAM GILMORE : South Carolina in the Revolutionary War. Charles- ton, S. C. Published by the author, 1853.


: Addresses, Etc. See Simpson Bobo (supra).


SMITH, CHARLES FORSTER : "Random Thoughts of Spartanburg and Wofford College;" "Rev. Whitcfoord Smith, D. D." Two articles reprinted in the Spartanburg Herald, August 5 and August 12, 1917, from the Southern Christian Advocate of 1872.


SNOWDEN, YATES: History of South Carolina . .. in collaboration with H. G. Cutler . . . and an editorial advisory board including special con- tributors ... Chicago and New York. The Lewis Publishing Co. 6 vols., fronts., illus., (including maps, facsimiles) ports., 1920. Vols. III-V, biog- raphy.


SNYDER, HENRY NELSON : "How and Why Wofford Came To Be;" address delivered Nov. 5, 1937, before the historical societies of the two South Carolina Conferences held in Newberry, November 3-7, 1937. In Year Book, Upper South Carolina Conference, M. E. Church, South, 1937. pp. 83-91.


294


A HISTORY OF SPARTANBURG COUNTY


STARLIGHT, ALEXANDER : The Pictorial Record of the 27th Division. Compiled by Alexander Starlight, formerly of Signal Corps, U. S. A., with many illustrations from photographs. Harper & Bros., Publishers, New York and London. 1919. The cover has an interesting illustration based on the constellation of Orion (O'Ryan) and the monogram formed by the letters N Y D.


STEDMAN, C .: The History of the Origin, Progress, and Termination of the American War. Two vols. Dublin, 1794. Vol. I, 399 pp .; Vol. II, 449 pp. and index.


TARLETON, COLONEL BANASTRE : History of the Campaigns of 1780 and 1781 in the Southern Provinces of North America. 1787.


TAYLOR, THOMAS (Mrs.), Editor : South Carolina Women in the Confederacy. Columbia, S. C. The State Company, 1903. 413 pp.


TENNENT, REV. WILLIAM : "Fragment of a Journal Kept by .. . . Describ- ing his Journey, in 1775, to Upper South Carolina, at the request of the Council of Safety." In Year Book, City of Charleston, 1894. pp. 296-312. THOMPSON, HENRY T .: Ousting the Carpetbagger from South Carolina. R. L. Bryan Co., 1926. 177 pp.


TUOMEY, M. : Report on the Geology of South Carolina. Columbia, S. C., 1848. Printed for the State by A. S. Johnston. 293 pp.


TOWNSEND, LEAH : South Carolina Baptists, 1670-1805. The Florence Printing Company, Florence, S. C., 1935. 7 Chapters, w. bib. and index. Contains map of Baptist Churches in South Carolina prior to 1805, with location and date of construction. Compiled by Leah Townsend, drawing by E. Lamar Holman. 391 pp.


TRENHOLM, W. L .: "The History and Present Condition of Transportation in South Carolina." Chapter VII, pp. 611-640 in South Carolina Resources and Population, Institutions and Industries. Published by the State Board of Agriculture of South Carolina, Charleston, S. C. Walker, Evans & Cogswell, 1883. 762 pp.


VAN DEUSEN, JOHN G. : Economic Bases of Disunion in South Carolina. New York, Columbia University Press, 1928, with map. 360 pp.


VIATOR (pseudonym) : This signature was affixed to a series of letters in the Carolina Spartan in the early fifties defending denominational colleges against attacks made on them by X Press. An unsigned letter in the Carolina Spartan said Viator was J. Wofford Tucker, and T. Stobo Far- row was X Press, afterwards editor of the Express.


WAIT, JANE WOFFORD (Mrs.) : History of the Wofford Family. Direct de- scendants of Captain Joseph Wofford. Contributors : Mrs. Jane Wofford Wait, Captain John W. Wofford, Mrs. Carrie Wofford Floyd. 1928. Spar- tanburg, S. C. Band & White, Printers. 268 pp.


WALKER, WILLIAM ("Singing Billy") : Southern Harmony and Musical Com- panion. (A songbook.) 1835. Nathan Whiting, New Haven, Conn. xxxii and 216 pp. Various editions. For a detailed bibliographical ac- count see Jackson's White Spirituals, Etc. p. 61 ff.


Christian Harmony. Miller's Bible and Publishing House., Phila., 1866. A second edition, 1873. xv and 361 pp.


295


BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES


WALLACE, DAVID DUNCAN: History of South Carolina. (3 vols.) The American Historical Society, Inc., New York, 1934. Vol. I, 462 pp; Vol. II, 510 pp; Vol. III, 579 pp. Volume IV, comprising biographical sketches, was not prepared by Dr. Wallace, but by the publishers. While not in itself authoritative, it provides much valuable help to an investigator.


-: "The Census in Southern Agriculture." Published in Popular Science Monthly, January 1904.


-: A Communication in the Hispanic American Historical Review. Dur- ham, N. C. Duke Univ. Press, August 1936.


WOODRUFF, A. B .: History of Bethel Church. In Spartanburg Baptist Asso- ciation Minutes, 1882. Greenville, S. C., 1882.


X PRESS (pseudonym) : T. Stobo Farrow, advancing theory that educational institutions should be State controlled, and condemning denominational schools, waged a bitter controversy in the Spartan of the fifties with Viator (J. W. Tucker).


INDEX


Abner's Creek Baptist Church, 85. Agricultural and Mechanical Society, 190.


Agricultural Societies and Fairs, 106.


Agriculture, 51, 183, 184, 185, 202.


Airline Junction (later Hayne), 205.


Airline Railroad, 163, 170, 171.


Airport, 284.


Alexander family, 15. Anderson's Mill, 37. Anderson family, 15, 22.


Arkwright Mill, 218.


Armistice, 256; anniversary, 272.


Art, 230, 231, 232.


Asbury, Francis, 46, 47, 83, 103.


ยท Asheville (N. C.), stages from, 105. Associate Reformed Presbyterians, 214. Association, The, 19, 21.


Back Country, 19. Ballenger's Road, 52. Banks, first, 204, 205. Baptists, 16, 19, 59, 84, 87, 110, 124, 214. Barbecues, 21, 115, 158. Barksdale Factory, 76, 171.


Barry, Andrew, 30, 40, 104.


Barry, Kate, 32, 117.


Barry family, 15. Bates, "Bloody," 30, 31.


Bates, William, 74, 76, 77.


Battery B, 61st Regiment, C. A. C., 234.


Beaumont Mills, 218. Benson's Mill, 170.


Berwick's Iron Works, 33, 67.


Bethel Agricultural Society, 106, 168.


Bethel Baptist Church, 16, 88, 106.


Bethesda Church, 85, 132.


Bethlehem Baptist Church, 83, 84, 107, 108. Bible Society Conventions, 123. Bishop family, 22, 117. Bivings, James, 78, 79. 80. Bivingsville, 71, 78, 79, 81, 104, 125, 129, 130, 170, 171. Black Code, 140. Blackstock's, 17, 29. Blackstock Road, 14, 18, 29, 52, 236. Blackstock Volunteers, 128.


Blake, William Kennedy, 113, 132, 146, 147, 158, 159, 206, 222. Block House, 16, 18. Board of Trade, 205. Bobo, E. H., 164, 168.


Bobo, Simpson, 58, 60, 78, 79, 80, 91, 106, 126, 129, 135, 147, 159, 161, 168,. 169, 170, 212, 231.


Boggs, John, 59, 61. Boiling Springs, 16, 49.


Boiling Springs Baptist Church, 83, 84. Bomar, Elisha, 60, 61.


Bomar, John E., 79, 80, 81, 110, 129, 131, 161, 171, 213, 223.


- Bomar, M. M., 180.


Bomar, Thomas, 96, 180.


Bomar's Old Field, 107, 125, 136.


Brandon, Thomas, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33. Brannon, James, 96, 121. Brewton, Jonas, 91, 131.


Briant, Javan, 146, 147, 160.


British forces, 22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 29.


Brockman, Benjamin T., 128, 137.


Brockman Guards, 128.


Buck Creek Baptist Church, 84.


Buena Vista, 77.


Buffington, Joseph, 18, 35, 37, 67, 71.


Buncombe Road, 18, 52, 173.


Burnett, W. E., 218, 222, 223, 226.


Burnt Factory, 74, 75, 76.


Bushy Creek, revival at, 86.


Camp Floyd, 238.


Camp Hearon, 233.


Camp Jackson, 234, 262, 265.


Camp Joseph Walker, 217.


Camp Meetings, 47, 85.


Camp Oliver Edwards, 217.


Camp Sevier, 234.


Camp Wadsworth: establ. of, 236; magnitude of, 239; 27th Div. at, 242; camp life, 242; dramatic inci- dents, 243; trenches constructed, 245; camp newspapers, 245; Christ- mas at, 248; hardships of, 249; new conditions at, 252; officers' training school, 252; a "melting pot," 253; 6th Div. at; training school for nurses, 254 ; 96th Div. at, 255; influenza epi- demic, 255; second winter at, 257; last days of, 258; camp hospital, 270; aftermath, 271.


Campobello, 97, 205. Canby, E. S. R., 146-148.


Cannon, Gabriel, 80, 91, 106, 129, 141, 143, 152, 153, 158, 160, 161, 168, 169. Cannon's Camp Ground, 85, 177, 192. Carlisle, Charles H., 205, 222. Carlisle, Charles W., 216.


Carlisle, Howard B., 217, 231.


Carlisle, James H., 84, 89, 95, 98, 126, 177, 213, 220, 222, 231. Carlisle, John W., 140, 141, 146, 153, 169.


Carleton, Guy, 252, 258. Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Rwy., 216, 274.


297


/


298


INDEX


Carolina Progressionist, 102. Carolina Spartan (see Spartan).


Carpetbagger regime, 148. Cedar Hill Factory, 78, 171.


Cedar Spring, 26, 27, 31, 50, 97, 124, 129, 131, 179, 211.


Cedar Spring Baptist Church, 50, 82, 84.


Cedar Spring Schools, 96.


Centennial Pageant, 281.


Central Methodist Church, 59, 214.


Chalybeate Springs, 123.


Chamberlain, Gov. Daniel H., 161.


Charleston & Western Carolina Rwy., 211, 274. Cherokee County, 21, 26, 35, 66, 119, 156, 212.


Cherokee Falls Cotton Factory, 71.


Cherokee Guards, 128.


Cherokee Iron Works, 170.


Cherokee Indians, 14, 15, 22, 23.


Cherokee Springs, 97, 123-125, 176, 192.


Cherokee Vigilant Society, 125. Chesney, Alexander, 13, 29.


Christian Harmony, 101. Church of the Advent, 87, 109.


Church of Christ on Jamey's Creek, 16.


Churches, 58, 92, 124, 214.


Civic Music Association, 230.


Civil War, 17, 76, 77, 121, 124, 126, 128, 129, 133, 134, 138, 140, 166, 175. Clark, Elijah, 15, 27, 31.


Clemson College, 190, 200, 203, 261, 277.


Cleveland, Jesse, 55, 60, 61.


Cleveland, John B., 131, 147, 218, 221, 222, 223, 236. Cleveland Park, 284.


Clifton, 71, 205, 211.


Clifton Cotton Mill, 201, 218.


Coan family, 15.


Coast Artillery, Co. Two, 233.


Coast Defense, Co. Seven, 234. Cofield, George, 205, 221, 222, 226. Collins family, 15. Commencements, early, 120. Commercial fertilizers, 183.


Community Development, in the 50's, 104.


Company C, 117th Engineers, 235, 264.


Company F, 1st S. C. Infantry, 234. Confederate Government, 70, 73, 129, 138.


Confederate Monument, 216. Confederate Soldiers, return of, 138. Confederate Veterans, reunion of, 217. Congressional Investigating Commit- tee, 142, 154.


Constitution, of 1865, 140; of 1868, 147.


Convention, County Teachers, 180. Conventions, entertainment of, 64. Converse, Dexter E., 71, 79, 80, 81, 171, 211, 222, 223, 283.


Converse College, 106, 123, 201, 210, 220, 222, 223, 226, 283.


Converse College Choral Society, 227. Converse Heights, 123, 216.


Cooper-Limestone Institute, 180. Co-Operationist, the, 91, 126.


Cotton growing, 73, 167, 276.


Cotton Manufacture, 71, 73, 74, 75, 117, 171.


Cottonseed oil mills, 185.


Council of Safety, 11, 19, 21, 22.


County Fair, the first, 106; Associa- tion, 191.


County Health Department, 279.


Court, County, 33, 34, 36, 37, 39, 40. Court Week, 42, 64.


Courthouse, County, first building, 37 ; second building, 55; third building, 110; fourth building, 211; focus of social life, 42.


Cowmen, 15.


Cowpens, 28, 29, 30, 47, 68, 107, 117, 125, 130, 206, 207, 264.


Cowpens Guards, 128.


Crawfordsville Cotton Mill, 80, 170, 171. Crescent Mill, 218.


Cross Anchor, 97, 104, 129, 130, 176. Cunningham, "Bloody Bill," 30, 31, 67. Curtis, Thomas, 97.


Curtis, William, 97, 110, 126, 180.


Dark Corner, 149. Dark Summer, 24.


Dean, Hosea J., 61, 63, 91, 111, 131.


Democratic clubs, 158, 159, 161, 163.


Democratic Party, 143, 158, 159.


Dodd family, 15.


Dow, Lorenzo, 85.


Draft, the, 235.


Drayton, John, 43, 44, 49, 54.


Drayton, William Henry, 11, 12, 21, 25, 67.


Drayton Mill, 218.


Duncan, D. R., 128, 131, 141, 152, 153, 158, 159, 161, 218, 222, 223.


Duncan Park, 284.


DuPre, Daniel A., 213, 226. DuPre, Warren, 135.


Earle, Bayliss, 16, 36.


Earle, Bayliss, 46. Earle, Samuel, 31. Earle family, 16. Earle's Fort, 16.


299


INDEX


Earlesville, 16, 104.


Education, adult, 224; agricultural, 200; leadership in, 200; public, 82, 99, 280.


Edwards, Oliver E., 128, 133, 136, 137. Eighty-first (Wildcat) Division, 265. El Bethel Methodist Church, 215. Elections, in 1867, 145; in 1868, 148, 158, 160; in 1876, 165. Emigration, 173. Enoree Rangers, 128. Episcopal Theological Seminary, 220. Episcopalians, 85, 109; churches, 124, 179. Esther, 225. Eustatie School, 95.


Evins, John H., 107, 115, 136, 147, 153, 158, 163, 164, 168, 169. Evins, S. N., 80, 90, 91, 129, 146.


Evins Campaign Working Clubs, 163, 164. Express, The, 106, 110, 114, 204.


Fairfield Park, 191, 197, 233. Fairforest, 36, 205, 236.


Fairforest Baptist Church, 16.


Fairforest Presbyterian Church, 50. Fairforest Regiment (Second Spartan Regt.), 23. Fairforest Shoals, 29. Farley, Hugh L., 195-196.


Farmers, 183-188, 200.


Farmers' Alliance, 190, 192, 198.


Farmers' Institute, 190.


Farmers' Movement, 193. Farms, Experimental, 188. Farrow, James, 100, 129, 140, 141, 143. Farrow, Samuel, 45, 60, 95.


Farrow, T. Stobo, 106, 131, 135, 136, 147, 158, 164, 169, 177, 206. Ferguson, Patrick, 25, 26, 27 29, 31. Fifth Regiment, S. C. V., 127, 128, 136. Finger, Joseph, 80, 81. Fingerville, 97, 104, 129, 171. Fire Department, 209. First Baptist Church, 61. Fleming, C. E., 136, 205, 213, 218, 221, 222. Fleming, Mrs. C. E., 216, 217.


Fletchall, Thomas, 11, 16, 21. Floyd, John F., 200, 236, 259, 263. Floyd family, 22.


Forest Rifles, 128, 136.


Fort Prince, 15, 17, 97, 117.


Fort Thicketty, 26-27.


Forts, Revolutionary, 117. Forty-second (Rainbow) Division,


235 Foster, Anthony, 47. Foster, B. B., 55, 84, 135. Foster, Gary Evans, 260.


Foster, James W., 194-196.


Foster, Joel, 147, 153, 160.


Foster, Moses, 192, 194, 197. Foster, Rice, 146.


Foster, William, 125, 128, 260.


Foster, W. M., 160, 161, 168.


Fredonia, 122.


Freedmen's Bureau, 149.


Freeman, Edwin J., 267. Freemasonry, 82.


Friendship Baptist Church, 16, 84.


Fusionists, 162.


Gaffney (Gaffney City), 48, 163, 205, 212.


Gaffney family, 122, 131.


Gaffney, Michael, 48, 49, 212.


Gantt, T. Larry, 198-199.


Gardening, ornamental, 109.


Garlington, A. C., 136, 159.


Garrett Springs (formerly Thomson's Spring and later Rock Cliff), 175. Gaston family, 15.


Gamewell, James A., 226.


General Hospital, 279.


Georgia Cleveland Home, 214.


Georgia Road, 18, 52.


Glendale (formerly Bivingsville), 18, 67, 79, 196, 205, 211, 218. Glenn Springs, 36, 50, 97, 105, 124, 131, 163, 175, 176, 192, 211.


Glenn Springs Cavalry Troop, 122.


Gold mining, 35, 173.


Gold Star Mothers, list of, 270.


Gold Star Widows, list of, 270.


Good Samaritan Hospital, 214.


Gowan's Fort, 17, 26, 31.


Gowansville, 17, 97, 104, 134.


Grange (Patrons of Husbandry), 168, 177, 183, 188, 190, 192.


Grand Jury, 39, 40, 41. Great Cane Brake, engagement at, 22.


Greek Orthodox Church, building of, 214. Green Pond Baptist Church, 85.


Green Spring (Cedar Spring), 31, 50. Grindal Shoals, 12, 13, 15. Guerry, Albert Capers, 231.


Habeas Corpus, suspension of, 156. Hale, Columbus, 45, 46, 83.


Hallman, S. T., 214. Hammond, Harry, 119, 183.


Hampton, Wade (The Second), 45, 68, 122. Hampton, Wade (The Third), 143, 159, 162, 164, 196, 207.


Hampton family, 16, 22. Hampton Guards, 234, 259, 262, 263. Hannon family, 16, 22. Harris Theatre, 213, 217.


Haskell Manifesto and Convention, 196.


300


INDEX


Hearon, Charles O., 233, 236.


Heinitsh, H. E., 206, 211, 222.


Henry, James E., 57, 58, 60, 61, 75, 76, 83, 231.


Herald (Spartanburg), 177, 179, 204. Hill, Sollimon, 66.


Hill's factory, 73, 75, 76, 130, 170, 171, 230. Hillsville, 205. Hite family, 22.


Hobbysville, 104, 131.


Holly Springs Baptist Church, 85.


Home Guards, 134, 138.


Homes, of 1804, 45; in the 50's, 108, 118, 119. Hospitals, 213.


Howard Gap Road, 273.


Hurricane Shoals (now Clifton), 15, 69, 71, 97, 101, 104, 170.


Hutchings, Thomas, 59, 74, 77, 78, 105, 106.


Ice, manufacture of, 204. Immigration Aid Societies, 173.


Independent Order of Odd Fellows, 113, 175.


Indian Line, 15, 16, 17, 18, 22, 34, 35.


Indian Massacre (of 1776), 23.


Indian Traders, 12, 13, 14, 16.


Indians, 16, 22, 29, 34, 117.


Industry Manufacturing Company


(Hill's factory), 75.


Inter-State Farmers' Encampment, 188, 189, 190, 192.


Iron District Volunteers, 128.


Iron Manufacturing, 18, 35, 66, 68, 69, 70, 173. Irwin, W. M., 61, 151. Italian Immigrants, 173.


Jackson family, 16.


Jacksonborough Assembly, the, 33.


Jail, first, 37; second, 63, 213; third, 213.


Jail Street (Wall St.), 213.


Jamison family, 15.


Jamison's Fort, 17. Jewish Synagogue, 214.


Jillson, J. K., 179.


John Bomar & Company, 80.


John-Nina Hospital, 214. Jones, George, 59. Jordan, James, 15, 17, 36, 94, 100, 117.


Kennedy, Benjamin, 128.


Kennedy, L. C., 105, 147, 213, 231.


Kennedy, Mrs. L. C., 131, 213.


Kennedy Library, 213. 216. Kilgore, B. F., 106, 126, 158, 168, 169. Kilgore, Josiah, 77.


Kings Mountain Guards, 128.


Kings Mountain Iron Manufacturing Company, 68, 71.


Kirby, A. H., 59, 111. Kirby Hill, 175.


Ku Klux Klan, 149, 152, 154, 155, 156, 157, 160, 176.


Ladies' Mount Vernon Memorial As- sociation, 107.


Lancaster, S. T. D., 192, 196.


Lander, Samuel, 178.


Landrum, J. B. O., 194, 195, 206. Landrum, John G., 59, 64, 88, 101, 110, 126, 133, 231.


Law, T. H., 210, 218.


Lawson's Fork Volunteers, 128. Legg, G. W. H., 112, 123, 131, 135, 141. Leitner, Elias C., and G., 79.


Leo's Foundry, 130.


Lester's Mill (later Beuna Vista), 77, 171. Liberty Poles, in 1860, 125.


Lightwood Knot Springs, 136.


Limestone Springs, 49, 50, 68, 97, 122, 123, 124, 146, 180, 212.


Limestone Springs Company, 128.


Limestone Springs Female High


School, 97, 102, 125, 131.


Limestone Springs Infantry, 128.


Limestone Springs Male Academy, 154. Limestone quarries, 35, 173. Lipscomb family, 122.


Little, William, 129.


Lockwood, Mrs. Belle, 131.


Loyal League, 149.


Loyalists, 22, 25, 26, 27, 29.


Lutherans, 214.


Lyle, J. Bankston, 153, 154.


Magnetic Iron Company, 70. Magnolia Street, 215.


Magnolia Street Cemetery, 101, 175.


Magnolia Street School, 215, 221, 240.


Manning, W. S., 22, 223.


Mansion House, 63.


Manufacturers Association of Con- federate States, 81.


Mary Black Memorial Hospital, 279.


Masons, 110, 175, 213.


May Day Celebrations, 120, 224.


McCollough, J. D., 113, 179.


McCravey, H. A., 129.


McJunkin, Joseph, 29, 30.


McJunkin, Samuel, 30, 33.


McKendree's Chapel, 85.


McMahon family, 15. McMakin, Carrie, 229.


McMillan's Mills, 80.


Means, Mrs. Celina E., 215.


Means, S. C .. 146, 158, 161, 184. Merchants' Hotel. 186, 196, 206.


Methodists, 59, 64, 84, 87, 109, 124, 131.


301


INDEX


Mexican War, 67, 121. Migration, the Western, 82.


Militia, 16, 23, 26, 32, 121. Militia Act, 175.


Miller, J. W., 91, 106, 158.


Miller family, 15, 22.


Mills, 18, 71, 124, 171, 173, 185, 217.


Mills, Robert, 50, 51, 56, 84, 96, 183. Minerva School, 95.


Minute Girls, in 1860, 125.


Minute Men, in 1860, 125, 126.


Model Cotton Mill, 275.


Montgomery, Frank Gibbes, 266.


Montgomery, John H., 121, 211, 217, 222, 223.


Moore, Paul V., 200, 236, 246. Moore, Thomas, 46, 94. .


Moore, T. J., 168, 169, 189, 194, 197, 200, 216, 217, 264.


Moore family, 15, 122.


Morgan, Daniel, 32, 205, 207.


Morgan Light Infantry, 128, 136.


Morgan Monument, 37, 207.


Morgan Rifles, 107, 123, 127, 136.


Morgan Square, 207, 210, 233.


Morrison, William S., 221.


Morton family, 15.


Moses, Franklin J., 160, 161.


Mount Vernon Association, 107.


Mount Zion Baptist Church, 85. Mountain Shoals (now Enoree), 76, 104. Mozart Choral Club, 226.


Municipal Centenary, 281. Musgrove's Mill, 21, 27, 30, 94. Music, in schools, 102, 224, 227, 229.


National Union Party Convention, 143. Nazareth Presbyterian Church, 16, 30, 85, 99, 117, 177, 180. Negroes, 119, 140, 148, 158, 162, 164, 181, 183, 214. Nesbitt, James, 76, 91, 131, 147.


Nesbitt, Samuel, 66, 94. Nesbitt, Willson, 60, 68, 71. Nesbitt family, 15.


Nesbitt Iron Manufacturing Company, 68, 69.


Nesbitt's Limekiln Spring, 49. New Hope Post Office, 104. New Prospect Baptist Church, 85, 97, 104, 163. Newspapers, 63, 102. Nicholls, William Montague, 266. Nicholls family, 15. Nicholls Fort, 17. Nicholls Mill (later Anderson's Mill), 37. Ninety-Six, 19, 24, 27, 28, 30, 36. Ninety-Six District, 26, 30, 33, 35, 36.


Ninety-Sixth Division, A. E. F., 253, 255, 258.


Noblit, Samuel, 93. North Carolina Line, 29, 34, 35. North Pacolet Presbyterian Church, 85. Nullification, 82, 89, 125.


Old Iron District, 66, 130. One Hundred and Eighteenth Inf., 262 One Hundred and Fifth Inf., 249. One Hundred and Second Military Police, 240. O'Neall, J. B., 83, 90, 95, 111.


Opera House, 206, 212.


Ordinance of Secession, 126.


Orphans' Friend, The, 179.


Orr, James L., 141, 144, 148, 151, 197. O'Ryan, John F., 236, 237, 248, 251, 259, 271. Over There Club, 248. Owen, Mary, 62.


Pacific Mills, 71, 275.


Pacolet, 123, 163, 205.


Pacolet flood, 201.


Pacolet Guards, 128.


Pacolet Mills, 201, 211.


Pacolet Settlement, 12, 15, 18.


Pacolet Springs (Poole's Springs), 49, 123. Paine, Phoebe, 61, 62, 113.


Painters, of portraits, 231.


Palmetto Air School, 284.


Palmetto Building, 212.


Palmetto flag, 125.


Palmetto House, 107, 111, 120, 126, 127, 132, 139, 176, 177, 178, 212.


Palmetto Sharpshooters, 136, 163.


Pardo, Spanish explorer, 14.


Paris Mountain, 23.


Patrons of Husbandry, 168, 177.


Patterson's Spring, 49.


Pauline, 104, 248. Peach Industry, 277.


Pearis, Richard, 23, 24.


Pearson family, 15.


Peden family, 15.


Peete, A. T., 220, 226.


Pell, Robert P., 223, 228, 283.


Pendleton, W. H. K., 264.


Pendleton Manufacturing Company, 78. Penney family, 15. People's Hospital, 214. People's ticket, 146. Perry, B. F., 31, 64, 140, 141, 144, 145, 146, 159, 161, 181. Pershing, John J., 259, 262. Petty, Charles, 92, 180, 190, 193, 195, 206, 217, 221, 222.


302


INDEX


Philadelphia Baptist Church, 83, 84, 104, 133.


Piedmont & Northern Railway, 236, 274.


Piedmont Headlight, 198.


Piedmont House, 177, 178.


Piedmont Seminary, 220, 226.


Pioneer Club, 175.


Pioneer Regiments, at Camp Wads- worth, 252.


Poinier, Samuel T., 146, 147.


Poole, John, 60.


Poole, R. C., 63, 140.


Poole, Thomas, 57, 60.


Poole, William, 40, 66.


Poole's Iron Works, 67.


Poole's Spring ( Pacolet Spring), 49. Poolesville, 95, 104.


Poplar Springs, 85, 97, 158, 248.


Population figures, 43, 51, 56, 174, 206.


Port Royal & S. C. Rwy., 169.


Post-War Enterprises, 273.


Powder Springs, 50.


Powell Knitting Company, 275. Presbyterians, 59, 84, 87, 124, 214. Prince family, 16.


Prince's Fort, 17.


Provincial Congress, of S. C., 19.


Public Ground (Public Square), 37, 42, 63, 111, 159.


Public Health measures, 279.


Quakers, 43, 82.


Quarters (of slaves), 120.


Quilting parties, 117.


Radicals, 140, 162.


Railroads, 105, 114, 116, 168, 273.


Rainbow Lake, 284.


Ravenel, H. E., 222.


Ray, Thomas, 87, 89.


Ray family, 15. Reconstruction, 121, 142, 143, 144, 175. Records, County, 36, 38.


Red Cross, 233. Red Shirts, 164, 217.


Reid, R. H., 99, 132, 177, 179, 180.


Reidville, 14, 99, 192, 248.


Reidville Female College, 99, 201.


Reidville Male High School, 99.


Reidville schools, 124, 179. Religion, denominations, 84.


Republican Party, 144, 146.


Revolutionists, 16, 18, 23, 25, 29. 67.


Rich Hill (Rich, Whitestone), 104, 192, 205.


Rifle Clubs, 150. Roads, 18, 44, 52, 104, 273.


Rock Cliff (Garrett Springs), 175, 211. Rock Spring Academy, 95. Roebuck's Regiment, 32.


Rolling Mill (Hurricane Shoals), 130. Roman Catholics, 214.


Russell, W. T., 147, 225.


St. John's Classical & Military School, 123


St. John's College, 113.


St. John's Day, 175.


St. John's Hall, 179.


St. John's High School, 113, 222.


St. Paul's Catholic Church, 214.


Saxon Mills, 218.


Scarborough School, 96.


School for Deaf & Blind, 98, 179, 283. Schools, 60, 92, 99, 102, 120, 124, 131, 180, 221, 280.


Schwing, James A., 234, 261, 262, 264.


Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, 15, 19, 82. Scott, Robert K., 148, 150, 160.


Secession, 91, 124, 126.


Second Army Corps, AEF, 259.


Second Regiment, N.C.N.G., 238.


Second Spartan Regiment, 23.


Selden, Julia, 224.


Settlements, Settlers, 12, 15, 21, 34, 36, 73, 78.


Seventh Engineers, N.Y.N.G., 242.


Shell, G. W., 193; Manifesto, 194; Convention, 194, 195.


Sheriff, Hilla, 280.


Shipp, A. M., 132.


Sickles, D. E., 141, 144, 146.


Simms, William Gilmore, 64.


Simpson, W. D., 159, 160, 164, 169.


Sisters of the Confederate States, 130.


Singing Schools, 100.


Sixth Division, AEF, 253, 265.


Slavery, 75, 82. Smith, Robert M., 146, 147, 153, 160, 161, 193, 195, 196.


Smith, Sanford, 18, 66.




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