USA > South Carolina > Williamsburg County > History of Williamsburg; something about the people of Williamsburg County, South Carolina, from the first settlement by Europeans about 1705 until 1923. > Part 2
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The wonderful tales that had been told about Charles-
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ton of the King's Tree country, and from thence had been retold in England, Scotland, and Ireland, made many poor Protestants in those countries look longingly across the Sea. Finally, they began coming. When they reached the King's Tree and saw endless pine barrens enmeshed in impenetrable swamps, from whence came strange shrill screams of unknown birds, rasping cries of savage beasts and war whoops of still more savage men, and when they realized that they must begin against primeval conditions, under unknown skies, and by black waters, they needed all the firmness of mind and body they had accumulated through a hundred generations of struggle against severity.
In 1732, a colony of forty Scotch-Irish under the leader- ship of Roger Gordon settled about the King's Tree on Black River on lands now within the immediate vicinity of Kingstree. Making up this colony of forty, were the families of the following men: Roger Gordon, Edward Plowden, Robert Ervin, James Armstrong, David Johnson, Adam McDonald, William James, Archibald Hamilton, David Wilson, and John Scott. This colony came up Black River and, disembarking from their vessel at Brown's Ferry, blazed their way through the forests along what is now the Kingstree-Georgetown road to the King's Tree. These were the first settlers in Williamsburg Town- ship.
In 1734, John Witherspoon and his seven children, six of whom were married and brought children of their own, came up Black River as far as Potato Ferry; and, from this point, settled in various parts of the Township. Robert Witherspoon, grandson of John, in 1780, wrote the fol- lowing account of the Witherspoon Colony, the original manuscript, of which this is a true copy, is in the posses- sion of the descendants of the late Dr. J. R. Witherspoon, of Alabama.
"John Witherspoon and Janet Witherspoon were born in Scotland about the year 1670. They lived in their
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younger years near Glasgow, at a place called Begardie, and were married in 1693. In 1695, they left Scotland and settled at Knockbracken, in the Parish of Drumbo, County of Down, Ireland, where they lived in comfortable cir- cumstances and good credit until the year 1734. He then removed with his family to South Carolina.
"We went on board the ship called 'The Good Intent' on the 14th of September, and were detained by head- winds fourteen days in the Lough at Belfast. On the sec- ond day after we set sail, my grandmother, Janet, died and was interred in the boisterous ocean, which was an affecting sight to her offspring.
"We were sorely tossed at sea with storms, which caused our ship to spring a leak; our pumps were kept inces- santly at work day and night for many days together and our mariners seemed many times at their wits' end. But it pleased God to bring us all safe to land, except my grand- mother, about the first of December.
"But to return,-my grandfather and grandmother had seven children. Their names were as follows, viz .: Janet (or Jennet), David, James, Elizabeth, Robert, Mary, and Gavin. Their daughter Janet was born in Scotland and was married to John Fleming in Ireland. They had a large family of children born in Ireland and brought seven of them to this place, Williamsburg, viz. : Isabella, John, Elizabeth, James, Janet, Penelope, and William. My uncle, John Fleming, died in 1750, in a good old age; my aunt Janet died in 1761 in the sixty-sixth year of her age. My uncle David was born in 1697, married to Ann Pressley and brought with him to this place two children, viz .: Sarah and Janet. He died in the year 1772 in the sixty- seventh year of his age.
"My aunt Elizabeth was married to William James and they brought with them to this place four children, viz. : Mary, Janet, John, and William. They both died in the year 1750, he forty-nine and she forty-seven years of age.
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"My uncle Robert was married to Mary Stuart and by her had two children, Mary and John ; his first wife, Mary, died in Ireland. He married his second wife, Hester Jane Scott, a short time before he left Ireland and brought his two children with him to this place. His wife, Hester Jane, died in 1756, aged forty years ; he died in 1758, aged fifty-three years.
"My aunt Mary was married to David Wilson in Ireland, and brought to this place two children, William and John. My uncle David died in 1750, aged fifty years, and she died in 1765, in the fifty-eighth year of her age.
"My uncle Gavin, the youngest son of my grandparents, was born in 1712, and was unmarried when he left Ireland.
"It is to be remembered that we did not all come over in one ship, nor in the same year, for my uncles, William James and David Wilson, and their families, with uncle Gavin, left Belfast in 1732, and uncle Robert followed in 1736. As I said, we landed in Charleston three weeks before Christmas in 1734. We found the inhabitants very kind. We remained in that place until after Christmas and were put on board an open boat, with tools, one year's provisions, and one steel mill for each family. Our pro- visions consisted of Indian corn, rice, wheat flour, beef, pork, some rum, and salt; and, for each hand over six- teen years of age, one axe, one broad and one narrow hoe.
"We were much distressed in our passage, as it was in the depth of winter and we were exposed to the inclemency of the weather by day and by night; and that which added to the grief of all persons on board were the profane and blasphemous oaths and expressions of the patroon and his boatmen. They brought us up as far as Potato Ferry on Black River, about twenty miles from Georgetown, where they put us on shore.
"We lay for some time in Samuel Commander's barn, while the boat made her way up to the King's Tree, with the goods and provisions on board, and was probably the
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first boat that had ever ascended the River to that place. While the women were left at Commander's the men went up to build dirt houses, or rather potato houses, to take their families to. They also brought up a few horses and what help they could get from the few inhabitants, in order to carry their families, children, and other necessary articles up; as the woods were full of water, and the weather very cold, it made it go very hard with the women and children.
"We set out in the morning the last of January, a part reached Mr. McDonald's, others as far as Mr. Plowden's, and Mr. James Armstrong's, and a part to my uncle, Wil- liam James'. Their little cabins were as full that night as they could hold and the next day every one made the best he could to his own place. This was on the first of February, 1735, when we came to the place called the Bluff, three miles below the King's Tree. My mother and we children were still in expectations of coming to an agree- able place, but when we arrived and saw nothing but a wilderness, and instead of a comfortable house, no other than one of dirt, our spirits sank; and what added to our trouble was that the pilot who came with us from uncle William James' left us as soon as he came in sight of the place. My father gave us all the comfort he could by telling us that we would soon get all the trees cut down and in a short time there would be plenty of inhabitants and that we would be able to see from house to house.
"While we were here, the fire went out that we brought from Boggy Swamp. My father had heard that up the river swamp was the King's Tree. Although there was no path nor did he know the distance, he followed up the meanderings of the swamp until he came to the branch and by that means he found Roger Gordon's place. We watched him as far as the trees would let us see and re- turned to our dolorous hut, expecting never to see him or any human being more. But after some time, he returned
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with fire and we were somewhat comforted, but evening coming on the wolves began to howl on all sides. We then feared being devoured by wild beasts, as we had neither gun nor dog, nor even a door to our house, howbeit we set to and gathered fuel and made a good fire and so we passed the first night.
"The next morning being clear and moderate, we began to stir about, and about midday there arose a cloud at Southwest, attended with high wind, lightning, and thun- der. The rain quickly penetrated through the poles of the hut and brought down the sand with which it was covered and which seemed for a while to cover us alive. The lightening and claps were very awful and lasted for a good space of time. I do not remember to have seen a much severer gust than that was. I believe we all sin- cerely wished to be again at Belfast. But the fright was soon over and the evening cleared up comfortable and warm.
"The boat that brought up the goods arrived safe at King's Tree. People were much oppressed in bringing away the articles, for as there were no houses near, they were obliged to toil hard and carry them on their backs, consisting of clothing, beds, chests, provisions, tools, pots, bowls; and, as at that time there were but few roads or paths, every family had to travel the best way it could, which was near double distance to some, for they had to follow swamps and branches as their guides at first and after some time, some men got such a knowledge of the woods as to be able to blaze paths, so that the people soon found out to follow blazes from place to place.
"As the winter season was far advanced, the time to prepare land for planting was very short, yet the people were generally healthy and strong. All that could do anything wrought diligently and continued clearing and planting as long as the season would admit. So they made provisions for that year. As they had but few beasts to
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feed, a little served them; and as the range was good, there was no need of feeding creatures for several years.
"I remember that the first thing my father brought from the boat was his gun, which was one of Queen Anne's mus- kets. He had her loaded with swan shot, and one morning while we were at breakfast there was a travelling 'possum passing by the door, my mother screamed out, "There is a great bear !" Mother and we children hid ourselves be- hind some barrels and a chest at the far end of the hut, while father got his gun and steadied her past the fork that held up the other end of our house and shot him about the hinder parts, which caused him to grin in a firightful manner. Father was in haste to give him another bout, but the shot, being mislaid in the hurry, could not be found, and we were penned up for some time. Father at last ventured out and killed him with a pole. Another circumstance which gave us much alarm was the Indians when they came to hunt in the Spring. They came in great numbers like the Egyptian locusts, but were not hurtful.
"We had a great deal of trouble and hardships in our first settling, but the few inhabitants were favored with health and strength. We were also much oppressed with fear on divers other accounts, especially of being mas- sacred by the Indians, or bit by snakes, or torn by wild beasts, or of being lost and perishing in the woods, of whom there were three persons who were never found.
"My uncle Robert, with his second wife and two chil- dren, Mary and John, arrived here near the last of August, 1736. He came on the fine ship called the 'New- built', which was a ship of great burthen and brought a great many passengers, who chiefly came and settled here and had to travel by land from Georgetown, and instead of being furnished with provisions, etc., as we were, they had money given them by the public. When they arrived, our second crop had been planted and was coming for- ward, but the season being warm and they much fatigued,
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many were taken sick with ague and fever, some died and some became dropsical and also died.
"About this time, August or September, 1736, the people began to form into a religious society, built a church and sent to Ireland for a minister. One came whose name was Robert Herron, who staid only three years and returned to Ireland. The first call was made out for Reverend John Willison of Scotland, author of the 'Mother's Catechism', 'A Practical Treatise on the Lord's Supper', and of the 'Discourses on the Atonement'.
"The following anecdote is handed down by tradition of Mr. Gavin Witherspoon ; meeting a neighbor one day, this conversation is reported to have taken place. Wither- spoon-'Wull, we must have a minister.' 'Wull, Mister Witherspoon, wha wull ye git to be your minister?' 'Wull, wha but Mister Willison o' Dundee?' 'But the minister must have a muckle sight o' money for his living,' 'And that we must gie him,' says Mr. Witherspoon. 'An' how much, Mr. Witherspoon, wull ye gie?' 'Ten pounds', was the ready reply. 'But, Mr. Witherspoon, whar'll ye git the ten pounds?' 'Why if wus comes to wus, I ien can sell my cow,' says he. Mr. Willison, of Dundee, was ac- cordingly sent for to preach the Gospel in the wilds of America.
"In the fall of the year 1737, my grandfather, John Witherspoon, took a disease called Rose-in-the-leg, which occasioned a fever from which he died. He was the first person buried at the Williamsburg Meeting House, which he had assisted to erect. About the same time, 1737, my father had a daughter, Elizabeth, that died, aged three years, born at the place called the Bluff, where we lived.
"My grandfather was a man of middling or common stature, of a fine, healthy constitution, of fair complexion, and somewhat bow-legged. He was well acquainted with the Scriptures, had volubility in prayer, and was a zeal- ous adherent to the principles of what was called in his
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day the Reformed Protestant Church of Scotland. He had also a great aversion to Episcopacy, and whoever will impartially read the history of the times of his younger years in Scotland will see that his prejudices were not without cause. It was his lot to live in a time of great distress to the persecuted Church, during the reign of James the Seventh of Scotland and Second of England. Being one who followed field-meetings, he and some others of his kindred were much harassed by the Papists. Yet, notwithstanding, if his younger years were attended with some trouble, he still enjoyed great peace and tranquility in his after life and had the comfort and happiness of liv- ing to see his seven children all creditably married and settled for themselves ; and, except the death of my grand- mother, his beloved wife, he never knew what it was to part by death with one of his own immediate family, a blessing which few persons have granted to them, espec- ially at his advanced age.
"My father's name was James, the third child and sec- ond son of my grandparents. He was born at the begin- ning of the present century, lived with his parents at Drumbo, County of Down, until he was twenty-five years old, when he married my mother, whose name was Eliza- beth McQuoid, in the twentieth year of her age.
"My grandfather, Robert McQuoid, married Sarah Camp- bell. They both died in Ireland, he in 1728, aged eighty-six, and she was aged about eighty. My father and mother set- tled in the Parish of Graba, near the Canningburn Mills, where they lived about nine years and sold their possessions to embark for America. My father brought the family to my grandparents at Knockbracken about the 1st of May, 1734, and left us there until the 1st of September. In the mean- time, he wrought at the reed-making business. He brought four children on board of the ship, viz .: David, Robert, John, and Sarah. Sarah died in Charleston shortly after
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their arrival, and was the first person buried in the Scotch Meeting House Yard.
"In May, 1743, the Reverend Mr. John Ray arrived here from Scotland. He came upon a call which his congre- gation had sometime before sent to the Reverend Mr. John Willison, of Dundee. Mr. Ray continued a faithful, zealous, and laborious worker in the congregation until 1761. He being abroad on a visit up Black River was taken sick with the pleurisy and died. The remains of this eminently pious man were brought down from Salem, where he died, and buried at the church where he had for eighteen years successfully labored, being about forty-six years of age. 'Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth : Yea, saith the spirit, that they may rest from their labors, and their works do follow them.'
"I was born in Ireland on the 20th day of August, 1728, was my father's second son; in my youth he taught me to weave, as he also taught my elder brother, David, to make reeds. The family lived together at the Bluff until March, 1749. My father then moved to Thorntree, a place situated between the Lower Bridge on Black River and Murray's Ferry on the Santee. I there went out and wrought at the weaving business with my uncle, Gavin Witherspoon, who lived at a place called Megart's (McGirts) Swamp, until the September following. I went next to overseeing for a Mr. Fleming, near Black River Church, twenty-five miles below King's Tree, where I remained until January, 1752, and then returned to my father's.
"The reason of my return was that it had pleased God- in the last awful epidemic that prevailed in Williamsburg in the year 1749 and 1750, usually called the 'Great Mor- tality', and which had carried off near eighty persons, many of them the principal people or heads of families- to remove by death my elder brother, David, and my sis- ter, Jane, both in the year 1750. My father being then in a very feeble and infirm state of health and unable to at-
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tend to his own business, I left my own to take care of his. I remained with my parents until 1758, when, on the 2nd of March, I married Elizabeth Heathly, a young lady then in the eighteenth year of her age, and settled for myself four miles below King's Tree and near the River.
"I afterwards removed and settled one mile higher up the River nearer King's Tree, in 1761, and immediately on the public road leading from that place to the Lower Bridge on Black River. Here I had a more comfortable and healthy residence, and here also, I expect to spend the remainder of my days.
"Our first son, James, was born on the 20th of March, 1759; our second son, Thomas, was born on the 22nd of March, 1761, and died on the 8th of September, 1765, aged four years and six months; our first daughter, Ann, was born January 4, 1763; our third son, John, was born January 20, 1765, and died on the 24th of July, 1767, aged two years and six months; our fourth son, Robert, was born January 29, 1767; our second daughter, Mary, was born March 20, 1769; our third daughter, Elizabeth, was born July 25, 1771; our fifth son, John, was born March 17, 1774; our sixth son, Thomas, was born July 23, 1776.
"My honored mother departed this life on the 22nd day of January, 1777, in the seventy-second year of her age, and was the last surviving branch of the old stock of our family. As I have had an intimate personal knowledge of their lives and deaths, I bear them testimony that they were servers of God, were well acquainted with the Scrip- tures, were much engaged in prayer, were strict observers of the Sabbath, in a word, they were a stock of people that studied outward piety as well as inward purity of life.
"Indeed God blessed this settlement at first with a num- ber of eminently pious and devoted men, out of whom I chose to set down some of their names, viz .: William Wil- son, David Allen, William Hamilton, John Porter, William
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James, David Wilson, John James, James McCleland, Rob- ert Wilson, Robert Paisley, James Bradley, John Turner, William Frierson, to whom I add my own father and my three uncles, David, Robert, and Gavin. These were men of great piety in their day, indeed they were men of re- nown. May the glorious King and Head of the Church for His own glory still maintain and keep up men of piety and holiness as a blessing to this place and congre- gation to the latest posterity is the heart request of the unworthy scribe."
CHAPTER III.
ORIGINAL SETTLERS.
From 1735 to 1737, a great many settlers came to the new township on Black River and practically every acre of land had been taken up by these settlers within a year after the township had been surveyed. Every man set- tling here was granted a half acre town lot and fifty acres of land in the township for himself, his wife, and each one of his children.
These are the names of the heads of families who had settled in Williamsburg Township up to 1737 : Robert Alli- son, John Anderson, James Armstrong, David Arnett, James Adams, John Athol, John Ballentine, John Barnes, George Barr, Joseph Barry, John Basnett, Benjamin Bates, Matthew Bernard, Joseph Bignion, James Blakely, John Blakely, John Bliss, John Borland, Jonathan Bost- wick, James Bradley, Thomas Brown, George Burrows, William Camp, William Campbell, William Cochran, John Connor, William Copeland, William Cooper, James Craw- ford, Thomas Dale, John Dick, Nathaniel Drew, Thomas Dial, Robert Ervin, Francis Finley, Robert Finley, James Fisher, John Fleming, John Frierson, William Frierson, Aaron Frierson, David Fulton, James Gamble, Roger Gib- son, Gabriel Girrand, John Gotea, Roger Gordon, Francis Goddard, Hugh Graham, Hugh Green, George Green, Richard Hall, Thomas Hall, Archibald Hamilton, William Hamilton, Christopher Harvey, William Harvey, John Herron, George Hunter, Peter Hume, John James, Wil- liam James, John Jamison, William Johnson, Joseph Johnson, David Johnson, Abraham Jordan, Samuel Ken- nedy, John Knox, Crafton Kerwin, Richard Lake, John Lane, James Law, Patrick Lindsay, William Lowry, Richard Malone, John Matthews, Samuel Montgomery, Daniel Mooney, John Moore, William Morgan, Joseph
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Moody, John McCullough, Nathaniel Mccullough, Daniel Murray, David McCants, John McCants, James McCauley, James McCutchen, James McClelland, Alexander Mc- Clinchy, William McCormick, William McKnight, John McElveen, Thomas McCrea, Alexander McCrea, William McDole, Hugh McGill, David McEwen, James McEwen, Andrew McClelland, James McGee, Edward McMahan, Matthew Nelson, John Nicholson, William Orr, James Pollard, John Porter, John Pressley, William Pressley, Edward Plowden, John Robinson, Joseph Rhodus, Andrew Rutledge, John Scott, James Scott, William Scott, James Smith, Charles Starne, James Stuart, John Stubbs, John Sykes, William Syms, James Taylor, William Turbeville, William Troublefield, Matthew Vannalle, John Whitfield, William Williamson, Henry Williams, Anthony Williams, David Wilson, John Wilson, William Wilson, David Witherspoon, Gavin Witherspoon, James Witherspoon, John Witherspoon, Robert Witherspoon, Robert Wilson, and Robert Young.
These original settlers in Williamsburg Township came from England, Ireland, Scotland, Germany, Holland, and from the New England States, Pennsylvania and Virginia. They were all about the same class of men. They were people who had been non-conformists as to State-Church religion, and nearly all of their families had lost their property in the religious conflicts of the seventeenth cen- tury. The greater number of them had lived in Ireland for many years before coming to America. They had migrated from England and from Scotland to Ireland on account of fair, promises on the part of the English King. These failing them, they sought refuge in America.
The Blakelys, Bradleys, Browns, Finleys, Gambles, Halls, Humes, Johnsons, Matthews, Murrays, Nelsons, Plowdens, Rutledges, Taylors, and Wilsons were of Eng- lish blood. The Barrs, Dials, and others were of German descent. The Bignions, Janneretts, Vanalles, and Orrs
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were of Swiss origin. The Barrys, Kennedys, Lindsays, Lowrys, Malones, and Morgans were Irish. The Arnetts, Campbells, Crawfords, Ervins, Friersons, Fultons, Flem- ings, Grahams, Hamiltons, Montgomerys, McColloughs, McCreas, McGills, Pressleys, Scotts, and Witherspoons were Scotch-Irish. The Williams and the James families were Welsh.
Within the territory limits of what is now Williamsburg County, but outside of Williamsburg Township as surveyed in 1736, and whose names have not heretofore been men- tioned, had settled the following: William and Hesther Brown; John and Sarah Lane; Daniel and Sarah Shaw; Caleb and Mary Avant; Samuel and Mary Miller; John and Hannah Avant; John and Martha Thompson; An- thony and Mary Atkinson; Anthony and Mary White; John and Elizabeth Green; John and Anne Brunson ; John and Mary McIntosh; John and Elizabeth Cribb; Thomas and Elizabeth Cribb; John and Margaret Henlin ; Thomas and Mary Harrington ; William and Mary Barton; John and Rebecca Evans; William and Mary Heathly ; William and Lydia Green; William and Margaret Turbeville; Joseph and Ann Rhodus; James and Priscilla McGirt; Joseph and Mary Cantey ; Samuel and Anne Cantey ; Wil- liam and Mary Snow; Robert and Mary Oliver; Abraham and Lydia Michaux; Michael and Mary Murphy ; James and Elizabeth McPherson; John and Lucretia McDowell; William and Elizabeth Chicken; William and Elizabeth McGee; John and Sarah Frierson; Henry and Rebecca Bennett; Paul and Margaret Jaudon; William Cooper, Francis Cordes, Peter Guerry, William Saunders; John and Ann Leger; Daniel and Mary McDaniel; Jonathan and Hesther Christmas; John and Ann Conyers; Bryan and Mary Kennedy; James and Frances Jenner; John and Isabella Jamison; James and Cassiah Crawford; Hardy and Elizabeth Futhy; Thomas and Mary Mc- Cormick; Anthony and Ann Phillips; Alexander and
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