07 June 2026

BDC Facebook Page Re-cap for May 2026

As is my established practice, events that have taken place are omitted. The entire BDC staff contributed Facebook posts during May: Cassandra focused in on preservation - Preservation Week and National [Historic] Preservation Month; Sydney on postcards; and I did most of the remaining ones. - gmc

May 1 - (12 AM) My historical hero, Benjamin Franklin wrote "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" which means that it is easier and better to stop a problem from happening than to fix it afterward. Though he coined the phrase in 1736 as a reference to fire safety, the phrase has a much larger application. The proverb emphasizes that proactive, small efforts (prevention) prevent much larger, costly, or difficult fixes (cure) later. Here in the BDC we observe MayDay in just such a way: risk assessment, mitigation, analysis, risk assessment, mitigation, analysis is a frequent cycle of activity when it comes to being a good steward of historically important materials.

May 1 - (Noon) May Day, May Day! Save your archives! In honor of May Day and Preservation Week, the BDC wants to make sure that your collections will be safe in a disaster.
Here are some disaster planning and response tips for personal collections:

- Create an emergency preparedness plan and a disaster kit, along with a check-list of “must have” records and treasured heirlooms to bring during an evacuation. Make note of the locations of your records and heirlooms in your emergency plan if they are not kept in one spot. Doing so will make grabbing your collections during an evacuation much easier!
- Make digital copies and back-ups of your most important records and documents. Store those back-ups in safe locations or on the cloud so they are not lost in a disaster.
- After a disaster, follow professional salvage advice from organizations like NEDCC and NPS, and contact a conservator to restore any damaged heirlooms. Wear proper PPE during salvage efforts. Do not prioritize the safety of objects over your own health and safety!

May 1 - (6 PM) Monthly overview

May 2 - It's the last day of Preservation Week, and the BDC has one final tip for you. Since National Postcard Week begins tomorrow, we're taking the time to share some advice on preserving your postcard collections.
- Like photographs, postcards should be stored in archival-safe plastic sleeves, like those made of polypropylene.
- Organize your postcards upright in an archival box that best fits the postcards. Oversized postcards might need to be stored in separate boxes or in a folder near the main collection. Do not fold materials.
- Postcards can be arranged in any order that makes sense to you: by date, name, subject of the postcard's image, etc.
- If the correspondence on the postcard is valuable to you, consider transcribing it! Writing in cursive is growing less common, and as a result the ability to read it is also decreasing in younger generations. Transcribing the messages on postcards now preserves the content for your descendants.

May 4 - (AM) Independence (Mon)Day: The Battle of Coosawhatchie happened 247 years ago. A small Patriot contingent led by Col. William Moultrie and his subordinate Col. John Laurens encountered a British force of about 2400 Redcoats under the command of Gen. Augustine Prevost. Laurens was supposed to fall back with his men. Instead he crossed the river and set up a battle line on poor ground to engage the enemy. His men suffered from well placed long range artillery fire; Laurens was wounded. His subordinate, Capt. Thomas Shubrick, ordered the Patriots to fall back to the Tullifinny River and then back towards Charleston. The Battle of Coosawhatchie was a British victory.

"Battle of Coosawhatchie, May 3, 1779" is SC PRINT 138 in our holdings.
2 Asides: 1 ) That's Major William Hazzard Wigg riding upon his horse "Independence" to Col. Laurens' rescue. 2) The victor British General Augustine Prevost was called "Old Bullet Head" on account of a disfiguring wound to his face acquired during the Seven Years' War.

61 days until Independence Day 2026 - and the official 250th anniversary of our republic!

May 4 - (PM) National Postcard Week: Today we have a postcard from our Artificial Beaufort County Postcard Collection, 1900-present. Titled “Ruins of Old Sheldon Church between Beaufort and Walterboro, S.C.,” this postcard depicts the ruins draped by a plethora of oaks and Spanish moss. The church was estimated to have been built between 1751 and 1757 but was partially burned by local Loyalists during the American Revolution. General Augustine Prevost ordered a raid in 1779 which initiated the action.
You may be wondering, what exactly is an “artificial” collection? Great question! Artificial collections are collections created by archivists out of materials given by different donors that share a similar subject matter or format. A standard archival collection is donated by a single person and consists of a distinct grouping of items that archivists do not add to or adjust. In regard to this specific collection, these postcards were all donated by library staff, anonymous donors, and purchased specifically for the collection.
If you would like to learn more about Sheldon Church or would like to see one of our many different postcards of the ruins, schedule an appointment today: bdc@bcgov.net or (843) 255-6468.

May 5 - (AM) National Postcard Week: Today we have a postcard from the Lucille Hasell Culp Postcard Collection, 1940 – 1981. Titled “Beaufort Waterfront, Beaufort, S.C.,” you can see a shrimp boat floating in the water with a man standing toward the back. A note is even scribbled on the bottom that states “a shrimp boat coming in.” The Beaufort District Collection holds quite a bit of Beaufort’s long and storied history of shrimping. Our vertical file collection contains multiple files of the subject, including shrimping, boating, shipwrecks, shipbuilding, ship captains, ship registers, and so much more.
What are vertical files, you may ask? Vertical files hold materials such as clippings, pamphlets, or articles pertaining to the subject of the file. These files act as a gateway; they can provide context that may point researchers to a new path of resources. You never know what you may find!

If you want to learn more about the economic fluctuations of the shrimping industry in Beaufort, the environmental impacts of shrimp farming, or why there has been such a drastic decrease in Lowcountry shrimp boats over the last one hundred years, schedule an appointment today: bdc@bcgov.net or (843) 255-6468.

May 5 - (PM) The BDC staff are enjoying the Revolutionary festivities, too! After our most recent program on Hilton Head, we took a quick pitstop at the Charles Cotesworth Pinckney historical marker to complete that question on our BCHS/BCL/Beaufort County 250 Revealing the Revolution Scavenger Hunt sheets (and we even snapped a selfie!). How many markers have you visited so far? If you haven't started, you can pick up a brochure for the County-wide scavenger hunt or the shorter library edition at your closest BCL branch library. Learn more about everything the Library has planned to celebrate America's 250th in Grace's post on the Library's new Soundings blog.

May 6 - “Black History Note” and National Postcard Week: Today we have a postcard from the Russell J. Arnsberger Postcard Collection, 1900 – 1985 titled “The Mather School.” This postcard is a two-in-one, offering two glimpses into what life was like for young Black girls attending school in early twentieth century Lowcountry South Carolina. The postcard does not have a publication date, but the correspondence on the back is postmarked March 25, 1955.
In the top photo you can see three girls standing outside of a building wearing what is most likely their school uniform: midi dresses and skirts, knee length socks, and cardigans. The cardigans paired with the baren tree next to them indicates that it was most likely winter. The second photo appears to be taken during a class change period. The girls are passing each other while carrying their bags and books; some are chatting while some are determined to be elsewhere. The short sleeve shirts, knee length skirts, and freshly blooming trees could point to springtime, but in the Lowcountry, who knows?!
There are a few postcards of the Mather School scattered throughout our postcard collections. The Beaufort District Collection holds quite a bit of history on the school itself; from titles to yearbooks, vertical files and more. If you are interested in seeing any of these materials for yourself, schedule an appointment today: bdc@bcgov.net or (843) 255-6468.

May 7 - (AM) National Postcard Week: Today we have a postcard from the Robert E. H. Peeples Postcard Collection, 1910 – 1989. Titled “Bay St. Showing new Bank Building, Beaufort, S.C.,” it is exactly as it sounds. You can see the bank and many other notable buildings still standing on Bay Street today. The correspondence on the back of the postcard was dated 1910, placing the production date either in the early twentieth or late nineteenth century. Bay Street is rich in history, and this single postcard offers a solid, but restrained, view of it.
The Beaufort District Collection contains books, files, maps, prints, videos, and more that offer detailed descriptions of downtown’s storied past. If you are looking to learn more about Bay Street, perhaps you may want to view VF MAIN STREET BEAUFORT, one of our residential files located on Bay Street, or one of our surname files of a family that lived and/or conducted business downtown.
If you would like to learn more about Bay Street’s history or view more of our Bay Street postcards, schedule an appointment today: bdc@bcgov.net or (843) 255-6468.

May 7 - (PM) Curious about what's new (or new-to-us) in the Research Room?

May 8 - (AM) "Finding Aid Friday" - April showers are said to bring May flowers - which brings to mind yet another garden club. The Sea Island Garden Club is the second oldest garden club in Beaufort County. We take care of some of their records in the Research Room. Read the Finding Aid.

May 8 - (PM) National Postcard Week: Today we have another postcard from the Artificial Beaufort County Postcard Collection, 1900-present. Titled “National Cemetery, Beaufort, S.C.,” the postcard depicts the entrance of the cemetery, including what is now the main office. Fun fact: The oldest postcard in the BDC is a "Privately Printed Card" from the Russell J. Arnsberger Postcard Collection of the Beaufort National Cemetery made between 1898 and 1901. This particular postcard is available to view online through the Lowcountry Digital Library.
The Beaufort National Cemetery is located in Beaufort, South Carolina at 1601 Boundary Street and is open daily for self-guided tours. The cemetery was founded in 1863 to provide eternal resting places for those who died while serving the United States. It was officially placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.
The Beaufort District Collection holds various maps and vertical files on the Beaufort National Cemetery, Civil War Burial Records from the cemetery, and multiple arachnological and inventory surveys completed on the land. If you are interested in viewing any of these materials, schedule an appointment today: bdc@bcgov.net or (843) 255-6468.

May 9 - National Postcard Week: From the Beverly Bowers Jennings Postcard Collection, 1900 – 2018 we have a postcard titled “Bridge to Hilton Head, South Carolina.” The bridge was built in 1956 and became the Island’s first permanent connection to the mainland. Named for the notable South Carolinian politician, the bridge was formally dedicated to James F. Byrnes on May 19, 1956. The Beaufort District Collection is home to the Beaufort Scrapbook, 1944 – 1959 which holds images from the bridge’s dedication ceremony pamphlet. The BDC contains a variety of materials on all of the many bridges in Beaufort District, including books, inventories, maps, prints, studies, vertical files, and more. If you are interested in learning more, schedule an appointment today: bdc@bcgov.net or (843) 255-6468.

May 11 - Independence (Mon)Day: 246 years ago tomorrow Major General Sir Henry Clinton, Admiral Mariot Arbuthnot and Major General Charles Lord Cornwallis of the British forces successfully seized Charleston, forcing Patriot General Benjamin Lincoln to surrender the town and his entire army to the Redcoats on May 12, 1780.
Among the captured and imprisoned in Charles Towne was Beaufort District's own Thomas Heyward, Jr.
And Then There Were Thirteen: Second Charleston 1780 (AKA The Siege and Capture of Charleston, South Carolina) is narrated by historian Henry Lumpkin. It's considered one of SCETV's classics. You can watch it online OR you can watch the video on the DVD player in our Research Room. Tip: If you want to come view it in the Research Room, it's best to let us know you're coming so we can have the equipment set up and ready for you upon your arrival: 843-255-6468; bdc@bcgov.net.
54 days to the 250th anniversary of our republic - which means you have only 52 days to complete our "Revealing the Revolution" challenge, co-sponsored by the Beaufort County Historical Society and the Beaufort County 250th committee. Pick up the game sheets at any Library branch or bookmobile.

May 12 - (AM) 164 years ago tonight, Robert Smalls was ready to take the biggest risk of his life - stealing away "The Planter" and sailing into the Union blockade in Charleston harbor. Learn more about this "War Hero, Public Servant, and Man of Mark" on the BDC's [other] blog.

May 12 - (PM) This Place Matters, particularly in National Historic Preservation Month.
A new historic preservation database has begun: Mapping Our Shared History funded by the Mellon Foundation. As the website notes, "For decades, the story of America’s historic places has been told in bits and pieces. Information about them sits scattered across agency hard drives, historic commission meeting minutes, and decades-old surveys. While thousands of properties have been formally designated as historic, we lack a nationwide understanding of what they are, where they are located, and what rules protect them."
Nevada and Connecticut are completed; South Carolina is yet to come.

May 13 - "Black History Note in National Preservation Month:" This year's theme is "All People are Created Equal" so it is fitting for us to draw your attention to materials about freedman Cyrus Garvin's house built on the property of his former enslaver Joseph Baynard ca. 1870. The Garvin family owned the structure until 1961.
The property was in dire physical condition when the Beaufort County Land Trust acquired the house and property in 2001. Beaufort County and the Town of Bluffton partnered to maintain and restore the Garvin House in 2004 as part of the Oyster Factory Park. Restoration of the historic house was completed in 2017.
We have a vertical file on the property and a copy of The Garvin House : a preservation & interpretation plan for an 1870 freedman's home : July 15, 2009 : and Appendix, August 15, 2009 by Laura Budak (2009) in our Research Room. You can also read Charlotte Adams' thesis, Beyond Preservation : Reconstructing Sites Of Slavery, Reconstruction, And Segregation (2018) that discusses the Garvin House online.

May 15 - "Finding Aid Friday": People like to see pictures. In Archives Land, the Finding Aid is meant to precede the digitization - but sometimes the cart comes before the horse.
6 of our 9 digital collections hosted on the Lowcountry Digital Library website are image collections. One of Cassi's performance goals for this fiscal year was to write and post Finding Aids to all of the collections we've partnered with the Lowcountry Digital Library to host so far over the years. Cassi finished writing the Finding Aid to the "Civil War and Reconstruction Era Stereoscope Photographs of the Port Royal Region Collection." Only one more to go before we can check this off my pre-retirement list of projects to oversee.

May 16 - Looking for something fun to do this weekend? Why not try the Revealing the Revolution Scavenger Hunt by BCHS, BCL, and Beaufort County 250? Michaela K. was one of the first to complete the library edition of the Scavenger Hunt. She had a great time searching the Beaufort Branch for each marker.
Pick up a brochure for the County-wide scavenger hunt or the shorter Library edition at your closest BCL branch library. Learn more about everything the Library has planned to celebrate America's 250th in Grace's Soundings blog post.

May 18 - "Independence (Mon)Day:" Last week I highlighted the capture of Charleston by the British. What happened to the revolutionaries after Charleston fell on May 12, 1780? Patriots in Exile: Charleston Rebels in St. Augustine during the American Revolution by James Waring McCrady and C.L. Bragg (2020) explores that tale.
Their book began began as a family history project but soon became a "chronicle ... of sixty-three-patriots-in-exile", including Beaufort's owner signer of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Heyward, Jr., and Charleston and Beaufort merchant Daniel DeSaussure who was part of the Beaufort Council of Safety in 1775; a member of the South Carolina Provincial Congress, 1776-1776, South Carolina House of Representatives, 1776 – 1780 and a captain in the Beaufort militia.
We're another week closer to the big day - Independence Day 2026! Have you finished the BDC/Beaufort County Historical Society/Beaufort County 250th Committee "Revealing the Revolution" challenge yet?
This book highlights the British perspective on the matter. Loyalist attorney, Royal official, and Charleston resident who became Gen. Henry Clinton’s personal secretary in 1780, James Simpson was the architect of a crackdown on paroled rebels after the fall of Charleston on May 12, 1780. Simpson worked hand-in-hand with Lt. Col. Nisbet Balfour to punish “that set of villains” with the concurrence of Gen. Lord Cornwallis. Heyward was arrested in the first round-up of revolutionaries on August 27, 1780. DeSaussure’s arrest came later on November 15, 1780. Both men would be transported to St. Augustine.
Following news of the first round-up, Gen. George Washington was instructed to inquire about the justification of the transfer of paroled citizens to St. Augustine on October 6, 1780. British Gen. Cornwallis wrote back: “In regard to [Washington’s] complaint … I have only to say that the insolence of their behavior, the threats with which they in the most daring manner endeavoured to intimidate our friends, the infamous falsehoods which they propagated through the town and country, and the correspondence which they constantly kept up with the enemy, rendered it indispensably necessary that they should either be closely confined or be sent out of the province. The milder measure was adopted, and they were sent, with every convenience which their situation would admit of, to a better climate than South Carolina.” (p. 63).
I particularly like Appendix A in which the authors provide short biographical sketches of the exiles.
Only 47 days left to July 4th; only 45 days left for you to finish the BDC/ BCHS/ BC250th "Revealing the Revolution" Challenge. Pick up your game sheet, correctly answer the questions, and return to be entered to receive an appropriate prize!

May 20 - “Black History Note in National Preservation Month:” On Wednesdays this month, the BDC is highlighting some of the historical sites in Beaufort County that tell a story about Beaufort’s heritage and show us that “All People are Created Equal.” Today, we’d like to share the story of the Cotton Dike Cemetery on Dataw Island with you all.
When the Cotton Dike Cemetery was established, possibly as early as 1785, it was part of the Sams Plantation. It was the “slave” cemetery, used to inter the bodies of enslaved men and women who worked in the nearby cotton and indigo fields. For nearly 200 years, enslaved people and their descendants were buried in graves along the marshy shore, often without a headstone (or perhaps with markers that have degraded or washed away) and without a written record.
Despite this lack of records, family members knew where their loved ones had been buried, so the area remained a sacred site. However, the extent of the graveyard was not understood. In 2006, the Dataw Historic Foundation hired a firm to use ground-penetrating radar to survey the cemetery grounds to record and count the grave sites. At least 38 sites were found and, through the help of local families, 24 of the interred were identified. A rededication ceremony was held at Cotton Dike Cemetery in December of 2007 to honor the departed by their families. DHF also installed a marker which shares the history of the cemetery with visitors and names the known individuals buried there.
You can learn more about Cotton Dike Cemetery, and other historic cemeteries on St. Helena Island, in the St. Helena Island Cemetery Inventory Records archival collection housed in the BDC.

May 21 - The Juan Pardo Expeditions by Charles Hudson, (1990) revised edition with new index with documents relating to the Pardo Expeditions, transcribed, translated and annotated by Paul E. Hoffman and afterword by David G. Moore, Robin A. Beck, Jr. and Christopher B. Rodning (2005) covers Pardo's two journeys with a contingent of 120-125 Spanish soldiers that commenced from Santa Elena. The first expedition ran from December 1, 1566 to March 7, 1567; the second from September 1, 1567 to March 2, 1568.
This volume mines the Pardo documents to reveal a wealth of information pertaining to Pardo's routes, his encounters and interactions with native peoples, the social, hierarchical, and political structures of the Indians, and clues to the ethnic identities of Indians known previously only through archaeology. The new afterword reveals recent archaeological evidence of Pardo's Fort San Juan -- the earliest site of sustained interaction between Europeans and Indians - -demonstrating the accuracy of Hudson's route reconstructions.
May 22 - "Finding Aid Friday:" The Gullah Festival going on this weekend was established in 1987 to honor and recreate the atmosphere of a celebration called Decoration Day. It is held over the Memorial Day weekend. Rosalie Pazant, her family, and Deloris Nevils helped found the event. The BDC has a vertical file of clippings about the festival and the Pazant Family, and a small archival collection, the Deloris Nevils Papers, that include information about the festival.

May 23 - Survey says ... You want more reading suggestions (or at least the folks who participated in the Library system's strategic plan said so).
Because NPS Ranger Eric Ellis gave us an excellent talk on a complicated series of events in the 1870s and the BDC has a lot of resources on the topic, I put together a Connections post, "Reading Suggestions about Party Politics during the Reconstruction Era" for some recommended titles about the tumultuous political shenanigans of the post-Civil War era for all you BDC history nerds to explore.

May 26 -  It's Hurricane Preparedness Month. Nothing reinforces the need to prepare for the next major storm quite like a new digital exhibit about the recovery efforts after the Great Sea Island Hurricane.

"Mapping Recovery: The 1893 Hurricane and Black Sea Island Communities" curated by Caroline Grego is a Lowcountry Digital History Initiative. Some of the BDC's resources are featured in the online exhibit. See "Credits" and "Further Reading" sections for additional details.
Our digital partnership with the LCDL just keeps on giving. Deciding to partner with LCDL was the 2nd best decision of my library career.

May 27 - “Black History Note in National Preservation Month:” For the last few weeks, we’ve been sharing some of Beaufort’s historical sites which show us that “All People are Created Equal.” We’re wrapping up the month with a recent preservation success story: Tabernacle Baptist Church!
Many of you know the Tabernacle Baptist Church, which sits proudly along Craven Street in Downtown Beaufort. The church is believed to have been constructed in 1811 during a brief schism that occurred in the congregation in the nearby Beaufort Baptist Church. When the schism ended, the congregation used the Tabernacle building as a lecture hall up until the Civil War. Then, during the War and as a result of the “Great Skedaddle,” Black Beaufortonians began using the Tabernacle for their own Baptist services. The Tabernacle Baptist Church was officially organized in 1863, and the building was purchased by the congregation in 1867.
Over the years, the Tabernacle Baptist Church became a fixture in the community, offering weekly services while also serving an additional purpose as a community meeting space. However, the centuries began to wear on this beloved structure. The steeple, added to the building in 1873, was especially in need of repair.
In 2021, the Tabernacle Baptist Church was awarded a National Fund for Sacred Places grant by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The funds were to be used to restore the church’s steeple. Work began last year, in May of 2025, and was finished in December.
You can learn more about Tabernacle Baptist Church, and other historic churches in Beaufort District, at the BDC.

May 29 - "Finding Aid Friday in National [Historic] Preservation Month:" Architect and architectural photographer Charles Bayless captured exteriors and interiors of historic buildings in Beaufort County as part of the Historic American Buildings Survey in the late 1970s. Contact us to see the 466 black and white photographic prints; 2 letters; and one 16 page detailed typed index in the Finding Aid to the archival collection.

May 30 - I can't let National [Historic] Preservation Month go past without a mention of the history of Auldbrass Plantation, one of Frank Lloyd Wright's two houses in South Carolina. There's a recently updated Connections post about Auldbrass in case you'd like to learn more about this historic structure - the only FLW designed plantation complex.

03 June 2026

National Trails Day : Reading Suggestions from the BDC

National Trails Day registered logo, three green mountain icons on a white background with the words National Trails Day
June 6 is National Trails Day, a day to celebrate being in the great outdoors enjoying nature.  

Okay, I will admit it. I am a very "inside" type of person (which may be a critical point in why I became a librarian). While I like to see sunshine on the regular, I am content to see said sunshine through a window or just sitting on my porch. I do not particularly like to be in the sunshine out and amongst nature. I appreciate clean air and clean water that would not be possible without all the filtering that nature provides. I find areas I have visited elsewhere quite lacking in trees which makes me long for my very wooded lot along a little tidal creek. But one is unlikely to find me meandering down a trail without ulterior motives - those ulterior motives usually being one or more of my grandchildren are visiting. Given that they have a lot more energy than a 60-something Gigi, it's more a matter of self-preservation than my personal enjoyment that we sometimes take to one or more of the local trails. 

The BDC has maps about trails; vertical files about trails; posters about trails; a few government documents about trails; and books about trails. Here are a few that you might of interest as you're planning your next little outing: 

The most visible of the local nature trails in the Spanish Moss Trail. The story of the Spanish Moss Trail begins with the historic Magnolia Line Railroad established in 1870. Railroad operations ceased in 2003. In 2008 Beaufort-Jasper Water and Sewer Authority acquired the right-of-way to use as a utility corridor. In January 2011, BJSWA granted a surface easement to Beaufort County to develop 14 miles of the corridor as a recreational trail called the Spanish Moss Trail. Rumor had it that "Moss" was for head of the BJSWA at the time Dean Moss, but Spanish Moss does indeed hang from trees all along the route. 

We have a vertical file dedicated to the Friends of the Spanish Moss Trail group as it is the most visible entity that raises funds for and awareness of the trail to ensure a sustainable, well-appointed and safe outdoor recreational experience for walkers and bicyclists. The trail recently added several more miles of pathways. 

The Town of Port Royal has a well-used nature trail too. We have posters related to the Port Royal Rookery and Cypress Wetland Trail fund-raising efforts, branded "These Chicks are Ready to Party!."  My grandchildren like to see the alligators basking in the sun and the birds nesting along this 1/2 mile trail. The Friends recommend that peak times for alligator viewing is midday. For birds, it's best to be present within an hour of sunrise or sunset - which alas, also happens to be mosquito feeding times. (Bug spray recommended).  

The Town of Hilton Head was the first governmental entity to establish walking and bicycling trails. We have a separate vertical file entitled Parks and Pathways -- Hilton Head Island on that topic. 

Trails have been part of Beaufort County planning at least from the late 1990s. You can read the Beaufort County Comprehensive Plans for 1997 and 2010 in our Research Room. 

Given that we have so much water, it is not at all surprising that there are water-based trails in Beaufort County too. Paddling South Carolina : A Guide to Palmetto State River Trails (2001) would be a good place to start. For an earlier plan, read South Carolina River Trails : A Part of the South Carolina Overall Recreation Plan (SCORP) 1980 issued by the South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism's division of Planning in 1978. Other materials that you might find helpful are The Gullah Connection Trail : A Proposal for the US National Park Service (DATE) and Palmetto Journal : Walks in the Natural Areas of South Carolina by Phillip Manning (DATE). 

Then there are the themed trails, mostly to attract tourists. We tend to create vertical files for these initiatives. For example, we have vertical files for the The Shell Art Trail; The Watermen's Wave Lowcountry Boot Trail; and the Lowcountry Revolutionary War Trail. (Psst: There's more about the Shell Art Trail and the Watermen's Boot Trail in Cassandra's post about public art projects in July 2025.) 

If one is more historically minded, then perhaps you would like to learn about ancient trails, i.e., pathways of the Native Americans in this area. The key source for that topic remains Discovering South Carolina : A Story about Indians, Their Ancient Remains and Trails by Bert W. Bierer (1969). At our recent "Historically Speaking" lecture with Dr. David Moore, he explained Juan Pardo's itinerary in terms of following ancient pathways that the Native Americans had forged through the forests as the basis for a proposed Spanish road to Mexico. 

And as a reminder: The BDC, Beaufort County Historical Society and the Beaufort County 250 Committee has a historical marker trail of sorts relating to the course of the American Revolution for you to follow during our "Revealing the Revolution" Historic Marker Challenge. Don't delay, participate today because game sheets must be returned on or before July 2, 2026. As our partners say "It's fun! It's free!! It's history!!!" 

We have maps for some trails. An example is the recently published Hilton Head Island Culture Trail Map (2024). 

Contact us to learn more about these and other materials inside the BDC's Research Room: bdc@bcgov.net; 843-255-6468.

I hope that you will take to the great outdoors to explore some of the trails we have in Beaufort County soon.  

31 May 2026

What to Expect in June 2026

The Library system begins its Summer Reading Program "Unearth a Story" which features dinosaurs and archaeology today. The BDC doesn't have much about dinosaurs but we do have a lot of archaeological reports to highlight. 

We're taking to the road to promote our "Revealing the Revolution" challenges. You'll see me at Bluffton Branch around 10 AM; Hilton Head Branch around Noon; and Beaufort Branch about 5 PM on June 1. On June 2, Cassi will visit Lobeco Branch about 10 AM and I will be out at St. Helena Branch around 5 PM. Cassi and Sydney will be going with the Bookmobile staff to the "Discover the Lowcountry" event on June 4. I am working a table at USCB's "South Carolina and the Road to Independence : Celebrating 250 Amazing American Years with Words, Music, and Cake" with Leah Roche of the Beaufort County Historical Society on June 6.  On June 9, Sydney will drop by the Port Royal Branch -- all of which to help get the word out about our signature project for BCL America250 and the Summer Reading Program 2026. 

Tendaji Bailey will bring the Wright-Campbell student cadre from HBCUs to visit the BDC on June 11.

The Library will be closed on June 19 for Juneteenth.

I'll talk about colonial period British resources in the Research Room on the evening of June 22 at Beaufort Branch. And since June is National Caribbean-American Heritage Month, and Barbadians founded Charles Towne and thereby South Carolina in 1670, expect to see some items related to that fact featured on the BDC's Facebook page this month.

The BDC crew will orient new Library employees to the system's special local history collection and archives unit on June 24.

On June 27, we'll be at Bluffton Branch to conduct the trivia contest on their Liberty & Legacy Day - with a rinse and repeat (of sorts) for Beaufort Branch's Liberty & Legacy Day on July 1. (I'll finally get to use the inauthentic colonial outfit I bought for Halloween at work! Yes!!)

27 May 2026

A Genealogists' Tool Kit : Military and Other Records From the Revolutionary War In the BDC Research Room


Let's say that you have identified ancestors in your family tree who may have served in a military capacity during the conflict as Americans and the British were determining the future government of the English colonies in North America. Establishing your blood ties to a Revolutionary War soldier in particular can be thrilling, time-consuming, and once documents, may afford you the opportunity to join a heritage society. 

Does the BDC have materials to help you document your ancestor's service and life? Yes, we do! 

General Types of Military Records

It may help to know a little about the various types of military service-related records that one finds on databases or in library collections. Military records provide a variety of information about an individual and could include their birthplace, age at enlistment, occupation, and names of immediate family members. Some types of military records include:

  • Service records: Service records for militia, volunteer, or regular forces document that an individual served in the military and can provide your ancestor’s unit or organization.
  • Draft, Conscription, or Selective Service Records: Since 1863, the federal government has registered millions of men who may have been eligible for military service. Enrollment and Draft information include name residence, age, occupation, marital status, birthplace, physical description, and other information.
  • Bounty Land Warrants: The federal government provided bounty land for those who served in the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, and Indian wars between 1790 and 1855.
  • Pension Records: The federal government and some state governments granted pensions or bounty land to officers, disabled veterans, needy veterans, widows or orphans of veterans, and veterans who served a certain length of time. Pension records usually contain more genealogical information than service records. However, not every veteran received or applied for a pension.
Although subscription databases such as Ancestry Library Edition and Fold 3 have a lot of materials posted online to help you dig deeper into your ancestral roots, these massive databases do not have digital surrogates of every resource ever created and/or published. Sometimes one has to go analog - as in visiting archives or visiting libraries to find appropriate printed or microfilmed materials to use in your research. 

Printed Materials in the Research Room


Here are a few printed materials in the BDC that may help you discover more about your Patriot or Loyalist ancestors. 

DAR Patriot Index: Centennial Edition by the Daughters of the American Revolution (National Society of the DAR Centennial Administration, c1994). Covers Patriots whose service has been established through DAR membership applications submitted between October 1890 and 11 October 1990. Part 1: Surnames beginning with A - F; Part 2: Surnames beginning with G - O; and Part 3: Surnames beginning with P - Z.  

Revolutionary War Bounty Land Grants Awarded by State Governments by Lloyd DeWitt Bockstruck (Genealogical Publishing, 1996). "A land bounty is a grant of land from a government as a reward to pay citizens for the risks and hardships they endured in the service of their country, usually in a military related capacity." This volume lists bounty land grants in Connecticut, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, and "Virginia-Indiana."- introduction

Revolutionary War Pensions Awarded by State Governments, 1775 – 1874, the General and Federal governments prior to 1814, and by Private Acts of Congress to 1905 by Lloyd de Witt Bockstruck (Genealogical Publishing, [2011]). More than 16,500 pensioners are featured in this work compiled in an attempt to identify and recreate the Revolutionary War pension files generated prior to the disastrous fire in the War Department on 8 November 1800, which destroyed nearly a quarter-century of records.

Stub Entries to Indents issued in payments of Claims against South Carolina growing out of the Revolution (The Historical Commission of South Carolina, 1910-1939).

South Carolina Loyalists in the American Revolution by Robert Lambert (University of South Carolina Press, 1987).

African-American Patriots in the Southern Campaign of the American Revolution by Bobby G. Moss and Michael C. Scoggins (Scotia-Hibernia Press, 2004).

African-American Loyalists in the Southern Campaign of the American Revolution by Bobby G. Moss and Michael C. Scoggins (Scotia-Hibernia Press, 2005).

African American and American Indian Patriots of the Revolutionary War (National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, 2001).  Please note: This is also available free as a downloadable PDF file. Online the title is "Forgotten Patriots: African American and American Indian Patriots of the Revolutionary War." Because the PDF file is 874 pages, it can take some time for the file to download. 

South Carolinians in the Revolution by Sara Ervin ([S.l.]: Genealogical Publishing, 1965). 

Anecdotes of the Revolutionary War in America with Sketches of Character of Persons the Most Distinguished, in the Southern States, for Civil and Military Services by Alexander Garden (A.E. Miller, 1822). 

South Carolina in the American Revolution: A Source Guide for Genealogists and Historians by Eric G. Grundset for the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution. (National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, 2013).

Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution by Bobby Moss (Genealogical Publishing, 1985).

Traditions and Reminiscences, Chiefly of the American Revolution in the South : including biographical sketches, incidents, and anecdotes, few of which have been published, particularly of residents in the upper country by Joseph Johnson (Walker and James,1851). 

We may have even more. Contact us to discuss your research problem. 

Microfilmed Materials in the Research Room


Beaufort is a "Burned County": Almost all of our pre-Civil War records were destroyed in 1865. Given this fact, genealogical research can be more challenging here. Through the years, the BDC purchased some SC Department of Archives and History records on microfilm to help fill the historical gap. Among the most important series that can help you identify ancestors who may have served during the American Revolution are:

South Carolina Tax Returns, 1783-1800. (2 rolls) This series supplies information about landowners and size of holdings that census records and deed books leave out for the period covered. A printed guide to these records is available in our Research Room. 

Records of the South Carolina Treasury, 1775-1780. (6 rolls) This office was critical to the operation of the newly independent colony and funding of the war effort. The records reflect the increased responsibilities of the revolutionary treasury as the expenses of the war and the problems of supplying the new government grew. They hold a wealth of information on the financial management of the colony during this period and detail military expenditures. A printed guide to these records is available in our Research Room.
Decorative image - roll of microfilm

This is a fundamental genealogical and historical resource for information regarding the Revolutionary War era. A printed guide to these records is available in our Research Room. You can search series S108092 online via the Online Records Index at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History (SCDAH).  

South Carolina Will Transcripts, 1782-1868(31 rolls) This is a fundamental genealogical and historical resource for the period covered. A printed guide to these records is available in our Research Room. You can search series L10125 online via the Online Records Index at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History. 

South Carolina State Plats, Charleston Series, 1784-1860Columbia Series, 1796-1868(30 rolls) These plats are an essential source for genealogy and local history as well as a gold mine of primary documentation for social, cultural, and economic historical studies. A printed guide to these records is available in our Research Room. You can search these series online via the Online Records Index at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History.

We have a volume of memorials to quitrents in printed form in the Research Room though this series on microfilm is far more extensive than the printed volume available. In certain cases, this is the only surviving record of a particular transaction, containing Proprietary land grants, certificates of admeasurements, wills, leases, and releases. A printed guide to the Memorials microfilmed series is available in our Research Room. The Memorials on microfilm is partially indexed online via the Online Records Index at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History.

Tip: Using the guides to collections held at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History can be a bit daunting. Be sure to read "Searching the SCDAH Summary Guide and Online Catalog" by Katharine Slover on the Silver Crescent Standard: The Blog of the South Carolina Department of Archives and History (8 August 2019) for guidance. 
Tip: The information on the SCDAH's page about its Digital Collections and downloading the list of digitized genealogical related materials at the SCDAH may prove very helpful to you as well. 
Confused? Need a little more help than the online guides provide? You are always welcome to set up an appointment to sit down with BDC staff for a little one-on-one assistance with the Online Records Index or with the printed materials or microfilm we have in the BDC Research Room. Though we cannot do genealogical research for you, we can certainly guide you on how to use the genealogical materials we have and offer suggestions on other resources and cultural heritage organizations that might have additional sources of information more about your Revolutionary War era ancestors. 

Please e-mail bdc@bcgov.net or call us at 843-255-6468 to set a date and time for a mutually agreeable research appointment.  

20 May 2026

Reading Suggestions about Party Politics during the Reconstruction Era

One of the findings from the Library's strategic plan survey responses was that customers wanted staff to offer more book recommendations. Though I admit that most likely those customers wanted book recommendations about the latest fiction and their read-alikes, I am going to interpret that finding to include requests for more recommendations about local history nonfiction, particularly when we have some good titles to suggest to you as supplemental reading related to the BDC's  local history program presentations. 

National Park Service Historian Ranger Eric Ellis gave a great talk about the political divisions of the Beaufort Republican party last week. As he noted, the Republican Party was in control during most of the Reconstruction Period until it split into various factions. In 1874 Democrats changed their election tactics, disrupting Republican political rallies and cutting political deals with Republican splinter groups to secure local and state offices. 

Here are a few recommended books from the BDC or SCLENDS consortium about the rough and tumble, oftentimes violent - but fascinating - political history of South Carolina's Reconstruction Era and its impact on and at the national level : 

Black Over White : Negro Political Leadership in South Carolina during Reconstruction by Thomas Holt. Urbana : University of Illinois Press, 1977. 

The Southern Historical Association awarded this book its 1978 Charles S. Syndor Prize as recognition of Holt's scholarship combining quantitative analysis with narrative history to challenge myths about the power and political effectiveness of Reconstruction-era Black politicians in the Palmetto State. 

The Bloody South Carolina Election of 1876 : Wade Hampton III, the Red Shirt Campaign for Governor and the End of Reconstruction by Jerry L. West. Jefferson, NC : McFarland, 2011. 

Contentious political campaigns are nothing new. This book examines the gubernatorial election of 1876, in which the state's most celebrated Civil War general created a united front in the Democratic Party and wrested control of politics from the Republicans. Of particular note are the ways in which the race, with its disqualified ballots, delays and wrangling, prefigured some elections in the 2000s. For four months, the state endured two warring Houses of Representatives. Two Black Beaufort County men, Thomas Hamilton and N.B. Myers crossed the aisle to join the Wallace House in support of Hampton to secure his governorship. 

Gullah Statesman : Robert Smalls from Slavery to Congress, 1839 - 1915 by Edward A. Miller, Jr. Columbia : University of South Carolina Press, 1995. Available in print and as an e-book on Hoopla

A native of Beaufort, South Carolina, Robert Smalls was born into slavery but through acts of remarkable courage and determination became the first African American hero of the Civil War and one of the most influential African American politicians in South Carolina history. I consider this one of the most important secondary works about Smalls. It is a political biography of his triumphs and setbacks of the celebrated U.S. congressman and advocate of compulsory, desegregated public education. 

Hampton and His Red Shirts : The Story of South Carolina's Deliverance in 1876 by Alfred B. Williams. Charleston, SC : Walker, Evans and Cogswell Company, 1935. 

The author was a newspaper man who argued that the "carpetbagger" government that ruled South Carolina from 1868 until it was overthrown in 1876 was corrupt and caused more destruction than the four years of the Civil War. More recent scholarship has challenged Williams' views. Hathitrust provides a digital copy online

Hurrah for Hampton! : Black Red Shirts in South Carolina during Reconstruction by Edmund L. Drago. Fayetteville : University of Arkansas Press, 1998. 

Drago takes a more balanced view of the Reconstruction Era to examine the motives and concerns of the former enslaved who supported a movement that eventually led to the return of white supremacy in the Palmetto State. Though most of the freedmen identified and supported the Republican party, Drago focused on the primary source testimonies before Congress of seven Black conservatives who joined the white paramilitary clubs termed the "Red Shirts" who supported the election of former Confederate general Wade Hampton in the governor's race in 1876. He also includes analysis of eleven slave narratives to explore the relationship between Black initiative and southern paternalism. 

Rebellion, Reconstruction, and Redemption, 1861 - 1893 by Stephen R. Wise and Lawrence S. Rowland. Columbia : University of South Carolina Press, 2015.    

I consider the three volumes series on the history of Beaufort County by Lawrence S. Rowland and others as "The Bible of Local History."  Volume 2 explores how the Union victory and the political and social Reconstruction of South Carolina was followed by a counterrevolution called Redemption, the organized campaign of Southern whites, defeated in the war, to regain supremacy over African Americans. While former slave-owning, anti-black "Redeemers" took control of mainland Beaufort County, they were thwarted on the Sea Islands, where African Americans retained power and kept reaction at bay. By 1893, elements of both the New and Old South coexisted uneasily side by side as the Democratic mainland reverted to an agricultural-based economy while the Republican Sea Islands and the town of Beaufort underwent an economic boom based on the phosphate mining industry and the new commercial port in the Lowcountry town of Port Royal.

Requiem for Reconstruction : Black Countermemory and the Legacy of The Lowcountry's Lost Political Generation by Robert D. Bland. Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, 2026.  

Bland "explores how Black Americans born in the thirty years between 1840 and 1870 saw Reconstruction as a defining political movement and worked to preserve its legacy by formulating new archives, shaping local community counternarratives, and using the Black press to preserve and circulate Reconstruction's meaning to a national audience." 

South Carolina in the Civil War and Reconstruction Eras : Essays from the Proceeding of the South Carolina Historical Association edited by Michael Brem Bonner and Fritz P. Hamer. Columbia : University of South Carolina Press, 2016. 

This is an anthology of twenty-three of the most enduring and important scholarly articles about the Civil War and Reconstruction era published in the peer-reviewed journal since 1931. The volume is divided by topic into five subsections: "The Politics of Secession and Civil War"; "On the Battlefront"; "On the Home Front."; "Emancipation, Race, and Society"; and "The Politics of Reconstruction." 

State of Rebellion : Reconstruction in South Carolina by Richard Zuczek. Columbia : University of South Carolina Press, 2009. Also available as an e-book on Hoopla.

The author recounts the volatile course of Reconstruction in the state that experienced the longest, largest, and most dynamic federal presence in the years immediately following the Civil War in this book.  He details the tactics - from judicial and political fraud to economic coercion, terrorism, and guerrilla activity - employed by conservatives to nullify the African American vote, control African American labor, and oust northern Republicans from the state. He documents the federal government's attempt to quash the conservative challenge but shows that, by 1876, white opposition was so unified, widespread, and well-armed that it passed beyond government control. 

To Rescue the Republic : Ulysses S. Grant, the Fragile Union and the Crisis of 1876 by Bret Baier. New York : Custom House, 2021.

Fox News Channel's Chief Political Anchor provides a history of Grant's essential yet underappreciated role in preserving the United States during a period of great political division. The book is available in print, large print, and audio CD through SCLENDS as well as on Hoopla as an audio book and as an e-book.  

If you happen to be more of a watcher than a reader, then I suggest that you take a look at "The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in South Carolina" with Dr. Brent Morris, a COVID-era recording we made when all was shut down five years ago. The information Dr. Morris provides is very helpful to understanding what happened in the Palmetto State between approximately 1865 and 1880. If you want to skip the introduction and get straight to his lecture, begin around the 5-minute mark. 

Reminder: All units of the Beaufort County Library will be closed Monday, May 25 in honor of Memorial Day.