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).
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.
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, 1784-1860; Columbia 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.
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.