19 March 2025

Final Thoughts on "Lafayette 200"

What a celebration we've had!

It takes a community to successfully plan and deliver a community event. Kudos to Lise Sundria of Historic Beaufort Foundation who coordinated the heck out of a lot of historically minded folks and organizations to pull this off.

Thank goodness it was a once in a lifetime event - for me at least. Cassandra and Sydney are considerably younger than me so they have a good chance to be alive with the 225th anniversary of Lafayette's visit comes around. And yes, we've kept notes so that the celebration will be well documented in our LAFAYETTE, MARQUIS DE vertical file. And yes, I made a pitch for the archive of this community event to eventually become part of the BDC's archival collections. We'll see where that goes in the next few months or year. I have no doubt that when the 225th anniversary rolls around, organizers will ask whoever is in charge of the BDC about what the Library has about what happened on Tuesday, March 18, 2025.

"Lafayette 200" in Beaufort may be done and dusted but we would be quite remiss not to mention all the help we got from the Beaufort Branch and Bookmobile Services preparing for the BIG DAY. I'd like to name names of those who have really helped me plan this venture: Library Director, Amanda Dickman, who said "yes;" and Kathleen McTeer and Cheryl Graffo came aboard early with Beaufort Branch manager Stacey Inman's nod to our adventure. The artistically inclined Mackenzie Goodman and Katharine Argall also at Beaufort Branch drew Lafayette 200 themed designs for the embroidery class and coloring sheets. Alyssa Krob shared flyers for us to distribute about Creativebug, made "Lafayette e-books" and "Lafayette audio-books" lists for Hoopla and gave us some DISCUS promotional items to give away at the Street Fair. Fiona Johnson of Port Royal Branch and Robyn Allen of Technical Services donated embroidery floss and needles to us to use at the adult crafting session.

The Friends of the Beaufort Library - which helps out Beaufort Branch, St. Helena Branch, Lobeco Branch, Port Royal Branch, Bookmobile Services, and the BDC - helped fund the purchase of supplies for our Adult and Children craft sessions.

My staff, the amazing Cassandra Knoppel and the astounding Sydney Whiteside, helped in many and myriad ways. We bounced ideas back and forth for months; they made fun of me from time to time when I was getting too deeply into the weeds - not seeing the forest for the trees; but they never gave me anything other than their very best. Cassandra took on some of my regular duties so that I could devote time to plan programs, attend committee meetings, and write social media for this project. Sydney designed "Lafayette 200" bookmarks - adult and youth versions - and a Lafayette materials flyer for us to distribute during the Street Fair. I could not have done this without their hands, hearts and minds.

Stacey Inman, Shaquiella Holmes, Ryan Easterbrooks, and Cheryl Graffo helped Cassandra, Sydney and me staff our table during the Street Fair portion. Allison Reeves, who's responsible for the bookmobiles, lent very practical logistical support and supplies. (She let us borrow her wagon (yeah!) - which was a tremendous help hauling our "stuff" to the Street Fair back and forth. She also took some of our leftover program flyers, coloring sheets, etc. on her routes - north and south of the Broad this week so that the celebration can go on for a bit longer.) Library Marketing shared some of their give-aways (pens, pencils, stickers) for our table.

We are grateful for the kindness and skills of Jade Weaver who showed us how to embroider our white handkerchiefs to wave during the parade; and to the Material Girls of the Sea Island Quilting Guild who helped us make a quilt square on March 12th in anticipation of the General's arrival. Kathleen McTeer and Shaquiella Holmes ran the children's crafts - making an 1825 American flag on one afternoon; and playing games and making toys from the early 19th century on March 12th.

From the bottom of my itty bitty heart, thank you to all who helped make this a successful Library community outreach activity. 'Tis good to have such talented and generous colleagues at Beaufort County Library.

15 March 2025

Historical Context of General Lafayette's Visit to America, 1824-1825

  “What do we really know about Lafayette’s visit to Beaufort in     1825?” As it turns out, not much - but  researching documentary   evidence to substantiate local legends led me down some interesting   research paths that are the substance of the rest of this post. Trying   to uncover additional information about his visit led me to the story   of a long and consequential transatlantic relationship that involved   some of the key figures of European and American history over a   period of more than 50 years. 

That transatlantic relationship has several distinct phases which explains why President James Monroe asks Congress to invite Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis De La Fayette to be the “Nation’s Guest” in 1824 – and why Lafayette comes to Beaufort in 1825. 

Please note: This post is a supplement to my post "Lafayette Visits Beaufort." Even so, this a very abbreviated version of events and intellectual history that omits a lot of the nuances and subtleties - but you can use my source list and additional resources available through the SCLENDS and Hoopla catalogs and some of our database subscriptions in DISCUS to explore the topic more deeply. You can also read more about the resources we have in the Research Room on the topic in the "Reading Room Display - "Hero of Two Worlds" written by Sydney Whiteside earlier this month. 

PHASE 1: AMERICAN REVOLUTION

James Monroe is a Patriot. He quit college to join the Continental Army in 1776. He’s badly wounded at the Battle of Trenton in early 1777. In fact, in Emanuel Leutze's painting "Washington Crossing the Delaware" James Monroe is depicted as the man holding the American flag upright on his way to the fight. [The painting cannot be considered historically accurate but it is among the most recognizable images we associate with the American Revolution.] 


In April 1777, a young, wealthy French aristocrat with an impressively lengthy name defied his own king to fight in the American Revolution. This is what most Americans know about Lafayette: He came to fight with the Americans against the British King.

George Washington is the initial connection between Monroe and Lafayette. When Lafayette arrived unannounced but keen to help, Washington decided to make use of him – first for his publicity value -- as the 19 year-old French nobleman had no combat experience.

Lafayette gets that wartime experience at the Battle of Brandywine on September 11, 1777. He shows extreme courage under fire. In some accounts, Lafayette is standing between Patriot Major General, William Alexander, AKA Lord Stirling and James Monroe when Lafayette takes a bullet in his leg. Monroe keeps company with Lafayette while he’s recovering – and thus the roots of a lifelong friendship is formed. Soon afterwards Lafayette is given command as a Major General in the Continental Army. From this point onwards, Lafayette prefers to be addressed as “General.”

Monroe and Lafayette were both encamped at cold, miserable, and disease-ridden Valley Forge with Washington from December 19, 1777, to June 19, 1778. Both men fought at the Battle of Monmouth. Thus by 1778 Monroe and Lafayette have become friends - based on their shared military service in the cause of American independence and their shared belief in American principles of liberty and equality.

But their personal paths diverge in 1779. Monroe is frustrated by his lack of military recognition and becomes a civilian. He studies law with Thomas Jefferson to support himself and to prepare for political office. Lafayette continues his military career and gets Louis XVI to provide official military support and troops to the American cause of Independence from Great Britain.  Lafayette fights during the Siege of Yorktown and returns to France at the end of 1781.


It takes a bit for peace talks to start but once underway, the negotiation goes rather quickly. The Treaty of Paris ending the American Revolution is signed September 3, 1783. This painting is unfinished because the British delegation refused to sit for the artist Benjamin West. 

Lafayette returns to America in August 1784 to celebrate the signing of the Treaty of Paris with the American people. He gets to Virginia in November and stays at Mount Vernon with George Washington who’s more of a father figure to him than his former commander. On November 18, Washington and Lafayette go to Richmond to meet with others but I cannot be sure that Monroe was there. Lafayette writes to James Madison that “Our friend Munro is very much Beloved and Respected in Congress” so it’s likely that they did meet up.

The 5 years from 1784 to 1789 is something of a lull before the storm. These flags are emblematic of the political whiplash over the course of Lafayette’s life. After 1788, Lafayette is in and out of politics in France – sometimes in support of the government, at other times out of favor with the powers of the day. 

PHASE 2: FRENCH REVOLUTION

Lafayette becomes one of the leaders of the early phases of the French Revolution with a goal to reform France’s government. He co-authors the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the  Citizen in late July 1789 and becomes head of the National Guard tasked to maintain order in Paris. Unfortunately, the King is reluctant to ratify the abolition of noble privileges. This angers the mob – and though Lafayette manages to save Queen Marie Antoinette at this time -- the mob forces the royal family to relocate to the Tuileries Palace in Paris.  Louis XVI bides his time under house arrest for a time but tries to escape in June 1791. The family is quickly recaptured.   

A month after that, Lafayette orders National Guard soldiers to open fire at an anti-monarchy demonstration in Paris and French citizens die. Lafayette is torn between support of the King and his reformist impulses. Lafayette’s reputation in revolutionary France falters even as threats from Prussia and Austria are growing. 

Lafayette and his National Guard troops are repositioned to defend against Prussian and Austrian forces gathering near the border. Louis XVI is deposed by the Jacobin faction in August 1792 – and the faction declares Lafayette an enemy of the State. The General knows that it’s flee or die. 

He decides to flee and live to fight another day. Lafayette plans to get to the Dutch Republic, sail to Britain, try to help his relatives escape, and then head to the United States where he and his male heirs had been awarded honorary citizenship in several states in 1784. But his plan fails. He gets captured by Austrian troops at Rochefort [in present-day Belgium] and jailed. Upon news of this, Adrienne, his wife, sends their young son, Georges Washington, into hiding; she and their daughters remain on their estate.

In December 1792 Louis XVI is convicted by the Jacobins. He dies at the guillotine on 21 January 1793. His wife, Marie Antoinette is beheaded 9 months later. The bloodbath accelerates after the deaths of the King and Queen. After being held at several prisons, Gen. Lafayette becomes “State Prisoner #2” at Olmutz in Austria in 1794. The Jacobins led by Maximilien Robespierre confiscate Lafayette’s fortune and imprison his wife and young daughters.

All this underlines just how dangerous France is when Monroe arrives as Minister to France in August 1794 with his wife Elizabeth Kortright Monroe and their children. Monroe was brave and daring in military matters; he’s brave and daring in his first ministerial posting.  He continues advocating for the release of Lafayette just as his predecessor had done ; but he ups the ante. He learns that Lafayette’s wife, Adrienne’s mother, grandmother, and sister have died by guillotine. He acts to help the imprisoned Adrienne and her girls. Monroe finds one of the few carriages left in Paris, gussies it up, stocks it with food and clothing, accepts his own wife’s offer to act in his stead and off the La Belle Americaine goes to pay a social call to Adrienne in prison. Adrienne is set to die the following day – but Elizabeth Monroe makes it clear that she will be visiting Adrienne on the morrow. It was a gutsy move. Not wanting to endanger ties with the United States, France abruptly reversed its verdict and did not execute Adrienne or her daughters though they would keep them in prison until January 1795.  When they are released, they shelter in the American Minister’s home in Paris. Thomas Paine, author of Common Sense, is also sheltering with the Monroes.

This is an excerpt of the letter from Monroe to his boss,the Secretary of State, Edmund Randolph in February 1795. Monroe says Adrienne is with them and in dire financial straits.  At his own discretion, Monroe advanced her about $1000 from an account appropriated by Congress for the General in 1794.

A few weeks later an almost unrecognizable Georges appears on the doorstep of the Monroe’s house with his tutor, Felix Festrel who had kept him safe since the time of the General’s capture. Monroe facilitates Georges and Festrel’s escape to America. Monroe issues Georges an American passport in the name of George Motier. 

In this letter to President Washington, Mme. Lafayette places her son under the protection of the United States. She says that the letter carrier will share information about Lafayette’s circumstances in person with the President. Mme. Lafayette closes by imploring GW to accept her trust, respect, and attachment. Bear in mind: These two people have never met. Georges becomes a House guest of President Washington and Georges attends Harvard University during his 3 years sojourn in the USA. 

In September 1795, Monroe issues Adrienne an American passport in the name of Mrs. Motier of Hartford, CT. She and her daughters sail to Dunkerque, get on an American ship bound for Hamburg, and make their way into neutral Denmark where an aunt was sheltering family refugees from France. In October 1795, Emperor Francis II of Austria agrees to let Adrienne and her daughters Anastasie and Virginie join Lafayette in the Olmutz prison.

The Monroes were very popular in France. Both of them spoke French well, and they adopted some French mannerisms. n the words of the historian Harlow Giles Unger, “La Belle Americaine was a goddess, and Monroe was as close to becoming a god in French officialdom as it was possible for any foreigner to be." However, President Washington decides that Monroe is too close to the French and re-assigns him to England and Spain. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of South Carolina, Eliza Lucas Pinckney’s son, replaces Monroe.  

BTW: Peggy Pickett will channel Eliza’s life during the Revolution as she oversees her sons’ plantations on March 25 in a local history program co-sponsored by the Beaufort History Museum and the BDC at the Beaufort Library.

American diplomats continued to push for Lafayette’s release after Monroe was removed by Washington. But it took Napoleon to free Lafayette. When Napoleon Bonaparte and his revolutionary armies conquered Austria in 1797, a clause in the Treaty of Campo Formio released Lafayette. They left Olmutz prison on September 19 and moved to La Grange, Adrienne’s estate east of Paris.

Monroe and Lafayette were comrades in arms in the American Revolution; During the French Revolution, the Monroes save Lafayette’s family. 

Lafayette may be free but his reputation remains tarnished in his native country. He has financial problems. His wife developed health issues during her imprisonment. The General’s support of liberal democratic causes in France, Greece, Italy and Poland makes his suspect in Europe.

PHASE 3: MONROE BECOMES 5th PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES

James Monroe spends the years from 1796 raising his political profile. He serves as Governor of Virginia three times. He suppresses a slave rebellion; his only son dies; He helps negotiate the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. He goes on diplomatic missions to France, England and Spain. He serves as Secretary of State and Secretary of War and for a few days was heading both of those departments in 1814. He is a very popular man in the US. Great Britain was defeated, Monroe and the Jeffersonian Republican party enjoyed a clear victory in the 1816 Presidential Election. The electoral count was 183 for Monroe, 34 for his Federalist party opponent Rufus King of New York. But it was during the "Era of Good Feelings" that political issues arose that would dominate American politics for the next 40 years.

Unfortunately, the women in his life were not as well liked. “The Beautiful American” of France was not popular in Washington, DC. Dolley Madison, wife of President James Madison, was a hard act for brave, reserved, formal and sick Elizabeth to follow. On account of her nature and health, she didn’t make social calls to the wives of government officials which annoyed those wives. Monroe’s eldest daughter, Eliza, became the unofficial White House hostess during her father’s two terms.  But Eliza Monroe Hays was considered acerbic and rather imperious. She did not let others forget that her childhood best friend was Hortense, Queen of Holland, Napoleon’s step-daughter by his first wife Josephine and his sister-in-law as she married Louis Bonaparte in 1802.

Monroe was a great admirer of George Washington.  Just as George Washington had done, Monroe took to the roads and waters to unify the nation. He broke his tours into 3 segments covering over 2000 miles in all.  He was the first president to ride a steamboat (from Baltimore to Philadelphia) and the first sitting president to travel as far west as the Michigan territory.

He also oversaw the addition of some Spanish territory along the Gulf of Mexico by peaceful means. The Adams-Onis Treaty set up a new boundary with the Viceroyalty of New Spain.  During his Southern Tour in 1819, Monroe stopped by Beaufort for a few days on his way to check out the recently ceded Florida territory. On May 3rd, the inhabitants of the town learned that President Monroe would arrive in a few days. According to the Savannah Daily Republican newspaper, most of the citizenry took to their horses and assembled to greet the President at the Port Royal Ferry Crossing along the Whale Branch River [quite near to the current location of the Whale Branch Bridge]. "On entering the town he was handsomely saluted by a company of artillery, commanded by capt. [sic] Burke, and received the salutations of the Intendent..."  (which was what the mayor of Beaufort used to be called). The text of his welcome and the President's response were printed in the newspaper issue.  

The next day Monroe visited Fort Marion (AKA Fort Lyttelton) and was guest of honor at a dinner held in Beaufort College where a number of toasts were offered. These toasts are included in the Savannah Daily Republican newspaper as well. Toasting others was a key component of political and social life in the 18th and 19th centuries. (I was quite disappointed to not find any record of the toasts made during Lafayette’s visit 6 years later. Who was offering the toast and the nature of the toast can give a researcher insight into the thoughts and minds of the toaster and his/her place in the community.) 

Monroe had several unique problems during his first term as President.  The Panic of 1819 was the first widespread and durable financial crisis in the United States that caused a general collapse of the American economy that lasted through 1821.

Geographic expansion during Monroe’s first term exposed latent tensions over the morality of slavery and the balance of economic power.  In 1819 there were 22 states in all - 11 states with slavery and 11 states where slavery was not allowed. But Missouri wanted to become the 23rd state. The carefully maintained balance was in jeopardy. There was a Congressional bruiser of a political fight that was resolved by Henry Clay’s Missouri Compromise. The Missouri Compromise admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a non-slave state at the same time, so as not to upset the balance between slave and free states in the nation. The Compromise also outlawed slavery above the 36º 30' latitude line in the remainder of the Louisiana Territory.

A few days later after the compromise was signed, Monroe’s youngest daughter Maria married her first cousin in a White House ceremony – the first Presidential child to do so. The wedding was a small family affair with a guest list of only 42 people. Lauren McGwin's article about the wedding and the reception afterwards is a fascinating read. The article's summary on the White House Historical Association website says "Although offended when not invited to the wedding, high society was welcomed to a reception at Stephen Decatur's house on the eve of the duel that would take his life." 

Despite the financial Panic of 1819 and the Missouri Crisis, James Monroe was re-elected unopposed in the election of 1820. Monroe won his second term by a true landslide - 231 to 1 in the electoral college. The hold-out was William Plumer, an elector from New Hampshire who casts his vote for John Quincy Adams.

From 1793 until 1933, presidents of the United States were inaugurated on March 4. Monroe's second inauguration was the first time that March 4 happened to fall on a Sunday. After consulting with Supreme Court justices on the matter, Monroe decided to hold the Inaugural ceremony on Monday, March 5.  It was the first oath taking outdoors. According to witnesses, “The occasion was “simple, but grand, animating and impressive.” (p. 324). Following Washington’s example, Monroe makes it clear that he will not run for a third term. The most significant policy to emerge from Monroe’s 2nd term was the Monroe Doctrine warning European powers not to interfere in the affairs of the Western Hemisphere. By late 1822 four main candidates are hoping to be America’s next President. 

Left to right: John Quincy Adams, son of former President John Adams; Andrew Jackson, Hero of New Orleans; a prominent politician from Georgia who had held a number of positions in the Federal government William H. Crawford; and the architect of the Missouri Compromise and Speaker of the House Henry Clay

The political scene is heating up – and Monroe is looking to smooth the waters. About the only thing every citizen of the United States can agree upon in 1824 is that Lafayette is an American hero – and with the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence coming up soon, President Monroe asks Congress to invite his friend, the great hero of the Revolution Major General Lafayette, to visit America as its guest. Lafayette quickly says “yes.” It’s been 40 years since his last visit to America. 

Lafayette is 67 years old, largely unappreciated and ignored by the French, and in financial difficulties. He is accompanied by his middle-aged son, Georges, his secretary and a valet. From his arrival in New York on August 16, 1824 to his embarkation to return to France on September 7, 1825, presentations, plays, feasting, balls, and pageants greeted him wherever he traveled. His 13 month marathon trip to all 24 states is a triumph!

There is however, a little touch of scandal.  His very good - and very much younger – free-thinking Scot female friend, the controversial Frances Wright accompanied Lafayette for parts of the tour. She is about 200 years ahead of her time. They travel on separate conveyances for propriety -- and because his son Georges is not a fan. Lafayette introduces her to important American citizens such as Jefferson, Madison, John Quincy Adams, and Gen. Andrew Jackson and their wives. BTW: Miss Wright will not be traveling with General Lafayette while he is on his way to Beaufort. She headed west to visit some experimental communities. They will meet up in New Orleans later.

While Lafayette’s in the country he is witness to an unusual Presidential election. Andrew Jackson received the most popular votes and the most electoral votes in the Presidential election of 1824. But because of the crowded field of candidates, Jackson fell 32 electoral votes short of election – which throws the election into the House of Representatives. 

But before the House of Representatives can consider the matter, at Speaker of the House Henry Clay’s invitation, Gen. Lafayette addresses a joint session of Congress on December 10, 1824. He makes a short speech thanking the country for its efforts on his family’s behalf during the French Revolution. He declared his faithfulness to American ideals of "liberty, equality, and true social order, and so it shall continue to be to my latest breath.’ Lafayette was the first foreign representative to address both houses of Congress. He spoke to both houses on the same day but not in a joint meeting. Therefore, Lafayette's speeches fail to meet the criteria according to the "History, Art & Archives: United States House of Representatives" website. Lafayette, however, was the subject of one of the only two addresses by a foreign representative to a Joint session of Congress:  French Ambassador Andre de Laboulaye spoke before the assembled Congress to mark the centennial of the death of the Marquis de Lafayette on May 20, 1934. 

The House chooses the next president on a snowy February 9, 1825. Lafayette is present for the official count of the electoral college vote, then leaves with the Senators while the representatives do their duty. John Quincy Adams is chosen on the first ballot.  With the Presidential election settled, Lafayette heads south in February 1825. 

He gets to Beaufort South Carolina on March 18, 1825. We know that he was here – we know that he arrived after dark, but other details remain a bit murky.

According to an account in the Southern Patriot newspaper of Charleston the week after Lafayette's visit: Upon his arrival he was met by a committee who led a procession to a reception room where citizens were gathered for opening remarks. Nearby was a ballroom. This specific source states that he remained in the ballroom for three hours and was then led back to the landing point. The implication of the text is that the Ball was held in the same building as the reception room.

Note: This happens to be the guide for the upcoming Grand Procession re-enactment set for Tuesday, March 18, 2025. 

Lafayette’s private secretary Auguste Levasseur provides this account in Lafayette in America, 1824 - 1825:

During the rest of our sail to Savannah, we skirted the islands of Hunting, Beaufort, Port Republican, Hilton Head, etc., and often by such narrow passages that the sides of our ship nearly touched the land on each side, and it had rather the look of rolling on the grasslands that surrounded it than that of gliding on the water which disappeared beneath it. It was nearly midnight when we passed in front of Beaufort, and everyone on board was sleeping, but we were soon awakened by the shouts of the citizens who had waited up to then on the bank, and General Lafayette, having gotten up, gave in to their entreaty that he spend some moments among them. 

A woman purportedly named Hetty Barnwell - but whose identity cannot be verified – is purported to have been present at Lafayette’s arrival. But problems arise: The tale does not surface until almost 100 years after the event in a book not known for its accuracy. Furthermore, the account that was published in Historic Houses of South Carolina by Harriett Leiding (1921) is not the same as the typed transcript of the letter that is in our LAFAYETTE, MARQUIS DE vertical file and in the Barnwell Family Papers posted online.  

Leiding's account is found on pages 245-246. She begins by writing that Lafayette came to Beaufort on March 2, 1805 - which is simply not accurate - and spoke from the balcony of the John Mark Verdier house. Leiding says that the ball was held at Barnwell Castle that unfortunately had "burned about 1879. An authentic account taken from an old letter written by a member of the Barnwell family, who entertained him, reads:" 

We went into Beaufort last Thursday evening expecting LaFayette would come there on Friday. We had lent our house to give the ball in. The ball committee requested us to dress the rooms, as he was expected at two o'clock. We were obliged to leave the rooms half dressed, to go down to the bay to see the procession. We had a very good position as we went to McNeston's Balcony where the arch was erected, but all our trouble was in vain, for after waiting there about an hour we returned to our home. We were afraid that he would not come at all. However, at about twelve notice was given that he had come. We were, of course, deserted by the Guards, who went to conduct him to the house. The procession was then so handsome that I scarcely regretted his not coming in the day. All the boys in the town had lights in their hands, which had a beautiful effect, shining on the long, white plumes of the Guards. He stayed just long enough to shake hands all around and eat supper. As it was the first time that LaFayette had entered any place at night at least it had the effect of novelty! 

Now compare the above account with this letter ascribed to Hetty Barnwell that's posted online in the Lowcountry Digital Library and that we have copies of stored in the BDC vertical files: 


There is the inconsistency of the balcony's name "McNeston's" in the Leiding transcription; "Wescot's" in the Barnwell typescript. A quick search of the 1820 and 1830 Federal Censuses shows some men surnamed Wescot in other parts of South Carolina - but none in Beaufort. A quick search of the 1820 and 1830 Federal Censuses shows some men surnamed "Neston" in other parts of South Carolina but no "McNeston" at all. That, of course, does not mean that perhaps a Mr. Wescot or a Mr. McNeston was living in Beaufort in 1825 and that he had a balcony and that Lafayette may have stood upon said balcony and addressed Beaufortonians. Miss Barnwell also claims that the Ball was held in her aunt’s ground floor basement – without specifying the name of that aunt or the location of her aunt's house. 

Francis Richard Lubbock, a native of Beaufort who became Governor of Texas, states in Six Decades in Texas or Memoirs of Francis Richard Lubbock (1900) that "At the time of La Fayette's visit I fairly effervesced with delightful enthusiasm. It was a holiday for everybody. Our guest was a hero. He came in my father's boat." He describes the scene 75 years after the occasion this way on page 5: 

Lubbock was 9 years old when Lafayette came to Beaufort and thus 84 years old when his memoir was published. The Henry Shultz was a steamboat owned and operated by his father, Dr. Henry Thomas Willis Lubbock. A typo in the excerpt gives the year of Lafayette's arrival as "1824" rather than 1825. Several sources indicate that James Hamilton was indeed accompanying Lafayette on his travels in South Carolina and Georgia. The reason given for Lafayette's late arrival is that the steamboat got stuck on a sandbar and had to wait for the incoming tide to float it. Lubbock also says that the ball was held at "Mrs. Elliott's, [at which] I had the honor of being presented to the illustrious general, and complimented by him for my manliness and patriotism." We knot that the Intendent of Beaufort (read that as "mayor") was William Elliott, III and his family lived in what we call The Anchorage now in 1825. But there were a lot of Mrs. Elliotts in Beaufort in 1825. 

This little newspaper article printed in the Tampa Tribune & Sun covers a lot of ground re: a Verdier-Lafayette connection. 

Unfortunately, so far there is no corroborating evidence in other sources for the Verdier family's specific claims. You will notice in the newspaper article that some of the details are not consistent with other accounts: There is no mention of the grand procession. Lafayette just walks a several hundred feet from the steamer to the portico of the John Mark Verdier house at 801 Bay Street. This article gives the name of the steamship as "William Seabrook." But the Southern Patriot newspaper issue of March 17, 1825 clearly puts Lafayette travel on the Henry Shultze steamship to Edisto, Beaufort, and Savannah.  

This article has the sequence of Lafayette’s journey backwards as well. Lafayette was in Charleston, then Edisto, then Beaufort, and left here for Savannah. The account also refers to a "sumptuous banquet" held in Lafayette's honor at the family home. It behooves us to take note that Verdier's daughter Mrs. I.V. Scull talked with the newspaper reporter but was not present at the 1825 Red Letter Local History day event. 

Our LAFAYETTE vertical file contains some correspondence between Dr. E. H. Anderson of Beaufort and administration at the Library of Congress and the New York Public Library about sources in those institutions about Lafayette's visit to Beaufort in 1825. Their research was inconclusive beyond the Southern Patriot article quoted above. 

Evan Thompson, former Executive Director of Historic Beaufort Foundation, references an unpublished "Reminiscences of Mary Barnwell Elliott Johnstone" from 1894 that we do not have in our holdings. In his "Lost & Found" column entitled "Where was Lafayette's famous visit?" in the short-lived Beaufort Today newspaper April 4, 2008 issue, he dismisses Johnstone's account out of hand. Drawing from her memories as a one year old toddler, Johnstone claims that Lafayette's reception was at the Barnwell house [ i.e., Barnwell Castle].

Thompson writes that none of the “witnesses” are particularly reliable – and I agree with him. So as it turns out, here are the facts that I can substantiate: 


Kind of like Julius Caesar: Lafayette Came. Lafayette Saw. Lafayette conquered -- the hearts of Beaufortonians and Americans.  Everything else related to his visit to our fair city remains the stuff of local legend.

Sources: 

American Battlefield Trust website: Trenton; Brandywine; Monmouth; Yorktown; Treaty of Paris (1783) 
American Battlefield Trust website: William Alexander, Lord Stirling; Marquis de Lafayette
American Revolution Institute of The Society of the Cincinnati website: "Leutze's Washington Crossing the Delaware" painting
America's First Families: An Inside View of 200 Years of Private Life in the White House by Carl S. Anthony (2000) 
America's Presidents: Noted Historians Rank America's Best - and Worst - Chief Executives edited by Brian Lamb (2019)
Apostles of Revolution: Jefferson, Paine, Monroe and the Struggle against the Old Order in America and Europe by John E. Ferling (2018) 
"Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol," Architect of the Capitol website
The Autobiography of James Monroe, edited and with an introduction by Stuart Gerry Brown (1959) 
Avalon Project, Yale Law School website: "Declaration of the Rights of Man" (1789) 
Barnwell Family Papers, College of Charleston, Lowcountry Digital Library website 
BDC vertical file: LAFAYETTE, MARQUIS DE
BDCBCL: Lists, Links and Finding Aids blog: Fort Marion; Fort Lyttelton
Britannica Online: Marie Antoinette ; Louis XVI ; Maximilien Robespierre ; John Quincy Adams
Charles Fraser by Alice R. Huger Smith (1967)
EDSITEment! website, National Endowment for the Humanities: "Presidential Election of 1824"
Founders Online, National Archives (US) website : Monroe; Madison; Lafayette
General and Madame de Lafayette: Partners in Liberty's Cause in the American and French Revolution by Jason Lane (2003) 
The Golden Age in Beaufort: Read before the Beaufort County Historical Society January 15, 1952 by Margaret Raney Scheper (1952)
Hero of Two Worlds: The Marquis de Lafayette in the Age of Revolution by Mike Duncan (2021)
Historic Houses of South Carolina by Harriett Leiding (1921)
The Hugers of South Carolina by T. Tileston Wells (1931)
The Ideals Guide to Presidential Homes and Libraries by Peggy Schaefer (2002)
"200th Anniversary of the Marquis de Lafayette's Address to Congress, "In Custodia Legis: Law Librarians of Congress" blog
John Mark Verdier House by Colin Brooker (1997)
"Knowing the Presidents" series, Smithsonian Institution: George Washington; Thomas Jefferson; James Madison; James Monroe; John Quincy Adams; Andrew Jackson
Ladies of Liberty: The Women Who Shaped Our Nation by Cokie Roberts (2008)
Lafayette by Harlow G. Unger (2002)
Lafayette in America in 1824 and 1825: Journal of a Voyage to the United States by Auguste Levasseur, edited by Alan Hoffman (2016)
Lafayette in the Somewhat United States by Sarah Vowell (2015) Note: This one is a fun read - but not necessarily historically accurate. 
Lafayette in Two Worlds: Public Cultures and Personal Identities in an Age of Revolutions by Lloyd S. Kramer (1996)
Lafayette: Prisoner of State by Paul Spaulding (2010)
The Last Founding Father: James Monroe and a Nation's Call to Greatness by Harlow G. Unger (2009) 
The Letters of Lafayette and Jefferson with an introduction and notes by Gilbert Chinard (1929) 
Library of Congress Research Guides: James Monroe
The Marquis: Lafayette Reconsidered by Laura Auricchio (2014)
Milestone Documents series, National Archives (US) website: Treaty of Paris (1783); Missouri Compromise (1820)
Monticello website: Frances Wright 
Palace of Versailles website: Louis XVI; National Guard (France)
The Papers of James Monroe, University of Mary Washington
Port Royal Under Six Flags by Katharine M. Jones (1960) 
The Prisoner of Olmutz exhibit, Special Collections and College Archives, Skillman Library, Lafayette College  
The Return of Lafayette, 1824 - 1825 by Marian Klamkin (1975)
Savannah Daily RepublicanGeorgia Historic Newspapers database 
September 9 -15, 1797: Lafayette Gains his Freedom from the Prison of Olmutz, The Schiller Institute website
Six Decades in Texas or Memoirs of Francis Richard Lubbock by Francis Richard Lubbock (1900)
South Carolina Encyclopedia website: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney
The Story of the Life of Lafayette by Mrs. John Farrar  (1831) 
United States Federal Census: 1820, 1830, Ancestry Library Edition database
United States Senate, Senate Historical Office website
What God Hath Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815 - 1848 by Daniel Walker Howe (2007)
White House Historical Association website: Elizabeth Monroe; Dolley Madison
Wikipedia: Tuilleries Palace; Champs de Mars Massacre ; Jacobin faction; Elizabeth Kortright Monroe; Treaty of Campo Formio (1797); Eliza Monroe Hays; Hortense, Queen of Holland; Josephine de Beauharnais; Louis Bonaparte; Panic of 1819; Stephen Decatur; William Plumer; John Quincy Adams; William H. Crawford; Frances Wright 

13 March 2025

Finishing Season 8 with a Flourish : BHM/ BDC Local History Programs

We are poised to end Season 8 of the Museum and Library's local history series on a high note with opportunities for you to learn more about the depth, scope, and breadth of Beaufort District's long and varied past. How did a grandmother run multiple plantations while her sons supported the Patriots cause? How did Beaufort District land features play out in the War of Independence? What is that land made of? are all questions that can be answered by attending our upcoming programs with the Beaufort History Museum. 

Tuesday, March 25, 2025 - BHM/BCL 8.3: "Eliza Lucas Pinckney's Revolutionary War" with Historical Interpreter, Peggy Pickett at Beaufort Branch


Program Description: Eliza Lucas Pinckney, portrayed as a time traveler from the 18th century by experienced historical interpreter and author Peggy Pickett, gives modern audiences her view of the American Revolution as a woman and the mother of two Continental Army officers. One of those sons, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, left his plantation on Pinckney Island in her care while he was off at the Continental Congresses and fighting for independence from Great Britain. Space is limited. First come, first seated; Doors open at 1:30 PM for seating. 

Speaker Biography: Margaret Pickett, or Peggy as she prefers to be called, is a graduate of the University of Maryland and a former teacher who spent 20 years working in museum education in Virginia's historic triangle-Jamestown, Williamsburg and Yorktown. In 1999 she became an independent Living History Interpreter researching and developing documented programs based on the lives of prominent 17th and 18th century Virginia women. She has presented programs attired in historical clothing reproductions and in modern clothing for the National Parks Service, at colleges and historical organizations in both Virginia and South Carolina.

After moving to Bluffton in 2010 she has added three 18th century South Carolina women - Eliza Lucas Pinckney, Dorothy Sinkler Richardson, and Rebecca Motte- to her repertoire. Her published works include The European Struggle to Settle North America (2011) co-authored with her son, Dwayne, and a biography of Rebecca Brewton Motte: American Patriot and Successful Rice Planter, 1737-1815 (2022).   She authored the first major biography of Eliza Lucas Pinckney since 1896, Eliza Lucas Pinckney: Colonial Plantation Manager and Mother of American Patriots, 1722-1793 (2016). 

Tuesday, April 29, 2025 - BHM/BCL 8.4:  "The American Revolution from the Perspective of Geology and Topography" with Dr. Tom Burnett at Beaufort Branch. 


Program Description: Dr. Burnett will discuss war strategies utilized by both American patriots and British soldiers through an integration of philosophy and cartography. He will begin with a general overview of the geology and topography of the Eastern Seaboard which influenced the outcome of many battles. From there he will narrow his lecture to South Carolina and highlight battles in Beaufort District. You will hear about the Swamp Fox, the Gamecock, and the Wizard Owl and how each used knowledge of their native terrain to defeat the British. Come learn the “real story” about why the South Carolina state flag features a palmetto tree. Space is limited. First come, first seated; Doors open at 1:30 PM for seating. 

Speaker Biography: Thomas L. Burnett, Jr., PhD received his B.S.in Geology and Biology and then his M.S. in Geology and Oceanography from the University of South Carolina. He Received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M in Geology and Oceanography. His long career included work in universities in South Carolina and California and in private business with Getty Oil and Texaco. 

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - BHM/BCL 8.5: Lowcountry Discoveries of Dr. Dirt with Randy James, PhD at St. Helena Branch Library

Program Description:
Learn about the fascinating soils in Beaufort District. Dr. Randy James will share many interesting secrets of our soils, from the top, all the way down to the phosphate bedrock. He will also discuss the fascinating, multiyear project, full of various pieces and parts, that finally allowed him to determine just how old our local soils are. Surprising stuff! As Dr. Dirt often says, “Why look up, when you can look down?” 
Space is limited. First come, first seated; Doors open at 1:30 PM for seating. 

Speaker Biography: Dr. Randy James has a PhD in soils, and is a Professor Emeritus with the Ohio State University, College of Food, Agriculture & Environmental Sciences. He has lived in Beaufort for over 15 years, does a lot of volunteer work in the community, and is endlessly fascinated with our dirt.

03 March 2025

Reading Room Display - "Hero of Two Worlds" by Sydney Whiteside

As per usual, the parts in italics are mine. Everything else was written by the BDC's Library Assistant, Sydney Whiteside. -- gmc

Happy March! When you think of the month of March, it’s likely that you think of Spring and the anticipation of warmer weather. Grace assigned me this topic several months ago - because planning for the Lafayette 200 celebration spearheaded by Historic Beaufort Foundation began before I was hired! Besides what the BDC and Beaufort Branch are doing, other events held in his honor include contests, a procession down Bay Street to the John Mark Verdier House, lectures, dancing at the Arsenal sponsored by the Beaufort History Museum, and historical interpreter Mark Schneider who has dedicated his life to studying the life of the Marquis de Lafayette.

On March 18, 1825, Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, more commonly known as the Marquis de La Fayette, visited our very own county seat. This month we are celebrating the 200th anniversary of Lafayette’s visit to Beaufort (see below for more about the Library's programs). Though his visit was quite short, he left a mark on our small town.

For a general overview of Lafayette’s life, read "Lafayette Visits Beaufort," a post recently updated here on Connections.  His heroism and devotion toward both France and the United States resulted in one biography of Lafayette receiving the title Hero of Two Worlds. I like that so much I am also titling this month's display: “Hero of Two Worlds”.  

The layout of the case is as follows: 

  • Shelf 1 - Who was Lafayette? 

  • Shelf 2 - Lafayette in South Carolina 

  • Shelf 3 - Accounts of Lafayette's visit  

  • Shelf 4 - The Lafayette House (AKA the John Mark Verdier House)  


The first shelf of the display serves as an overview of who Lafayette was and why he is such an important historical figure. He was deemed as the “Hero of Two Worlds,” but this title is often times debated by our French counterparts. To America, Lafayette is seen as a champion of the Revolutionary War. He saw passion and power in our country’s cause which led him to offer his assistance in our fight for independence. Across the sea in France, although Lafayette served in the National Assembly and assisted in the launch of their Revolution, he was often viewed as too liberal in their political climate. Over time, the French Revolutionary Jacobins reached a point where Lafayette believed they’d gone too far. Jacobin party members discerned his lack of involvement and felt he had abandoned them. For this reason, Lafayette would never be memorialized in the Panthéon, where France buries their most significant historical figures. However back during his tour, Lafayette was the most famous man in America - and one of the most beloved.  

Front and center you will see The Story of the Life of Lafayette by Eliza Ware Farrar (1831). It is essentially a story within a story. A young boy named Henry Moreton is discussing well known historical figures such as Alexander, Caesar, and Napoleon and explaining how monumental they were. However, Henry’s father states that Henry has “seen one of the greatest men ever figured in any history”. Henry is confused and attempts to guess who his father is referring to and is soon reminded of how he has seen Lafayette in person before. Over the course of multiple weeks, Henry’s father recounts Lafayette’s remarkable life and proves to his son why he believes Lafayette to be the “greatest” historical figure to ever exist. This is one of my favorite books in our collection, so of course I had to include it. Our copy was published in 1831 and is only the size of my hand. Considering its age of 194 years, we try to handle it as little as possible. Thankfully, the book has been digitized and is available online through sources such as Google Books, Internet Archive, and Hathitrust. However, it is cool to see the book in person.  

To the left is The Fabric of Liberty: The Society of the Cincinnati of the State of South Carolina by Alexander Moore (2012). This book covers the history of the Society of the Cincinnati and also contains several mentions of Lafayette. The Society of the Cincinnati was made up of officers and later the descendants of Patriot officers. Although Moore focuses specifically on the South Carolina chapter of the Society of the Cincinnati, groups were formed in each of the original thirteen states. Their main purpose was to offer support to those who served and struggled throughout the time of the Revolutionary War. It is America’s oldest patriotic organization and is still active today. There are quite a few mentions of Lafayette, but some of the most important include his arrival to the continent, his relationship with Washington, and his extensive tour of the south. 

On the opposite side is Lafayette: Prisoner of State (2010), in which Paul S. Spaulding uses primary resources such as police and military records as well as personal accounts to dissect Lafayette's five-year long captivity. Lafayette attempted to flee during the overturn of France's constitution; However, he was intercepted by Austrian and Prussian troops who were set on invading France. This is an extremely interesting source due to the fact that until 2010, no one had ever completed such an extensive study of Lafayette’s imprisonment. Spaulding is often applauded for his research and dedication to fitting all of these puzzle pieces of first-hand accounts together to form an overarching picture of Lafayette’s capture as well as his release 

The second shelf consists of retellings of Lafayette’s visit to South Carolina. He travelled to Beaufort, Camden, Charleston, Columbia, Cheraw, and Edisto Island before heading to Savannah. Lafayette stayed in Charleston for three whole days, which is significantly longer than his typical stays on his tour of America.

Pinned to the back of the case you will see a poem titled "La Fayette Lands." It was written by Dubose Heyward and published in 1922 in his book of poetry entitled Carolina Chansons: Legends of the Low Country. The book itself is located front and center. I was thrilled to find this while I was meandering through the stacks to learn more about the BDC's holdings. (The poetry section is one of my favorites so I often end up there.) This is a beautifully written poem about Lafayette's arrival in South Carolina in 1777 to join the American Revolution.

Our Library Specialist Cassandra Knoppel loves the first stanza on page 39

A V-shaped ripple wrinkling from its jaws,                                                                            Slides noiselessly across the swells,                                                                                        Leading the swinging boat's crew to the beach;                                                                  And all the world slides up--                                                                                               And then the stars slide down--                                                                                                 As ocean breathes; while evening falls,                                                                             And destiny is being rowed ashore.

while my favorite is the final stanza on page 41:

Down in the library, The Marquis, writing back to old Auvergne, Has sanded down the ink; Again the quill pen squeaks: "A ship will sail tomorrow back to France, By special providence for you, dear wife; Tonight there will be toasts to Washington, To our good Louis and his Antoinette-- There will be toasts tonight for la Fayette ......." He melts the wax; Look, how the candle gutters at the flame! And now he seals the letter with his ring.    
To the left you will see Tales of Beaufort by Nell S. Graydon (1991). This book contains many well known as well as some more obscure stories about Beaufort. There is even a small section dedicated to the Lafayette house that recounts the night he arrived in Beaufort in 1825. Graydon wrote that many homes in the area were preparing for Lafayette’s arrival, including the Verdier and Barnwell homes; the latter often being referred to as “The Castle” (which is not "The Castle" at 411 Craven Street, but "Barnwell's Castle, one of the former Beaufort County courthouses - gmc). Beaufortonians worked tirelessly to decorate the town before Lafayette made landfall. Barnwell Castle was “dressed” for an extravagant ball while an arch of roses and trail of flowers led to the Verdier house. At midnight, much later than anticipated, Lafayette’s ship came ashore. With a dense schedule to keep to, he could only stay for a few hours. He did not want to disappoint the kind and welcoming people of Beaufort, so he stood on the porch of the Verdier house to speak to those who traveled from near and far to see the general. (Unfortunately, much of Graydon's version of the events on that night are not substantiated by primary source material from 1825. - gmc)

To the right is Charles Fraser written by Alice Ravenel Huger Smith (1967) which provides a complete overview of his life and accomplishments. Among those accomplishments was the opportunity to meet Lafayette and paint a portrait of him. Fraser was born in Charleston and resided there for most of his life. He attended school to study law but later found his calling in the world of art. Throughout all his years of painting, he was able to paint at least one member of almost every family prominent in Charleston during the first half of the nineteenth century. He was best known for creating miniature portraits. Fraser was able to paint a watercolor miniature portrait of Lafayette during his visit to Charleston, a few days before he arrived in Beaufort. This portrait usually is on display in Charleston’s City Hall along with numerous other historical figures.   

The third shelf is dedicated to firsthand accounts of Lafayette’s visit to Beaufort. The BDC is fortunate to have copies of multiple primary sources that thoroughly describe the brief but memorable night of March 18, 1825.  

The first account I have to share with you comes from Hetty Barnwell. It is a letter dated March 25, 1825 from the Barnwell Family Papers held at the College of Charleston. She states that she arrived in Beaufort the previous Thursday as the town was anticipating for Lafayette to arrive on Friday. He was expected to land ashore around two in the afternoon; however, it was not until midnight that the townspeople were alerted of his arrival. There was then a procession that led Lafayette to what she refers to as “Mr. Wescot’s” property. Hetty referred to the procession as “so handsome” and was terribly upset that she was not able to see it in the daylight. On the other hand, Hetty reflects on how “very beautiful” the lights had shined onto the plumes of the guards. As is consistently reported, he stayed a very short time. Hetty states that he only stayed “long enough to shake hands all around and eat supper”.  


On the opposing side of Hetty’s account is Port Royal Under Six Flags by Katherine M. Jones (1960). This story contains a few perspectives of Lafayette’s visit. The first is from his secretary Auguste Levasseur who describes Lafayette's visit on Edisto Island. The other excerpt is from the Southern Patriot and Commercial Advisor, a Charleston newspaper that recounted how the Marquis spent his time in Beaufort. Upon his arrival he was met by a committee who led a procession to a reception room where citizens were gathered for opening remarks. Nearby was a ballroom. This specific source states that he remained in the ballroom for three hours and was then led back to the landing point.

Francis Richard Lubbock, a native of Beaufort who became Governor of Texas, states in Six Decades in Texas or Memoirs of Francis Richard Lubbock (1900) that he was 9 years old when Lafayette came to Beaufort on the Henry Schultz, a steamboat owned and operated that fateful day by his father, Dr. Henry Thomas Willis Lubbock. A typo gives the year of Lafayette's arrival as "1824" rather than 1825. Lubbock also says that the ball was held at "Mrs. Elliott's, [at which] I had the honor of being presented to the illustrious general, and complimented by him for my manliness and patriotism." (p. 5). The mayor of Beaufort (called the "Intendant" back then) was William Elliott, III and his family lived in what we call The Anchorage now. - gmc  

As you have most likely noticed, details of Lafayette’s visit differ between retellings; however, the one detail we know for certain is that he only stayed a few hours - sometime after dark -- before re-boarding the steamboat to head to Savannah.

An interesting source I wanted to include comes from the Beaufort County Historical Society Papers that are housed here in the BDC. Centered on the shelf, BCHS Paper #20 is titled The Golden Age in Beaufort: Social and Cultural Aspects and was written by Margaret Raney Scheper in 1952. Scheper compiled numerous descriptions of historic Beaufort from the early to mid-nineteenth century, which she believed to be the town's “golden age”. A small portion of this study is dedicated to the visit of Lafayette. Scheper states that his visit was the “outstanding event of 1825”. She provides an overview of his visit and then recounts the pervious two sources I have shared with you: Hetty Barnwell’s letter and the Southern Patriot newspaper report. 

The final shelf focuses on the history of the John Mark Verdier House, which is often (erroneously it seems from recent historical inquiry) referred to as the Lafayette Building. Pinned to the back of the case is a surrogate of a pamphlet created by the Historic Beaufort Foundation. The house was built on “the Bay” in the 1790’s by John Mark Verdier. He had an aptitude for architectural design as well as an extremely particular vision for this house. The house would be built in an Adam-style which draws from 18th century neoclassicalism and features high ceilings, curved walls, and domes. This technique was strategically showcased in the second-floor ballroom as well as the foyer, which connected to the balcony from which Lafayette purportedly addressed the assembled Beaufortonians. 

Speaking of Lafayette’s local legend, it is the only reason the house is still here today. Here in the BDC, we have a copy of The John Mark Verdier House researched and written by Colin Brooker (1997). Brooker, an architect as well as an historic preservation consultant, is well known for his work in the area. This booklet has everything one would need to know about the Verdier house. It contains information about the lot itself, the Verdier family, the house and its architecture, a well as a preservation plan for the house.  

The process of saving the Verdier House from being destroyed sparked the historic preservation movement in 1940’s Beaufort. Over time, the house began to gradually decay due to a lack of proper maintenance and transformed into a rooming house that was under threat of being condemned. That was until the town came together to share the stories of Lafayette’s visit that had been passed down multiple generations. Beaufortonians declared that the Lafayette Building was a crucial part of the town’s history; the Marquis had stood there! So, in 1945, Chlotilde Martin formed the Committee to Save the Lafayette Building. With the help of the remaining Verdier heirs, the Beaufort Museum, and William Levin, the committee was able to gather enough funds to gain possession of the property. Throughout the following years, the Historic Beaufort Foundation made endless repairs to reform the house and convert it into a house museum that the public could then tour. The Historic Beaufort Foundation has more information about the house and tours on its website.

The needlework implements and artifacts are on loan from Mary Lou Brewton since we'll be hosting our "Waiting for Lafayette" programs.

I hope you’ve enjoyed learning a bit about the Marquis visit to Beaufort. This is only the beginning of this month’s festivities!

The Beaufort County Library's contribution are several - and all available free of charge but registration is required:

  • The Beaufort Branch's Children's Department are doing crafts on March 6th and playing 19th century games on March 12th for the kids to celebrate the Local History Red Letter Day a bit early. Space is limited; Registration is required. Call 843-255-6441 to reserve a spot. 
  • The Beaufort Branch and the BDC are co-sponsoring "Waiting for Lafayette" Needlecraft sessions the afternoon of March 12th. Session 1 will be embroidery with Jade Weaver 1 PM - 2 PM; Session 2 will be quilting with Jane Pfarner and other members of the Sea Island Quilters from 2:30 PM - 3:30 PM. We'll be in the Beaufort Branch's Children's Programming Room. Space is limited; Registration is required. Call 843-255-6441 to reserve a spot in either (or both) sessions. (Yes, this is the same number. The Children's department is keeping the registrations for both the youth and adult sessions.)
  • I will be giving a very brief overview of Lafayette's long relationship with President James Monroe and about Lafayette's visit to Beaufort at various times during the afternoon on March 12 in the Children's Programming Room. 
  • On Tuesday March 18, the BDC will have a table set up on the 200 block of Scott Street along with some other groups from 11:00 AM to 3:00 PM to honor the day that the most famous man in America came to call. 

If you are interested in any of the materials I have shared today, or wish to explore our collection for yourself, walk-ins are accepted but appointments are encouraged. To make an appointment, send an email to bdc@bcgov.net or give us a call at 843-255-6468. I hope to hear from you soon! 

Works Cited 

Brooker, C. (1997). The John Mark Verdier House. Historic Beaufort Foundation. 

Frarr, J. (1831). The Story of the Life of Lafayette. Hilliard, Gray, Little and Wilkins.  

Graydon, N. S. (1991). Tales of Beaufort. Sandlapper Publishing. 

Heyward, D. and Allen, A. (1922). Carolina Chansons: Legends of the Low Country. The MacMillan Company. 

Jones, K. M. (1960). Port Royal Under Six Flags. Bobbs-Merrill.  

Klamkin, M. (1975). The Return of Lafayette. Charles Scribner's Sons.  

Moore, A. (2012). The Fabric of Liberty: The Society of the Cincinnati of the State of South Carolina. Home House Press 

Smith, A. R. H. (1967). Charles Fraser. Garnier & Company.  

Spaulding, P. S. (2010). Lafayette: Prisoner of State. University of South Carolina Press.