22 March 2015

Program Date and Time Change




Event Name:  Preserving Your Family Treasures with Grace (Preservation)
Short Description of Event: Learn basic strategies to extend the life of your paper-based family treasures during Preservation Week 2015 with the Library system’s archivist, Grace Cordial.
Time and Date of Event: Tuesday, April 28 at 1 pm
Location of Event: BDC@ Bluffton Branch Library, 120 Palmetto Way, Bluffton, SC 29910
Price of Event: Free; Maximum 20 people; Ages 12 – Adults
Contact info: Grace Cordial, gracec@bcgov.net, 843-255-6468

15 March 2015

New Exhibit Opens March 16th

 
We highlight Women's History this month through a new exhibit, "Heart of the Home: Kitchen Archaeology at Mont Repose" and a free lecture.

Because a kitchen collapsed leaving artifacts in situ, archaeologists got an unique opportunity to explore the domestic duties and lifeways of women and girls on an 18th and 19th century Beaufort District rice plantation near Coosawhatchie. The artifacts recovered during the dig explain some of those female responsibilities. The research process undertaken to document the site and former uses of the property adds considerable knowledge about what life was like in Beaufort District's county seat. The exhibit is curated by Georgia Southern University Public History Graduate Student, Lilith Logan and her advisor, Dr. Sue Moore.

The exhibit will be on display Monday, March 16 – Friday, June 12 10 am – 5 pm weekdays, except April 22 and May 25. (The Library is closed Wed., Apr. 22 and Mon., May 25).

We offer special viewing hours on those dates when we have a BDC Saturday or evening program. On these dates, you can see the exhibit and attend a BDC local history program:

Saturday, March 21: Dr. Sue Moore and Lilith Logan of Georgia Southern University explain the artifacts relating to the “Heart of the Home” exhibit. You can view the exhibit that Saturday beginning at 11 am until the lecture starts at 1 pm.

Saturday, April 18: Local author, Charles Wersler is having an author book talk and sale about Last Ferry to Beaufort: The Life and Times of Capt. Willie Roberts, 1865 - 1952.  You can view the "Heart of the Home" exhibit from 11 am until the lecture starts at 1 pm.

Thursday, April 23: The "Heart of the Home" exhibit can be viewed from 10 am to 6 pm. Normally the area would be closed at 5 pm but because Dr. Chester dePratter will be in the BDC to share his deep knowledge of the Santa Elena site at 6 pm, we can add an extra hour of access to the exhibit.  

We thank the Beaufort Chapter, Archaeological Society of South Carolina for its co-sponsorship of the "Heart of the Home" exhibit and supplemental lecture.  The Chapter is also co-sponsoring the Santa Elena talk in April.

11 March 2015

Tracing the History of Your House

"I want to know who used to live in my house or on my property" is one of the most common reasons given for a visit to the Beaufort District Collection. Sometimes the person is lucky and there is already a vertical file of materials about the property, the property is listed on the National Register of Historic Places or a previous owner was of such local renown (or infamy) that it is easy to find the information. Most of the time, though, the answer is harder to uncover. BDC staff is here to guide you through the library-based parts of this process. 

What steps are involved in "Tracing the History of Your House?"

Step 1: Deeds 
Investigating the title to a specific piece of property regarding current and past ownership is not a library activity. Title searching is a Deeds office activity that most people either do for themselves or hire a professional title researcher to do for them. Librarians do not track property titles. It is important to know who else has owned your property and when the house was built. You should review the information on the Beaufort County’s Register of Deeds pages before you visit or call them: http://rodweb.bcgov.net/searchng/.  

Learn  the County’s identification numbers for your property which can vary through time.

HELPFUL HINT
When you have questions about County records, ask the personnel 
within that particular County office for help. 

Although you may be able to perform some of this work online, please know that you may have to visit the Deeds Office or an offsite storage facility for older files.This information is best secured from Deeds Office personnel. Each state has slightly different rules and procedures so doing a little research in the Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources edited by Alice Eichholz, 2004 (also available online http://www.ancestry.com/wiki/index.php?title=Red_Book:_American_State,_County,_and_Town_Sources) and The Source: A Guidebook to American Genealogy (http://www.ancestry.com/wiki/index.php?title=The_Source:_A_Guidebook_to_American_Genealogy) can be very helpful in guiding your investigations. 

Step 2: Library Research 

A. Obituary Files
When you find names of former owners of your property, you should check those names against our Online Obituary Index file.Obituaries are often wonderful sources of information about former residents of particular houses. The time frame of the obituaries file is 1862-1984, with some early 2000s entries, but the bulk of the obituaries are dated 1882 through 1984. Visit the BDC to see the obituary text card files or look up the obituaries on newspaper microfilm. Call us for details. 
·         Obituary Files Index
http://beaufortcountylibrary.org/obituary-files/public/deadpeople_list.php?a=showall

If a person's death may have been noted elsewhere in this state, give this guide to obituaries in other SC counties a try: 

·         South Carolina Obituary Resources page hosted by the South Carolina State Library 
http://statelibrary.sc.libguides.com/sc-information/sc-obituary-resources 

B. Vertical Files
We maintain a limited number of files on specific properties in the BDC with the list in our Research Room. 

Check for a vertical file on your specific address.  In addition, you may find the contents of these particular vertical files useful:
Historic Districts
Historic Houses
Historic Structures
509 Carteret Street (e.g., Check our catalog for other addresses)

C. Book Resources 
Here are some of the standard titles that discuss historic buildings within Beaufort County that would be prudent for you to check looking for your specific address:

917.579 LOW Historic Resources of the Lowcountry by the Lowcountry Council of Governments, c1979  (All libraries) 
917.5799 BEA Beaufort Historic District: Beaufort, South Carolina National Historic Landmark Documentation, c2000 (BDC)                                           
917.5799 HEL A Guide to Historic Beaufort South Carolina by Helsley c2006 (All libraries)
917.5799 GUI A Guide to Historic Beaufort by Historic Beaufort Foundation, 9th ed., rev., c1999 (BDC, BEA, BLU, HHI, LOB) 
917.5799 HIS Historic Beaufort: A Guide to the Gracious Old Homes, Churches and Other Points of Interest of Beaufort, South Carolina, by Historic Beaufort Foundation, 5th ed, c1985 (BDC, BEA, STH) 
917.57 WOR South Carolina: A Guide to the Palmetto State, c1941 (BDC, BEA, BLU, HHI) 
975.799 HAR Beaufort County Above Ground Historic Resources Survey, c1998  (BDC, BLU, HHI, LOB) Document available as a PDF http://nationalregister.sc.gov/SurveyReports/BeaufortCounty1998SM.pdf. Digitized images of the actual inventory forms from this survey are available at http://www.co.beaufort.sc.us/history/county-history/AboveGroundSurvey/.


D. Beaufort County Historical Society Papers that discuss historic structures in the area
Beaufort District Landmarks and Early Historical Sites
The Catholic Church and the Houses on New Street and Vicinity
Old Houses on the Bluff
Eight Beaufort Homes
Thoughts and Recommendations Concerning the Preservation of Beaufort’s Cultural and Historical    Resources
Bay Street and Beaufort in the 1920's As I Remember It
The Point
Robertville
Old Families of Beaufort: The Stuarts and the Bulls
Old Families of Beaufort: The Talbirds, the Barnwells, and the Chaplins of St. Helena
Purrysburg
Bluffton and the Okatie
Grahamville

E. Additional Resources to Consider

Back Issues of Local Newspapers are available in the BDC Research Room on microfilm. Unfortunately, the newspapers are not indexed.

Consult the Martin Guide to selective newspaper article titles, 1882—1936. You might get lucky.

We have few maps or plats in our holdings that indicate the size or location of individual properties.

Gerhard Spieler’s index to his newspaper column  

View Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps online in the South Carolina Digital Library  http://library.sc.edu/digital/collections/sanborn.html. Choose Beaufort County.

  

05 March 2015

Please Note: By Appointment Only T, W, and Th

This new schedule will be in effect until further notice. Our intent is to return to our former hours when a new Preservation Associate comes aboard and is oriented to BDC services. At this time, we do not have an estimated date when this will occur. 

01 March 2015

Weaving the Stories of Women's Lives Into History

March is National Women's History Month. Each year National Women's History Month employs a unifying theme and recognizes national honorees whose work and lives testify to that theme. The theme for 2015, "Weaving the Stories of Women's Lives,"  presents the opportunity to weave women’s stories – individually and collectively – into the essential fabric of our nation’s history. The nine honorees have each written Caucasian, African-American, Native American, Latina, and Chinese-American women back into the fabric of our nation's history.

To celebrate the BDC is hosting an exhibit and lecture about the lives of mid-19th century white and enslaved women on a nearby plantation as shown through the archaeology uncovered at the site. We are again joined in a partnership with the Beaufort Chapter, Archaeological Society of South Carolina to bring this exhibit and lecture to you.   

"Heart of the Home: Kitchen Archaeology at Mont Repose" Exhibit

A kitchen collapsed and artifacts in situ offer a unique opportunity to explore the domestic duties and lifeways of women and girls on a 19th century Beaufort District plantation. The exhibit is curated by Georgia Southern University Public History Graduate Student, Lilith Logan.

  • Monday, March 16 – Friday, June 12 10 am – 5 pm weekdays, except April 22 and May 25. (The Library is closed Wed., Apr. 22 and Mon., May 25). Special viewing hours on Saturday, March 21, 11 am - 1 pm; Saturday, April 18, 11 am to 1 pm; and Thursday, April 23, 10 am to 6 pm.

On Saturday, March 21, Dr. Sue Moore and Lilith Logan of Georgia Southern University explain the artifacts relating to the “Heart of the Home” exhibit. The lecture begins at 1 pm. You can view the exhibit that Saturday beginning at 11 am until the lecture starts at 1 pm.


As part of her project, Logan has created a TUMBLR blog about the exhibit.