The Library system will be closed Tuesday, July 4, 2017 to celebrate the birth of our nation. All branches of the
Beaufort County Library system will be closed on to observe
Independence Day. The library system will resume normal operating hours on
Wednesday, July 5.
Focusing on local history, Gullah culture, genealogy, natural history,and archaeology of lowcountry South Carolina's historic Beaufort, Hampton and Jasper counties.
29 June 2017
23 June 2017
Celebrate Liberty Days with Free Lecture and Tours at Select Locations
Few people know that South Carolina had the most Revolutionary War military engagements. The textbooks imply that most of the fighting was concentrated in Virginia, around New York, and in Massachusetts and whatever happened in the Southern colonies was a little consequence. How wrong all those textbooks have been. Few people in the South were left untouched by the conflict.
There was no consensus in the American colonies that independence from Great Britain was the only or even the wisest course of action to remedy the defects of colonial rule by George III and his representatives. 700,000 American residents were not free to conduct their lives as they themselves saw fit in 1776 for there were at least that many enslaved people in the American colonies. Thus the tension between the ideologies of liberty and enslavement was present from the start of this nation and has consequences that we feel even today. For most of the Revolutionary War period, congressional authority rested only on a state's willingness to comply with directives. Particularly troublesome was the economic dislocation caused by the war and the continual fear of slave revolts and social disturbances.
During the war, some of the heaviest fighting took place here. The landscape was ruined. Dr. Lawrence Rowland states: "The Beaufort District was devastated by the Revolutionary War. Most of the major plantations on Hilton Head Island and the mainland of St. Luke's and Prince William parishes were partially or wholly destroyed." (Rowland et al., The History of Beaufort County South Carolina, volume 1: 1514 - 1861) And the war was costly. The war effort cost South Carolinians approximately $120 million. With a white population of less than 100,000 people, South Carolina was the only state to pay its full requisition to the Continental Congress in 1783 but by doing so, it removed specie from circulation and helped fuel inflation.
The Rev. Archibald Simpson, a Presbyterian minister from Scotland who once served in churches in Colleton and Beaufort Districts from 1754 - 1772 returned in 1783 to find:
The
kickoff event for Liberty Days here in Beaufort and Jasper County is a
talk about the Revolutionary War heritage of South Carolina sponsored by the Beaufort County Historical Society and the Beaufort District Collection. Douglas Bostick, Executive Director of the South Carolina Battleground Preservation Trust, will speak in the Beaufort Branch Library Meeting Room on June 28 at 2 pm. 85 seats should be more than enough spots for a summertime library program. If you want the security of knowing for sure that you'll get a seat come early, pick up your ticket, and then browse all that Beaufort Branch Library has to offer. We'll have a display set up of Revolutionary War books and videos you can check out. 85 free tickets will be distributed beginning at 1 pm. Seating will begin at 1:30 pm. The session will be closed when all 85 tickets are taken. Please: Limit of 2 tickets per customer.
Mary Lou Brewton, immediate past President of the Beaufort County Historical Society, convinced many of the area museums to help the annual Liberty Week commemoration begun by the South Carolina Historical Society as Carolina Day. Now in its 2nd year as a week long celebration of programs and events in Charleston, the South Carolina Historical Society reached out to Beaufort County and the Beaufort County Historical Society led the way. Mary Lou has done a fabulous job (as usual) wrangling the cultural heritage folks into participating. She's coordinated 3 days worth of activities to allow you to join in the celebration. Here's an outline of what's on tap for Liberty Days in our area:
On
Friday, June 30th
the following museums are offering free admission from 10:30 am --3:30 pm:
Hilton Head:
Coastal Discovery Museum, 70 Honey Horn Drive
Heritage Library: Tours of Fort Mitchel and Zion Cemetery
Daufuskie:
Daufuskie Island Historic Foundation: Billie Burns Museum
Ridgeland:
Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage
Bluffton:
Bluffton Historical Preservation Society: Heyward House
Port Royal:
Historic Port Royal Foundation: Union Church, 11th St.
Beaufort:
Historic Beaufort Foundation: Verdier House, 801 Bay St.
Beaufort History Museum, 713 Craven St.
On Saturday, July 1st the following museums are offering free admission from 10:30 am – 3:30 pm:
Parris Island:
Parris Island Historical & Museum Society: Parris Island Museum Please note: Driver's license, vehicle registration and proof of insurance are required to enter Parris Island.
St. Helena:
Friends of Fort Fremont: Fort Fremont-Land's End
Port Royal Sound Foundation: Maritime Center, 310 Okatie Hwy, (Hwy 170 at Chechessee River)
Beaufort:
A word of caution: Please check out the website of the organization for details regarding reservations. Some may require reservations to participate.
Partners in Liberty Week include the South Carolina Historical Society, the Beaufort County Historical Society, the Beaufort County Library, the Beaufort History Museum, the Coastal Discovery Museum, the Heritage Library, the Daufuskie Island Historic Foundation, Historic Beaufort Foundation, Historic Port Royal Foundation, Bluffton Historical Preservation Society, Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage, Parris Island Historical & Museum Society, Friends of Fort Fremont, the Port Royal Sound Foundation Maritime Center, the Santa Elena History Center, and the Sons of the American Revolution. Additional funding provided by the Humanities SC.
![]() |
(Beaufort District Collection Print #138) |
During the war, some of the heaviest fighting took place here. The landscape was ruined. Dr. Lawrence Rowland states: "The Beaufort District was devastated by the Revolutionary War. Most of the major plantations on Hilton Head Island and the mainland of St. Luke's and Prince William parishes were partially or wholly destroyed." (Rowland et al., The History of Beaufort County South Carolina, volume 1: 1514 - 1861) And the war was costly. The war effort cost South Carolinians approximately $120 million. With a white population of less than 100,000 people, South Carolina was the only state to pay its full requisition to the Continental Congress in 1783 but by doing so, it removed specie from circulation and helped fuel inflation.
The Rev. Archibald Simpson, a Presbyterian minister from Scotland who once served in churches in Colleton and Beaufort Districts from 1754 - 1772 returned in 1783 to find:
All ... was desolation ... every field, every plantation showed marks of ruin and devastation ... The British & the American armies having carried off all my fine breed of horses, and Several hundred head of cattle ... Was all day entertained with the account of the most horrid transactions of the British Army & the Loyalists, during the war.

Mary Lou Brewton, immediate past President of the Beaufort County Historical Society, convinced many of the area museums to help the annual Liberty Week commemoration begun by the South Carolina Historical Society as Carolina Day. Now in its 2nd year as a week long celebration of programs and events in Charleston, the South Carolina Historical Society reached out to Beaufort County and the Beaufort County Historical Society led the way. Mary Lou has done a fabulous job (as usual) wrangling the cultural heritage folks into participating. She's coordinated 3 days worth of activities to allow you to join in the celebration. Here's an outline of what's on tap for Liberty Days in our area:
Hilton Head:
Coastal Discovery Museum, 70 Honey Horn Drive
Heritage Library: Tours of Fort Mitchel and Zion Cemetery
Daufuskie:
Daufuskie Island Historic Foundation: Billie Burns Museum
Ridgeland:
Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage
Bluffton:
Bluffton Historical Preservation Society: Heyward House
Port Royal:
Historic Port Royal Foundation: Union Church, 11th St.
Beaufort:
Historic Beaufort Foundation: Verdier House, 801 Bay St.
Beaufort History Museum, 713 Craven St.
On Saturday, July 1st the following museums are offering free admission from 10:30 am – 3:30 pm:
Parris Island:
Parris Island Historical & Museum Society: Parris Island Museum Please note: Driver's license, vehicle registration and proof of insurance are required to enter Parris Island.
St. Helena:
Friends of Fort Fremont: Fort Fremont-Land's End
Port Royal Sound Foundation: Maritime Center, 310 Okatie Hwy, (Hwy 170 at Chechessee River)
Beaufort:
Santa Elena Foundation: Santa
Elena History Center, 1501 Bay St.
A word of caution: Please check out the website of the organization for details regarding reservations. Some may require reservations to participate.
Partners in Liberty Week include the South Carolina Historical Society, the Beaufort County Historical Society, the Beaufort County Library, the Beaufort History Museum, the Coastal Discovery Museum, the Heritage Library, the Daufuskie Island Historic Foundation, Historic Beaufort Foundation, Historic Port Royal Foundation, Bluffton Historical Preservation Society, Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage, Parris Island Historical & Museum Society, Friends of Fort Fremont, the Port Royal Sound Foundation Maritime Center, the Santa Elena History Center, and the Sons of the American Revolution. Additional funding provided by the Humanities SC.
21 June 2017
Heritage Walking Tour: Robert Smalls, 1839-1915
Latest update 25 January 2022: I deleted images no longer available and references to the Cate Lineberry Author Book Talks held on June 22, 2017. -- Grace Cordial
You can learn more about his amazing story by following the links on our Wordpress blog entry about him and/or by checking out some of the materials listed there. If you are in downtown Beaufort and are able to walk 1 to 2 miles without difficulty, then perhaps you will want to take this heritage walking tour. It is based on one created by Penn Center in 2005 for a Beaufort County Library/Penn Center co-sponsored seminar near the release of Adrina Ifill's documentary, Congressman Robert Smalls: A Patriot's Journey from Slavery to Capitol Hill.
Stop #1: 911
CRAVEN STREET Robert Smalls Bust and Burial Site in the Tabernacle Baptist
Church Cemetery
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Robert Smalls Bust by Marion Talmage Etheredge |
Stop #2: 920 BAY STREET “Abraham Cockcroft House / Beaufort Customs House”
This building
was constructed as a residence about 1857. The Greek Revival styled front of
the house faces the Beaufort River. The structure looked over wharves and docks
on the river making it an ideal location for the Beaufort Customs House. Robert Smalls worked here as the Collector of
Customs from 1889 until his retirement in 1912. William Joseph Thomas bought
the building in 1932 converting the Bay Street façade into retail and office
space.
![]() |
Customs House, 920 Bay Street as it appeared in 1860s (Beaufort County Library) |
On your way along Bay Street as you head towards New Street, you will pass some buildings that Robert Smalls would have passed himself as he walked home from the Customs House. Linger at the base of the Woods Bridge at Cannon Park to enjoy the view. If it's low tide, breathe in the wonderfully evocative smell of pluff mud.
Stop #3: 414 NEW STREET “William Johnson House”
Samuel J. Bampfield bought this two storied frame
house around the time of his marriage to Smalls’s daughter Elizabeth on April
24, 1877. The structure sits on a tabby foundation and may have been built as
early as the 1770s based on architectural studies done in 2006. Bampfield
participated in the political affairs of the town and county during the
Reconstruction era serving as a state representative, newspaper editor, Clerk
of Court and postmaster. After her
husband’s death in 1899, Elizabeth served as Postmistress until 1908 after
which she became secretary to Rossa B. Cooley, head of Penn School. In 1910
Elizabeth and her children moved to Charlotte, NC where she died at age 101 in
1959. She never remarried. Samuel, Elizabeth and seven of their children are
buried in the Mercy Cemetery at the corner of Boundary and Lafayette Streets on
US Highway 21.
Stop #4: 606 NORTH STREET “Whipper House”
![]() |
Copyright undetermined. Not a BDC image. |
Both Smalls and prominent Black attorney and politician William J. Whipper owned this antebellum property at separate periods after the Civil War. Whipper attended the SC Constitutional convention of 1868, served as a State Representative 1868-1872 and again from 1875-1876, and was Beaufort County Probate Judge, 1876- 1888. Smalls and he became political rivals beginning with the election of 1872. After arguing vigorously against black disenfranchisement during the SC Constitutional Convention of 1895, Whipper refused to sign the document as did all the other Beaufort County delegates, including Robert Smalls. Whipper died in Beaufort in 1907. It is believed that both his wife, Francis Rollin Whipper and he are buried in unmarked graves in the Wesley United Methodist Church yard at the corner of Prince and West Streets.
Stop #5: 601 NEW STREET “First African Baptist Church”
First African Baptist Church was built in the Gothic
Revival style circa 1861 by the Baptist Church of Beaufort for its black members
who far outnumbered the white congregants. The black congregation took over the
building in 1863. Robert Smalls helped found the congregation and attended
services. Needing funds to repair Civil War damage in their own church, the
Baptist Church of Beaufort sold the structure to the congregation’s deacons for
$300 in 1868, at a considerable discount. The building “was enlarged and
beautified” before 1873. Smalls family weddings and funerals were held here.
Stop #6: 511 PRINCE STREET “Henry McKee House / Robert Smalls House”
Likely built around 1810, this house was owned by the McKee
family at the time when Robert Smalls was born into slavery on this property in
1839. Working as a crewman aboard the steamer Planter in Charleston in
1862, Robert Smalls earned freedom for his family by stealing the steamship and
delivering it to the Union Blockading Squadron. Small purchased this house at a
tax sale in occupied Beaufort in January 1864. The DeTreville Family who had purchased
the property in 1855 sued to regain title to the house after the Civil War. The
US Supreme Court ruled in favor of Smalls thus deciding the validity of all the
wartime property tax sales in South Carolina. Robert Smalls lived in this house
throughout his busy political career as state legislator, state senator and
five-term U.S. Congressman. He died in the house on February 23, 1915. It
remained in the Smalls family until 1940. The house was added to the National
Register in 1975.
Stop #7: 708 EAST STREET “The Tree House”
This property gets its nickname from its situation around a beautiful great oak tree. The structure originally served as a home on the Emmon’s Farm located at the corner of Carteret and Boundary streets. Smalls moved it to East Street in 1910. The wing was added by a later owner.
Stop #8: 508 DUKE Street "The Smalls-Nash Cottage"
This structure was built by Robert Smalls as a rental property in 1890. It has two fireplaces placed back-to-back inside. It may have served as a wash house. Dolly Nash, a direct descendant of Robert Smalls, and her husband John willed the property to Historic Beaufort Foundation (HBF) in 2006. HBF renovated and restored the structure in 2007.
Stop #9: 715 NEW STREET
“Samuel Bampfield House”
Robert Smalls purchased this circa 1830 property for Bampfield to house his large family. Originally only 2 rooms over 2 rooms, extensions were added to the rear and double-porches were added to the front of the house.
Robert Smalls purchased this circa 1830 property for Bampfield to house his large family. Originally only 2 rooms over 2 rooms, extensions were added to the rear and double-porches were added to the front of the house.
Stop #10: CORNER OF CARTERET AND WASHINGTON STREETS Former “William Fuller House” (razed)
Colonel William Fuller built a house on these grounds in 1829. The Beaufort School Board of Education purchased the property in 1867 to open a public school for blacks. The deed had a proviso that the property always be used by citizens of Beaufort for school purposes. The board was mostly African American and consisted of Robert Smalls, Jonathan J. Wright, William J. Whipper, Richard H. Gleaves, London S. Langley, Walter Fuller, Isaac Simmons, Prince Rivers, R.F. Bythewood, Rev. Arthur Waddell, J.J. Cohen, George Waddell, and J.C. Rivers. In 1925 the Board of Education decided to raze the deteriorated black school and build a new school for black students to be called Robert Smalls High School at another site. The property is part of the University of South Carolina Historic Beaufort Campus complex today.
OPTIONAL Stop #11: It's probably too far for most folks to walk, but the Beaufort County ROBERT SMALLS GOVERNMENT COMPLEX sits on the CORNER OF BOUNDARY STREET AND RIBAUT ROAD on the site of the former Robert Smalls Schools complex. When the public school for black students located in the former William Fuller house closed, a new school was built in 1924 at the intersection of Ribaut Road and Boundary Street. Named for Robert Smalls, this school complex at various times included both primary and secondary education facilities for black students. This school integrated as did all Beaufort County schools in 1965. The Robert Smalls High School was razed in the mid-1980s to make way for the current Beaufort County government administration buildings. A new integrated Robert Smalls Middle School opened in 1985 on W.K. Alston Drive, named after the longest serving principal of Robert Smalls High School, W. Kent Alston. Alston was principal of the Robert Smalls High School from 1938 until 1962.
18 June 2017
Coming Soon ... Latest Robert Smalls Book & Liberty Days
We're happy that Beaufort County Historical Society agreed to be a co-sponsor of our June programs. We're also going to try out a new way of ticketing local history programs since we've heard grumbling about the reservation system for the Beaufort History Museum / Beaufort County Library local history series. A new system may work better; it may not work better; but we are going to give it a go.
Here's what we've decided to test: We'll have 85 free tickets available at Beaufort Branch beginning at 10 am on June 22nd for the Lineberry program. We'll distribute the free tickets until they are gone. In the afternoon, we'll have 100 free tickets available for distribution at the Lineberry program at Bluffton Branch beginning at 2 pm. The difference in the number of available tickets is because of the size of the respective meeting spaces. Bluffton Branch's Community Room is larger than Beaufort Branch's Meeting Room. You'll need to drop by and pick up up to 2 tickets - one for you and one for a significant person in your life. Free tickets will be available beginning at 1 hour before program time.
Thursday, June 22 at 3pm | BDC@ BLU, 120 Palmetto Way, Bluffton |Ages
12 - Adult
Book talk, sale and signing with author Cate Lineberry whose latest book recounts the amazing story of Robert Smalls’s escape from slavery. Free. Ticketed. Co-sponsor: Beaufort County Historical Society
The following week, we will celebrate Liberty Week in concert with the South Carolina Historical Society, the Beaufort County Historical Society and many of our cultural heritage neighbors in Beaufort County and Jasper County. First up is a Carolina Day lecture on June 28th.
Carolina Day is the annual commemoration of the Battle of Sullivan's Island, the first significant American victory over the British. By winning the Patriots protected the critical port of Charleston. The British would not occupy the state's capital until 1780. Come hear Executive Director of the South Carolina Battleground Preservation Trust Doug Bostick talk about the our state’s Revolutionary War heritage on Carolina Day, June 28th at 2 pm in the Beaufort Branch Meeting Room, 1st floor, 311 Scott Street. 85 Free tickets available for pickup at 1 pm on the day of the program. Co-sponsor: Beaufort County Historical Society
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