30 August 2017

A Sea Island Lady Celebration at HBF - Slots Going Fast!!!!


Update: Session #1 sold out so quickly that Session #2 has been added. Details are on the HBF website www.historicbeaufort.org.


Some say that A Sea Island Lady is the best book ever written about Beaufort's past. At least the parts about the effect of the Great Sea Island Hurricane and phosphate mining bear obvious signs of diligent historical research. However,  A Sea Island Lady is one of those books one either loves or hates. Many local residents and visitors fall into the "Love" category. To capitalize on all that love, Historic Beaufort Foundation is hosting several fund-raising events in September to celebrate the book and its author, Francis Griswold, an HBF benefactor.

The original session set for 25 September - Dinner & A Lecture "Reading Nineteenth-Century Beaufort in Francis Griswold's A Sea Island Lady"  with Dr. Mollie Barnes $ sold out so quickly that a second session has been added. Tickets are expected to go quickly for Session #2 - which actually so don't delay! Details are on the HBF website www.historicbeaufort.org.

30 September - A Sea Island Lady Walking Tour $

Exhibit about author Francis Griswold in the Verdier House $

Tickets may be ordered online at www.historicbeaufort.org/shop or by calling the HBF office at 843.379.3331.

A reminder:
All units of the Beaufort County Library will be closed on Monday, September 4th in honor of Labor Day. Regular schedule at all locations will resume Tuesday, September 5th.

For now the Beaufort District Collection is usually open Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays, 9 am to 5 pm. Access on Tuesdays and Wednesdays is by advance appointment only. Please make the necessary arrangements by calling 843-255-6468 or by e-mailing bdc@bcgov.net.

Please note: We do not monitor emails or telephone calls after 5pm weekdays, on Saturdays, Sundays, or on holidays. We are not a 24/7/365 work place.

On another topic, the Beaufort Branch Library is going to pilot a curbside delivery service beginning Tuesday, September 5th. Read all about that in the Library's News and Notes.

23 August 2017

The Devastating Sea Island Hurricane of 1893



In the overnight hours of August 27 - 28, 1893 the largest natural disaster to ever befall Beaufort County struck with destructive and deadly force. 

A History of Storms on the South Carolina Coast, a report from the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, summarizes the storm this way:
Category 3 Extreme storm; winds SE 96 mph (Charleston); storm surge approached 20 feet on lower coast; St. Helena and other sea islands (Hilton Head) overflowed in considerable part; at Beaufort “ the water was so high that following the storm a catfish was found gilled on a fence that surrounded the Methodist Church”; property damages assessed in the millions of dollars (perhaps $10 million)’ at least 2000 and perhaps as many as 3000 lives lost in coastal Carolina, primarily at Beaufort, St. Helena, and Lady’s Island, from drowning.  
(Beaufort District Collection)

Susan Hazel Rice (1830 – 1911) of Beaufort describes the Great Sea Island Storm of 1893 in her diary:
Sunday, Aug. 27, 1893  
The wind blew all night & is still blowing as I fear we may get the gale yet. My head aches too. We went to church in morn & was pleased with Lewis sermon from Luke 17-11 "And these are in the world". He is to preach again tonight if it does not storm. Mr W took dinner with us & it rained & blew so hard that he could not go to Port Royal. About 4 oclock the wind rose and at bed time it was a gale so he staid & a blessing he did for the tide was 2 ft deep in our lower story & plastering falling & rain beating in everything.
Monday, Aug. 28, 1893                                                                                                                         What a gale we had all night Every room soaking wet, sashes blowing in & Mr. W & Lewis were all night nailing doors & sashes We all lay on pallets in the sitting room but got no sleep until 4 A.M. When day light came what a scene of desolation. The tin is taken completely off our shed room & blinds blown off & sashes broken. not a dry room in the house & the lower story in dreadful condition. But we are better off than many others. My cow was drowned & most of the chickens. Can't make fire in stove as chimney is broken in & stove full of salt water. Our cistern ruined.
Among the dead, was Susan Hazel Rice's beloved brother, Dr. Gowan Hazel, a physician.
Tues. Aug. 29, 1893
Bright & warm About 3 o'clock yesterday I got a note from Dr. Stuart saying my own Brother was drowned. I cannot believe it & cannot bear it if it is true. Mr. Holmes went down in a rowboat & brought this (sic) remains of the loving brother, getting home about one o'clock this morn. He does not look natural but is a small comfort to be able to look upon his poor discolored face once more, but to think I never shall hear him speak again is too much for me to bear. We buried him at 11 A.M. & I have come to my home where he will never more come. Mr. Wilkins had a very appropriate service & Lewis made the prayer.

In 1959 C. Mabel Burn recalled the storm of her youth, describing some of the Beaufort area damage and relief efforts for the Beaufort County Historical Society.  She recalled the death of Dr. Hazel and others:
There was only one white person lost that I remember of.  It was Dr. Hazal [sic], brother of Mrs. Susan Rice.  He was quarantine doctor on Parris Island at the outgoing sea depot, and he was drowned.  We understood he lost his life in an effort to save the lives of two negro boys.  There was much difficulty in getting the body to the Baptist cemetery, as streets were piled high with debris, but by many windings and sending men ahead with axes to cut debris of trees, etc. the hearse finally made it and he was buried. 

 But on St. Helena and Lady’s Island, hundreds of people were drowned, almost entirely negro, for they had no way to escape, and the people of Beaufort town could not get to them, as there was no bridge to cross the river, boats only could be used, and these were a wreck and sunken so not available.

For weeks men hunted these islands for the bodies, and when found buried them at once, for no funerals could be held. 

Burn was living on the Point when the storm hit causing wide-scale destruction: 

The waves of the sea dashed against houses and on the Point where we were living, all small houses were washed away; not one was left standing when morning came.

Around 1 A.M. there was a furious ringing of our door bell, and a tall Negro man we knew asked if he might bring women and children to our front porch as all their houses were gone, and they had them in boats seeking shelter.  My Father said “No, the piazza is about to go as it is only held up by one column.  Bring them into the house.” So in a room used as a private school room, and equipped with benches and chairs they were sheltered the rest of the night.  Three trips of the big ferry boat were made, bringing 12 to 15 people each trip, so we had around 30 people sheltered for the night.  They had lost everything they possessed except what was on their backs.  When morning came, two old colored people, man and wife were drowned.  One lay at our front door, the other at the back…. 

(Beaufort District Collection http://lcdl.library.cofc.edu/lcdl/catalog/lcdl:87214)
Entire roofs of houses went whirling through the air ... Boards from a house on the next corner from ours, probably 200 ft. away had been torn off and driven end ways through the side of our house.  The house was so badly ruined we had to leave it when the storm was over. …

The water front was a shambles. …

The Steamer “Clifton,” a steam boat which operated between Beaufort and Savannah, was carried by the waves to the bend beyond the Court House [then on Bay Street] and placed right against the bluff. …

(Beaufort District Collection, http://lcdl.library.cofc.edu/lcdl/catalog/lcdl:87212)

Every street in town was piled as high as the house tops with uprooted trees, demolished houses, household furniture, etc. …

For weeks fires were kept burning in the streets and dead bodies of dogs, chickens, etc. were flung in and burned for they could not be buried.

(Beaufort District Collection, http://lcdl.library.cofc.edu/lcdl/catalog/lcdl:87204)
The Sun Dispatch, a newspaper out of Charleston, probably the issue of September 3, 1893 reported about conditions in Beaufort County. Section headings of the article “Out of the Depths” describing the situation in Beaufort County include: The Coroner’s Gruesome Task; Eight Feet Higher than Spring Tide!; Over a Million Dollars Lost; Eighty Per Cent of the Houses Gone; Lowland Crops Utterly Destroyed; Four Thousand at St. Helena Hungry; Senator Verdier’s Story of the Storm; and Money Losses in Beaufort Town among others.  (Unfortunately the photocopy of the article is not complete nor clear enough to result in a decent digital scan. )The article includes several tables of statistical data including one on the number of casualties in Beaufort County as given by the overwhelmed Beaufort County Coroner Wells who acknowledges that the list is not complete.

Between 1000 - 2000 people died as the result of the surging waters and fierce winds that came ashore. A precise count of the dead cannot be made as many bodies were swept out to sea. We know some of the names from Beaufort County Coroner's Inquisition Records. You can read the Inquisition Records in the Beaufort District Collection Research Room during our regular hours of operation.
The Sea Island Hurricane remains the 5th most deadly storm in US history.

Relief efforts were hampered by the extent of the destruction.   The local Relief Committee consisted of six men: George Holmes, Beaufort’s Intendant (Mayor); Robert Smalls, Port Collector; William Lockwood, Banker; Capt. N. Christensen, Hardware Merchant; Thomas F. Walsh, Dispenser (Liquor store owner); E.F. Convonsieur, Railroad Agent, and George W. Ford, Colored [sic]. The Sun Dispatch says that the committee met the previous evening deciding to issue an appeal for immediate relief to “the American people” for the estimated 6000 people in desperate need and that a determination was made that information will not be given to the press until the facts were corroborated.   

Circumstances in the field rapidly overwhelmed the Local Relief Committee.  Governor Ben Tillman, “believing that methodical business management and experience were better,” asked Clara Barton and her Red Cross organization to take charge.  This would be the first hurricane relief effort in the history of the United States Red Cross.  Barton and her staff arrived in Beaufort on September 20 and remained for 10 months.  Much good was accomplished but questions about the uses of the supplies and funds provided by the Red Cross were raised.  
(Beaufort District Collection, SC PRINT #20A)
Other relief workers were criticized.  Personal accounts of the hurricane's effect are replete in Storm Swept Coast by Rachel C. Mather.  Mather ran a Methodist supported School of Negro Girls on the Shell Road [current day site of the Technical College of the Lowcountry] and published the booklet as a means to garner sufficient funds and in-kind donations of food and clothing to assuage suffering.  The $120 spent on publication could have been better spent on actual relief wrote the Palmetto Poston July 5, 1894.
(Beaufort District Collection, Palmetto Post 5 July 1894)

A week later, the Palmetto Post editor wrote "we did her an injustice with the lights now before us, and hasten to remedy the evil.  The book is to be sold.  It is a readable account of the storm, and an acknowledgment of benefits derived from charitable people who went down in their pickets to aid the distressed.... Miss Mather pays a tribute to the Red Cross which many think it in no way deserves.  Why, with an amount not over $10,000 Miss Mather did more real good work among the sufferers than the vaunted Red Cross with four times the amount." 

Traumatic events often trigger artistic expression.  “The Storm of 1893,” a song sung locally in the hurricane’s aftermath, had this chorus:

            Oh the wind did blow so high
            And de storm was all abroad
            But yet we recognize in it
            The wonderful power of God.

We've posted a revised list of materials on the topic of the Sea Island Storm for those who are interesting in learning much more about this local historical natural disaster and its long-lasting effects.  One can also find list of materials about Rachel C. Mather and Clara Barton.

Check out The Great Sea Island Storm of 1893 by Bill and Fran Marscher from one of our branch library local history sections for the most poplar book on today's topic. 

Because many Coastal Empire residents have little memory of the damage that hurricanes cause,  Georgia Public Radio's Orlando Montoya posted a blog entry about this storm for our neighbors to the South. Some of the images from the Beaufort District Collection are in used in that blog entry.  
 
Sources:  
A History of Storms on the South Carolina Coast by Laylon Wayne Jordan with Robert Dukes, Jr. and Ted Rosengarten, South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, 197?, p. 32. 

“Out of the Depths,” [probably the Sun Dispatch (Charleston, SC), September 3, 1893, front page and maybe other pages]. 

“The Storm of 1893,” uncited.  A photocopy was distributed during the Heritage Society of Beaufort Annual Luncheon, 2004.  

“The Deadliest, Costliest, and Most Intense United States Tropic Cyclones from 1851 to 2010 (and Frequently Requested Hurricane Facts)” by Eric S. Blake, Christopher W. Landsea and Ethan J. Gibney, National Weather Service, National Hurricane Center, August 2011.   

Sea Island Sufferers” begins at p. 43.  Governor Tillman asks the SC General Assembly to grant the State Comptroller- General the authority to suspend collection of state taxes in the hard hit counties of Beaufort, Colleton, Berkeley and Georgetown during his Annual Address delivered in November 1893.

"Miss Mather's Book," Palmetto Post, July 12, 1894, p. 2.

Palmetto Post, July 5, 1894, p. 2.


Images were taken from our own holdings.  Please credit "Beaufort County Library."

18 August 2017

Local Solar Eclipses

The upcoming (mostly total) solar eclipse that is coming on Monday afternoon has almost everyone enthralled. Though the estimate of the totality here in Beaufort County is between 90 - 97% depending on the source, interest in this eclipse has eclipsed all expectations.

Our Library, like many public libraries along the eclipse path, has "sold out" of free glasses. Most libraries  distributed free protective glasses to those attending our programs about the eclipse. BCL staff has turned away hundreds, perhaps several thousands, of people over the past weeks - thousands of people who may not have visited any of our facilities or used any of our services. And that contact is a good thing. At least they could find our buildings and they thought that we could help - and if we had any glasses left we would be giving them away. We've even had direct contact from folks who never contact us through personal numbers and addresses to see if Library staff may have a hidden stash of solar eclipse glasses hoarded for our friends, neighbors, or acquaintances. The answer is "No, we do not."  Library staff have no glasses left to give to anyone nor do we have any to sell on the black market. As our web page states: "Due to overwhelming demand, the Beaufort County Library system no longer has any eclipse glasses remaining for distribution."


We do not have glasses but we do, however, have plenty of free information to offer about the upcoming eclipse. We have a web page devoted to the topic with access to Rob Hendrick's slideshow from an eclipse program he did at Beaufort Branch in July, an In Biblio Novitas podcast with Library staff about eclipse programs and materials, and suggested resources from the American Astronomical Society. The South Carolina State Library prepared a nifty LibGuide  with lots of links to reliable sources on the topic.

All the local newspapers are carrying information, too: Island News; Island Packet. I particularly like Margaret Evans's Rants and Raves column reflecting on our collective "Total Eclipse of the Heart" in the Lowcountry Weekly, even if she does delve over into astrology about the destined role of the eclipse baby who happens to be President at this portentous moment in United States history. Her closing sentence is masterful. 

https://eclipse2017.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/publications/NASA_map_508.pdf

Interestingly, the path of the August 21, 2017 total solar eclipse has been crossed by the tracks of 15 previous eclipses over the continental United States between 1503 and 1970 according to NASA. Some of the tracks crossed into South Carolina territory: October 23, 1623; June 24, 1778; and May 28, 1900.

As all our readers know, the Beaufort District Collection concentrates on Beaufort's past - and 47 years ago, Beaufort experienced a total solar eclipse on March 7, 1970. The March 7 total solar eclipse in South Carolina was the last total solar eclipse to be viewed in the continental United States until now. In 1970 the only newspapers around were the weekly Beaufort Gazette and the bi-weekly Sea Islander. (The Island Packet began publication in July 1970).


Beaufort Gazette, 12 March 1970, p. 8.


As you can surmise from the image above, photographs published in newspapers that were later microfilmed for preservation purposes are usually hard to reproduce. Ned Brown captured a completely dark downtown Beaufort at 1:30 in the afternoon. (Back in 1970, the Beaufort Gazette was still a weekly newspaper publishing on Thursday afternoons.)  

Be safe enjoying the eclipse. 

Heads up: The Library will be closed on Labor Day, Mon., Sept. 4th.

17 August 2017

Come Check Out Our New Look

The Beaufort District Collection Research Room has a brand new look!



It was very difficult to move around the room when we had more than one researcher at a time. As anyone who's been in knows, our public area is long but narrow. Having 4 tables and chairs for individual researchers allows BDC staff to sashay among the tables to more easily share materials and research advice. It also puts us in compliance with ACRL/RBMS Guidelines



The big desk has been replaced with a much smaller work station for Melissa and Amanda to help and monitor Research Room customers.

Team Kathy Mitchell, Melissa Jacobs, Amanda Forbes, Jan O'Rourke and Ileana Herrick worked wonders on re-arrangement, shifting, and going through "stuff" to make the room more comfortable for researchers and staff alike. We thank Facilities staff for doing the heavy lifting.

We are hopeful that arranging the public computer, the photocopier, the microfilm reader/printer and regular printer along the same concave wall opens the floor space as well as better accommodates the activities that actually go on in the public space of the Research Room.   

In case you're wondering what happened to our previous furnishings, "Waste not, want not" is our standard rule of thumb. The big reference station desk originally donated by the Beaufort County Historical Society when the South Carolina Room was completed in 1992 is in process of finding a new home with another local cultural heritage institution. The large tables, also donated in 1992 by the BCHS, have been re-purposed as workroom tables for docents and staff to process collections. The club chairs are now being used in other parts of the Library system.

Visit Amanda, Melissa and me in the Research Room to see for yourself. We're ready to guide you to wonderful books, articles, files, videos, etc. about Beaufort District's long and storied history.




Please note: The Library system will be closed Mon., Sept. 4th in honor of Labor Day. (Does anyone else appreciate the irony in this holiday?)

09 August 2017

Dr. Marcoux Returns August 15, 2017

In May 2016 we were privileged to have Dr. Jon B. Marcoux present a wonderful program about his upcoming archaeological search for the Sadkeche Fight. He returns to Beaufort County Library on Wednesday, August 15th at 2:00 pm  to give us an update about progress made thus far in identifying and interpreting this forgotten military engagement in a largely forgotten colonial conflict called the Yamasee War.

Please join us in the Beaufort Branch Meeting Room, 1st floor, 311 Scott Street for another illuminating local history program co-sponsored by the Beaufort District Collection and the Beaufort Chapter, Archaeological Society of South Carolina. The program is free. We'll have room to seat up to 85 guests.

Jon B. Marcoux, Ph.D.
Dr.  Marcoux graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1997. He earned his Master's degree from University of Alabama in 2000. He completed his Ph.D. at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2008.  He is an archaeologist who specializes in cultural and historic preservation and the study of late prehistoric and early historic Native American Indian societies (ca. A.D. 1000-1800). He has over 15 years of professional preservation experience, having directed archaeological survey and excavation projects across the southeastern U.S. and New England.  His recently published research explores the ways Cherokee communities negotiated the social and political turmoil caused by European colonialism. The search for the Sadkeche Fight is part of his long-term research project  to study cultural interaction among late seventeenth-century Native American Indian communities, enslaved Africans, and European settlers in lowcountry South Carolina. 

Dr. Marcoux's archaeological field work is funded with a grant from the National Park Service American Battlefield Protection Program.

Latest update: 24 March 2022 - Removed corrupted image of the program announcement. - gmc