Showing posts with label primary documents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label primary documents. Show all posts

28 August 2022

Red Letter Day: 1886 Earthquake Felt in Beaufort

Latest update: 6 October 2023 

The ground quivered rather often for mid-and upstate parts of the state when this post was written in 2022. So far this year things have been quiet  - a circumstance which could change with absolutely no warning. 

As seismic events go, there are two South Carolina based earthquakes to know: the 1886 Charleston Earthquake and the 1913 Union Earthquake. Of these, the Charleston Earthquake was by far the most significant for Beaufort County. 

The 1886 Charleston earthquake had an estimated magnitude of 7.6 on the Richter scale. It threw many people from their beds at 9:51 pm on the night of August 31, 1886. The earthquake rattled most of the East Coast, killed about 60 people, and caused much damage all along the coastal plain of South Carolina. It remains the strongest earthquake to date along the Eastern Seaboard affecting an area north to south from New York to Cuba and east to west from Bermuda to the Mississippi River. 

You can still see earthquake bars on some older Beaufort County buildings such as the Interpretative Center of the Reconstruction Era National Historical Park next door to the Beaufort District Collection.  

Here are a few local reports about the 1886 Earthquake as felt in Beaufort County as explained in Beaufort County Historical Society Paper #11, Reminiscences of Beaufort Storms by E.B. Rodgers in 1950:

"There was a rumbling from the northwest, then a slight shock, then a more severe shock and it lasted on through the night. The people thought the world had come to an end and rushed out of their houses and hurried to the churches. The white churches would not open. ... However, the Rev. Bythewood of the Tabernacle Baptist Church...opened its doors and to the surprise of all, the whites outnumbered the Negros [sic] in attendance."
"A tidal wave, twenty feet high, came up Beaufort River towards Port Royal and another down Beaufort River. They met just off Battery Creek and the water dashed high in the air..."  
I doubt that there was a 20 foot tidal wave because the Palmetto Post, a newspaper based in Port Royal then, did not mention any tidal wave at all. It covered the 1886 earthquake quite extensively including reports about aftershocks or damage to area buildings.  The newspaper included some colorful tidbits, such as "Weather Prophet Wiggins now claims to have predicted the great earthquake, and the most remarkable thing about it is that he claims that he predicted it before it occurred" (Palmetto Post, 16 September 1886, p. 2); the vilification of one John Thomson of Charleston for evicting earthquake survivors from his vacant lot; the inadequacy of the Western Union telegraph line in Beaufort; and, phosphate rock cracking at the Coosaw mines. But on the topic of a tidal wave, the newspaper is absolutely mum. I think that a 20 foot wall of water coming up and down the Beaufort River meeting at Battery Creek would have been noticed by someone and that the Palmetto Post would have included the event in its reporting - if it had really happened.
I propose that the author of Reminiscences of Beaufort Storms had heard the story about the tidal wave throughout his life and was simply sharing what he had heard with the members of the Society. He was but a toddler when the Earthquake of 1886 occurred as the preface to his talk indicates. Here is what he wrote:
My friends of the Historical Society have taken me for a much older person than I am and have indicated it by asking me to tell something about the earthquake.  I was only two years of age at the time -- I was born in 1884 and the earthquake was in 1886.  However, I have heard many things pertaining to the earthquake and some of those present know more about what happened than I, and I hope they will correct me or add to what I might say so as to make the record as nearly complete as possible."     

And perhaps someone at the Beaufort County Historical Society did discuss whether or not they had heard about the tidal wave as well. Local lore has a way of taking on a life of its own. Reminiscences can quickly turn into accepted not tested statements without the basic rules of historical research being considered. Given the date of Rodgers' presentation (June 1950), I doubt that he had access to the Palmetto Post newspaper issues from August - September 1886 in which he could read journalistic accounts of the earthquake and its aftermath. And, as his presentation title indicates, BCHS Paper #11 was a reminiscence, his recollections of what he had heard about the earthquake, not a formal historical study of local impacts of it on the Beaufort area. 

My favorite tale about the earthquake that Rodgers shared is this one:
“When the first shock [of the 1886 Earthquake] came, James Crofut was taking a bath. In his haste to get to the relative safety of the street, he remembered his beaver hat, but forgot his clothes!
I can confirm that Mr. James Crofut was taking a bath at the time of the earthquake from the August 31, 1886 diary entry that his wife Ellen Chapman Crofut (1837-1905) made.  
She doesn't mention that he reached the street in the buff. He was a Bay Street merchant, real estate investor, and auctioneer. Here is what she wrote about the earthquake the day it happened: 
Quite a severe shock of earthquake was felt here at 9.45 pm. Ja[me]s was taking a bath up stairs and I was writing letters. He came down and we went out in the yard. Mr. Mayo and Willie came over: were afraid to stay in their building, it shook so. There were eleven shocks before twelve o'clock

The people white and colored were very much frightened. The colored churches (except Waddell's) rung the bells at 11 o'ck [oclock] and the people went there and stayed all night, singing and praying.

Mr. & Mrs. Burr, Nellie, Mrs. Fitzsimmons and three children were out in the street. James told them to come in so they did and stayed half an hour or so. Most of the Beaufort people spent the night in the streets.  

The next day she recorded seven more aftershocks, though "not severe". Several neighbors moved into their house at 201 Laurens Street fearing structural instability of their own homes. She also notes that communication with Charleston remained cut and that no mail from the North had arrived in Beaufort. 

Telegraph messages began to arrive on Thursday, September 2, 1886 indicating the safety of family members More aftershocks occurred at 1 AM and 5 AM.  

On Friday, September 3, 1886, Mrs. Crofut writes: "I was hesitating whether to go to church this afternoon as I feel too nervous to go anywhere by myself..." but some neighbors dropped by to visit. Later that evening, the couple 

Thought we had better go to bed up stairs as there had been no shocks today except a slight one at noon. James was in bed, and I almost ready when there came a heavy shock and we hurried on our clothing and went over on the sea wall. Mrs. Willet was there with Katie, her servant, Mrs. Levin, Mrs. Murray (Brown), and the girl who works for her. James came home got our two double carriages, hauled them over there. Mrs. Willett, Katie, Mrs. Levin and myself got in one and stayed there till 5 a.m. There was muttering and rumbling all night but no heavy shocks.

Mrs. Crofut mentions aftershocks of varying strengths, sometimes several a day, through September 10th.  

You are welcomed to make an appointment to read the diaries that Ellen Chapman Crofut kept from 1874 to her death, the clippings in the EARTHQUAKES vertical file, Reminiscences of Beaufort Storms, and the backfiles of the Palmetto Post on microfilm here in the Research Room. Contact: 843-255-6468 or bdc@bcgov.net to make the necessary arrangements. 

01 August 2021

Reeves Collection of Stuart Family Papers Added to BDC Archives

The Beaufort District Collection relies upon the generosity of its donors to add items to the Research Room. In January of this year, Isabella Stuart Reeves offered us photocopies of some family letters that she had inherited. My plans for my former assistant to process this collection of almost 350 items came to naught so I had to work it into my list of tasks to accomplish. I finally got it done in late June. 

The Reeves Collection of Stuart Family Papers consists primarily of family correspondence between Claudia Smith Stuart (1802-1876) about family matters, social affairs in Beaufort and Charleston, SC, schooling at Harvard, West Point and seminaries in Spartanburg, SC and Alexandria, VA, secession and the Civil War. Reconstruction Era documents mostly refer to family poverty and difficulties post-war. Related families include Heyward, Rhett, Taber and Walker. Three original items were discovered during processing.  The Finding Aid to the Reeves Collection of Stuart Family Papers is posted on our WordPress blog: Links, Lists, and Finding Aids. 

I like how the City University of New York (CUNY) describes Archival Research and defines the term "Finding Aids" and explains the diversity one may find from one Finding Aid to another for the layman: 

Archival materials are described in documents called finding aids or collection guides.  These are detailed guides to the contents and arrangement of collections.

  • Finding aids are written to give the repository intellectual and physical control over their holdings and to help researchers find what they are looking for within collections.

  • Finding aids can take many forms and range in detail from a brief summary of a collection to an itemized list of its contents, to a card catalog, but most finding aids will fall somewhere in between. The level of detail and description depend on the resources of the repository and the collection itself.  Not all finding aids are online.

Finding Aids are wonderful documents that describe collections of items in general terms as pointer files to additional information. Sometimes, though, a particular item or set of items captures the attention of the processing archivist and she just has to share more than the Finding Aid allows. As an example, I enjoyed working with the contents of Folder 9: Stuart Family, 1858-1859 and did a little more research about the people writing and being mentioned in the letters.  

News of love, betrothals and weddings abound in Folder 9. Thomas Middleton Stuart writes of his engagement to Josephine Cay to his sister on 2 March 1858. Mentions are made of social visits with the Thomson daughters by Claudia Stuart. Whether she was first friends with the Thomson girls or had her eye on their brother remains to be uncovered, Claudia would marry Dr. Charles Robert Thomson on 9 April 1860. There is a letter of condolence from Benjamin Rhett Stuart dated 28 December 1862 to his sister Claudia upon the death of her infant child. None of the Thomson's three children survived infancy. Claudia's younger brother Benjamin Rhett Stuart married Charles' younger sister, Emma Virginia Thomson three weeks later. (I'm a practical woman - and given to cutting unnecessary costs. I wonder why they didn't have a double-wedding. Odds are the same guests would have attended the two separate weddings.) Benjamin and Emma would have ten children, eight of whom would survive into adulthood. 


I was also struck by the despair in a letter dated 1 September 1865 in Folder 10. It was a whole new world that former Masters and former enslaved had to learn how to negotiate. Thomas Middleton Stuart rails against post-war economic and social conditions in a letter to his mother:

I find it almost impossible to extend the hand of fellowship when my heart burns with vindictiveness to those who are now the “high water” among us – the yankees—great God damn them eternally! … The negro must die, or work, or leave the country – this last is impossible. He must work or die. We, the whites must live…. The low-country is inexpressibly tangled, shackled, crippled – a howling wilderness – a negro sack or net – idleness, vice, sickness and starvation…Unsafe to plant seed in the ground. At harvest robbed and plundered as we will be. Gunpowder, that’s the only pacifier! We must burn it! My dear Mother.
You are welcomed to set up an appointment to explore this collection and other holdings in the Research Room. Contact me gracec@bcgov.net or call 843-255-6446 to make the necessary advance arrangements. 

Because the Assistant position has yet to be filled, we have to agree upon a mutually acceptable date and time for your research appointment. In general, there are now three separate two-hour appointment slots per day, Mondays through Fridays that can be reserved in advance. Over the past 8 months, most of my customers stayed an average of 1.5 to 2 hours per visit. I learned that lesson and began offering three slots a day on 1 July. If you are coming from out of town or think that you will need two or all three slots on a particular day, we can discuss your needs and figure out how best to accommodate your needs and what may already be on my schedule.

Please note: As you are planning your research trip, be aware that I do not monitor incoming messages outside of scheduled business hours or while on leave. Ask at least several weeks ahead so that we can coordinate your schedule and mine. 

10 February 2019

R.L. Johnson Medical Journal Now Online!

The BDC recently added its eighth contribution to the Lowcountry Digital Library: R.L. Johnson Medical Journal, 1863-1864, 1867-1883! It posted on February 1, 2019.

R.L. Johnson Medical Journal, [p. 8] (BDC)
Richard Love Johnson (1841 – 1913) served the Confederacy as an Assistant Surgeon with several units, most notably the 3rd and 15th South Carolina Infantries. Johnson was stationed at various posts during the Civil War including McPhersonville in Beaufort District. [The necessary Beaufort connection!] His handwritten entries contain the names and units of his patients, notes on their wounds, treatments, surgeries and outcomes from 1863 to 1864. 

Following the Civil War, Johnson and his family resided on Edisto Island for several years where he turned to practicing obstetrics most often at John Wright’s Seaside Plantation and Dr. William M. Bailey’s Maxcy’s Plantation. 

He also documents two veterinary cases: a cat giving birth and the removal of a tumor from a donkey’s eye. 

During his time on Edisto Island he kept accounts relating to managing a small cotton farm with freed African-American laborers. He includes the names and payments to his workers.

Johnson would later practice medicine in Louisiana and Missouri. 

He revised the journal several times adding notes about medical journal articles and updates regarding some of his patients seen in other circumstances. The latest note with a date was done in 1883. Johnson died and was buried in Rolla, Phelps County, Missouri in 1913. 


This journal is significant because Johnson’s depictions give a firsthand view of medical practices during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras when prescribing whiskey, eggs, and opium were standard treatments. The medical cases and farm accounts typically include the names of individuals involved and thus may be useful for genealogical purposes.

Getting a primary source document for its online debut requires a lot of work and oftentimes the skills of several or many people. In the case of the R.L. Johnson Medical Journal,  I must give credit where credit is due.

The bulk of the work fell to the BDC's former Preservation Associate, Amanda Forbes. She did almost all of the digital scans, did most of the transcription, all the coding, and as her last act of employment sent scan and metadata files to Leah Worthington at the Lowcountry Digital Library.
Kristi Spaulding Marshall proofread the transcription several times to make sure that when it left our hands, it would be as perfect as it could be.

Leah Worthington is the Digital Projects Librarian at the College of Charleston who coordinates the Lowcountry Digital History Initiative and the Lowcountry Digital Library. I asked that the Journal go up at some point between January and April 2019. She oversaw the technology applications to get the Medical Journal uploaded and posted to the LCDL website. Leah got everything done so the journal became available for use by anyone anywhere in the whole world with an internet connection to use by closing time on Friday, February 1st.


I picked the project; oversaw its implementation; wrote the collection page introduction for the LCDL website; edited the Finding Aid; and posted the Finding Aid into our BDC WordPress blog.



Way back in 2007, Beaufort County Library contributed its first collection, Phosphate, Farms and Family: The Donner Collection to the LCDL. It has since been joined by selections from the Lucille Hasell Culp Collection; images from the Hurricane of 1893; a booklet of survival stories from the Hurricane of 1893; a postcard collection; and two collections of stereoscopic photographic images from the Civil War and Reconstruction eras.See all of our contributions to the LCDL at http://lcdl.library.cofc.edu/contributing-institution/beaufort-county-library.