South Carolina Vacation Guide System
South Carolina History
South Carolina is one of the 13 original colonies of the United
States. European exploration began in 1540, but the explorers brought
European diseases that decimated the local Indian population. The
English colony of the Province of Carolina was started in Charleston)
in 1670, with wealthy planters and their slaves, coming from the
British Caribbean colony of Barbados. Colonists overthrew the
proprietors after the Yamasee War, pushing back the American Indians in
1715-1717. In 1719 the colony was officially made a crown colony, and
North Carolina was split off and made into a separate colony in 1729.
South
Carolina banded together with the other colonies to oppose British
taxation in the Stamp Act Crisis of 1765, and played a major role in
resisting Britain. It became independent in March 1776 and joined the
United States of America. The Revolution was bloody and hard fought in
1780-81, as the British invaded, captured the American army and finally
was driven out.
An 1861 engraving of Fort Sumter before the attack that began the Civil War
The
cotton gin made the rich soil of the lowlands very profitable for
plantations operated by black slaves. The hilly upland areas, with few
slaves, were much poorer and a regional conflict underlay the political
system. With outspoken leaders such as John C. Calhoun, the state it
vied with Virginia as the dominant political and social force in the
South. It fought federal tariffs in the 1830s and demanded that its
rights to practice slavery be recognized in the territories. With the
1860 election of Republicans under Abraham Lincoln, who vowed to
prevent slavery's expansion, the voters demanded secession. In December
1860, the state seceded from the Union and in February 1861 it joined
the new Confederate States of America. In April 1861 the American Civil
War began when Confederate forces attacked the American fort at Fort
Sumter in Charleston harbor. The Civil War proved devastating to the
whites, but freed the blacks from slavery. From 1865 to 1877, South
Carolina underwent Reconstruction. Congress shut down the civilian
government in 1867, put the Army in charge, gave Freedmen (freed
slaves) the vote and prevented ex-Confederates from holding office. A
Republican legislature supported by Freedmen, northern Carpetbaggers
and white Southern Scalawags created and funded a public school system,
and created social welfare institutions. The constitution they passed
was kept nearly unaltered for 27 years, and most legislation passed
during the Reconstruction years lasted longer than that. By 1877 the
white conservatives, called "Redeemers" had regained political power.
In the 1880s Jim Crow laws were passed that were especially severe in
the state, to create public segregation and control movement of African
American laborers. After 1890 almost all blacks lost their vote, not to
regain it until 1965.
The Civil War ruined the economy, making
it one of the two or three poorest states for the next century.
Educational levels were low as public schools were underfunded,
especially for African Americans. Most people lived on small farms and
grew cotton. The more affluent were landowners, who subdivided the land
into farms operated by tenant farmers or sharecroppers, along with land
operated by the owner using hired labor. Gradually more industry moved
into the Piedmont area, with textile factories that turned the state's
raw cotton into yarn and cloth for sale on the international market.
Wave after wave of revivals made most people quite religious; most
people, white and black alike, were Baptists.
Politically the
state was part of the Solid South. Because African Americans were
disenfranchised, no black officials were elected between 1900 and the
late 1960s. Many went to northern cities during the Great Migration
after 1910. Whites rigidly enforced segregation in the Jim Crow era,
limiting African Americans' chances for education, representation and
free public movement. The Civil Rights laws of the 1960s ended
segregation and protected the voting rights of African Americans. The
blacks had been affiliated with the Republican Party, but after 1964
became intensely loyal Democrats, while most whites moved in the
opposite direction.
The cotton regime ended by the 1950s. As
factories were built across the state, the great majority of farmers
left agriculture. Service industries, such as tourism, education and
medical care grew rapidly, as the textile factories faded after 1970.
By 2000 the white majority of South Carolina voted solidly Republican
in presidential elections, but state and local government elections
were contested by the two parties. The population continued to grow,
reaching 4 million in 2000, as coast areas became prime locations for
tourists and retirees. With a poverty rate of 13.5%, the state was
slightly worse than the national average of 11.7%.
Early history
Humans
arrived in the area of South Carolina around 13,000 BC. These people
were hunters with crude tools made from stones and bones. Around 10,000
BC, they used spears and hunted big game. Over the Archaic period of
8000 to 2000 BC, nuts, berries, fish and shellfish became part of the
diet, and trade between the coastal plain and the piedmont developed.
There is evidence of plant domestication and pottery in the late
Archaic. The Woodland period brought more serious agriculture, more
sophisticated pottery, and the bow and arrow. By the time of the first
European exploration, twenty-nine tribes or nations of Native Americans
lived within the boundaries of what became South Carolina.
Colonial period
The Carolina Colonies
By
the end of the 16th century, the Spanish and French had left the area
of South Carolina after several reconnaissance missions and failed
colonization attempts. In 1629, Charles I, King of England, granted his
attorney general a charter to everything between latitudes 36 and 31.
He called this land the Province of Carlana, which would later be
changed to "Carolina" for pronunciation, after the Latin form of his
own name.
In 1663, Charles II gave the land to eight nobles, the
Lords Proprietors, who ruled the Province of Carolina as a proprietary
colony. After the Yamasee War of 1715-1717, the Lords Proprietors came
under increasing pressure and were forced to relinquish their charter
to the Crown in 1719. The proprietors retained their right to the land
until 1719, when the colony was officially split into the provinces of
North Carolina and South Carolina, crown colonies.
In April 1670
settlers arrived at Albemarle Point, at the junction of the Ashley
River and Cooper River. They founded Charles Town, named in honor of
King Charles II. Throughout the Colonial Period, the Carolinas
participated in many wars against the Spanish and the Native Americans,
including the Yamasee and Cherokee tribes. In its first decades, the
colony's plantations were relatively small and its wealth came from
Indian trade, mainly in Indian slaves and deerskins. The slave trade
affected tribes throughout the Southeast, and historians estimate that
Carolinians exported 24,000-51,000 Indian slaves from 1670–1717,
sending them to markets ranging from Boston to the Barbados. Planters
financed the purchase of African slaves by their sale of Indians.
18th century
In
the 1700-1770 era the colony possessed many advantages -
entrepreneurial planters and businessmen, a major harbor,
cost-efficient African slave labor and an attractive physical
environment, with rich soil and a long growing season, albeit with
endemic malaria. It became one of the wealthiest of the British
colonies. Rich colonials became avid consumers of services from outside
the colony, such as mercantile services, medical education, and legal
training in England. Almost everyone in 18th-century South Carolina
felt the pressures, constraints, and opportunities associated with the
growing importance of trade.
Yamasee war
A pan-Indian
alliance rose up against the settlers in the Yamasee War (1715–1717)
and nearly destroyed the colony. But the Yamasee were defeated and with
exposure to European infectious diseases, the backcountry's Yamasee
population was greatly reduced.
Slaves
After the Yamasee war,
the planters turned exclusively to importing African slaves for labor.
They used their labor to create rice and indigo plantations as
commodity crops. Building dams, irrigation ditches and related
infrastructure, enslaved Africans created the equivalent of huge
earthworks to regulate water for the rice culture.
The Gullah
people comprised a large fraction of the enslaved people who were
brought to South Carolina. The distinctive Gullah/Geechee culture was a
product not of isolation, but rather of interaction with American
society with non-African alternatives in full view. The Gullah adapted
to multiple factors in American society, while at the same time
marketing or otherwise using their distinctive lifeways, products, and
language to perpetuate their unique ethnic and racial identity.
Low Country
The
Low Country was settled first, dominated by wealthy men who became
owners of large amounts of land on which they created plantations. They
first transported white indentured servants as laborers, mostly teenage
youth from England who came to work off their passage in hopes of
learning to farm and buying their own land. Planters also imported
African laborers to the colony. In the early colonial years, social
boundaries were fluid between indentured laborers and slaves, and there
was considerable intermarriage. Gradually the terms of enslavement
became more rigid and slavery became a racial caste. With a decrease in
English settlers as the economy improved in England before the
beginning of the 18th century, the planters began to rely chiefly on
enslaved Africans for labor.
The market for land functioned
efficiently and reflected both rapid economic development and
widespread optimism regarding future economic growth. The frequency and
turnover rate for land sales were tied to the general business cycle;
the overall trend was upward, with almost half of the sales occurring
in the decade before the American Revolution. Prices also rose over
time, parallel with the rise in the price for rice. Prices dropped
dramatically, however, in the years just before the war, when fears
arose about future prospects outside the system of English mercantilist
trade.
Back country
In contrast to the Tidewater, the back
country was settled chiefly by Scots-Irish and North British migrants
who had quickly moved down from Pennsylvania and Virginia. The
immigrants from Ulster, the Scottish lowlands and the north of England
(the border counties) comprised the largest group from the British
Isles before the Revolution. They came mostly in the 18th century,
later than other colonial immigrants. Such "North Britons were a large
majority in much of the South Carolina upcountry." The character of
this environment was "well matched to the culture of the British
borderlands." Such immigrants settled in the backcountry
throughout the South and relied on subsistence farming. They mostly did
not own slaves. Given the differences in background, class,
slaveholding, economics and culture, there was longstanding competition
between the Low Country and Upcountry that played out in politics.
Rice
Planters
earned wealth from two major crops: rice and indigo, both of which
relied on cultivation by slave labor. Historians no longer believe that
the blacks brought the art of rice cultivation from Africa. Exports of
these crops led South Carolina to become one of the wealthiest colonies
prior to the Revolution. Near the beginning of the 18th century,
planters began rice culture along the coast, mainly in the Georgetown
and Charleston areas. The rice became known as Carolina Gold, both for
its color and its ability to produce great fortunes for plantation
owners.
Indigo
In the 1740s, Eliza Lucas Pinckney began
indigo culture and processing in coastal South Carolina. Indigo was in
heavy demand in Europe for making dyes for clothing. An "Indigo
Bonanza" followed, with South Carolina production approaching a million
pounds (400 plus Tonnes) in the late 1750s. This growth was stimulated
by a British bounty of six pence per pound. South Carolina did not have
a monopoly of the British market, but the demand was strong and many
planters switched to the new crop when the price of rice fell. Carolina
indigo had a mediocre reputation because Carolina planters failed to
achieve consistent high quality production standards. Carolina indigo
nevertheless succeeded in displacing French and Spanish indigo in the
British and in some continental markets, reflecting the demand for
cheap dyestuffs from manufacturers of low-cost textiles, the
fastest-growing sectors of the European textile industries at the onset
of industrialization.
In addition, the colonial economy depended
on sales of pelts (primarily deerskins), and naval stores and timber.
Coastal towns began shipbuilding to support their trade, using the
prime timbers of the live oak.
Jews
South Carolina's liberal
constitution and early flourishing trade attracted Sephardic Jewish
immigrants. They were mostly elite businessmen from London and the
Barbados, where they had been involved in slavery and in the rum and
sugar trades. In 1800, Charleston had the largest Jewish population in
the United States.
Revolutionary War
John Rutledge had many roles in South Carolina's history throughout the American Revolution.
Prior
to the American Revolution, the British began taxing American colonies
to raise revenue. Residents of South Carolina were outraged by the
Townsend Acts that taxed tea, paper, wine, glass, and oil. To protest
the Stamp Act, South Carolina sent wealthy rice planter Thomas Lynch,
twenty-six-year-old lawyer John Rutledge, and Christopher Gadsden to
the Stamp Act Congress, held in 1765 in New York. Other taxes were
removed, but tea taxes remained. Soon South like the Boston Tea Party,
began to dump tea into the Charleston Harbor, followed by boycotts and
protests.
South Carolina set up its state government and
constitution on March 26, 1776. Because of the colony's longstanding
trade with Great Britain, the Low Country cities had numerous
Loyalists. Many of the battles fought in South Carolina during the
American Revolution were against loyalist Carolinians and the Cherokee
tribe allied with the British. This was to British General Henry
Clinton's advantage, as his strategy was to march his troops north from
St. Augustine and sandwich George Washington in the North. Clinton
alienated Loyalists and enraged Patriots by attacking and nearly
annihilating a fleeing army of Patriot soldiers who posed no threat.
White
colonists were not the only ones with a desire for freedom. Estimates
are that about 25,000 slaves escaped, migrated or died during the
disruption of the war, 30 percent of the state's slave population.
About 13,000 joined the British, who had promised them freedom if they
fought with them. From 1770 to 1790, the proportion of the state's
population made up of blacks (almost all of whom were enslaved),
dropped from 60.5 percent to 43.8 percent.
On October 7, 1780,
at Kings Mountain, John Sevier and William Campbell, assaulted the
'high heel' of the wooded mountain, the smallest area but highest
point, while the other seven groups, led by Colonels Shelby, Williams,
Lacey, Cleveland, Hambright, Winston and McDowell attacked the main
Loyalist position by surrounding the 'ball' base beside the 'heel'
crest of the mountain. North and South Carolinians and attacked British
Major Patrick Ferguson and his body of Loyalists on a hilltop. This was
a major victory for the patriots, especially because it was won by
militiamen and not trained Continentals. Thomas Jefferson called it
"The turn of the tide of success." It was the first patriot victory
since the British had taken Charleston. While tensions mounted between
the Crown and the Carolinas, some key southern Pastors became a target
of King George: "...this church (Bullock Creek) was noted as one of the
"Four Bees" in King George's bonnet due to its pastor, Rev. Joseph
Alexander, preaching open rebellion to the British Crown in June 1780.
Bullock Creek Presbyterian Church was a place noted for being a Whig
party stronghold. Under a ground swell of such Calvin protestant
leadership, South Carolina moved from a back seat to the front in the
war against tyranny. Patriots went on to regain control of Charleston
and South Carolina with untrained militiamen by trapping Colonel
Banastre "No Quarter" Tarleton's troops along a river.
In 1787,
John Rutledge, Charles Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, and
Pierce Butler went to Philadelphia where the Constitutional Convention
was being held and constructed what served as a detailed outline for
the U.S. Constitution. The federal Constitution was ratified by the
state in 1787. The new state constitution was ratified in 1790 without
the support of the Upcountry.
Scots Irish
During the American
Revolution the Scots Irish in the back country in most states were
noted as strong patriots. One exception was the Waxhaw settlement on
the lower Catawba River along the North Carolina-South Carolina
boundary, where Loyalism was strong. The area experienced two main
settlement periods of Scotch Irish. During the 1750s-1760s, second- and
third-generation Scotch Irish Americans moved from Pennsylvania,
Virginia, and North Carolina. This particular group had large families,
and as a group they produced goods for themselves and for others. They
generally were patriots.
Just prior to the Revolution, a second
stream of immigrants came directly from northern Ireland via
Charleston. This group was forced to move into an underdeveloped area
because they could not afford expensive land. Most of this group
remained loyal to the crown or neutral when the war began. Prior to
Charles Cornwallis's march into the backcountry in 1780, two-thirds of
the men among the Waxhaw settlement had declined to serve in the army.
British victory at the Battle of the Waxhaws resulted in anti-British
sentiment in a bitterly divided region. While many individuals chose to
take up arms against the British, the British themselves forced the
people to choose sides.
Antebellum South Carolina
Main article: Antebellum South Carolina
A historic home in The Battery.
It
was South Carolina alone that attempted to thwart national law during
the Nullification Crisis, and South Carolina was the first state to
declare its secession in 1860 in response to the election of Abraham
Lincoln.
Politics and slavery
Further information: List of plantations in South Carolina
Slave
owners had more control over the state government of South Carolina
than of any other state, blending aristocratic traditions with
democracy. South Carolina's plantation owners played the role of
English aristocrats more than the planters of other states, whereas
newer Southern states, such as Alabama and Mississippi, allowed more
political equality among whites. Although all white male residents were
allowed to vote, property restrictions for office holders were higher
in South Carolina than in any other state. South Carolina had the only
state legislature where slave owners had the majority of seats. It was
the only state where the legislature elected the governor, all judges
and state electors. The state's chief executive was a figurehead who
had no authority to veto legislative law.
The majority of the
population in South Carolina was black: by 1860 the population of the
state was 703,620, with 57 percent or slightly more than 402,000
classified as enslaved African Americans. Free blacks numbered slightly
less than 10,000. Unlike Virginia, where most of the plantations and
slaves were concentrated in the eastern part of the state, in South
Carolina plantations and slaves were common throughout most of the
state. After 1794, Eli Whitney's cotton gin allowed cotton plantations
to grow throughout South Carolina. By 1830, 85 percent of inhabitants
of rice plantations along the coast were slaves. When rice planters
left the malarial low country for cities such as Charleston, up to 98
percent of the low country residents were slaves. By 1830, two-thirds
of South Carolina's counties had populations with 40 percent or more
enslaved; in the two counties with the lowest rates of slavery, 23
percent of the population were slaves.
In 1822, a black freedman
named Denmark Vesey and compatriots around Charleston organized a plan
for thousands of slaves to liberate themselves through an armed
uprising. Vesey's plan, inspired by the 1791 Haitian Revolution, called
for thousands of armed black men to kill their slaveholders, seize the
city of Charleston, and then escape from the United States by sailing
to Haiti. The plot was discovered when two slaves opposed to the plan
leaked word of it to white authorities. Charleston authorities charged
131 men with participating in the conspiracy. In total, the state
convicted 67 men and killed 35 of them by hanging, including Denmark
Vesey. White fear of slave insurrections after the Vesey conspiracy led
to a 9:15 pm curfew for slaves in Charleston, and the establishment of
a municipal guard of 150 white men in Charleston, with half the men
stationed in an arsenal called the Citadel.
Plantations in older
Southern states such as South Carolina wore out the soil to such an
extent that 42 percent of state residents left the state for
plantations with newer soil in the lower South. The remaining South
Carolina plantations were especially hard hit when world wide cotton
markets turned down in 1826-32 and again in 1837-49. Economic hardships
caused many South Carolinians to believe that a Forty Bale theory
explained their problems.
Nullification
The white minority in
South Carolina felt more threatened than in other parts of the South,
and reacted more to the economic Panic of 1819, the Missouri
Controversy of 1820, and attempts at emancipation in the form of the
Ohio Resolutions of 1824 and the American Colonization Petition of
1827. South Carolina's first attempt at nullification occurred in 1822,
when South Carolina adopted a policy of jailing foreign black sailors
at South Carolina ports. This policy violated a treaty between the
United Kingdom and the United States, but South Carolina defied a
complaint from Britain through American Secretary of State John Quincy
Adams and a United States Supreme Court justice's federal circuit
decision condemning the jailings. Foreign blacks from Santo Domingo
previously communicated with Vesey's conspirators, and the South
Carolina state Senate declared that the need to prevent insurrections
was more important than laws, treaties or constitutions.
South
Carolinian George McDuffie popularized the Forty Bale theory to explain
South Carolina's economic woes. According to this theory, tariffs that
became progressively higher in 1816, 1824 and 1828 had the same effect
as if a thief stole forty bales out of a hundred from every barn. The
tariffs applied to imports of things like iron, wool and finished
cotton products. The Forty Bale theory was based on faulty math in that
Britain could sell finished cotton goods made from Southern raw cotton
around the world, not just to the United States. Still, the theory was
a popular explanation for economic problems that were caused in large
part by overproduction of cotton in the lower South, and less cotton
production from South Carolina's depleted soil. South Carolinians,
rightly or wrongly, blamed the tariff for the fact that cotton prices
fell from 18 cents a pound to 9 cents a pound over the 1820s. While the
effects of the tariff were exaggerated, manufactured imports from
Europe were cheaper than American-made products without the tariff, and
the tariff did reduce British imports of cotton to some extent. These
were largely short-term problems that existed before United States
factories and textile makers could compete with Europe. Also, the
tariff replaced a tax system where slave states previously had to pay
more in taxes for the increased representation they got in the U.S.
House of Representatives under the three-fifths clause.
The
Tariff of 1828, which South Carolina agitators called the Tariff of
Abominations, set the tariff rate at 50 percent. Although John C.
Calhoun previously supported tariffs, he anonymously wrote the South
Carolina Exposition and Protest, which was a states' rights argument
for nullifying the tariff. Calhoun's theory was that the threat of
secession would lead to a "concurrent majority" that would possess
every white minorities consent, as opposed to a "tyrannical majority"
of Northerners controlling the South. Both Calhoun and Robert Barnwell
Rhett foresaw that the same arguments could be used to defend slavery
when necessary. President Andrew Jackson successfully forced the
nullifiers to back down and allowed a gradual reduction of tariff
rates. Calhoun and Senator Henry Clay agreed upon the Compromise Tariff
of 1833, which would lower rates over 10 years. Calhoun later supported
national protection for slavery in the form of the Fugitive Slave Law
of 1850 and federal protection of slavery in the territories conquered
from Mexico, in contradiction to his previous support for nullification
and states rights.
Censorship and slavery
On July 29, 1835,
Charleston Postmaster Alfred Huger found abolitionist literature in the
mail, and refused to deliver it. Slave owners seized the mail and built
a bonfire with it, and other Southern states followed South Carolina's
lead in censoring abolitionist literature. South Carolina's James Henry
Hammond started the gag rule controversy by demanding a ban on
petitions for ending slavery from being introduced before Congress in
1835. The 1856 caning of Republican Charles Sumner by the South
Carolinian Preston Brooks after Sumner's Crime Against Kansas speech
heightened Northern fears that the alleged aggressions of the slave
power threatened republican government for Northern whites.
Secession and war
South
Carolina was the first state to secede from the Union after the
election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860. South Carolina adopted the
Declaration of the Immediate Causes Which Induce and Justify the
Secession of South Carolina from the Federal Union on December 20,
1860. All of the violations of the alleged rights of Southern states
mentioned in the document were about slavery. President Buchanan
protested but made no military response aside from a failed attempt to
resupply Fort Sumter via the ship Star of the West, which was fired
upon by South Carolina forces and turned back before it reached the
fort.
Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, Fort Monroe in
Virginia, and Fort Pickens and the partially built Fort Taylor in
Florida were the remaining Union-held forts in the Confederacy (or what
would become the Confederacy after Virginia joined), and Lincoln was
determined to hold Fort Sumter. Under orders from Confederate President
Jefferson Davis, troops controlled by the Confederate government under
P. G. T. Beauregard bombarded the fort with artillery on April 12,
forcing the fort's capitulation and beginning the American Civil War.
The Union controlled forts Monroe, Pickens and Taylor throughout the
war, but secessionists were more extreme in Charleston than elsewhere.
American Civil War
Prewar tensions
Few
white South Carolinians saw emancipation as an option. Whites feared
that if blacks, a majority in most parts of the state, were freed, they
would try to "Africanize" the whites' cherished society and culture.
This was what they believed had happened after slave revolutions in
some areas of the West Indies. South Carolina's white politicians were
divided between devoted Unionists who opposed any sort of secession,
and those who believed secession was a state's right.
John C.
Calhoun noted that the dry and barren West could not support a
plantation system and would remain slaveless. Calhoun proposed that
Congress should not exclude slavery from territories but let each state
choose for itself whether it would allow slaves within its borders.
After Calhoun's death in 1850, however, South Carolina was left without
a leader great enough in national standing and character to prevent
action by those more militant South Carolinian factions who wanted to
secede immediately. Andrew Pickens Butler argued against Charleston
publisher Robert Barnwell Rhett, who advocated immediate secession and,
if necessary, independence. Butler won the battle, but Rhett outlived
him.
When people began to believe that Abraham Lincoln would be
elected President, states in the Deep South organized conventions to
discuss their options. South Carolina was the first state to organize
such a convention, meeting in December following the national election.
On December 20, 1860, delegates convened in Charleston and voted
unanimously to secede from the Union. President James Buchanan declared
the secession illegal but did not act to stop it.
Fort Sumter
Six
days later, on the day after Christmas, Major Robert Anderson,
commander of the U.S. troops in Charleston, withdrew his men against
orders into the island fortress of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor.
South Carolina militia swarmed over the abandoned mainland batteries
and trained their guns on the island. Sumter was the key position to
preventing a naval invasion of Charleston, so the Confederacy could not
afford to allow federal forces to remain there indefinitely. More
important, having a foreign country (the USA) control its largest
harbor meant that the Confederacy was not really independent—which was
Lincoln's point.
On February 4, a congress of seven cotton
states met in Montgomery, Alabama, and approved a new constitution for
the Confederate States of America. Lincoln argued that the United
States were "one nation, indivisible," and denied the Southern states'
right to secede. South Carolina entered the Confederacy on February 8,
1861, thus ending fewer than six weeks of being an independent State of
South Carolina. Virginia politician Roger Pryor told Charleston that
the only way to get Old Dominion to join the Confederacy was for South
Carolina to instigate war with the United States. The obvious place to
start was right in the midst of Charleston Harbor.
About 6,000
men were stationed around the rim of the harbor, ready to take on the
60 men in Fort Sumter. At 4:30 a.m. on April 12, after two days of
intense negotiations, and with Union ships just outside the harbor, the
firing began. The decision was made by President Jefferson Davis and
his cabinet. Edmund Ruffin is usually credited with being given the
honor firing the first shot. Thirty-four hours later, Anderson's men
raised the white flag and were allowed to leave the fort with colors
flying and drums beating, saluting the U.S. flag with a 50-gun salute
before taking it down. During this salute, one of the guns exploded,
killing a young soldier—the only casualty of the bombardment and the
first casualty of the war.
Civil War devastates the state
The
South was at a disadvantage in number, weaponry, and maritime
skills—few southerners were sailors. Federal ships sailed south and
blocked off one port after another. As early as November, Union troops
occupied the Sea Islands in the Beaufort area, and established an
important base for the men and ships who would obstruct the ports at
Charleston and Savannah. Many plantation owners had already fled to
distant refuges, sometimes taking their slaves with them.
Those
African Americans who remained on the Sea Islands became the first
"freedmen" of the war. The Sea Islands became a laboratory for
education, with Northern missionary teachers finding former enslaved
adults as well as children eager for learning, and subsistence farming
by African Americans, as they took over land for their own use.
Despite
South Carolina's important role, and the Union's unsuccessful attempt
to take Charleston from 1863 onward, few military engagements occurred
within the state's borders until 1865. Having completed his March to
the Sea at Savannah, Sherman took his Army to Columbia, then north into
North Carolina. There was little resistance to his advance. Sherman's
1865 march through the Carolinas resulted in the burning of Columbia
and numerous other towns.
On February 21, 1865, with the
Confederate forces finally evacuated from Charleston, the black 55th
Massachusetts Regiment, led by Thomas Baker, Albert Adams, David Adams,
Nelson R. Anderson, William H. Alexander, Beverly Harris, Joseph
Anderson, Robert Abram, Elijah Brown, Wiley Abbott, marched through the
city. At a ceremony at which the U.S. flag was once again raised over
Fort Sumter, former fort commander Robert Anderson was joined on the
platform by two men: African-American Union hero Robert Smalls and the
son of Denmark Vesey.
Poverty would mark the state for
generations to come. There was an agricultural depression, and changes
in the labor market disrupted agriculture. Also, proportionally South
Carolina lost more of its young men of fighting age than did any other
Southern state. Recorded deaths were 18,666 but fatalities may have
reached 21,146. This was 31-35% of the total of men of ages 18–45
recorded in the 1860 census for South Carolina.
Reconstruction 1865–1877
African
Americans had long comprised the majority of the state's population.
They began to play a prominent role in the South Carolina government
for the first time during Reconstruction. Despite the anti-Northern
fury of prewar and wartime politics, most South Carolinians, including
the state's leading opinion-maker, Wade Hampton III, believed that
white citizens would do well to accept President Johnson's terms for
full reentry to the Union. However, the state legislature, in 1865,
passed "Black Codes", angering Northerners, who accused the state of
imposing semi-slavery on the Freedmen. The South Carolina Black Codes
have been described:
"Persons of color
contracting for service were to be known as "servants", and those with
whom they contracted, as "masters." On farms the hours of labor would
be from sunrise to sunset daily, except on Sunday. The negroes were to
get out of bed at dawn. Time lost would be deducted from their wages,
as would be the cost of food, nursing, etc., during absence from
sickness. Absentees on Sunday must return to the plantation by sunset.
House servants were to be at call at all hours of the day and night on
all days of the week. They must be "especially civil and polite to
their masters, their masters' families and guests", and they in return
would receive "gentle and kind treatment." Corporal and other
punishment was to be administered only upon order of the district judge
or other civil magistrate. A vagrant law of some severity was enacted
to keep the negroes from roaming the roads and living the lives of
beggars and thieves."
The Black Codes outraged northern opinion and apparently were never put into effect in any state.
After
winning the 1866 elections, the Radical Republicans took control of the
Reconstruction process. The Army registered all male voters, and
elections returned a Republican government composed of a coalition of
freedmen, carpetbaggers, and scalawags. The federally mandated new
Constitution of 1868 brought democratic reforms, including the state's
first public school system. Native white Republicans supported it, but
white Democrats viewed the Republican government as representative of
black interests only and were largely unsupportive.
Adding to
the interracial animosity was the sense of many whites' that their
former slaves had betrayed them. Before the war, slaveholders had
convinced themselves that they were treating their slaves well and had
earned their slaves' loyalty. When the Union Army rolled in and slaves
deserted by the thousands, slaveholders were stunned. The black
population scrambled to preserve its new rights while the white
population attempted to claw its way back up the social ladder by
denying blacks those same rights.
The Ku Klux Klan raids began
shortly after the end of the war, a first stage of insurgency. They
terrorized and murdered blacks and their sympathizers in an attempt to
reestablish white supremacy. These raids were particularly prevalent in
the upstate and they reached a climax in 1870-71. Congress passed a
series of Enforcement Acts aimed at curbing Klan activity and the Grant
administration eventually declared martial law in the upstate counties
of Spartanburg, York, Marion, Chester, Laurens, Newberry, Fairfield,
Lancaster, and Chesterfield in October 1870. The declaration was
followed by mass arrests and a series of Congressional hearings to
investigate the violence in the region. Though the federal program
resulted in over 700 indictments, there were few successful
prosecutions and many of those individuals later received pardons. The
ultimate weakness of the response helped to undermine federal authority
in the state, though formal Klan activity declined precipitously
following federal intervention. The violence in the state did not
subside, however, and would reach a new climax during the political
season of 1876.
The 1876 gubernatorial election
From 1868 on,
elections were accompanied by increasing violence from white
paramilitary groups such as the Red Shirts. In 1876, tensions were
high, especially in Piedmont towns where the numbers of blacks were
fewer than whites. There were numerous demonstrations by the Red
Shirts—white Democrats determined to win the upcoming elections by any
means possible. The Red Shirts turned the tide in South Carolina,
convincing whites that this could indeed be the year they regain
control and terrorizing blacks to stay away from voting. Because of the
violence, Republican Governor Chamberlain requested assistance from
Washington to try to keep control. President Ulysses S. Grant sent
federal troops to try to preserve order and ensure a fair election.
Using
as a model the "Mississippi Plan", which had redeemed that state in
1874, South Carolina whites used intimidation, violence, persuasion,
and control of the blacks. Armed with heavy pistols and rifles, they
rode on horseback to every Republican meeting, and demanded a chance to
speak. The Red Shirts milled among the crowds. Each selected a black
man to watch, privately threatening to shoot him if he raised a
disturbance. The Redeemers organized hundreds of rifle clubs. Obeying
proclamations to disband, they sometimes reorganized as missionary
societies or dancing clubs — with rifles. They set up an ironclad
economic boycott against Black activists and scalawags who refused to
vote the Democratic ticket. People lost jobs over their political
views. They beat down the opposition — but always just within the law.
Wade Hampton made more than forty speeches across the state. Some Black
Republicans joined his cause; donning the Red Shirts, they paraded with
the whites. Most scalawags "crossed Jordan", as switching to the
Democrats was called.
On election day, there was intimidation on
all sides, employed by both parties, and the returns were disputed all
the way to Washington, where they played a central role in the
Compromise of 1877. Both parties claimed victory. For a while, two
separate state assemblies did business side by side on the floor of the
State House (their Speakers shared the Speaker's desk, but each had his
own gavel), until the Democrats moved to their own building. There the
Democrats continued to pass resolutions and conducted the state's
business, just as the Republicans were doing. The Republican State
Assembly tossed out results of the tainted election and reelected
Chamberlain as governor. A week later, General Wade Hampton III took
the oath of office for the Democrats.
Finally, in return for the
South's support of his own convoluted presidential "victory" over
Samuel Tilden, President Rutherford B. Hayes withdrew federal troops
from Columbia. The Republican government dissolved and Chamberlain
headed north, as Wade Hampton and his Redeemers took control.
Memory
Whites
and blacks created entirely different memories of Reconstruction and
used them to justify their politics. The white memory, taught in the
schools until the 1960s, said that corrupt Yankee Carpetbaggers
controlled for financial profit the mass of ignorant black voters and
nearly plunged South Carolina into economic ruin and social chaos. The
heroes in this version were the Red Shirts, who rescued the state from
misrule and preserved democracy, expelled blacks from the public
square, restored law and order, and created a long era of comity
between the races. The black version reverses the heroes and villains
and provided intellectual support for the Civil Rights Movement.
Battles over the display of the Confederate flag reignited memories in
the 1980s.
Conservative rule 1877–1890
The Democrats were led
by General Wade Hampton III and other former Confederate veterans who
espoused a return to the policies of the antebellum period. Known as
the Conservatives, or the Bourbons, they favored a minimalist approach
by the government and a conciliatory policy towards blacks while
maintaining white supremacy. Also of interest to the Conservatives was
the restoration of the University of South Carolina to its prominent
prewar status as the leading institution of higher education in the
state and the region.
Once in power, the Democrats quickly
consolidated their position and sought to unravel the legacy of the
Radical Republicans. They pressured Republicans to resign from their
positions and within a year both the legislative and judiciary were
firmly in the control of the Democrats. They launched investigations
into the corruption and frauds committed by eminent Republicans during
Reconstruction. All charges were dropped when the Federal government
dropped its charges against white participants accused of violence in
the 1876 election campaign.
With their position secure, the
Democrats next tackled the state debt. Reconstruction government had
established public education and new charitable institutions, together
with improving prisons. There was corruption, but it was mostly white
Southerners who benefited. Taxes had been exceedingly low before the
war because the planter class refused to support public programs like
education. The exigencies of the postwar period caused the state debt
to climb rapidly. When Republicans came to power in 1868, the debt
stood at $5.4 million. By the time Republicans lost control in 1877,
state debt had risen to $18.5 million. Many Democrats from the
upcountry, led by Martin Gary, pushed for the entire state debt to be
canceled, but Gary was opposed by Charleston holders of the bonds. A
compromise moderated by Wade Hampton was achieved and by October 1882,
the state debt was reduced to $6.5 million.
Other legislative
initiatives by the Conservatives benefited its primary supporters, the
planters and business class. Taxes across the board were reduced, and
funding was cut for public social and educational programs that
assisted poor whites and blacks. Oral contracts were made to be legally
binding, breach of contract was enforced as a criminal offense, and
those in debt to planters could be forced to work off their debt. In
addition, the University of South Carolina along with The Citadel were
reopened to elite classes and generously supported by the state
government.
By the late 1880s, the agrarian movement swept
through the state and encouraged subsistence farmers to assert their
political rights. They pressured the legislature to establish an
agriculture college. Reluctantly the legislature complied by adding an
agriculture college to the University of South Carolina in 1887. Ben
Tillman inspired the farmers to demand a separate agriculture college
isolated from the politics of Columbia. The Conservatives finally gave
them one in 1889.
Tillman era and disfranchisement, 1890–1914
In
1890, Ben Tillman set his sights on the gubernatorial contest. The
farmers rallied behind his candidacy and Tillman easily defeated the
conservative nominee, A.C. Haskell. The conservatives failed to grasp
the strength of the farmers' movement in the state. The planter elite
no longer engendered automatic respect for having fought in the Civil
War. Not only that, but Tillman's "humorous and coarse speech appealed
to a majority no more delicate than he in matters of taste."
The
Tillman movement succeeded in enacting a number of Tillman's proposals
and pet projects. Among those was the crafting of a new state
constitution and a state dispensary system for alcohol. Tillman held a
"pathological fear of Negro rule."
White elites created a new
constitution with provisions to deprive blacks and poor whites of
voting rights without violating the Fifteenth Amendment. This was
chiefly accomplished through provisions related to making voter
registration more difficult, such as poll taxes and literacy tests,
which adversely affected African Americans and poor whites. After
promulgation of the new Constitution of 1895, voting was essentially
restricted to whites for more than 60 years.
During
Reconstruction, black legislators had been a majority in the lower
house of the legislature. The new requirements meant that only about
15,000 of the 140,000 blacks could qualify to register. In practice,
many more blacks were prohibited from voting by the subjective voter
registration process controlled by white registrars. In addition, the
Democratic Party primary was restricted to whites only. By October 1896
there were 50,000 whites registered, but only 5,500 blacks, in a state
in which blacks were the majority.
The 1900 census demonstrated
the extent of disfranchisement: African Americans comprised more than
58% of the state's population, with a total of 782,509 citizens
essentially without any representation. The political loss affected
educated and illiterate men alike. It meant that without their
interests represented, blacks were unfairly treated within the state.
They were unable to serve on juries; segregated schools and services
were underfunded; law enforcement was dominated by whites. African
Americans did not recover the ability to exercise suffrage and
political rights until the Civil Rights Movement won passage of Federal
legislation in 1964 and 1965.
The state Dispensary, described as
"Ben Tillman's Baby", was never popular in the state, and violence
broke out in Darlington over its enforcement. In 1907, the Dispensary
Act was repealed. In 1915, the legal sale of alcohol was prohibited by
referendum.
Tillman's influence on the politics of South
Carolina began to wane after his move to the U.S. Senate in 1895. The
Conservatives recaptured the legislature in 1902. Aristocratic planter
Duncan Clinch Heyward won the gubernatorial election. They made no
substantial changes and in fact Heyward continued to enforce the
Dispensary Act at great difficulty. The state continued its rapid pace
of industrialization and this gave rise to a new class of voters, the
cotton mill workers.
White sharecroppers and mill workers
coalesced behind the candidacy of Tillmanite Cole Blease in the
gubernatorial election of 1910. They believed that Blease was making
them an important part of the political force of the state. Once in
office, however, Blease did not initiate any policies that were
beneficial to the mill workers or poor farmers. Instead, his four years
in office were highly erratic in behavior. This helped to pave the way
for a progressive, Richard I. Manning, to win the governorship in 1914.
Economic booms and busts
In
the 1880s 1886, Atlanta editor Henry W. Grady won attention in the
state for his vision of a "New South", a South based on the modern
industrial model. By now, the idea had already struck some enterprising
South Carolinians that the cotton they were shipping north could also
be processed in South Carolina mills. The idea was not new; in 1854, De
Bow's Commercial Review of the South & West, edited by
Charleston-born James Dunwoody Brownson De Bow, had boasted to
investors of South Carolina's potential for manufacturing, citing its
three lines of railroads, inexpensive raw materials, non-freezing
rivers, and labor pool. Slavery was so profitable before 1860 that it
absorbed available capital and repelled Northern investors, but now the
time for industrialization was at hand. By 1900 the textile industry
was established in upland areas, which had water-power and an available
white labor force, comprising men, women and children willing to move
from hard-scrabble farms to mill towns.
In 1902, the Charleston
Expedition drew visitors from around the world. President Theodore
Roosevelt, whose mother had attended school in Columbia, called for
reconciliation of still simmering animosities between the North and the
South.
The Progressive Movement came to the state with Governor
Richard Irvine Manning III in 1914. The expansion of bright-leaf
tobacco around 1900 from North Carolina brought an agricultural boom.
This was broken by the Great Depression startting in 1929, but the
tobacco industry recovered and prospered until near the end of the 20th
century. Cotton remained by far the dominant crop, despite low prices.
The arrival of boll weevil infestation sharply reduced acreage, and
especially yields. Farmers shifted to other crops.
Black
sharecroppers and laborers began heading North in large numbers in the
era of World War I, a Great Migration that continued for the rest of
the century, as they sought higher wages and much more favorable
political conditions.
Civil Rights Movement
Compared to hot
spots such as Mississippi and Alabama, desegregation went rather
smoothly during the 1950s and 1960s in South Carolina. As early as
1948, however, when Strom Thurmond ran for president on the States
Rights ticket, South Carolina whites were showing discontent with the
Democrats' post–World War II continuation of the New Deal's
federalization of power.
South Carolina blacks had problems with
the Southern version of states rights; by 1940 the implementation of
disfranchisement written into the 1895 constitution had the practical
effect of still limiting registration of African Americans to 3,000 -
only 0.8 percent of those of voting age in the state. African Americans
had not been able to elect a representative since the 19th century. By
1960, during the Civil Rights Movement, South Carolina had a population
of 2,382,594, of whom nearly 35%, or 829,291 were African Americans,
who had been without representation for 60 years.
Non-violent
action began in Rock Hill in 1961, when nine black Friendship Junior
College students took seats at the whites-only lunch counter at a
downtown McCrory's and refused to leave. When police arrested them, the
students were given the choice of paying $200 fines or serving 30 days
of hard labor in the York County jail. The Friendship Nine, as they
became known, chose the latter, gaining national attention in the
American Civil Rights Movement because of their decision to use the
"jail, no bail" strategy.
In 1962, federal courts ordered
Clemson University to admit African-American Harvey Gantt into its
classes. The state and the college's board of trustees had exhausted
legal recourse to prevent it; influential whites ensured that word was
widespread that no violence or otherwise unseemly behavior would be
tolerated. Gantt's entrance into the school occurred without incident.
The March 16, 1963, Saturday Evening Post praised the state's handling
of the crisis, with an article titled "Desegregation with Dignity: The
Inside Story of How South Carolina Kept the Peace". Twenty years later,
Gantt was elected as mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina.
In
1964, Barry Goldwater's platform galvanized South Carolina's
conservative Democrats and led to major defections of whites into the
Republican Party, led by Senator Thurmond. With the Civil Rights Act of
1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965, finally South Carolina blacks could
participate in public life and regained the power of suffrage. Since
then African Americans have been regularly elected to national, state
and local offices.
In 1968, the tragic shooting at Orangeburg
shattered the state's peaceful desegregation. When police overreacted
to the violence of students' protesting a segregated bowling alley,
they killed three students and wounded more than 30 others.
In
1970, when South Carolina celebrated its Tricentennial, more than 80%
of its residents had been born in the state. Since then, however,
Northerners have discovered South Carolina's golf courses, beaches and
mild climate. The state, particularly the coastal areas but
increasingly inland as well, has become more popular as a tourist
destination and magnet for new arrivals. Even some descendants of black
South Carolinians who moved out of the South during the Jim Crow years
have moved back. Despite these new arrivals, about 69% of residents are
native born.
Recent events
Economic change
The rapid
decline of agriculture in the state has been one of the most important
developments since the 1960s. As late as 1960 more than half the
state's cotton was picked by hand. Over the next twenty years
mechanization eliminated tens of thousands of jobs in rural counties.
By 2000 only 24,000 farms were left, with fewer than 2% of the
population; many others lives in rural areas on what were once farms,
but they commuted to non-farm jobs. Cotton was no longer king, as
cotton lands were converted into timberlands. Until the 1970s rural
areas always controlled the legislature. After 1972, both houses of the
state legislature were reapportioned into single-member districts,
ending another rural advantage. Coupled with the federal Voting Rights
Act of 1965, this change transformed South Carolina politics. The South
Carolina Democratic party, which dominated the state for a century
after Reconstruction, began to decline at the state and county level
with the 1994 elections. Republicans won all but one statewide
constitutional office and control of the state house of representatives.
Fritz
Hollings, governor 1959–1963, was a key supporter of development,
executed a campaign to promote industrial training programs and
implemented a state-wide economic development strategy. The end of the
Cold War in 1990 brought the closing of military installations, such as
the naval facilities in North Charleston that Rep. Mendel Rivers had
long sponsored. The quest for new jobs became a high state priority,
Starting in 1975 the state used its attractive climate, lack of
powerful labor unions and low wage rates to attract foreign investment
in factories, including Michelin, which located its U.S. headquarters
in the state. The stretch of Interstate 85 from the North Carolina line
to Greenville became "UN Alley" as international companies opened
operations.
Tourism became a major industry, especially in the
Myrtle Beach area. With its semitropical climate and cheap land and low
construction costs (because of low wages), the state became developer's
dream. Barrier islands such as Kiawah and Hilton Head, became
retirement communities for wealthy outsiders. The state's attempts to
manage coastal development in an orderly and environmentally sound
manner have run afoul of federal court decisions. The U.S. Supreme
Court ( in "Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council") ruled that the
state, in forbidding construction on threatened beachfront property,
had, in effect, seized the plaintiff's property without due process of
law. The rush to build upscale housing along the coast paid its price
in the billions of dollars as Hurricane Hugo swept through on September
21–22, 1989. Charleston was more used to hurricanes; historical
preservation groups immediately stepped in to begin salvage and
reconstruction, with the result that one year after Hugo the city was
virtually returned to normal.
By the late 1980s, however, the
state's economic growth rate flattened. South Carolina's development
plan focused on offering low taxes and attracting low-wage industries,
but the state's low levels of education failed to attract high wage,
high tech industries.
In 2009, the state outbid the state of
Washington for a giant new Boeing plant, that will be constructed in
North Charleston. Boeing must create at least 3,800 jobs and invest
more than $750 million within seven years to take advantage of the
various tax inducements worth $450 million.
Politics
In the
1970s, South Carolina elected its first Republican governor since
Reconstruction. In 1987 and 1991, the state elected and reelected
Governor Caroll Campbell, another Republican. Many politicians switched
from the Democratic Party to the GOP, including David Beasley , a
former Democrat who claimed to have undergone a spiritual rebirthwho
was elected governor as a Republican. In 1996 Beasley surprised
citizens by announcing that he could not justify keeping the
Confederate flag flying over the capitol. He said that a "spate of
racially motivated violence compelled him to reconsider the politics
and symbolism of the Confederate flag, and he concluded it should be
moved." Traditionalists were further surprised when Bob Jones III, head
of Bob Jones University, announced he held the same view. Beasley was
upset for reelection in 1998 by little-known Lancaster State
Assemblyman Jim Hodges. Hodges attacked Beasley's opposition to the
creation of a state lottery to support education. Hodges called for a
fresh tax base to improve public education. Despite Hodges'
unwillingness to join Beasley in his opposition to flying the
Confederate flag, the NAACP announced its support for Hodges. (At the
same time the NAACP demanded a boycott of conferences in the state over
the same issue). Hodges reportedly accepted millions in contributions
from the gambling industry, which some estimated spent a total of $10
million in its own campaign to defeat Beasely.
After the
election, however, with public opinions steadfastly against video
gambling, Hodges asked for a statewide referendum on the issue. He
claimed that he would personally join the expected majority in saying
"no" on legalized gambling, but vowed not to campaign against it.
Critics in both parties suggested that Hodges' debts to the state's
gambling interests were keeping him from campaigning against legalized
gambling. The state constitution does not provide for referendums
except for ratification of amendments. State legislators shut down the
state's video casinos soon after Hodges took office.
Upon his
election, Hodges announced that he agreed with Beasley's increasingly
popular compromise proposal on the Confederate flag issue. He supported
the flag's transfer to a Confederate monument on the State House's
grounds. Many South Carolinians agreed with this position as the only
solution. Further, they admired Hodges' solution to nuclear waste
shipments to the state. Hodges alienated moderate voters sufficiently
so that in 2002, most of the state's major newspapers supported
Republican Mark Sanford to replace him. Hodges was held responsible for
the state's mishandling of the Hurricane Floyd evacuation in 1999. By
2002, most of the funds from Hodges' "South Carolina Education Lottery"
were used to pay for college scholarships, rather than to improve
impoverished rural and inner-city schools. Religious leaders denounced
the lottery as taxing the poor to pay for higher education for the
middle class.
In the lottery's first year, Hodges'
administration awarded $40 million for "LIFE Scholarships", granted to
any South Carolinian student with a B average, graduation in the top
30% of the student's high school class, and an 1,100 SAT score. Hodges'
administration awarded $5.8 million for "HOPE Scholarships", which had
lower g.p.a. requirements.
Hodges lost his campaign for
reelection in 2002 against Republican conservative Mark Sanford, former
U.S. congressman from Sullivan's Island.


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