Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Norman DeBruhl Statement of Faith

                                                  A Statement of Faith 

By Norman Hoyle DeBruhl
December 14, 2015 

One has to go back in history to make things fit.

History is important because it teaches one just how clever we are not!

Sliding back one, two, or twenty generations the same old human frailties come shining
through.  The sins of our fathers, are the same today, yesterday, and tomorrow.

The one constant, the one redeemable virtue, the one truth that has survived for two
thousand years is the message delivered in the Sermon on the Mount.

Contained in that memorable message was the perfect "truth."  The guide for an individual or a whole population.

A guide that needs not the armies of theologians, or those with the "calling" to explain
or teach the true meaning of those spoken words in the sermon spoken so long ago.

Those words have distilled for me the essence of the Christian Faith.  Reading those words
convinced me why I am therefore a Christian.   A believer in that Sermon on the Mount.

My Christianity begins and ends with those two realities, the man Jesus, and his
teaching.     Norman Hoyle DeBruhl

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

7th South Carolina Cavalry retreat from Richmond to Appomattox







"The Falling Flag.  by Edward M Boykin  
The 7th South Carolina Cavalry CSA  Commanded by Col. Edward M Boykin
Evacuation of Richmond, retreat and surrender at Appomattox April 9, 1865.

Benjamin F DeBruhl and George Ephraim DeBruhl brothers served with Company K
of the 7th SC Cavalry Regiment.   George was in the dismounted contingent ordered to serve in the infantry ranks.
Benjamin remained with the mounted ranks and ordered to serve as cavalry rear guard protecting Lees retreating army.
George was surrendered April 9, 1865 and paroled immediately.   Benjamin was with the contingent that managed a breakout the night before the surrender.  They rode west towards Lynchburg, VA.
When word reached them that Gen Joseph Johnston CSAhad surrendered to Gen Sherman USA in North Carolina.  With this news,they realized  the war was lost.  They were ordered to disband by their commander and told to make their way home.  Their commander asked them to live in peace under the laws of the United States. 
At a council of war the night of April 8 General Fitzhugh Lee asked his uncle Robert E. Lee for
permission to try for a breakout.   General Lee gave his blessing for the attempt.   The cavalry
broke through the surrounding Union army and headed west towards Lynchburg Va.
Benjamin made his way through the mountains, crossing through Mars Hill section of Western North Carolina on his way back to Greenville South Carolina and his new wife Rebecca Marshbanks DeBruhl and two of their 13 children destined to be born to them.
They left Greenville in 1867 and moved permanently to the Mars Hill section of North Carolina. Settling along Gabriels Creek in Madison County.
George Ephraim followed them to Mars Hill with his large family. Ben and Rebecca came to Mars Hill with Rebecca's parents and family.   Francis Marion Beauregard Marshbanks and Rebecca Ann Salmon Marshbanks and their large family. Benjamin,Rebecca, Francis Marion, and Martha Ann Marshbanks are buried

at Gabriels Creek cemetery, Mars Hill, NC.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 






Friday, November 20, 2015

William Francis DeBruhl

William Francis F. DeBruhl

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Marlboro, SC
Death: (Date and location unknown)
Immediate Family: Son of Edward Cornwallis DeBruhl and Patience Stevens
Husband of Maria Stokes DeBruhl
Father of George Ephraim DeBruhl and Benjamin Franklin DeBruhl
Brother of Jesse DeBruhl; George DeBruhl; Ann Stevens DeBruhl; Harriet DeBruhl; Stephen Carr DeBruhl and 1 other
Half brother of Mary DeBruhl; Samuel Godart DeBruhl; Elizabeth DeBruhl and Edward C DeBruhl

Saturday, September 12, 2015

William Fair DeBruhl Barkuloo

BARKULOO, William F.D.
The Atlanta Constitution; Thursday 4 December 1890; pg. 2 col. 2
THE VICTIM DIED—A Negro Kills a White Man in Brunswick
            Brunswick, Ga. December 3—[Special—William Barkuloo was struck in the head by John Boatwright a negro laborer with a piece of scantling yesterday and died this morning at 4 o’clock from the injuries received.  The affair was a cold blooded one.  At the hour Barkuloo died his murderer was arrested at his home on Dartmouth street.  Boatwright had just gotten into his house and was in the act of undressing when he was made to put on his clothes again by the officers, when he was taken to jail.
            Barkuloo was foreman of the lumber dock of Stillwell Millen & Co. and he discharged Boatwright from his employ.  The latter refused to go and stood around making himself obnoxious.  A truck had been run off the track and Barkuloo having been led to believe Boatwright did it accused him.  The negro replied “Whoever said I did it is a d—d liar.”  This angered Mr. Barkuloo who seized a stick and struck at Boatwright.  The negro by this time got hold of a piece of wood the same size that Barkuloo had and struck the latter over the head.  Mr. Barkuloo fell unconscious and was afterwards taken to his home where Dr. H. Burford was summoned.  Dr. Blain was also called but despite their close attention and all that loving hands could do Barkuloo gradually sank until the hour of 4 o’clock this morning.
            A reporter called at the jail this morning to see Boatwright and learn what he had to say about the matter but was refused admittance.  The coroner was notified of the death of Barkuloo but he sought the advice of the solicitor general, who said that an inquest was unnecessary.  He was between thirty five and forty years of age, and leaves a wife to mourn his sudden demise.  The funeral will take place tomorrow at 10 o’clock a.m. from the First Baptist church.  Excitement was high with talk of lynching, but all is quiet tonight.
The Augusta Chronicle; 4 December 1890; pg. 1A col.
KILLING IN BRUNSWICK—Wm. Barkuloo Killed by a Negro Laborer Who Was Discharged.

            BRUNSWICK, GA., Dec. 3.—[Special.]—William Barkuloo, who was struck in the head by John Boatwright, a negro laborer, with a piece of scantling yesterday, died this morning at 4 o’clock from the injuries received.  The affair was a cold-blooded one.  At the hour Barkuloo died his murderer was arrested at his home, on Dartmouth street.  Boatwright had just gotten into his house and was in the act of undressing when he was made to put on his clothes again by the officers when he was taken to jail.  Barkuloo was foreman of the lumber dock of Stillwell, Millen & Co.  He discharged Boatwright from his employ.  Later he refused to go, and stood around making himself obnoxious.  A truck had been run off the track, and Barkuloo having been led to believe Boatwright did it, accused him.  The negro replied:  ‘Whoever said I did it, is a dam liar.”  This angered Mr. Barkuloo, who seized a piece of stick and struck at Boatwright.  The negro by this time got hold of a piece of wood the same size Barkuloo had, and STRUCK THE LATTER OVER THE HEAD.  Mr. Barkuloo fell unconscious, and was afterwards taken to his home, where Dr. H. Burford was summoned.  Dr. Blaine was also called in, but despite their close attention and all that loving hands could do, Barkuloo gradually sank until the hour of 1 this morning.
            A reporter called at the jail this morning to interview Boatwright and to learn what he had to say about the matter, but was refused admittance.  The coroner was notified of the death of Barkuloo, but he sought the advice of the solicitor-general, who said that an inquest was unnecessary.  He was between 45 and 46 years of age and leaves a wife to mourn his sudden demise.  The funeral will take place tomorrow at 10 o’clock a.m., from the First Baptist church.  There was great excitement here today and talk of lynching, but all is quiet tonight.  No trouble is anticipated by the officers.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Col. James Lawrence Orr CSA

Colonel James Lawrence Orr

In 1736, Irish immigrant, Robert Orr, came to the American Colonies. He first lived in Pennsylvania and later moved to Wake County, NC. His youngest son, Jehu, a Revolutionary War soldier, moved during the late 1700s to the Pendleton District of SC. Jehu’s son Christopher married Martha McCann also of Irish descent. Christopher and Martha had three sons and two daughters. One of these sons was James Lawrence Orr, born May 12, 1822 in the Craytonville Community of Pendleton District. James Lawrence Orr was known as a great statesman on both state and national levels.
In 1830 the Orr family moved to Anderson, where Christopher became the manager of a hotel and General Merchandise store. James Lawrence decided to enter the University of Virginia, considered one of the best institutions of higher learning in that era, to study law. He matriculated in 1839 at the age of seventeen and spent two years in the university. He excelled in various subjects during his freshman year. The second year he concentrated on the study of law. When Professor J. A. G. Davis, whom Orr depended upon in his study of law, was killed by a student, and an inexperienced lawyer became his instructor, Orr decided to return to South Carolina. He came back to Anderson and continued to study law and history.
In January 1842, Orr, not quite 20, entered Joseph Whitner’s law office. Whitner, solicitor of South Carolina’s western circuit, was often absent from the office, and Orr met many people whom he advised about legal matters. He began his political career at the age of 21 by serving as a delegate to the Democratic State Convention, which met in Columbia. John C. Calhoun was the choice of this body for presidential nominee in 1844. Orr was well suited to politics.
In 1843 he became editor of the Anderson Gazette, and at the same time began practicing law in Anderson, Greenville, Pickens, Abbeville and Laurens. He married Mary Jane Marshall in the same year. They had seven children, Eliza, born 1845, Martha, born 1847, James Lawrence, born 1852, Samuel, born 1855, Mary, born 1858, Amelia, born 1860, and Christopher, born 1862. There oldest daughter, Eliza died in January 1851. Mary Jane Orr had a stroke following the birth of Christopher but did recover her speech.
The Orr family attended the Episcopal church in Pendleton. In 1849, the rector of St. Paul’s Church in Pendleton began holding meetings in the Anderson Court House. In 1851 Grace Episcopal Church was built in Anderson. Orr was instrumental in establishing this church.
He ran for a position in the lower house of the state legislature in 1844 and in 1846 he was re-elected to the same office. He was becoming well known in the state capital and was making friends over the entire state. He began to make plans to run for a seat in the US Congress. Orr was elected and entered the US House of Representatives in 1849 over Benjamin F. Perry. He did not run for re-election.
The 1850 census shows that Orr was a slave owner living on a 710 acre farm, growing cotton, corn, oats, wheat and vegetables, and raising livestock. In July, 1860, Orr announced that he favored secession, but he opposed strongly the idea of South Carolina leaving the Union alone. The Secession Convention, which met in the First Baptist Church in Columbia on December 17, 1860, moved to Charleston because of a small-pox epidemic in the city. On December 20, the convention adopted the Ordinance of Secession in St. Andrew’s Hall and signed it in Institute Hall. Former Congressman Orr served on the committee drafting the ordinance.
In the meantime Major Robert J. Anderson had moved his troops from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter during the night of December 26th. On April 12, 1861, troops under General P. G. T. Beauregard fired on Fort Sumter at 4:30am. Anderson surrendered after a battle of thirty three hours, beginning the war between the North and South. Eleven states belonged to the Confederate States of America. They included South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama , Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, North Carolina, Arkansas, Tennessee and Virginia. After the secession of South Carolina from the Union and the firing on Fort Sumter, Orr petitioned Governor Francis Pickens to allow him to raise a Regiment of soldiers. Permission was granted and different men in the districts began conscripting the recruits. This regiment was later called the South Carolina First Regiment of Rifles or Orr’s Rifles. They gathered at a campground near Sandy Springs M. E. Church in Anderson County on July 19, 1861. On the following day they were mustered into service. Officers were selected by popular vote, and the following were elected:
  • Colonel James Lawrence Orr, Anderson
  • Lt. Colonel J. Foster Marshall, Abbeville
  • Major Daniel A. Ledbetter.
Companies were organized and captains chosen. They were:
  • Company A Keowee Rifleman, Captain J. W. Livingston
  • Company B McDuffies Guards, Captain James Perrin
  • Company C Mountain Boys, Captain J. J. Norton
  • Company D Orr’s Rifles, Captain Frank E. Harrison
  • Company E Oconee Riflemen, Captain Miles M. Norton
  • Company F Blue Ridge Riflemen, Captain Robert A. Hawthorne
  • Company G Marshal Riflemen, Captain C. McDuffie Miller
  • Company H Pee Dee Guards, Captain George M. Fairlee
  • Company K Marshall Guards, Captain George W. Cox
  • Company L Calhoun Guards, Captain John B. Moore.
According to a diary kept by a confederate soldier, W. A. Lowery of Pickens District, the recruits remained at the Sandy Springs campground location for six weeks and six days, then started the long march to the coast, first to Summerville and later to Ft. Moultrie on Sullivan’s Island. This Regiment consisted of three companies from Abbeville District, two from Anderson District, four from Pickens District and one company comprised men from Marion District. The Pickens recruits lived largely west of Keowee River. It is safe to assume that most of them lived in the area which was called Oconee when Pickens District was divided in 1868.


Coming soon, a list volunteers for Orr's Rifles from the Anderson, Oconee, and Pickens areas.

William Fair DeBruhl Barkuloo

William Fair DeBruhl Barkuloo

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina
Death: Died in Brunswick, Glynn County, Georgia
Immediate Family: Son of William Barkuloo and Eliza C. DeBruhl
Husband of Mary T. Scarlett
Half brother of Henry Suydam Barkeloo; Marian Louise Barkeloo; Osmont Voorhees Barkeloo and Willie D. "Tum" Barkeloo

Managed by: Duane Harley Roen
Last Updated:

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Sarah Wigfall Trezevant Marrie William Jesse DeBruhl second son of William Jesse DeBruhl

Sarah Wigfall Trezevant married William Jesse DeBruhl
The second son of William Jesse DeBruhl builder of the
DeBruhl Marshall house 1820,

Sarah was from an old Huguenot family of Charleston.
They had two children:

Arthur DeBruhl

Jesse DeBruhl

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

James Lawrence Orr Minister to Russia


ORR, James Lawrence

ORR, James Lawrence
Collection of the U.S. House of Representatives
About this object
1822–1873

Biography

ORR, James Lawrence, a Representative from South Carolina; born in Craytonville, Anderson County, S.C., May 12, 1822; attended the public schools, and was graduated from the University of Virginia at Charlottesville in 1842; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Anderson, S.C., in 1843; engaged in newspaper work; member of the State house of representatives 1844-1847; elected as a Democrat to the Thirty-first and to the four succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1849-March 3, 1859); chairman, Committee on Indian Affairs (Thirty-third Congress); Speaker of the House of Representatives (Thirty-fifth Congress); was not a candidate for renomination in 1858; resumed the practice of law at Craytonville; member of the southern rights convention held in Charleston, S.C., in 1851; delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Charleston in 1860; member of the secession convention in 1860; one of three commissioners sent to Washington, D.C., to treat with the Federal Government for the surrender of the forts in Charleston Harbor; Member of the Confederate Senate in 1861; served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; special commissioner sent to President Johnson to negotiate the establishment of provisional government for the State of South Carolina in 1865; member of the State constitutional convention in 1865; elected Governor of South Carolina as a Republican in 1866; president of the State convention at Columbia in July 1866; delegate to the Union National Convention at Philadelphia in August 1866; judge of the eighth judicial circuit 1868-1870; member of the Republican State convention in August 1872; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1872; appointed by President Grant as Minister to Russia in December 1872; died in St. Petersburg, Russia, May 5, 1873; interment in the Presbyterian Cemetery, Anderson, S.C.                             

Friday, June 12, 2015

Ownership history of DeBruhl Marshall House

     


             DeBruhl Marshall House
                          Columbia, South Carolina 

Built 1820 by Jesse DeBruhl Low Country planter and broker.
After a design, by Robert Mills designer of the Washington Monument. 


I just received this from Robert Olguin of Historic Columbia.  He the chief historian/archaeologist/restorer at the De Bruhl Marshall House. 

 
Timeline of Owners

1820―1860                Jesse DeBruhl

1861―1905                Mary C. Wiley (DeBruhl’s widow) and John S. Wiley

1905                            Sold to Palmetto Bank; immediately sold to William Jesse DeBruhl (Mary and Jesse’s son) and then sold to Janie B. Marshall

1905―1919                Janie B. Marshall (the widow of J.Q. Marshall Sr., son of John Foster Marshall and Jesse DeBruhl’s daughter, Elizabeth A. Marshall, by his first wife, Eliza Donovan)

1919―1947                James Hagood Sams and Caroline E. Sams

1947―1972                May Bond S. Rhodes

1972―1989                DeBruhl-Marshall Company (Phillip Kenneth Huggins, Robert Nicholson Milling, Roger K. Rutledge, A. Sale Estefano, Bob C. Schnackenberg, Frank A. Cheano, and Cynthia S. Hamilton)

1989―2014                South Carolina Tees Incorporated (William Maxwell Gregg, to whose name the deed was transferred in 1997)

2014―present            Wanda Gale Breedlove

Friday, June 5, 2015

Ambassador James Lawrence Orr

James L. Orr (1872-1873)

1872-73

James L Orr
James L Orr

James Lawrence Orr was a U.S. Representative from South Carolina from 1849 to 1859 from South Carolina, and was Speaker of the House during his last term. A member of South Carolina's secession convention, he was a Confederate Senator, and served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War. After the war he was elected Governor of South Carolina. President Ulysses S. Grant appointed him Minister to Russia. He died of pneumonia in St. Petersburg less than two months after he arrived at Post. He was the brother in law of Jehu Foster Marshall who was married to Elizabeth DeBruhl,
Jesse DeBruhl's daughter.

5th Battalion, South Carolina Rifles









5th Battalion, South Carolina Rifles   

Benjamin F DeBruhl started his Confederate service in 2nd SC State service. He served six months when it was discovered he was sixteen years of age.  He was discharged and reenlisted at age 18 in the 7th SC Cavalry CSA and served the duration of the war.   

Brief History
The 5th Battalion, South Carolina Rifles was also known as Moore's Battalion of Rifles.  It was also called the 1st Regiment, South Carolina Rifles under the leadership of James L. Orr.  By May 1861, James L. Orr and his brother-in-law, Jehu Foster Marshall, were both trying to raise a regiment.  Neither man could get enough soldiers to form a regiment so they combined their men and created the 5th Battalion, South Carolina Rifles. The battalion was mustered into State service in July 1861.  In April 1862 this military unit was reorganized into the 2nd Regiment, South Carolina Rifles (also called Moore's Rifles).[1]
Joseph H. Crute, Jr.'s book, "Units of the Confederate States Army", contains no history for this unit.[2]



Counties of Origin

Men often enlisted in  a company recruited in the counties where they lived though not always. After many battles, companies might be combined because so many men were killed or wounded.  However if you are unsure which company your ancestor  was in, try the company recruited in his county first.
Company A - many men from Abbeville District (County), a few men from Laurens District (County) and Newberry District (County)
Company B - many men from Pickens District (County). Part of Pickens District became Oconee County
Company C - many men from  Pickens District (County). Part of Pickens District became Oconee County
Company D - many men from Anderson District (County) and Pickens District (County)
Company E - many men from Pickens District (County)
Company F - many men from Anderson District (County) and Abbeville District (County), a few from Laurens District (County)
Company G
Information on companies and counties of origin is taken from Seigler's book.[1]

James Lawrence Orr Brother in Law of Jehu Foster Marshall

Colonel James Lawrence Orr

In 1736, Irish immigrant, Robert Orr, came to the American Colonies. He first lived in Pennsylvania and later moved to Wake County, NC. His youngest son, Jehu, a Revolutionary War soldier, moved during the late 1700s to the Pendleton District of SC. Jehu’s son Christopher married Martha McCann also of Irish descent. Christopher and Martha had three sons and two daughters. One of these sons was James Lawrence Orr, born May 12, 1822 in the Craytonville Community of Pendleton District. James Lawrence Orr was known as a great statesman on both state and national levels.
In 1830 the Orr family moved to Anderson, where Christopher became the manager of a hotel and General Merchandise store. James Lawrence decided to enter the University of Virginia, considered one of the best institutions of higher learning in that era, to study law. He matriculated in 1839 at the age of seventeen and spent two years in the university. He excelled in various subjects during his freshman year. The second year he concentrated on the study of law. When Professor J. A. G. Davis, whom Orr depended upon in his study of law, was killed by a student, and an inexperienced lawyer became his instructor, Orr decided to return to South Carolina. He came back to Anderson and continued to study law and history.
In January 1842, Orr, not quite 20, entered Joseph Whitner’s law office. Whitner, solicitor of South Carolina’s western circuit, was often absent from the office, and Orr met many people whom he advised about legal matters. He began his political career at the age of 21 by serving as a delegate to the Democratic State Convention, which met in Columbia. John C. Calhoun was the choice of this body for presidential nominee in 1844. Orr was well suited to politics.
In 1843 he became editor of the Anderson Gazette, and at the same time began practicing law in Anderson, Greenville, Pickens, Abbeville and Laurens. He married Mary Jane Marshall in the same year. They had seven children, Eliza, born 1845, Martha, born 1847, James Lawrence, born 1852, Samuel, born 1855, Mary, born 1858, Amelia, born 1860, and Christopher, born 1862. Their oldest daughter, Eliza died in January 1851. Mary Jane Orr had a stroke following the birth of Christopher but did recover her speech.
The Orr family attended the Episcopal church in Pendleton. In 1849, the rector of St. Paul’s Church in Pendleton began holding meetings in the Anderson Court House. In 1851 Grace Episcopal Church was built in Anderson. Orr was instrumental in establishing this church.
He ran for a position in the lower house of the state legislature in 1844 and in 1846 he was re-elected to the same office. He was becoming well known in the state capital and was making friends over the entire state. He began to make plans to run for a seat in the US Congress. Orr was elected and entered the US House of Representatives in 1849 over Benjamin F. Perry. He did not run for re-election.
The 1850 census shows that Orr was a slave owner living on a 710 acre farm, growing cotton, corn, oats, wheat and vegetables, and raising livestock. In July, 1860, Orr announced that he favored secession, but he opposed strongly the idea of South Carolina leaving the Union alone. The Secession Convention, which met in the First Baptist Church in Columbia on December 17, 1860, moved to Charleston because of a small-pox epidemic in the city. On December 20, the convention adopted the Ordinance of Secession in St. Andrew’s Hall and signed it in Institute Hall. Former Congressman Orr served on the committee drafting the ordinance.
In the meantime Major Robert J. Anderson had moved his troops from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter during the night of December 26th. On April 12, 1861, troops under General P. G. T. Beauregard fired on Fort Sumter at 4:30am. Anderson surrendered after a battle of thirty three hours, beginning the war between the North and South. Eleven states belonged to the Confederate States of America. They included South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama , Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, North Carolina, Arkansas, Tennessee and Virginia. After the secession of South Carolina from the Union and the firing on Fort Sumter, Orr petitioned Governor Francis Pickens to allow him to raise a Regiment of soldiers. Permission was granted and different men in the districts began conscripting the recruits. This regiment was later called the South Carolina First Regiment of Rifles or Orr’s Rifles. They gathered at a campground near Sandy Springs M. E. Church in Anderson County on July 19, 1861. On the following day they were mustered into service. Officers were selected by popular vote, and the following were elected:
  • Colonel James Lawrence Orr, Anderson
  • Lt. Colonel J. Foster Marshall, Abbeville
  • Major Daniel A. Ledbetter.
Companies were organized and captains chosen. They were:
  • Company A Keowee Rifleman, Captain J. W. Livingston
  • Company B McDuffies Guards, Captain James Perrin
  • Company C Mountain Boys, Captain J. J. Norton
  • Company D Orr’s Rifles, Captain Frank E. Harrison
  • Company E Oconee Riflemen, Captain Miles M. Norton
  • Company F Blue Ridge Riflemen, Captain Robert A. Hawthorne
  • Company G Marshal Riflemen, Captain C. McDuffie Miller
  • Company H Pee Dee Guards, Captain George M. Fairlee
  • Company K Marshall Guards, Captain George W. Cox
  • Company L Calhoun Guards, Captain John B. Moore.
According to a diary kept by a confederate soldier, W. A. Lowery of Pickens District, the recruits remained at the Sandy Springs campground location for six weeks and six days, then started the long march to the coast, first to Summerville and later to Ft. Moultrie on Sullivan’s Island. This Regiment consisted of three companies from Abbeville District, two from Anderson District, four from Pickens District and one company comprised men from Marion District. The Pickens recruits lived largely west of Keowee River. It is safe to assume that most of them lived in the area which was called Oconee when Pickens District was divided in 1868.

Coming soon, a list volunteers for Orr's Rifles from the Anderson, Oconee, and Pickens areas.

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Tuesday, June 2, 2015

History or ownership of DeBruhl Marshall Mansion

John Quitman Marshall was one busy man.  He was alternately Secretary of State, Judge, Lawyer, Swore in Wade Hampton as Governor, Streetcar developer, Electric Power developer, Completed State House, Restored DeBruhl Marshall House, in charge of paving Columbia streets, active in Columbia's social scene, fought constantly for money and talent
to complete the State House, prosecuted demon contractors, just to name a few of his accomplishments.  He died relatively
young at 59. It was said of him he worked himself to death for the good of Columbia and her citizens. In the restoration of
the DeBruhl Marshall house at the turn of the century, he removed the old leaders and replaced the roof with slate or wood shingles  and brought the old staircase from the old courthouse and installed it in the back hall of the DeBruhl Marshall mansion.  The leaders (downspouts) had the Mills mark and date according to some Mills historians, but the leaders are long ago vanished without a written record as yet discovered.  One of these days, possibly some document will surface
telling was was engraved on the gutters and downspouts.  We can only hope. 





I just received this from Robert Olguin of Historic Columbia.  He is the chief historian/archaeologist/restorer at the DeBruhl Marshall House. 
 
Timeline of Owners
 
1820―1860                 Jesse DeBruhl
 
1861―1905                Mary C. Wiley (DeBruhl’s widow) and John S. Wiley
 
1905                            Sold to Palmetto Bank; immediately sold to William Jesse DeBruhl (Mary and Jesse’s son) and then sold to Janie B. Marshall
 
1905―1919                 Janie B. Marshall ( the widow of J.Q. Marshall Sr., son of John Foster Marshall and Jesse DeBruhl’s daughter, Elizabeth A. Marshall, by his first wife, Eliza Donovan)
 
1919―1947                 James Hagood Sams and Caroline E. Sams
 
1947―1972                 May Bond S. Rhodes
 
1972―1989                 DeBruhl-Marshall Company (Phillip Kenneth Huggins, Robert Nicholson Milling, Roger K. Rutledge, A. Sale Estefano, Bob C. Schnackenberg, Frank A. Cheano, and Cynthia S. Hamilton)
 
1989―2014                 South Carolina Tees Incorporated (William Maxwell Gregg, to whose name the deed was transferred in 1997)
 
2014―present             Wanda Gale Breedlove
 
 

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Dr Samuel Steen Marshall divides up his plantation

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  • ID: I593
  • Name: Jehu Foster Marshall
  • Surname: Marshall
  • Given Name: Jehu Foster
  • Sex: M
  • Birth: 1817 in SC
  • Death: 1862 in Manassas, VA
  • _UID: 77AFB635C3A310409412EE756E7790F73C8A
  • Note:
    from WC database upstate-sc
    From "Greenwood County Sketches", p.320-321:
    Samuel Marshall, son of Samuel and Mary Steen Marshall, was about five years old when the family came to South Carolina. In 1810 Samuel Marshall went to Charleston to study medicine under a distinguished physician, Dr. Warren Waldo. Marshal was licensed to practice in 1812 and located at White Hall plantation in Greenwood County (then Abbeville District).
    While Dr. Marshall was a successful physician, he became more widely known as a progressive planter, and about 1830, he abandoned medical practice for farming. He was quoted as saying that the way to succeed in farming was "to raise and manufacture everything for the support of the plantation and let your cotton money represent your net profit."
    He followed his own advice, growing practically all the food needed for people and livestock, having cotton and woolen clothes and even shoes made on the place. His cotton yield was reported as ranging from 800 to 1200 pounds an acre, and he had hundreds of acres planted in that crop. Price of cotton ranged from 25 to 35 cents a pound. At his death in 1861, Dr. Marshall owned 147 slaves and was one of five men in Abbeville District with more than 100 slaves at that time.
    Dr. Marshall built an elegant home, "Cedar Grove." The site is the southeast corner of the intersection of highway 221 and state highway 156.
    A few years after the Confederate War, the place of about 3,700 acres, was sold to the South Carolina Land Commission, an agency set up to aid former slaves in acquiring home sites on long terms at low interest. It was said that each family was "promised" 40 acres and a mule. The Cedar Grove plantation was divided into tracts of about 40 acres each and sold to former slaves. The section became known as "Promised Land." The grand plantation house was occupied by four or five families, but later burned.
    In 1815 Dr. Samuel Marshall had married Eliza Clopton Foster, 1797-1870, daughter of Jehu and Margaret Perrin Foster; eight children.

    Title: MARSHALL PLANTATION SITE
    Location:
    County: Marion
    City: Ocala
    Description: A short distance north of here stood the sugar plantation of Jehu Foster Marshall, established in 1855. At the start of the Civil War in 1861, Marshall was named a colonel in the Confederate Army and soon commanded one of General Wade Hampton's infantry units, the 1st South Carolina Rifles. Colonel Marshall was killed during the Second Battle of Manassas in August 1862. The plantation continued in operation under the supervision of his widow, Elizabeth Anne DeBruhl Marshall, until March 10, 1865, when Union troops staged a surprise raid. The Marshall Plantation and the sugar mill were burned to the ground. The raid was conducted by elements of the 3rdUnited States Colored Infantry ,led by the black Sergeant Major Henry James. The Ocala Home Guard pursued the Union force and during the running battle, two of the home guard members were killed. After crossing the Ocklawaha River, the raiders set fire to the bridge. Company H, 2nd Florida Cavalry, lead by Captain J.J. Dickinson, encamped at nearby Silver Springs, soon gave chase and succeeded in driving the Union troops into St. Augustine, and reclaiming all property seized during the raid.
  • Change Date: 24 Feb 2009 at 00:00:00

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    Marriage 1 Elizabeth A DeBruhl b: 1827 in ,,SC
    • Married: 1843
  • Saturday, May 23, 2015

    John S Wiley of Child & Wiley

    Notice to Greenville and Columbia Rail Road Co. for listed script from estate of Jesse DeBruhl. 21 May 1871. On stationary of Child and Wiley, merchandise company in Columbia. John S. Wiley is announcing his guardianship of William Jesse DeBruhl. He is asking to exchange some bonds from Greenville and Columbia Rail Road. He is ready to settle estate. 31 May 1871. Richland Co., SC.

    Wednesday, May 13, 2015

    Dr Samuel Steen Marshall

    Dr Samuel Steene Marshall

    Birthdate:
    Death: Died
    Place of Burial: Christ Episcopal Church Cemetery Greenville Greenville County South Carolina, USA
    Immediate Family: Son of Samuel Marshall and Mary Steen Marshall
    Husband of Eliza Clopton Foster Marshall
    Father of Capt Jehu Foster Marshall and Dr Joseph Warren Waldo Marshall
    Brother of Nancy Aiken; Isabella Marshall; Mary Ann Major; George Marshall; William Marshall and 5 others