Union County
By Peter Triggiani and Amber Jackson
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About this ebook
Peter Triggiani
Peter Triggiani holds a master of science degree from NJIT and a bachelor of arts degree from Farleigh Dickinson University. He has served as an employee of the Union County Historical Society and is working to restore the historic Dawkins House, South Carolina's last Confederate capitol. Amber Jackson is currently seeking her bachelor's degree in liberal studies from USC-Union. The Union County Historical Society has opened its vast photo archives to present Images of America: Union County. A treasury of rarely seen images from local architecture, mill village culture, the Civil War, and assorted Americana are presented within.
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Union County - Peter Triggiani
museum.
INTRODUCTION
Union County is the historical gem of Upstate South Carolina; few, if any, other counties in the region can boast as much history. Prior to the arrival of European immigrants, this area was initially inhabited by Paleo or Mississippian Indians approximately 10,000 to 15,000 years ago. The skills of these peoples likely were responsible for the construction of Indian burial mounds located around the Broad River. Various early stone relics created by Native Americans have been unearthed within Union County, particularly around these mounds and in the proximity of the Broad River and other such bodies of water. Later, Cherokee and Catawba tribes dwelled within this vicinity. After a war fought around 1620 between these two nations, the terms for a peace treaty mandated that the Cherokee and Catawba occupy separate parts of the region. The Cherokee agreed to reside west of the Broad River in the vicinity of what would become Union County and the Catawba to the east of the river. Consequently, the Native American name for Broad River was Eswa Huppeday (Eswaspuddenah), which translates as line river.
Before and during the primary influx of European migrants, there was abundant game in Union County. The area absolutely teemed with antelope, deer, buffalo, wolves, beavers, and bears, not to mention numerous species of feral cats.
Union’s humble history began with European settlers populating newly acquired land bequeathed to them by royal land grants in the mid-to-late 1700s. These new colonists began cultivating Union’s rich soil and sowing the seeds of a fledgling community. Union—both city and county—was christened after a 1760s log-construction meetinghouse known simply as the Union Church and built for usage by all local Christian congregations. Diversity in Union was measured primarily by religious denominations; notable populations of these were Presbyterians, Episcopalians, and Quakers. As Union grew alongside its diverse settlers, history has recorded the many challenges that tested its people’s resolve. Within the span of 100 years, the citizens of Union struggled through three major periods of sociopolitical turmoil: the American Revolutionary War, the Civil War, and lastly the Reconstruction period, in which Congress passed forced acts of legislation that enabled radicals to take control of South Carolina policy. South Carolina had more Revolutionary War battles than any other of the 13 original colonies, with numerous skirmishes and three major engagements that took place in and around Union County: Blackstock’s Farm, Musgrove Mill, and Fish Dam. Fought primarily by local militia rather than the Continental army’s regimented forces, Patriots opposed and conquered British troops. The most notable example of Patriot victory in the aforementioned assaults is that of Blackstock’s, in which a militia ambush put over 100 British Redcoats out of action while suffering only three local American casualties. These battlefields remain as historic sites and state parks.
The question of the day transformed into the question of the decade during the 1850s; numerous local politicians, including General Wallace and soon-to-be South Carolina governor William H. Gist, spoke out in favor of Southern independence. Although no Civil War battles were fought in Union County, roots of the war are found here. Secessionist governor Gist’s plantation is located on the outskirts of Union County; his personal secretary, Benjamin F. Arthur, also lived in Union and was nominated to the position of clerk of the Secession Convention in December 1860. Arthur’s desk, on which the Declaration of Secession was penned, survived the war and is housed in the Union County Museum. Later in the war, Confederate president Jefferson Davis spent two days in Union while fleeing Yankee personnel. In the last days of the Civil War, Governor Magrath, last Confederate governor of South Carolina, fled Columbia prior to General Sherman’s advance and retreated to Union. He temporarily based himself at the Dawkins House, used its library as his office, and carried on state affairs in this refuge, consequently making Union a provisional South Carolina capital. His neighbor Benjamin F. Arthur, Edward John Arthur, and Governor Magrath burned documents in the Dawkins House library’s fireplace.