Redcliffe Southern Times
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Redcliffe Southern Times
REDCLIFFE PLANTATION 181 REDCLIFFE RD BEECH ISLAND, SC 29842 (803) 827–1473 UPCOMING EVENTS AT REDCLIFFE. Behind the Scenes of Redcliffe Plantation Sat, Jun 07 5:00 PM $15/participant For more information on these programs please contact the park. Park Staff Redcliffe Southern Times V O L U M E 8 , I S S U E M A Y 1 1 2 0 1 4 Museum Day! Celebrate YOUR local museum! International Museum Day has been celebrated around May 18th since 1977. It is a time to recognize the people and places who protect our natural and cultural heritage; a time to celebrate cultures and diversity, art and scientific tour. We use these objects to tell you about the people who used them and how they lived. One single object can give you multiple perspectives. For instance, the tin hat bath tub that sits in one of the bedrooms can illustrate how members of the Hammond family Park Manager Joy Raintree Park Interpreter Elizabeth Laney Park Technician Doug Kratz Speaking of Sheep! Frederica Wade Billings kept a “Book of Menus” in 1938. In pencil, she scrawled these instructions for her cook… “Fri. 4-15 Cook Lamb chop for Runzy’s lunch.” It appears that even their Jack Russell Terrier was fond of mutton! discovery, memories and the objects that hold them. . This year’s theme is “Museum Collections make Connections.” The International Council of Museums (ICOM) chose this theme because it “demonstrates how museum exhibitions have the ability not only to tell a story, but to also engage with the community through shared memory.” If you have ever toured Redcliffe then you know how true that statement is. Redcliffe has an extensive collection of over 4,000 personal items belonging to the Hammond family. Every object has its own story, and those stories reflect four generations of people that used those objects. At Redcliffe you are much more likely to get a “social history” tour than a “decorative arts” tour. What does that mean? Well, the objects at Redcliffe are not solely valued for their beauty , form, maker, or use and they are not the primary focus of the bathed in the 19th century, but it can also illustrate the work of the enslaved housekeeper that had to draw water from a well and prepare a bath for someone. Museum Day began as a way to ignite conversations among museum visitors, to broaden perspectives, and encourage advocacy of our cultural institutions. We invite you to visit us on May 18th and share how our museum collection has helped you to make a connection! Join a tour at 11 am, 1, or 3 pm WOOL & WHEELS: Textile Production on the Plantation When James Henry Hammond acquired Silver Bluff Plantation in 1831 there were no sheep listed in his inventory of the property. Within two years he owned 22 sheep and by 1839 he owned over 75 sheep. A part of the sheep’s use to the plantation was as a food source. Mutton is often listed as an alternative to pork and beef for slave food allotments. The sheep’s wool would have been equally as valuable as a source for yarn and cloth to supplement factory made cloth that Hammond purchased. continued,, p. 2 Wool & Wheels continued... Spinning raw wool into yarn was the province of enslaved women too pregnant to continue work in the fields. In his daily plantation journal James Henry Hammond writes for 31 Mar 1834: “Eliza had a child born dead last night. She has done no work out of her house & none but spinning in it & very little of that for ten weeks.” In February of 1835 he records that “Rosa Smith & Dido [are] spinning on account of pregnancy.” The type of spinning wheel these women used may have been a Great Wheel, also known as the Walking Wheel or Wool Wheel. A woman, standing, with one hand could move the wheel which turned the spindle while holding a piece of wool roving in the other hand which was twisted into yarn. Thanks to Marilyn Squier of McCormick, South Carolina Redcliffe Plantation now has a Great Wheel of its own. Mrs. Squier recently donated the antique spinning wheel for Redcliffe to use in the interpretation of enslaved women who lived and worked on the Hammond plantations. DOCUMENT OF THE MONTH N o, this is not a tawdry historical romance or a lurid liquor advertisement… It’s a letter John Shaw Billings, Redcliffe’s final owner, wrote to his mother in 1931. One of many historical letters from John S. Billings contained in the archival collection at Redcliffe Plantation State Historic Site it is also one of the funnier letters written by a member of the Hammond family. to do with it before I reach the U.S. prohibitia barrier Sunday night at Seattle. If I tried to drink it all myself F. would have a D.T. patient on her hands. Besides, you know how little I care for liquor without social ceremony. I’d hate to pour it out. Perhaps I can persuade F. to smuggle it in in her corset.” The Billings’ letters are some of the only Hammond papers that were not donated to the University of South Carolina’s Caroliniana Library and are “Dear Ma… I have in my bag a housed at the state historic site. 40 oz bottle of Johnnie Walker Whiskey which cost $6.85 and is the finest and purest. The bottle is 90% full. My problem: what Do you think Frederica Billings smuggled whiskey into the country in 1931?
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Redcliffe Southern Times
REDCLIFFE PLANTATION 181 REDCLIFFE RD BEECH ISLAND, SC 29842
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