Redcliffe`s August 2014 Newsletter
Transcription
Redcliffe`s August 2014 Newsletter
This newsletter sponsored by the campaign to re-elect James H. Hammond. REDCLIFFE PLANTATION 181 REDCLIFFE RD BEECH ISLAND, SC 29842 (803) 827–1473 UPCOMING EVENTS AT REDCLIFFE. Vote like its 1842! Redcliffe Southern Times V O L U M E 9 , I S S U E 5 N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 4 HARRY HAMMOND & THE SIEGE OF PETERSBURG . Asst. Park Ranger Jenny Tabbert From June of 1864 through April Harry and other reinforcements dows to see what damage they 1865 the city of Petersburg, Vir- from the Army of Northern Virgin- had done…” gina was besieged by the Union ia arrived near Petersburg in midArmy. Harry Hammond, eldest June 1864 to help General PGT After finally being allowed to son of James Henry Hammond Beauregard and his troops foil the serve in segregated units in the and future owner of RedUnion Army back in 1863, cliffe, was right in the thick several black regiments fought The Petersburg Campaign of things. A quartermaster against the Confederate army encompassed 292 days of serving with Gregg’s Brigade at Petersburg. When describin the Army of Northern Vir- combat, maneuver and trench ing a battle known to the ginia, Harry wrote many warfare between June 15, 1864 South as the battle of Fussell’s letters home to his wife EmiMill, Harry records that Conand April 2, 1865. ly and daughter Julia during federate forces were brought - From the Civil War Trust website the siege which described the in to “recapture the works thus conditions of the camp and lost, and whipped the enemy the events the soldiers endured. Union Army’s attempts to occupy back with great slaughter—It is the city. In a letter dated June 30th, the first time we fought negroes Writing to his four-year-old 1864 Harry described the following and I am sorry to say no quarter daughter Julia about a visit she to his wife Emily: “The enemy was shown them.” had made to the camp earlier in throw a number of shells daily into the year, Harry wrote “There has Petersburg but they do little dam- As well as providing first hand been many a sad story for the age, the people (women and chil- accounts of the siege, Harry’s people you saw that day, and dren) seem not to mind them at all - letters also reveal a man desperate many weary anxious hours for on one street yesterday where such to be with his young family. Most all of us since then… Now the a number of shells burst… women of his letters to his wife admonish Yankees keep shooting so, every were passing about with little con- her for not writing him more ofday and every night, that no cern, dodging around a corner ten! For more information about body knows what they are going when they heard a shell coming, or these letters see the Document of to do from one day to another.” putting their heads out of their win- the Month on the following page. From James Henry Hammond’s Diary for 15 November 1841: VOTE LIKE ITS 1842! “Thirty-four years old today. Dined with mother and family on a 7 year old Gobbler.” In 1842 35-year-old James H. Hammond cast his bid for Governor of South Carolina. He didn’t even have an opponent until the day of the election! Can he win the election again? Not a traditional modern Thanksgiving but close enough! during Redcliffe’s regular house tours Regular Tours (11, 1 & 3) Nov 1 - 9, 2014 $5/adult, $4/Ages 6-16, $3/ SC seniors, Free/5 & under An Evening with the Hammonds: 1864 Sat, Nov 22 5 PM—6:30 $10/Adult, $7.25/SC Senior For more information on these programs please contact the park. Park Staff Park Manager Joy Raintree Park Interpreter Elizabeth Laney Park Technician Doug Kratz Asst. Park Ranger Josh Snipes November 1-3 & 6-9 at 11 am, 1 pm & 3 pm $5/Adults, $4/Ages 6-16, $3 SC Seniors Some individuals may be ineligible to vote in this election. James Henry Hammond Get an “I Voted in the 1842 Election” sticker!! Robert FW Allston Governor (and later Senator) James Henry Hammond was no stranger to a good argument. In the two examples below he blasts Governor Morehead of North Carolina during the negotiation of the release of a “political offender”, circa 1842 (left) and mocks future Governor of South Carolina William Henry Gist in a private diary entry after Gist opposed Hammond’s own election as Governor, 1842 (right). 08 Dec 1842 The leaders were Bill Myers, a notorious blackguard...Wm. H. Gist, a bladder and blatherer from Union, and L.T. Wigfall, the Edgefield bravo… I am endeavoring to collect the names of those who voted against me. from The State, “Carolina Folklore”, 2/2/1964 from the diary of James Henry Hammond, 1842 Document of the Month - Harry & Emily Hammond’s Two years after Harry Hammond married Emily Cumming in 1859, Civil War broke out. In the Hammond family papers today there is a collection of letters written back and forth between Harry and Emily which describes the couple’s Civil War experiences—his on the war front and hers on the home front. The letters provide a touching look at a young family, often separated by the war. The letters are a part of the Hammond-Bryan-Cumming Papers at the University of South Carolina’s Caroliniana Library, but scans of several of the letters are on display in an exhibit in the Redcliffe Plantation SHS Visitor Center today. Civil War Letters