This blog grew out of my "Down Da Road I Go Blog," which was originally to be about stuff I was interested in, music and what I was doing. There was so much history and Civil War entries, I spun two more off. Starting Jan. 1, 2012, I will be spinning a Naval blog off this one called "Running the Blockade."
Saturday, March 23, 2019
Chester County and Chester (S.C.) At the End of the War.
In an earlier blog yesterday, I mentioned that the midshipman of the Confederate States Naval Academy, guarding the Confederate treasury in April 1865 as the government fled south (also with Varina Davis, wife of Jefferson Davis) and they went to Chester (called Chesterville back then) before moving on to Abbeville, S.C..
I found a lot of good information about Chester at the Southern Fried Common Sense & Stuff blog.
As Sherman left the wreckage of Columbia, S.C., he decided on a feint toward Charlotte to the north, while his real destination was Fayetteville and then Goldsboro, North Carolina. This took him toward Chesterville. His main force went north to Winnsboro, 25 miles south of Chester before turning so he never actually entered Chester County, although scouting parties and his bummers did.
THE HANGING OF BURRELL HEMPHILL
In front of the Hopewell Reformed Presbyterian Church in southern Chester County is a small stone monument for Burrell Hemphill, a slave of Robert Hemphill who owned 2200 acres. When Union forces passed through, the Hemphill family fled and left Burrell in charge of the estate.
Burrell buried the family silver in the woods but was caught by Union bummers on his return. He refused to tell them where he had buried the silver. This angered them and they dragged Burrell to a spot near the church and hanged him and then lowered him several times, then rehanging him again but he continued to refuse to tell them.
He eventually died from the torture. The Union soldiers then used his body for target practice.
--Old Secesh
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