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Volume 6, March 2004 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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The
Last to Leave
By
Alphonso Brown,
Gullah Tours |
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In
the year 1671, the Council of Province ordered a town to be established on James
Island, South Carolina. The town, McLeod's Plantation (not called McLeod's at
that time), became a part of James Island around 1696. The
property was first owned by Morris Morgan in 1696 and had about 617 acres. There
were no formal buildings on the property except for a few slave quarters. Dual
residency existed, and most plantation owners had homes elsewhere, usually in
Charleston. From the colonial period well into the 20th century, most of James
Island consisted of blacks. Around 1720, St Andrews Parish records reported
around 215 white taxpayers and nearly 2,500 slaves. The
slaves were left to oversee and cultivate the property. The owners’ dual
residency allowed the slaves to practice and perpetuate many African traditions,
cultures and languages. For example, sweeping the yard to keep the snakes away
is still a common practice in some of the rural areas of the low country. The
Gullah language, which combined English words and West African grammar and
pronunciation, survived and can still be heard today among friends and families,
young and old, primarily in the Charleston and Beaufort areas. Other
African customs survived. The practice of root medicine, brought by the slaves
from Africa, is still used by many
blacks and whites locally. (Benin, West Africa, is still known for its practice
of root medicine and witchcraft.) Root medicine was used for both benign and ill
ends, but greedy practitioners eventually gave it a reputation that was more bad
than good. Those practitioners who used their knowledge of root medicine for
good were not feared and would today be called "herbalists."
Where cotton wasn’t king The
main activity on the island was the raising of beef, which gave the plantations
there a different financial advantage when everyone else in the South was
struggling with cotton. Cotton and rice were planted here but not on the large
scale they were at other plantations. The slaves at McLeod's Plantation, who
were from West Africa’s Gambia River region, were expert horseman and cattle
herders. Many historians consider them to have been America's first cowboys. The
waters surrounding James Island were major modes of transportation, and the
Africans were highly prized for their skills as boatmen. The job was an
especially prestigious one among them since it gave slaves a measure of
independence in their comings and goings. Indigo was also a major crop at the
plantation, but the process of changing the indigo plant into the blue dye made
the slaves sick and many died of cancer. Not
much is known about McLeod's Plantation during the early colonial period. After
Morris Morgan in 1696, the land was deeded as a Royal Grant to one Captain David
Davis in 1703, who then sold the land to William Wilkins in 1706. In
1741, Wilkins sold the property to Samuel Perronneau. It is believed that
Perroneau was the only one to have cultivated the property. None of the previous
owners, including Perronneau, ever lived on the property, although they had
slaves living there. In 1770, 250 acres were either sold or given to Edward
Lightwood II, Perronneau's son-in-law. It was Lightwood who built the first main
house and outbuildings. The house was approached from the south by an alley of
oaks that extended northward to Wappo Creek. Lightwood
was a "broker" in slave trading and owned 53 slaves. His daughter
married William McKinzie Parker I in 1796. When Parker's mother-in-law died, he
purchased the estate. Parker was involved in the slave trade industry and owned
several vessels. Like Perronneau and Lightwood, Parker also worked the
plantation. In
1851, the plantation was sold to William Wallace McLeod. By this time, the
property had increased to 914 acres of land and 779 acres of marsh. McLeod built
the present house around 1854-56. Exactly what happened to the Lightwood house
is unknown. Speculations are that it was either destroyed or pulled down.
Around
1860, McLeod owned approximately 74 slaves and 23 slave cabins that were located
around the plantation. The five remaining 20' x 12' wooden slave cabins, the
dairy, and the kitchen building are believed to date from the Lightwood/Parker
period (1770-1850). The old slave bell, used to call in the slaves from the
field, still hangs from the giant oak tree near the "big" house. William
Wallace McLeod served in the Civil War and moved his family to Greenwood, South
Carolina. He left Steven Forrest, a slave, in charge of the plantation. McLeod
died in the war in 1864. Shortly after, Mrs. McLeod died, leaving a son, still
in his teens, and two young daughters as owners of the plantation. During the
war the house fell to the Federals. The house was used as a Union Army
headquarters and as a hospital for the black soldiers attached to units of the
54th and 55th Massachusetts Regiment. After
the war, the house was headquarters for the Freedmen's Bureau. Freed slaves from
all over the island pitched pine bough shelters and camped on the plantation in
order to be within easy reach of their free rations and "their 40 acres and
a mule." Unlike other parts of the South, tenancy was preferred to share
cropping. It gave the black farmers freedom from white exploitation and the hope
of accumulating money to purchase their own land. This plan proved to be very
successful for local blacks well into the years after slavery. McLeod
Jr. Arrived back at his father's home in 1879 after Congress failed to pass
Sherman's "Field Order #15" (the “40 acres and a mule” concept).
It was said that McLeod Jr. was forced to apply for an escort of Union soldiers
to lead him through a crowd of angry blacks who were thronging around the house,
bitter at the prospect they would receive no land. After
greedy carpetbaggers dismantled the Freedmen's Office, black families continued
to maintain quarters in each room of the house. They took possessions, and used
the house as they chose, with no regard for owners or property. McLeod later was
able to establish ownership and evict them. In
1895, Dr. Bert J. Wilder, who had been a surgeon for the Union Army, visited
Charleston and told McLeod that the drawing room of the house served as his
operating room for the black soldiers of the 54th and 55th Massachusetts
Regiments. Those who died were buried in the slave graveyard. (A site behind the
fire station near the James Island Bridge). Willis
Ellis McLeod, who was born in 1885, became owner of the property in 1918 and
lived there until his death in 1990 at the age of 105. The McLeods continued to
sell and rent properties to blacks long after the war. The slave quarters, which
date back to the Lightwood/Parker period, are some of the oldest original wooden
slaves quarter in the south. African Americans continued to occupy these slave
quarters until around 1990 (not a misprint). Of all the plantations in the
South, the blacks at McLeod were, literally, the "last to leave." The plantation is now owned by the Historic Charleston Foundation. The Foundation is planning to open the plantation to the public in the near future.
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