Col. John "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell

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Col. John "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Dublin, Fingal, Ireland
Death: June 1724 (52-53)
Old House Plantation, Port Royal Island, South Carolina, Colonial America
Place of Burial: Beaufort, SC
Immediate Family:

Son of Capt. Matthew Barnwell and Margaret Barnwell
Husband of Elizabeth Anne Barnwell
Father of Margaret Sams; Col. Nathaniel Barnwell; Anne Gibbes; Bridget Sams; Mary Grimball and 3 others

Occupation: See included History
Managed by: Emily Laine Harding
Last Updated:

About Col. John "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell

Tuscarora Jack Barnwell

Born in Ireland in 1671 to a well-connected, titled family of Barons, Baronets and Viscounts, Barnwell left to seek his fortune in 1701. Although John’s intention when he came to America was to “travel but for no other reason,” he evidently made an early decision to end his wide-ranging travels and take up life in Charleston (then Charles Town) South Carolina. Founded only 30 years before, the once tenuous toehold in the New World had become a bustling port prospering from the cultivation of rice. Barnwell quickly established himself, serving first as Clerk of the Governor’s Council, later as Deputy Secretary of the Council and ultimately as Comptroller of the Province.

At about this time he met and married Anne Berners, a “good English Lady” whose family was described as “perhaps more noble than the Barnwells.” She traced her ancestry through Sir John Bourchier, first Baron Berners, who was a great grandson of King Edward III. John Barnwell’s marriage to Anne added another impetus for him to remain in Carolina. The couple settled on Port Royal Island on lands Barnwell had been granted. Their first child Margaret was born in Charles Town in 1704, son Nathaniel in 1705, and they had another almost every year until there were eight in all, two boys and six girls. Their daughter Mary, born June 25, 1709, on Port Royal Island, married Paul Grimball (II).

John Barnwell was by all accounts a heroic leader in battle, an adept statesman on both sides of the Atlantic and a visionary who helped secure the future of fledgling Beaufort. A skilled mapmaker in uncharted lands, John Barnwell literally and figuratively put Beaufort on the map. He also founded a family that would increasingly dominate Beaufort politically, socially and economically with each succeeding generation.

Governor Sir Nathaniel Johnson (for whom Barnwell would name his first son) was one of his early patrons. In the years leading up to 1709, Barnwell was favored with a series of land grants on Port Royal and vicinity for holdings totaling over 3,400 acres. His first contact with the area, where he would play an even more prominent role, was in 1703, when he was directed to map Port Royal Sound. Often a part of expeditions against the Spanish and French, Barnwell continued to map the region, eventually making "the great mother map of the American southeast from which all subsequent maps of the area were made.”

In 1711, his extensive military experience led to his being given the command of a party of militia and 500 Indians (predominantly Yemassee) sent against the powerful Tuscarora Indians who had been raiding English settlements in what is now North Carolina. Outnumbered, under provisioned, and contending with both poor discipline and bitter winter conditions, the expedition under Barnwell’s leadership nevertheless managed to rout the Tuscarora. The success of his mission and his status as Carolina’s most experienced Indian fighter earned him the epithet -- Tuscarora Jack. (there are detailed accounts of this battle available online, but I didn't include it.)

His trusted allies the Yemassee, however, in just four years would turn against the English. For years, Barnwell and Port Royal neighbor, planter and Indian agent, Thomas Nairne, had warned that the official exploitive policy toward the Indians was pushing them toward revolt. Their warnings proved correct on Good Friday 1715 when the Yemassee together with Creeks, Choctaws and Catawbas struck first at Pocotaligo Town. Two, perhaps three, colonists escaped the massacre, fleeing to Barnwell’s plantation.

Alerted to the uprising, 300 colonists fled to Beaufort and crowded aboard a smuggling ship that had been seized and detained in the harbor. Among the passengers was Barnwell’s ten year old son Nathaniel. Over 400 settlers, though, were killed in the uprising among them Thomas Nairne. Once again Tuscarora Jack was pressed into service to lead forces against the Indians, this time to drive his former allies the Yemassee into Florida.

In 1717, John Barnwell was also appointed to the first Board of Commissioners who were assigned the task of reforming Indian policy. He was also given the additional responsibility of directing the defense of the colony from the Stono River to St. Augustine. Although the Yemassee were ultimately routed, the uprising helped to fuel the colonists’ dissatisfaction with their governing authority, the Lord Proprietors. Their lack of support for the defense of the colony and self-interested rule led the colonists to petition for direct rule by the crown. The emissary deemed to have the requisite expertise and experience to plead their case was Colonel John Barnwell.

Arriving in London in 1720, he met with the Board of Trade and Lords Justices and successfully argued for transfer of power over the Carolinas to the King. His second mission was to propose that a string of defensive forts be built along the southern frontier. The financially conservative Lords Justices approved the building of only one, on the Altamaha River. On returning to the Carolinas, Barnwell oversaw its construction. Named Fort King George, it was the first permanent English presence in Georgia. A member of the assembly from 1717 until his death in 1724, Barnwell also served as Justice of the Peace for Granville County and commander of the county militia.

Another master plan emerged from John’s fertile brain in the years 1720-1721, which resulted in the eventual establishment of a series of forts surrounded by settlements—a plan that could be made applicable to the entire colonial frontier.

By the time of his death in 1724, John Barnwell was recognized as “the greatest planter of the Port Royal District,” on of the “brightest young men of the Colony; a Colonial expert,” and a member of a group that “originated every constructive development in South Carolina,” or so it was reported in the Minutes of the Vestry of St. Helena’s Perish several years later. A widower at the time of his death, he left to his children an estate of over 6,500 acres. A founding father of Beaufort, he was also the patriarch of a prolific family that prospered, married well and carried on his legacy of public service to become one of the most powerful of Beaufort families.

Saint Helena's Parish was organized in 1712 and construction of the church began in 1724. Colonel Jack "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell founder of Beaufort, is buried here. The church was used as a hospital during the Civil War, when its flat tombstones became operating tables.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Barnwell_%28colonist%29



Tuscarora Jack Barnwell

Born in Ireland in 1671 to a well-connected, titled family of Barons, Baronets and Viscounts, Barnwell left to seek his fortune in 1701. Although John’s intention when he came to America was to “travel but for no other reason,” he evidently made an early decision to end his wide-ranging travels and take up life in Charleston (then Charles Town) South Carolina. Founded only 30 years before, the once tenuous toehold in the New World had become a bustling port prospering from the cultivation of rice. Barnwell quickly established himself, serving first as Clerk of the Governor’s Council, later as Deputy Secretary of the Council and ultimately as Comptroller of the Province.

At about this time he met and married Anne Berners, a “good English Lady” whose family was described as “perhaps more noble than the Barnwells.” She traced her ancestry through Sir John Bourchier, first Baron Berners, who was a great grandson of King Edward III. John Barnwell’s marriage to Anne added another impetus for him to remain in Carolina. The couple settled on Port Royal Island on lands Barnwell had been granted. Their first child Margaret was born in Charles Town in 1704, son Nathaniel in 1705, and they had another almost every year until there were eight in all, two boys and six girls. Their daughter Mary, born June 25, 1709, on Port Royal Island, married Paul Grimball (II).

John Barnwell was by all accounts a heroic leader in battle, an adept statesman on both sides of the Atlantic and a visionary who helped secure the future of fledgling Beaufort. A skilled mapmaker in uncharted lands, John Barnwell literally and figuratively put Beaufort on the map. He also founded a family that would increasingly dominate Beaufort politically, socially and economically with each succeeding generation.

Governor Sir Nathaniel Johnson (for whom Barnwell would name his first son) was one of his early patrons. In the years leading up to 1709, Barnwell was favored with a series of land grants on Port Royal and vicinity for holdings totaling over 3,400 acres. His first contact with the area, where he would play an even more prominent role, was in 1703, when he was directed to map Port Royal Sound. Often a part of expeditions against the Spanish and French, Barnwell continued to map the region, eventually making "the great mother map of the American southeast from which all subsequent maps of the area were made.”

In 1711, his extensive military experience led to his being given the command of a party of militia and 500 Indians (predominantly Yemassee) sent against the powerful Tuscarora Indians who had been raiding English settlements in what is now North Carolina. Outnumbered, under provisioned, and contending with both poor discipline and bitter winter conditions, the expedition under Barnwell’s leadership nevertheless managed to rout the Tuscarora. The success of his mission and his status as Carolina’s most experienced Indian fighter earned him the epithet -- Tuscarora Jack. (there are detailed accounts of this battle available online, but I didn't include it.)

His trusted allies the Yemassee, however, in just four years would turn against the English. For years, Barnwell and Port Royal neighbor, planter and Indian agent, Thomas Nairne, had warned that the official exploitive policy toward the Indians was pushing them toward revolt. Their warnings proved correct on Good Friday 1715 when the Yemassee together with Creeks, Choctaws and Catawbas struck first at Pocotaligo Town. Two, perhaps three, colonists escaped the massacre, fleeing to Barnwell’s plantation.

Alerted to the uprising, 300 colonists fled to Beaufort and crowded aboard a smuggling ship that had been seized and detained in the harbor. Among the passengers was Barnwell’s ten year old son Nathaniel. Over 400 settlers, though, were killed in the uprising among them Thomas Nairne. Once again Tuscarora Jack was pressed into service to lead forces against the Indians, this time to drive his former allies the Yemassee into Florida.

In 1717, John Barnwell was also appointed to the first Board of Commissioners who were assigned the task of reforming Indian policy. He was also given the additional responsibility of directing the defense of the colony from the Stono River to St. Augustine. Although the Yemassee were ultimately routed, the uprising helped to fuel the colonists’ dissatisfaction with their governing authority, the Lord Proprietors. Their lack of support for the defense of the colony and self-interested rule led the colonists to petition for direct rule by the crown. The emissary deemed to have the requisite expertise and experience to plead their case was Colonel John Barnwell.

Arriving in London in 1720, he met with the Board of Trade and Lords Justices and successfully argued for transfer of power over the Carolinas to the King. His second mission was to propose that a string of defensive forts be built along the southern frontier. The financially conservative Lords Justices approved the building of only one, on the Altamaha River. On returning to the Carolinas, Barnwell oversaw its construction. Named Fort King George, it was the first permanent English presence in Georgia. A member of the assembly from 1717 until his death in 1724, Barnwell also served as Justice of the Peace for Granville County and commander of the county militia.

Another master plan emerged from John’s fertile brain in the years 1720-1721, which resulted in the eventual establishment of a series of forts surrounded by settlements—a plan that could be made applicable to the entire colonial frontier.

By the time of his death in 1724, John Barnwell was recognized as “the greatest planter of the Port Royal District,” on of the “brightest young men of the Colony; a Colonial expert,” and a member of a group that “originated every constructive development in South Carolina,” or so it was reported in the Minutes of the Vestry of St. Helena’s Perish several years later. A widower at the time of his death, he left to his children an estate of over 6,500 acres. A founding father of Beaufort, he was also the patriarch of a prolific family that prospered, married well and carried on his legacy of public service to become one of the most powerful of Beaufort families.

Saint Helena's Parish was organized in 1712 and construction of the church began in 1724. Colonel Jack "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell founder of Beaufort, is buried here. The church was used as a hospital during the Civil War, when its flat tombstones became operating tables.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Barnwell_%28colonist%29

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Col. John "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell's Timeline

1671
1671
Dublin, Fingal, Ireland
1704
1704
1705
1705
Charles Town, Berkeley County, Province of South Carolina
1707
August 7, 1707
Old House Plantation, Port Royal Island, South Carolina
1709
June 25, 1709
Port Royal Island, Burton, Beaufort, South Carolina, United States
1709
Old House Plantation, Port Royal Island, SC, United States
1710
1710
1712
March 8, 1712
County Meath, Dublin, Ireland
1712