Start My Family Tree Welcome to Geni, home of the world's largest family tree.
Join Geni to explore your genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Abbeville City & County, South Carolina

view all

Profiles

  • Dr, Henry Davis Green, Jr. (1829 - 1902)
    From Father: Rev. Henry Davis Green Mmother: Rebecca Williamson Abbott 1850 - M.D. degree, Medical College of the State of South Carolina, Charleston, SC (from : Sumter Co., SC; preceptor: Dr. H. J. ...
  • Agness Ann Ashley (1761 - 1849)
    Parents Thomas Dove and Anna Dorothy Dove Family Children !NOT PROVEN! except Martha there is zero evidence to proove that the following were children of William Ashley & Sophia other than circumst...
  • William Ashley, III (1757 - 1839)
    Biography William A. Ashley served in the American Revolution, as a Coporal in the Maryland Cavalry, Pulaski's Corps. He and his widow Agness are buried in an unmarked (other than fieldstones) grave at...
  • Aaron Ashley (1773 - 1860)
    ?/M William Ashley Birth* 19 Feb 1730 Kent, Maryland. Marriage* cir __ ___ 1751 Sophia (--?--) (1735-1790) Son: __ ___ 1773 Aaron Ashley Sr; Kent, Maryland. United States Census, 1830 South C...
  • Joshua Ashley, Sr. (1764 - 1842)
    Biography Children !NOT PROVEN! except Martha there is zero evidence to proove that the following were children of William Ashley & Sophia other than circumstantial. ?/M Joshua Ashley Birth* ...

Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in Abbeville, South Carolina.

History

Abbeville County, located on the Savannah River in Northwestern South Carolina was first settled by people of mostly Scots-Irish descent around 1756. A small group of French Huguenot refugees also settled at New Bordeaux in Southwest Abbeville County. Dr. John de la Howe, of Huguenot descent and native of Abbeville, France was given the honor of naming the new county in 1785. The City of Abbeville, the county seat, has a population of 6,000 with a county population of 25,000.

Famed states' rights advocate and Vice President John C. Calhoun first practiced law in Abbeville, and he was born on a farm in Abbeville County near what is now the town of Mt. Carmel.

Abbeville has the unique distinction of being both the birthplace and the deathbed of the Confederacy. On November 22, 1860, a meeting was held at Abbeville, at a site since dubbed "Secession Hill", to launch South Carolina's secession from the Union; one month later, the state of South Carolina became the first state to secede.

At the end of the Civil War, with the Confederacy in shambles, Confederate President Jefferson Davis fled Richmond, Virginia, and headed south, stopping for a night in Abbeville at the home of his friend Armistead Burt. It was on May 2, 1865, in the front parlor of what is now known as the Burt-Stark Mansion that Jefferson Davis officially acknowledged the dissolution of the Confederate government, in the last official cabinet meeting.

The Abbeville County Courthouse, Abbeville Historic District, Abbeville Opera House, Armistead Burt House, Patrick Calhoun Family Cemetery, Cedar Springs Historic District, Harbison College President's Home, Trinity Episcopal Church and Cemetery and Upper Long Cane Cemetery are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Adjacent Counties

Other Towns & Communities

  • Antreville
  • Calhoun Falls
  • Donalds
  • Due West
  • Honea Path (part)
  • Lake Secession
  • Lowndesville
  • Ware Shoals (part)

Links

Wikipedia

Abbeville County History

The Burt-Stark House

Sumter National Forest (part)

SC GenWeb

Genealogy Trails


upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/44/Map_of_South_Carolina_highlighting_Abbeville_County.svg/1128px-Map_of_South_Carolina_highlighting_Abbeville_County.svg.png?20060212162346