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Barnwell County, South Carolina

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Profiles

  • Reuben R. Green (1768 - 1851)
    DAR proven son of William Green and Phereby X. Married to Elizabeth Bates.
  • PVT. William Green, Sr. (c.1743 - bef.1815)
    DAR Ancestor #: A047470 GREEN, WILLIAM Ancestor #: A047470 Service: SOUTH CAROLINA Rank(s): SOLDIER Birth: 1740 Death: ANTE 1-13-1815 BARNWELL DIST SOUTH CAROLINA Service Source: SC ARCH, ACCTS AUD #...
  • Pheriby Green (c.1745 - bef.1815)
    DAR proven wife of William Green. DAR proven children: Reuben m. 1. Elizabeth Bates Absolom m. 1. XX or Sarah X Civil m. 1. Griffin Owens Delilah m. 1. Wiatt Weathersbee ----------------...
  • Isaac Jacob Dykes, Sr. (1755 - 1807)
    Biography Isaac Jacob Dykes, Sr. was born in 1755 in Orangeburg, Orangeburg, South Carolina, United States. His parents were William George Dykes, Sr. and Susannah Elizabeth Dykes . Isaac married Ann...
  • John Grubbs (1874 - 1931)

Please add profiles for those who were born, lived or died in Barnwell County, South Carolina.

Official Website

History

The Barnwell District was created in 1797 (effective in 1800) from the southwestern portion of the Orangeburg District, along the Savannah River. It was named after John Barnwell, a local figure in the Revolutionary War.

In 1868, under the South Carolina Constitution revised during Reconstruction, South Carolina districts became counties. The government was made more democratic, with county officials to be elected by male citizens at least 21 years old, rather than by the state legislature as done previously.

In 1871 the legislature took the northwestern portion of the county to form part of the new Aiken County, the only county organized during the Reconstruction era. In 1874 the border with Aiken County was adjusted slightly. This county and Barnwell, with populations of blacks and whites that were nearly equal, had extensive violence in the months before the 1874 and 1876 elections, as groups of paramilitary Red Shirts rode to disrupt black Republican meetings and intimidate voters to suppress black voting. More than 100 black men were killed in Aiken County during the violence, especially at Ellenton, South Carolina.

In 1895 white Democrats in the state legislature passed a new constitution, disfranchising most blacks for more than 60 years by raising barriers to voter registration.

In 1897 the eastern third of the county was taken to form the new Bamberg County. In 1919 most of the southern half of the county was taken to form most of the new Allendale County, thus reducing Barnwell county to its present size.

Adjacent Counties

Cities & Towns

  • Barnwell (County Seat)
  • Blackville
  • Elko
  • Hilda
  • Kline
  • Snelling
  • Williston

Links

Wikipedia

National Register of Historic Places

Plantations of Barnwell County

Genealogy Trails

South Carolina Pioneers.net



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