Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Commemorating the 150th Anniversary of Fort Sumter at South Coast Antiques.

Today is the 150th anniversary of the firing on Fort Sumter, so I decided to do a post with a bit of historical information not available anywhere else.  Governor Francis Wilkinson Pickens was governor of South Carolina from 1860 to 1862.  He presided over the secession of South Carolina and it's admission to the Confederate States of America.
Governor Pickens authorized the firing on Fort Sumter by SC militia, which is well known as the start of the Civil War, but he also authorized the first shot fired in the civil war when he sanctioned state militia artillery to fire on the Union vessel Star of the West 9 January, 1861 during its attempt to bring supplies to Major Anderson's blockaded garrison at Fort Sumter.  His wife, Lucy Pickens witnessed the bombardment of Fort Sumter from atop a home in Charleston.


Governor Pickens was a life-long politician and diplomat.  He was Minister to England, a state representative several times and later a state senator.  Under President James Buchannan, he served as minister to Russia from 1858 to 1860 where they became close friends with Czar Alexander II, who was the godfather of their child.    Finally he was Governor of South Carolina during secession and the early part of the Civil War.

His wife, Lucy Pickens was a master socialite of the 19th century, captivating everybody, even the Czar of Russia.  She was so well known in South Carolina and through America, her face appears on the South Carolina Confederate $100 dollar bill as well as a CSA $1,000 bond.  She was the consummate southern bell and captivated everybody with her intelligence and charm.



This letter was written by Governor Pickens, with an official State of South Carolina letterhead frank to his wife on 4 July 1861.  The letter is short and terse, very unlike typical communications of Victorian couples.  I can only expect that Gov Pickens was distraught and upset.  Perhaps she was in an area of the coast that was threatened by Union invasion and he feared her capture.
We have this letter for view here at South Coast Antiques and Gallery.


Both Francis Pickens and Lucy  Pickens are interred at Willow Brook Cemetery, Edgefield, Edgefield County South Carolina, USA.  Visit their grave sites by clicking on the links.



* Update 28 July 2015 *
A reader recently asked a question about the Lucy Pickens letter and it got me reexamining the envelope, which had previously eluded deciphering despite my familiarity with mid-19th century documents.  So, reinvigorated I went online and pulled up a few other letters written by Gov Pickens from the exact period for comparison and found that he had used runners to deliver letters in some cases. 

On the envelope, I could read “Xxxxfield” which did not match anything I could think of at the time of the first post back in 2011.  But, now I also realized that although his estate was called Edgewood, it was just outside of the town of Edgefield, in the county of Edgefield, where he built his mansion in 1829.  So relooking at “Xxxxfield”, I then understood it was the small town Edgefield, the population of which in 1860 was only 518.  His large estate and mansion was just outside of town and known by everybody in town, cleared up any uncertainty as to destination. 

Next up was some additional instructions written in the lower left hand part of the envelope.  I decided to use some comparisons of other Pickens letters in hopes of at least getting a feeling for his handwriting by sampling.  By pulling up a contemporary letter sent by Gov Pickens to General Beauregard, which was also hand-delivered, it indicated, “By Mr. Green” which meant that this Mr. Green would take it to the general.  It wasn’t a destination, it was a delivery instruction. 

Now since that I knew the letter to Lucy Pickens had to travel a good distance and not by mail.  Scouring period railroad maps, I found no railroads ran by Edgefield from Columbia, a distance of 57 miles, nor were there any convenient rivers that would give an easy steamboat trip, so any travel would have to be by road. 

I then understood the marking read, “By next boy” with a flourish at the end, just like the Gen Beauregard letter.  This letter would have to be hand carried also, by coach or by rider over a long road.  This letter had no stamps and no cancellation, not even a frank marking, which is another reason why I think it was carried by courier – “By next boy”, e.g. by the next runner to Edgefield.

 ------------------------------------------------
                               
                              Mrs F. ??. Pickens

                               Edgefield 

   By next Boy
-----------------------------------------------

Now at least some of the mystery has cleared away, although why Gov Pickens was so abrupt may never be known.  The letter was dated the morning 4th of July 1862 so I wonder of Lucy was supposed to attend a party that night in Columbia.  If so, she probably didn’t make it.  What a shame, Lucy Pickens was one of the great luminaries of the south and her attendance at a party would have made it sparkle. 

Now don’t think that the Confederates didn’t venerate the Founding Fathers, they did.  In fact, the first few years of The United States of America, the United States was unified and operated under the Articles of Confederation.   Eventually the Articles were replaced and the new US Constitution was ratified on June 21, 1788.   Yes, the USA was a confederacy originally and yes, they broke away from “the rightful government of Britain”.  So the government and states of the CSA had every reason to observe celebrate the original American Revolution.  But that’s another story for another time.

I’d like to thank the reader for reminding me of unfinished business with the Lucy Pickens letter as it led me to reread and rediscover its destination.  Sometimes a little time must pass for the dust to settle and the handwriting becomes clearer. 

2 comments:

  1. Do y'all still have this letter? If so, is it for sale? I have been researching Lucy for nearly 10 years now and I portray her at reenactments and living histories. I would love to know more about this letter!

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  2. Sorry, it's not for sale. I'd appreciate any help in deciphering the address on the envelope. I presume the scrawled name is either the name of a coastal estate or the name of the owner and the addition by ?North? Bay makes it clear that everybody knew the location. Another interesting thing is that it lacks a stamp or a government frank mark, so it may have been dispatched via courier. In any case, he is deeply alarmed and I presume there was some Union activity in her area. Capturing the best known woman in the south and the wife of the Governor of the most belligerent state in the CSA would be a feather in some Union officer's cap.

    I'd like to know more myself -- where was she? Why the haste? Why is this letter from "headquarters" and not the governor's mansion or his letterhead. Blue ruled paper of this type was quite common at the time, but it was cut from a complete sheet as a measure of thrift. Although I can infer a lot, I still can't read the address or figure out where she was at on that 4th of July day. Lots of luck in your portrayals.

    Yours,
    Michael W. Moses
    South Coast Antiques

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