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Size | 0.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 10 items) |
Abstract | John Ball and Keating Simons Ball (1818-1891) were planters of Charleston District, S.C. Records of Comingtee, a Cooper River, S.C., plantation, in Charleston District (later Berkeley County), and other rice plantations of the Ball family, including Stoke, Kensington, and Midway. Volumes contain slave records listing supplies issued, births and deaths, names, and other data, 1780-1833; and shipping receipts for crops, 1841-1851. They also include diaries and notebooks of Keating Simons Ball, 1849-1840 and 1874-1884, that record weather, planting, and neighborhood and personal activities. Included in one volume are two pages headed "Orderly Book for the Regiment of Light Dragoons," 1779. Family members mentioned include Elias Ball (fl. 1675-1751) and John Ball, Jr. (1782-1834). |
Creator | Ball, John, 1760-1817. |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Alice Thomas, May 1990
Encoded by: ByteManagers Inc., 2008
Updated by: Kathryn Michaelis, December 2009
Back to TopThe following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
Elias Ball (fl. 1675-1751) of Devonshire, England, came to South Carolina around 1695 at the invitation of his uncle, John Coming. Materials in this collection relate to Elias Ball's descendants, particularly his grandson, John Ball (1760-1817), his great-grandson, John Ball (1782-1834), and his great-great-grandson, Keating Simons Ball (1818-1891).
Note:An extensive genealogy of the Ball family, beginning with Elias Ball in the late 17th century and continuing through the early 1900s, may be found on pages 83-119 in Volume 5 of this collection.
Back to TopRecords of Comingtee, a Cooper River, S.C., plantation, in Charleston District (later Berkeley County), and other rice plantations of the Ball family, including Stoke, Kensington, and Midway. Volumes contain slave records listing supplies issued, births and deaths, names, and other data, 1780-1833; and shipping receipts for crops, 1841-1851. They also include diaries and notebooks of Keating Simons Ball, 1849-1840 and 1874-1884, that record weather, planting, and neighborhood and personal activities. Included in one volume are two pages headed "Orderly Book for the Regiment of Light Dragoons," 1779. Family members mentioned include Elias Ball (fl. 1675-1751) and John Ball, Jr. (1782-1834).
Back to TopArrangement: chronological.
Folder 1a |
Volume 1: 1779-1817, 102 pp.Chiefly a register of the names and birthdates of slaves born on Ball family plantations, 1780-circa 1813, and lists of slaves who received clothing and blankets, 1782-1817, at the following locations: Midway, Marshland Farm, Belle Isle, Pamlico, Kensington, Hyde Park, and Garden Lot. Pages 97-102 were used as a register of colts, fillies, and mules belonging to John Ball, 1783-1802. Pages 15-16 were used as an "Orderly Book for the Regiment of Light Dragoons, commanded by Colonel Daniel Horry," listing regimental orders and a roster dated March-April 1779. |
Folder 1b |
Enclosure in Volume 1Small piece of paper with notation of names and dates. |
Folder 2a |
Volume 2: 1803-1834, 27 pp.Inscribed on inside front cover: "John Ball, Comingtee, 23 November 1819." Pages 1-8 serve as a register of slave names and descriptions of how the slaves were acquired by John Ball. One such heading reads: "Names of the Negroes of children at Comingtee Plantation in May 1803 belonging to Elias Ball and conveyed by will to his nephew John Ball in 1810 together with the increase of the females." Pages 9-25 list the birth and death dates of slaves at the Comingtee and Stoke Plantations. Entries begin in 1803 and most continue through the 1830s. |
Folder 2b |
Enclosures in Volume 2List of slave children belonging to John Coming, 1836; fragment dated 13th Jan 1880; letter of invitation to attend the second Annual Address of Harmony Circle Association at St. James R. E. Church, Comingtee, dated 15 December 1884. |
Folder 3 |
Volume 3: 1818-1833, 156 pp.Pages 1-13, 15-44, and 46-65 were used as a "blanket book," by John Ball, listing slaves who received blankets annually from 1818 through 1833 at Comingtee, Stoke, Backriver, Kensington, and Midway Plantations. Pages 150-155 were used in 1813-1818 as an account book of supplies, wages, and crops by John Ball, Jr. |
Folder 4 |
Volume 4: 1841-1851, 32 pp.Receipt book used to record bushels of rough rice shipped by Keating Simons Ball on board the schooner Nancy and received at various Charleston wharfs and South Carolina mills. Receipts are signed by Keating Simons Ball and others. |
Folder 5a |
Volume 5: 1849-1871, 219 pp.Pages 1-77 were used as a plantation daybook by Keating Simons Ball of the Comingtee Plantation. Included are entries which were made regularly, 1849-1850, and scattered entries and miscellaneous records of 1852, 1869, and 1871. Entries chiefly concern the planting and care of rice, corn, and oat crops; weather conditions; work progress of slaves; trips to Charleston for the sale of rice; hunting; and community activities. Pages 83-119 consist of an extensive Ball family genealogy, beginning with Elias Ball and continuing through the early 1900s. |
Folder 5b |
Enclosure in Volume 5Unsigned letter to Frederic Bancroft, Washington, D.C., dated 19 April 1911, about the deaths of Hugh and Anna Ball in an explosion aboard the steamer Pulaski in 1838, and two genealogical notes. |
Arrangement: chronological.
Folder 6 |
Volume 6: 1874, 225 pp.Pocket diary recording the daily activities of Keating Simons Ball, work on Comingtee Plantation, and the weather. Pages 194-224 were used to record accounts. |
Folder 7 |
Volume 7: 1875, 58 pp.Unbound fragment of pocket diary probably kept by Keating Simons Ball of Comingtee Plantation. Daily weather reports and church and neighborhood activities are recorded. |
Folder 8a |
Volume 8: 1879-1884, 244 pp.Pages 1-111 of this pocket memorandum book and diary were used in 1879-1880 for brief entries concerning Keating Simons Ball's daily activities on Comingtee Plantation and reports on the weather. Pages 112- 244 were used chiefly to record store accounts, 1879-1884. |
Folder 8b |
Enclosure in Volume 8:Six small pieces of paper containing financial notations. |
Folder 9 |
Volume 9: 1883, 176 pp.Pages 1-127 of this pocket diary contain brief entries for 1883 concerning the daily activities of Keating Simons Ball and Comingtee Plantation. Pages 128-135 list names and addresses. Pages 136-174 were used to record accounts of Keating Simons Ball. |
Folder 10 |
Volume 10: 1884, 170 pp.Pages 1-129 of this pocket diary were used chiefly by Keating Simons Ball to record daily weather reports. There are brief mentions of trips to Charleston and other community activities. Pages 130-166 were used to record "Cash Accounts" and "Bills Payable." Pages 167-168 list names and addresses. |
Reel M-1811/1-3
M-1811/1M-1811/2M-1811/3 |
Microfilm |