This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held in the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in our reading room, and not digitally available through the World Wide Web. See the Duplication Policy section for more information.
This collection was processed with support from the Randleigh Foundation Trust.
Size | 239 items |
Abstract | Heyward and Ferguson family members included Nathaniel Heyward (1766-1851) of South Carolina, whose estate included 45,000 acres of Low Country plantations and over 2,000 slaves; his sons, Nathaniel J. and William H. Heyward; his grandson, James Barnwell Heyward (1817-1886); Confederate brigadier general Samuel Wragg Ferguson (1834-1917); and others. The collection includes family correspondence, plantation records and other materials of Nathaniel Heyward; of his sons, Nathaniel J. and William H. Heyward; his grandson, James Barnwell Heyward; and other relations. Letters concern many topics including the sons' education at Princeton and Harvard; lands and slaves; travels in Europe; emigration from South Carolina to the old Southwest; northern interference with slavery; post Civil War conditions; relations with freedmen and tenants; and family and social life. Volumes include J. B. Heyward's records of four South Carolina plantations, including Copenhagen, Hamburgh, Myrtle Grove, and Rotterdam, 1845-1868. Miscellaneous papers include the recollections (typed transcription, 134 p.) of Samuel Wragg Ferguson as a child in Charleston, S.C., a cadet at West Point, a soldier with the U.S. Army Mormon expedition, 1857- 1858, and a Confederate brigadier general. |
Creator | Heyward (Family : Heyward, Nathaniel, 1766-1851)
Ferguson (Family : Ferguson, Samuel Wragg, 1834-1917) |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Suzanne Ruffing, August 1996
Encoded by: Roslyn Holdzkom, November 2006
his collection was processed with support from the Randleigh Foundation Trust.
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Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
Heyward and Ferguson family members included Nathaniel Heyward (1766-1851) of South Carolina, whose estate included 45,000 acres of Low Country plantations and over 2,000 slaves; his sons, Nathaniel J. and William H. Heyward; his grandson, James Barnwell Heyward (1817-1886); Confederate brigadier general Samuel Wragg Ferguson (1834-1917); and others.
Back to TopThe collection includes family correspondence, plantation records and other materials of Nathaniel Heyward; of his sons, Nathaniel J. Heyward and William H. Heyward; his grandson, James Barnwell Heyward; and other relations. Letters concern many topics including the sons' education at Princeton and Harvard; lands and slaves; travels in Europe; emigration from South Carolina to the old Southwest; northern interference with slavery; post Civil War conditions; relations with freedmen and tenants; and family and social life. Volumes include J. B. Heyward's records of four South Carolina plantations, including Copenhagen, Hamburgh, Myrtle Grove, and Rotterdam, 1845-1868. Miscellaneous papers include the recollections (typed transcription, 134 p.) of Samuel Wragg Ferguson as a child in Charleston, S.C., a cadet at West Point, a soldier with the U.S. Army Mormon expedition, 1857- 1858, and a Confederate brigadier general.
Back to TopSix letters, five miscellaneous papers, and one volume all in typescript copy. Included are two personal letters (both also on microfilm), one from Nathaniel Heyward to his mother from Princeton, 1806, and one from William Heyward to his father describing White Sulphur Springs, Va.; three Civil War letters, one from Frank (?) to his mother about marching to Morris Island and the war, one announcing the death of Nathaniel Heyward, and one about the delay in the removal of Nathaniel's body servant, John: and one genealogical letter, 1923. Miscellaneous items include a legal description of Dr. Simmons's losses in the Seminole War with detailed accounts; a printed pamphlet of a letter from Thomas Pinckney, Charleston, S.C., 12 December 1810, to John Champneys, president of the Agricultural Society of South Carolina, about a new method of cultivating rice; a large sheet containing names and ages of Dockon slaves, 1840; 14 pages from a book of slave lists; and a list of the names and owners of Cooper River plantations. The volume is Samuel Wragg Ferguson's memoirs, written in 1900, about his ancestry and early life in South Carolina and at West Point, 1852-1857; in the U.S. Army in Kansas and Utah, 1857-1861; and in the Confederate Army, 1861-1865.
Folder 1 |
Letters, 1806-1923 |
Folder 2 |
Miscellaneous papers |
Folder 3 |
Recollection of Samuel Wragg FergusonSee also: Samuel W. Ferguson, "With Albuel Sidney Johnston's Expedition to Utah, 1857," in Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society, 1911-1912, volume XII, pages 303-312. |
Reel M-2754/1 |
Materials, 1806-1923 and undatedLetters, slave lists, pamphlets and volumes primarily from the Heyward family. Letters include descriptions of William and Nathaniel Heyward Jr.'s college days; William H. Heyward's description of life in Charleston, 1810; Nathaniel Heyward Jr.'s trip to New York and description of the manufacturing of woolen cloth in New Haven, Conn.; accounts from Nathaniel Jr. and William Heyward in Europe, describing social life, dancing, art treasures, gambling, and travel conditions, 1810-1812; letters to Mrs. Barnwell from her daughter, Hetty Barnwell Heyward, and Nathaniel H. Jr about deaths in the family and children, 1814-1818; a letter from Nathaniel Heyward Sr. to James B. Heyward at Harvard about his allowance and travel, 1834; a letter in which Nathaniel Heyward Sr. discusses the migration of both whites and blacks to Alabama and Texas to the detriment of South Carolina; a letter from Daniel to James Heyward offering a plantation for sale; a letter from William H. Heyward, Columbia, S.C., to James Heyward discussing the South Carolina legislature and Northern interference in slave affairs; the settlement of Nathaniel Heyward's estate, with slave bills of sale and lists of slaves on the plantation, 1854; a letter from Charles Heyward to James B. Heyward about the Kansas Emigration Society, 1856; letters, 1861, protesting against drafting overseers into the Confederate Army, about moving slaves for safe keeping, and describing fires in Charleston; a physician's bill for attending slaves, 1862; letters about Nathaniel Jr.'s death, 1862; a letter from James B. Heyward to his wife about removing items from the plantation against danger from the enemy, 1864; a claim by James B. Heyward for the return of crops taken by United States forces, 1865; a letter from F. M. Montell to Lieutenant James Hann asking for military aid in handling freed slaves and quarantining smallpox on the Ferguson plantation, 1865; a blank agreement form for freedmen and women as sharecroppers with correspondence and contracts relating to sharecropping, 1865; and letters, 1866, on South Carolina politics, general conditions after the war, William Heyward's saw mill, and the Freedman's Bureau; undated slave lists; and general family and personal correspondence. There are also two pamphlets: "How to Kill Three Birds with One Stone," 1852; articles printed in the Charleston (S.C.) Courier on the improvement of the Santee Canal; and an address delivered at the 17th anniversary of the Black Oak Agricultural Society, 27 April 1858, by Samuel DuBose, president of the Society. There are also ten volumes: Volume 1: Plantation book of James B. Heyward, 1845, 1868 Volume 2: Planation Book of James B. Heyward with cloth lists for Copenhagen, Hamburgh, and Rotterdam plantations, 1851 Volume 3: Plantation book of James B. Heyward with list of slaves for Rotterdam, Copenhagen, and Hamburgh plantations, 1851-1857 Volume 4: Plantation book of James B. Heyward with list of slaves for Rotterdam, Copenhagen, and Hamburgh plantations, 1852-1858 Volume 5: Plantation book of James B. Heyward with field lists for Hamburgh, Rotterdam, Myrtle Grove, and Copenhagen, 1854-1856 Volume 6: Plantation book of James B. Heyward with crops and stock for Hamburgh, Copenhagen, and Myrtle Grove, 1857-1860 Volume 7: "In Memorium": Barker and Ferguson obituary record, 1858-1889 Volume 8: Plantation book of James B. Heyward with field lists for Rotterdam, Myrtle Grove, Copenhagen, and Hamburgh, February 1859 Volume 9: Plantation book of James B. Heyward for Rotterdam, Copenhagen, and Hamburgh, 1859-1861 Volume 10: Plantation book of James B. Heyward with overseers' agreements, 1859-1862 |