MEMORIES
BY
Charles Spalding Wylly
1916
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THESE MEMORIES
Have been
inspired and are dedicated to the “D.A.R.” and the “ACACIA CLUB” of Brunswick in
appreciation of their efforts—the one to preserve the traditions the other the
personalities of the past.
—Charles Spalding Wylly
“I pray the prayer that
Easterners do,
May the peace of Allah abide with you,
Wherever you stay and wherever you go,
May the beautiful palms of Allah grow,—
So I touch my heart, as Easterners do
May the peace of Allah abide with you.”
“Darien Gazette”, October 20th, 1836:—
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“A son, we learn, was born in the 18th instant,
to our friends Mr. and Mrs. Alexr. Wm. Wylly.
“The event occurred at The Thicket, the home of Capt. Charles
Spalding, U.S.A., 2nd Dragoons, who is serving with his regiment in
Florida. We offer our congratulations.”
October, 1915, near four score years since then, years that have
witnessed many and immense changes in the conditions of life, in the accepted
thought, and even in the religion of the community into which I was born and
have lived—changes that have engulfed, reversed and transformed its social and
political life, so that now it is scarce even a parody of what was and has
been. Endowed with a retentive memory I have preserved a loving remembrance of
many of the actors in the shifting scenes, of my own day, and have a keen
recollection of the words that fell from the lips of those whom age had
forbidden place in the drama or rather tragedy of the sixties. I have thought I
could fairly estimate the value of these changes, and so I write of what I have
seen, known and heard.
My parents were among the leading people of the county in which they
lived. My father was the only male descendant in Georgia (grand son) of
Alexander Wylly, an emigrant from Belfast, of 1748, a lawyer by profession,
a member of the Colonial Assembly, from Halifax district in 1772 an Speaker of
the House in 1774, and Secretary to Governor Sir James Wright in
1774-1775 and onward.
My mother was a daughter of Thomas Spalding of Sapelo Island
and Sarah Leake, his wife, and closely allied by birth to the families of
McIntosh, of New Inverness, and Martins of Jekyl Island. Their
homes or plantation was on Sapelo River, twelve miles north of Darien, and was
called The Forest. It was remarkable for the spaciousness and beauty of
the lawn, fringed and clothed with oak, bay, hickory and magnolia. Great pains
had been taken with the transplanting of every indigenous tree, and I can recall
no variety that was absent. Here I spent my childhood, and it is from here I
most vividly recall the tender accents of my mother’s voice, the look of the
sacred eyes, ever beaming with a love unutterable, the quiver of the fond lips,
smiling, ah me, to often, mournfully; it is here that she taught lessons always
leading up to and inculcating charity and goodwill to all men and all people. I
grew fast, and under the instruction of first a governess and afterwards a
tutor, made some progress in the acquisition of the rudiments of an education,
for when in April, 1848, I, less than twelve years old, was sent to the famous
school of Coates & Searle, of Charleston, S.C., I found myself graded with boys
of my own age. In this admirable place of instruction I remained for five
years. There
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were twenty-five boarding pupils and sixty day scholars,
all were children of the best families of the State, myself from Georgia and two
“Toutants” from Louisiana being the only “foreigners or natives” according to
“Charleston estimation” of barbarian or at least uncultivated communities. Many
of my school mates in later life became noted in state, civil and social life; a
very large number gave their lives in support of the “Lost Cause”. In 1853 I
was sent to the Military Institute at Marietta, where my Georgia
acquaintanceship was enlarged. The Cadet Battalion numbered 160 to 185; of that
number I know but one, Judge H.D. Twiggs, of Savannah, now alive. One
class (the first to graduate) had every member killed in battle by 1863. The
Georgia Military Institute had installed a corps of instructors of very moderate
acquirements.
The Superintendent, Major A.V. Brumby, a graduate of the West
Point Academy, was a gentleman of honor, education and culture, and when that is
said, nothing remains to be added. The assistant professors of French, history,
chemistry and belles letters, were simply expounders of accepted class books.
The commandant Major James W. Robertson, alone possessed a personality
and mentality fitted to enthuse and dominate the young minds with whom he came
into contact. The curriculum and instruction could not be called perfect or
ideal, but the ‘esprit’ was high, and had not the disasters of the Civil War
destroyed the buildings and dissipated the funds, it is possible the G.M.I.
might have grown into a most valuable State asset and institution. As early as
1822, Governor George M. Troup had in his message to the Legislature
said, “Prepare now for the last and coming resort, by establishment in every
State of military schools, foundries, armories, arsenals and powder
manufactories.” The school was not established until 1850, the arsenals,
foundries, and powder manufactories not at all. See what their value would have
been in 1861.
January, 1856 found me at home, just entering my 20th year, in
perfect vigor of body and mind. I had not graduated, or rather not been given a
diploma, owing to a foolish emente nearly approaching a mutiny, of the
senior class of which I was a member.
I was however, well equipped and
prepared for the choice of a profession, a good mathematician, a fair classical
scholar, with more than ordinary acquirements in “belles letters”, history,
geography, etc., and in addition a fair knowledge of French, not speaker, my
constitutional ear trouble preventing my having acquired the accent. In any but
a Southern State, I would at once have chosen some line of study to fit me for
the profession or life I might select, not so, surrounded by servants, with
horses, dogs, guns, boats at command, the indolence and love of pleasure
inherent in all young people caused me to fritter a full year away in absolute
idleness. Hunting, riding and visiting occupied weeks which ran into months.
For forty miles every house was open to me; many were the homes of near
relations and it is to a description of these and of their occupants that I
shall devote the next pages.
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MY GRANDFATHER’S HOME
Sapelo geographically situated in
latitude 31º 10’, longitude 29º 40’, or to be precise, that is the location on
which stands the steel tower that lights the course of a vessel into Doboy
Sound. I have already recited its history previous to the advent of the Saxon
race from here to take its first step in a triumphant march from the Atlantic to
the Pacific and from the Great Lakes to Key West. Sapelo, with its two sister
islands, Ossabaw and St. Catherine, had been exempt in the cession of territory
to South Carolina and the Province of Georgia, and been reserved and retained by
the “Nations” as hunting and fishing ground to be held in common for the use of
all. But on December the 11th, 1735, they were transferred by a deed of gift,
by Melatchee and his brother chiefs to James Bosomworth and
Mary Musgrove his wife; all gifts fro Indiana’s require a return in money or
goods and the Bosomworths gave to Melatchee and his associates, 12
guns, 12 pairs of blankets, 10 pieces of Osnaburgs, 200 pounds of powder, 200
pounds of lead, and 100 pounds of vermillion; the conveyance was proved before
John Mulryne, J.P. at Greenville, South Carolina, and attested to an
recorded by Wm. Pickney, Secretary of State, in February, 1736.
James Bosomworth had come to the province as Chaplain to His
Majesty’s regiment of foot. Mary Musgrove was the daughter of a Scotch
trader of Purysburg, a trading station on the Carolina side of the Savannah
river; her mother was an Indian woman of the Creek tribe and the daughter of a
minor chief. She had been brought up and had lived with her mother’s people,
and had spent a part of her years at her father’s trading post. She spoke
English and all the dialects of the Creek, Yemassee and Cherokee tongues were
familiar to her, General Oglethorpe had employed her as an interpreter,
and she had given him faithful and intelligent service and had accompanied him
in his long and arduous journeys into the interior wilds of the country, and in
a way had formed a part of his official family. It is difficult to understand
why the Colonial authorities should have taken umbrage at this disposal of an
unceeded part of the ajacent territory; rather we would think the disposal would
have been welcomed as a removal of a future cause of friction and discontent.
There was no reason to doubt the loyalty of the former Chaplain of His Majesty’s
regiment, and the good feeling and in some measure the attachment of his wife
was proved and attested by a three years’ service in an almost confidential
position. Offense, however, was taken, probably from too strict an adherence to
that absurd clause in the Charter which forbade to any one person the ownership
of more than 500 acres of land, supplemented by the still more absurd
declaration that inheritance should be only through male issue. As soon,
therefore, as the provincial authority had learned of the gift, by an order
issued in Council the recipients were notified that the cession of so
considerable part of the province was contrary to the policy and public welfare
and would not be held good; and at the same
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meeting Patrick Graham was directed to
visit the Indian Country and inquire into the validity of the grant, and power
was given him, should he find it possible and expedient to purchase the islands
for the Colonial representatives. With such power and with gifts and presents
to bestow, it is small wonder that no long time elapsed before his return,
bringing with him an instrument denying Melatchee’s right to sell, convey
or give the islands, and making a conveyance to the province of Georgia, of all
right, title and possession of the same.
Adam and Thomas, brothers of James Bosomworth,
now visited the Indian towns in the upper and more distant parts of the province
and obtained a third grant, which included not only all that had been given, but
the lands lying between the Altamaha and the St. Mary’s River. This conveyance
covered territory that had never before been ceded. The case was now
transferred to the “Council on Provinces,” which held its meetings at St. James’
London, and there it rested, “was argued and re-argued, continued and
re-continued” for twelve years; and Indian council was held in Augusta in 1755
for the taking of testimony, and finally in 1759 an order was passed directing
the sale of Ossabaw and Sapelo, “the sale to be public, and after due
advertisement,” the title to be made to the highest bidder. The right and title
of the Bosomworth’s to St. Catherine was confirmed, and made in fee
simple to them and their heirs. In addition, the sum of 800 pounds sterling was
adjudged and ordered to be paid to Mary Musgrove now Mary Bosomworth
for services rendered as interpreter to the Governor of the Province.
The proceeds of the sale of Ossabaw and Sapelo to be applied toward
the payment of the costs of the litigation and the purchase or acquiring of a
release from the Bosomworth’s, of all claims in the future; in accordance
with this decree, Sapelo Island was on December 11, 1759 sold by the Officer of
the Court, now represented by our County Sheriff, and Andrew Mackay,
being the highest bidder, became its first owner.
This gentleman having contracts with the government for the supply
of beef and pork stocked the island with hogs, cattle, and horses, and while
awaiting the natural increase he resided at the “Cottage,” the residence of
Wm. McIntosh, who had married Mary Catharine McKay, a near relative.
He died in 1769 from injuries received by a fall from his horse. His domestic
relations had not been pleasant; he had married in England a Lady Montagute,
a widow with one son. To his wish that she should accompany him to Georgia, she
had returned an absolute refusal. No child had blessed their union, and when he
died by an accident he had bade no will or testament, and the Island became the
property by due process of law of Mrs. Andrew Mackay who had never
crossed the ocean and whose life had been spent in Scotland, England, or Europe.
Communication was slow, English courts are slow, more especially
proceedings in the Courts of Chancery as our Probate Court is here called. War
clouds were brewing; the Stamp Act
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was blocking proceedings at law; the War of
Independence barred all orders of the courts for eight years, and so it was not
until 1786 that a Mr. Montagute, a son of Mrs. Mackay, by her
first marriage, appeared in Savannah, and armed with a power of attorney and the
necessary documents and proofs, offered the island for private sale, and after
much negotiation, and many disappointments, in 1788 Mr. Montagute sold
the islands to five French gentlemen, Messieurs DeMousse, J. De Chapeldelaine,
Jean de Beoufillet, Grande de Marlee and Poulain du Bignon. They did
not divide it, but held the island as an undivided property. The articles of
co-partnership; are curiously prolix and are remarkable in that the
supplementary clauses revoke almost everything that was of binding value in the
fourteen preceding articles of agreement.
Two of these owners, and probably three, made homes and resided on
the property. The others were in all likelihood, mere investors; Jean de
Beoufillet made his home and built for himself a house to which in 1789 he
brought Madame de Beoufillet and his only child, a daughter Natalie.
He called this refuge from the rising revolutionary storms of France “Bourbon”,
and located it on Cabareta River. Poulain du Bignon chose the South End,
where the great oaks had attracted him. Grande de Marlee (He afterwards
sold to De Chapeldelaine, which is the proper spelling) selected the spot
now called “Chocolate” as his location.
Under the supplementary clause to their articles of co-partnership
each of the five members were at liberty to fence, enclose, improve and
cultivate not more than 800 acres as their own individual property on their own
account, with power to sell, hold and dispose of that account at their
pleasure. Negroes were purchased, managers selected, houses and other
improvements commenced on the lands held in joins proprietorship. The private
holdings were fast assuming the look of prosperity, when a crushing blow fell,
and as in most human affairs, it was a woman who was the cause and who governed
the issue.
Monsieur de Beoufillet had been a banker of Bordeaux, and had
acquired a fortune as bankers do, by the receiving and holding on one day of
someone’s money, and of loaning three-fourths of the same on the next to someone
else, they paying him ten per cent for the transaction. To him, a devotee to
custom, a conservative, France, led by such radicals as Voltaire,
Rousseau, and, worse than all, Mirabeau, should be carried away with
the charm of novelty and reform. Indignant at such ingratitude, he had
determined to make in America a refuge for himself, a home for his wife, and a
future for Natalie his only child. He had entrusted to a nephew sent to
Savannah, a large sum of money with directions to purchase lands, buy negroes,
clear the woods, and provide a suitable home and dwelling for the reception of
himself and family when the time should come, when forced by the troublous years
that he foresaw, they would bid farewell to France. He had received letters
giving
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glowing details of the home being prepared for
them, some describing the beauty of the country, some telling of the wide
verandah-surrounded cottage, with outbuildings and offices, others with accounts
of carpenters’ and masons’ wages, showing how high the price of labor in that
new country. It was not until 1788 that Monsieur de Beoufillet had
written his nephew that he, his wife, and daughter Natalie would arrive
early in the following year—and it had only been then that the nephew had
bestirred himself and had bought for his uncle a fifth individual share in
Sapelo and the adjacent islands of Blackbeard and Cabareta, while in the
meantime, of the many thousands intrusted him, two-thirds had been invested, not
in lands, negroes, buildings or improvements, but on his own pleasures or in
gambling investments, from which he had hoped to quickly realize a fortune.
In 1789 Monsieur de Beoufillet had reached Savannah, had been
to Sapelo had found little preparation for his reception, and a most inferior
home provided for him, but few slaves bought, and little to show for the
expenditures made by the nephew. He had brought with him a retinue of white
servants, carriages, plate, and household equipment. There was not even a place
to stow them. He read and re-read the nephew’s letters describing the
expenditure of so many thousands of francs, for the building of rooms,
outbuildings, stables, etc. He looked over the charges for carpenters and
bricklayers’ work; he looked around upon the rude walls of a four-roomed house,
with a six-foot hall, and a kitchen of 12 x 15 attached by an L, and his heart
grew hot at the fraud that had been practiced on him. He sent for the nephew
and after storming, reproaching and cursing, he ordered him off his premises,
saying, “If I ever find you in my house it shall be at your peril, for I shall
kill you.” The nephew was driven from his presence and to him, and shortly
after this scene, in the absence of Monsieur de Beoufillet he ventured to
return, it may be to ask his aunt to intercede for him; it may be that the
lovely eyes and budding form of Natalie drew him; the last was the common
belief. The uncle’s unexpected return surprised him. Gentlemen then wore
swords; steel was drawn, and the nephew fell, as it was thought mortally
wounded. The seemingly dying man had been the intimate and close friend of
Monsieur de Beoufillet’s four co-partners. They received and nursed him
back into health. Most probably it was to the South End, the home of du
Bignon, that he was taken, for neither wounds nor death had any terror to
Poulain du Bignon; his friends listened to and believed the tale he told of
“a love that was not unreturned”; of a visit to say adieu, not farewell; “of
accounts carelessly kept, but of no monies embezzled”, and they determined to
break up the co-partnership; and to by a majority vote divide their interests,
and remove elsewhere.
Jekyl Island could be bought, and soon the co-partnership had passed
into liquidation, and four of its members had become proprietors of the Island
of Jekyl; transferring their Sapelo interests to other and new people.
Monsieur de Beoufillet now found himself
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alone among strangers, and indicted in the
courts of the country for “assault with intent to kill.” The Frenchman,
impulsive, ardent, and the same time with a hereditary fear of the law, was
desperate. He employed the Hon. Joseph Clay of Bryan County, to defend
him, Mr. Clay’s eloquence and legal ability gained a verdict of
acquittal. In a transport of gratitude Beoufillet embraced him in open
court crying, “Come to my house; you shall be my son, for you shall marry my
Natalie”. Mr. Clay smilingly with thanks replied, “That to do so
would subject himself to the charge of bigamy; but that he had a brother. Years
later, Ralph Clay paid his addresses, and Natalie became Mrs.
Ralph Clay, of Bryan County, and bore to him five children.
Poulain du Bignon’s life-story would have delighted a
Dumas. He had seen the world in many places and phases, and had drunk deep
of the cup of adventure in early youth. He had been commissioned as an officer
in the French army of the East Indies. He had served for years in the war in
which France and England, locked in deadly struggle, contended for the
possession of the rich and great countries of the East. Detailed as an
instructor of artillery to the courts of a great Rajan, he had lived amid the
barbaric splendor of a decaying empire, and had essayed by his skill and courage
to prop the tottering throne of a descendant of the “King of Kings.” In middle
life he had commanded an armed vessel of war, sailing under the French flag,
with letters of marquee, and in those years of continual warfare had worthily
upheld the honor of France. When “in his cups” as it was then called, not
otherwise, for in general he was silent, moody and brooding, I have been told by
one now dead, that his talk was entrancing in the vividness of incident and
adventure. Such was the man who lived at the South End. His descendants have
lost all remembrance of him, and even all memoranda. Mrs. Maurice, of
Jekyl, told me that when at the death of John du Bignon, Sr., the old
house was ordered demolished; the carpenter employed to perform the work, told
her he had found in an old cupboard, between the walls a great hoard of letters
and papers of old dates and addresses, such as Madras 1774, Hyderabad 1703, and
others that he could not make out—“Barque Josephine”, Brig—1776”, “Gondelope,
Martinique 1774”, Barque Marguerite 1781”—but that being unable to read French
he had burnt them. Mrs. Maurice said she threw up her hands in horror
and regret.
What unwritten history, what tragedies, what buried crisises, in
lives that had passes away, were, it may be, given to the flames, and now we can
not know, only imagine.
It is 1802 when I resume my story. Nine years have elapsed. The
four partners, by a majority vote have dissolved the Sapelo co-partnership, and
sold their shares to others. de Beoufillet alone remains. Count
Montalet, a refugee from St. Domingo, where perished all of his family, has
bought and resides at the former home of De Le Chapeldelaine. He calls
it his “Le chatelet,” a name that has been corrupted into “Chocolate”. He is
devoted to
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the cultivating and perfecting of his flower
and fruit gardens, and immensely interested in the rising talent and genius of
his colored cook, “Cupidon”, who, he declares, would equal or surpass
Vatel, had he scope and opportunity. In the morning and evening hours, he,
accompanied by his only companion Monsieur Horne, or it may be by the
Abbe Karle, a sometime visitor from Savannah, may be seen waling under the
oaks that border the fields and roads. They lead by a leash, a pig, whose
researches after acorns and other food they earnestly watch. What can these
quaint figures, with broad-skirted coats, embroidered vests, and knew breeches,
be doing with a pig in leash? They treasure the hope that truffles may be
found, and they seek the aid of the pig’s nose. Monsieur Horne
exclaims: “I think, Alphonse, we will one day find them.” The Count
replies, “Mon Dieu, I would that we may, for the eating of them “make men more
gentle and women more tender,” and in this country we need them, Mon Dieu, Mon
Dieu!”
Natalie is married, and a mother. She spends her summers
with her father at Bourbon, but is pressing them to remove to Bryan County so as
to be nearer to her. The South End has been sold to a Mr. Harrington and
has this very year been re-sold to Thomas Spalding who has returned from
a five years’ stay in England and Scotland.
As yet I have given no description of the Island, though I have
written pages concerning it. IN shape it somewhat resembled an orange leaf,
whose narrowed ends have been tilted upwards, and the center depressed for its
entire length; in short it is like an elliptical saucer, lower in the middle,
higher on the edges, and highest at the two extremities. Its length is twelve
miles, its breadth varied from two to three miles, including marshes. Its
highest lands were originally covered by a dense growth of oak and hard wood;
the lesser elevations by denser thickets of bay, gum, vine and evergreen; its
lower ridges with pine and palmetto, and its center by savannas of waiving
grass, dotted here and there by clumps of oak and vine with evergreen of holly,
casino and palmetto to break the monotony of the scene. Were it night, the
savannas would flash into a tremulous splendor, from the myriad of fire flies
that would here shew their short-lived glory against the dark green of the
bordering wood. Were it day, wild flowers of the palest blue, of the tenderest
pink and brightest yellow in thousands an tens of thousands would teach us how
poor our gardens are compared to Nature’s broad fields of living color. Here
and there wild cattle and sometimes deer, would be seen, and everywhere (should
the wind be high) could be heard the rolling music of the surf as it beat on the
yellow sand the song of the sea, and told of the might of the ocean wave.
Thomas Spalding, the only child of James Spalding and
Margery McIntosh, was near 30 years old when he purchased The South End
and the attached lands. He had absorbed his education from the personal
teaching of his father, had studied law in the office of Judge Gibbons of
Savannah, had passed the bar, as soon
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as he had attained his majority, at which time
Judge Gibbons turned over to him $20,000 as his only inheritance from his
father’s former large estates, for James Spalding had died the year
before and the Judge had administered on the estate. His nature was ardent, his
temper quick, his affection strong, his character grave; he had married Miss
Sarah Leake, of Belleville, McIntosh County, before he was twenty-four, an
almost immediately sailed for Scotland. On arrival he had placed himself in
communication with his father’s former business associates and partners, Messrs.
Simpson & _____ of London and Edinburg; had been received by them, and
assured of their continued interest in the son of a greatly-valued friend and
correspondent, and whose loss of wealth they ascribed to adherence to the Crown
from 1776 to 1783. Neither did they fail to place him in a way to the bettering
of his fortunes, and he had not returned until five years had elapsed.
Those were days when personal character, inherited uprightness and
reputable and good ancestry were recognized in the marts of business as
collaterals that passed and were honored and discounted by banks and money
lenders. After four years of acquaintanceship and growing approval, Mr.
Simpson said to the young man, “Our firm in your father’s life-time made
large sums of money, through our connection with him. We are too old to resume
our American transactions but we are prepared, knowing the opportunities there
offered, to loan you $50,000 at 3 1/2 % on your own personal note, due in ten
years.” Thomas Spalding accepted the generous offer, and it was with
funds thus provided that he arrived in Savannah early in the year 1802. He had
sold during his absence his home “Retreat” on St. Simon’s Island to Mr. Wm.
Page, where he had built a small house for the reception of his bride, but
to which he had never carried her, the foreign trip causing a change in his
plans. This house was unique, every timber in its frames was of squared live
oak, and the kitchen chimney had on each side a niche or chamber, one for the
reception of a cask of Madeira wine, the other for a thirty-gallon puncheon of
brandy. Where negro slaves were the domestics, the fire in the kitchen was
perpetual and in that continued heat the ageing of both wine and brandy was
greatly hastened and the quality enhanced.
His first business was to secure a home for himself, his wife, and
three children that during his absence from Georgia had been born to him, and
Sapelo having been brought to his notice, he closed the negotiations, drew a
draft upon Mr. Simpson for the purchase money, and received titles to the
South End properties, (I believe 4,000 acres). This done, labor was to be
provided to clear the forests, prepare lands, and plant crops and a house for
the needful protection of the family to be provided; the last requirement was
met by an improvised structure located at the landing place. It consisted
practically of a very large shed, with walls and partitions dividing the space
into rooms, made of straight sassafras poles which were plastered with
lime-mortar on both sides; the floors were of plank, the roof of palmetto
thatch; the ceilings of the same
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construction as walls and partition. He
obtained the aid of Mr. Roswell King, of Connecticut, a skillful
carpenter and workman, to supervise and direct the building and proper erection
of the building, now known as “The South End” Home. From his father’s estate he
obtained by purchase from his mother the house servants and a limited number of
trained mechanics and laborers; and with these as a nucleus he looked around
from where to supply the large quantity of crude industrial power. It was at
once evident that it could not be obtained from the white population, and must
come from elsewhere. He was a descendant in direct line and grandson of the
author of the New Inverness Protest of January, 1739 against the introduction of
slaves into the Colony (the first in the history of the world) and had not
forgotten the prophetic closing clause, “Nor in justice can we not think that if
slaves are thrown amongst us, they will one day return to be a scourge to us,
our children or our children’s children, for our sins”; but labor was absolutely
necessary for the carrying out of his undertakings. His environment and that in
which his father had lived, justified and encouraged it; every interest demanded
it; he said to himself, “They shall be more serfs on the land than slaves; I
shall civilize them and better their condition”; but you cannot touch pitch and
remain clean; and the penalty of the “one day or another” was incurred, and the
scourge was to fall.
Slaves were to be had in Charleston at $100 each “privilege of
choice”; he bought many from the West Indies; he brought hands trained for the
management and guidance of such raw labor. He made large contracts for
supplying live-oak fitted for vessels of war, the Government furnishing ship
carpenters for the moulding of the frames. He furnishing the timber and
transportation to the vessel’s side. The clearing of the oak forests
facilitated the opening of the fields where soon cotton, sugar, and all manner
of produce yielded sevenfold in this rich and virgin soil. Fences were made by
piling the larger limbs of the felled oaks one on the other. The lands were
drained; villages of huts with thatched roofs and walls, plastered inside and
out, had sprung up in favorable spots; these were styled settlements, such as
New Behaviour, Hanging Bull, and in each a head man, inappropriately called a
driver, (for he seldom drove) was placed in charge of probably one hundred
souls; he was however the nominal head, received orders, and was expected to see
them executed. At the Chatelet a different system prevailed. The two elderly
French men found happiness by a different road; no ambition toward the
accumulation of wealth or property now stirred their souls; they had lived and
played their brief part in the dram a of human life, and learned that it is all
but a “vanity of vanities”, a tinkling of the camel’s bells. They were now
retired from the stage and sitting far back with the audience; they calmly
waited the fall of the curtain; a little household of colored servants looked
after their wants; Cupidon the cook, his wife Venus, their son
Hercules, as gardener, and Ceres his wife, composed their ménage;
Hercules was fisherman and hunter, there-
[page 13]
fore the provider of the table; in the
carelessly cultivated fields some dozens of slaves worked a little, idled more,
and produced a sufficiency of food for themselves and sometimes $1,000 worth of
cotton, enough for the purchase of coffee, flour, sugar, a few luxuries, with
some good wine and brandy. In the sitting room a bookshelf held the works of
Racine, Rousseau, Voltaire, Molier, Ude’s Cookery, and Brillat
Savarin’s great work, “Eating and Cooking” as a fine art.”
I think it was after the perusal of Brillat’s immortal work
that Count Martalet conceived the hope of civilizing “les Americains”
through a diet of truffles.
Above the shelf were crossed the swords of Alphonse Count of
Montalet and of the Chevalier ‘Armand de la Horne. They have long gone
to rest, their graves were once to be seen near the front of the house in the
orange grove, not far from the Spring. By the way, this very spring is noted by
the first traveler from the North to the South, the botanist Bartram,
1773 and 1774.
At Bourbon, Madame Beoufillet is sick unto death; Monsieur
has grown thin, but brightens up with Gallic vivacity, when his neighbors call;
himself and Madame make ceremonious visits, and dine and are dined on special
occasions, such as when Madame Cottineau of Savannah and her brother
The Abbe Karle are paying summer visits to the Island.
It is now 1811, ten years have passed; the de Beoufillet’s
still reside at Bourbon, at the Chatelet—the lights yet burn, and show the
shadows of two old men who bend over the last copy of the “Moniteur”, which
tells of the victories o that “rascal” de Napoleon; a white cockade is
pinned to the crossed swords; they at least are true in faith and heart, to the
lilies of the Bourbons.
Mr. Spalding is at The South End; all the owners of small
tracts. The Sherwoods, the Sams, the Millers and others
have been eliminated by the purchase of both lands and stock. Four hundred
slaves answer when interrogated. “We are Spalding negroes”. Much land
has been cleared and drained; 400 acres of cotton and 200 of cane, with fields
that waive in corn greet the eye as you ride northward. Mr. Simpson has
been repaid the greater part of his loan, and the island shows and bears
evidence of a growing prosperity, the great house has been completed, the
furniture is in place, heavy and massive mahogany such as our fathers
laboriously worked out by hand. The South room, the library is fast being
filled with books that tell the past history of the world, of modern thought and
the science of a newer era. Nor is the poetry and philosophy of the older
wanting. There is a dearth of art; no pictures adorn the walls, except in the
central hall, where Gerard Audran’s engravings of LeBruns battles and the
triumph of Alexander cover the walls.
The crossing of the Granicus has the place of honor over the
sideboard; on the western wall; and near to it hangs the battle of Arbela—with
the soaring eagle—and beside it the siege of Tyre; and the eastern, the wars of
Hindoostan, with the Vanquished
[page 14]
Porus”, and the Triumph of Babylon; on the
south the Conqueror is extending clemency to the wife and daughter of Darien;
and in the shadow of the tent is shown the lovely figure of Statira, and
almost Godlike form of Alexander the Great; over the
northern doorway Guido Rent’s “Aurora” leads the dancing hours;
the “God of Life” and poesy and light” guides the car with rosy-footed morn to
herald his coming. These were the sole evidences of any sense or feeling
towards art; no illustrated book, no bronze or bric-a-brac—I forget, on the
sideboard there stood a marble bust of General Bonaparte taken from life
on his return form [sic] his first Italian Campaign; the most beautiful face I
have ever seen. Mr. Bourke Spalding now owns it. Years pass, and years
follow. The trees cast shadows, where before was light; children have been born
and children have died; my mother was born here in 1806; she told me in 1848
that when she could first remember the oaks were as great and as stately as they
then were. Michaux says in his “Sylva-Americana”, the live oak grows for
hundred years; lives for a hundred, and is one hundred more in dying; 1806, less
one hundred, 1706. 1806 full growth, 1906 commencement of decay, that is if the
ruthless hand of man has not hastened the end.
In the years intervening, between 1812 and 24 the doors were closed
and the blinds drawn forever at the chatelet; the loyal heart and gentle soul of
the Chevalier de la Horne was the first to be summoned to its final
roll-call, and we can safely trust his answering “Here” was breathed among the
noble dead. The Viconte did not long survive him; Cupidon, Venus and
Hercules ministered lovingly and faithfully to his latter and latest wants;
and I am glad to write, were manumitted and freed by his will and testament.
Cupid is said to a lad of 14 who had ridden up to inquire, “Master never
held up after Marse Armond’s death; he failed fast; and when he took down
his sword to put it in his coffin—you know the points were upwards when
crossed—he left his own, but turned the point downwards (the fencer’s signal
that the combat is over). I did my best when I went into the kitchen to prepare
his little dishes; “I used to cross myself and pray to St. Joseph that I might
receive help and inspiration in the art, but when I would take in the plate,
maybe a poulet a la marengo, with mushrooms, he would only taste it and say
‘Thank you, Cupid, it was superb; you improve wonderfully.’ On the last
day, and it was full ebb-tide and he had been lying a long while never speaking,
but with his eyes looking far away and not at us—I saw his lips move and leaned
over to hear; ‘Armand’ he said ‘we need hunt the truffles no more, for
here all are gentle and tender’. Then he turned his face to the wall, and was
gone. I do not know Marse Charles what he meant; can you tell me?”
“E’n as he trod that day his way to God,
So walked he from his birth.?
In simpleness, in gentleness, in honor and clean mirth; he had done his work,
had held his peace, and had no fear of death.
It is impossible for me to close the memories of these men of
[page 15]
the Chatelet, exemplars as they were of
courage, simpleness, gentleness, and clean mirth, without referring to and
thinking how different the Greek imaged and painted the bearer of the death
blow, from that now received and entertained. Holbein, in “The Dance of
Death” imaged and painted in the modern thought a grim and grisly skeleton, with
eyeless sockets, and skeleton hands that wave a terror-inspiring spear;
Ulysses telling to his recovered son of the one beautiful land found in his
many years of troublous voyaging, speaks of it as where “fruits ripen each day;
where flowers bloom each hour, and herds feed in pastures that never wither”;
and adds, as the supremest blessing granted to the happy people, that there
dwelt
“And when by lengthening years
in strength they fail,
Apollo comes, and Cynthia comes along;
They bend the silver bow, with tender skill
And void of pain the silent arrow kills”.
No skeleton there; no
terror-inspiring spear, but the most beautiful of the Gods, “The Lord of the
unerring bow; the sun in human limbs arrayed, and brow all radiant;” and not
alone, but with a woman who with love consoles for it is written, “They bend the
bow with tender skill”.
It was in the spring of the year 1822 that an elderly gentleman, a
Mr. Wambazee of Bruro Neck, heir and executor to the Vicomte [sic] de
Mentalet [sic], had come in his six-oarded [sic] boat to the Chatelet.
Mr. Wambazee was a Belgian by birth, short, florid, and fat. He had walked
through the garden and not plucked bud or blossom, had paused to wipe the
moisture from his brow in the very shadow of the rose arbor, unconscious of the
sweet perfume with which the devoniensis and yellow bankshires were greeting and
welcoming him. He had given to Cupidon, Venus and Hercules their
letter of manumission duly signed by the Governor; had mustered the remaining
slaves, and jotted down in a black memoranda book brief descriptions, names and
apparent age, such as: “Adonis, 48, strong but bandy-legged; his wife,
Hebe, 38, and 6 children, 9, 8, 7, 6, 4, 2 Chloe, 17, orphan,
brown; good eyes and teeth, and well made” and so on.
Mr. Wambazee would take luncheon. Cupidon composed
the little and hastily-prepared meal. “Vene, a chicken”, he had called
for and one “not over six weeks old; broiled, with mushrooms and cream sauce; a
salad from the white hearts of the best lettuce, only tarragon vinegar to be
used; a bottle of claret of the Blue Seal, and wafers. And when he rose, it was
with a sigh that Mr. Wambazee, looked towards the white-capped figure
that stood in the doorway. “Cupid”, he said, “I am sorry your master
manumitted you by will; I would never have parted with you”; and then with few
words of farewell, regardless and unconscious of perfume or flower, had moved
through the garden walk to his boat and taken his way to Savannah; that night he
would sleep at St. Catherine’s the next at Green Island, and the third in
Savannah.
[page 16]
And so farewell to the
Chatelet with its memories of courtesy, gentle breeding and high courage, for
does it not require a brave heart to face the world, aged, poor, wifeless and
childless, and yet to smile? Farewell to the fragrance of oleo and mignonette,
of rose, heliotrope and hyacinth. The idyllic days have passed, and the dawn of
a bare materialism is reddening the sky. What said St. Arnaud as from the
heights of Balaklava he looked upon the English horse—“It is magnificent, but it
is not war”. So I say of those days; they may not have been upbuilding nor
uplifting, but they were sweet and very lovely.
And farewell, too, to the memory of the stern and tender; loving and
generous old man; who for 50 years had said of Sapelo; “Sapelo, ‘c’est moi’.”
ready to give from his abundance to all except to himself, but demanding from
all an implicit submission to his will and precept; for his creed was that of
Sir Richard Burton’s:
“Do what thy manhood
bids you do;
From none but self Expect applause;
He noblest lives and noblest dies
Who makes and keeps his self-made laws;
All other life is living death, a world
Where none but phantoms dwell,
A breath, a wind, a sound, a voice,
A tinkling of the camel’s bells.”
So hard is it to be
dominant over a race of dependants, and not grow intolerant of differences,
in-admissible to argument, and domineering to all, even to those most loved; no
people in this wide, wide world needed more to pray “Lead me not into
temptation” than we of the South; no criminal ever had more right to say, “Lord,
judge me not according to my sins, but take into thy sight how greatly more I
might have sinned.”
But twice in forty years have I visited the scene of this story. My
memory has been of men whose names are buried in oblivion. On my visit previous
to this the last, crumbling walls threatening soon to pass into dust were all
that met my eye. The shadows cast by the sun were darkened to a deeper shade by
thought of the pile that had once stood stately in its seeming strength; “Old
Ocean laved its island seat, land of the olive and the lime.”
Since then forty odd years have gone, and this century is well on
and in its teens: years of love, of hope, of discouragement, of despondency and
in 1914 I have found the noble home restored, with every wall rebuilt, and white
and spotless in a garniture of green; it stands, claiming and asserting a new
immunity from time, and bidding a fresh defiance to sea or storm. It greets the
eastern sun as it rises in its sumptuous splendor and bids farewell to it as it
sinks to its bed of solemn repose. And the roof covers one not unmindful of
what has been, and not forgetful of the past; as I rode with him northward in
the great car, I saw it stopped to give time to an old negro of more than 80
years to lessen the fright of his lean and scrawny team, in the roar of the
impatient engine, that murmured at the delay, I thought I could hear the words
of the “Sartor Resartor”: “Venerable is the rugged face, weather-beaten
[page 17]
and besoiled, for it is the face
of a man living manlike, and but the more venerable for its rudeness. Oh,
hardly-entreated brother, for us was thy back so bent, for us were your straight
limbs and figure so deformed; thou wert our conscript, on whom the lot fell; and
fighting our battles were thou so married and bruised.
AN OLD SLAVE.
From out the
sedge, with dim, unsightly face,
And from slow-shuffling o’er the somber earth,
He comes, bowed bondsman of the other days,
Spirit of toil-worn fields that gave him birth.
Beneath the
yoke, all meek his shoulders bend,
Within his arm the jungles silent sleep,
While hands, great, dumb, blind-fumbling, hold the faith
That loyal servitude still bids them keep.
His “White Folks”!***See
the plodding figure rouse,
Dull eyes flash welcoming, yet humbly grave,
With rugged face o’er brimmed with love and smiles,
He stands, the worshipper, the friend, the slave;—
The plaintiveness of weird
plantation croons,
The patience of the furrows through the world,
And lo, the dreams of childhood, now grown old.
Black clumsy fingers,
sturdy as the plow,
Have cleared the thorns where swamp grown hummocks creep,
Upwrenched the oak, yet light as swallow’s wing,
Have touched the hair of “Massa’s Chile” asleep.
—Kate Fort Codington.
I have described the
residence of my grandfather. When not there I was oftenest found at Cannon’s
Point, the home of Mr. James H. Couper or at Retreat, with the King
family; it might be at Broadfield, with the Troups; sometimes at
Sutherland, with the Brailsfords, or the Grants at Elizafield.
Cannon’s Point and Retreat are on St. Simon’s Island; one at the
extreme north, the other at the southernmost point.
This island, located in a world of marsh and bordered by a world of
sea, is rich in natural and historic associations. The Rev. Mr. James Lee
wrote: “It is the historic associations interwoven with St. Simons, that give
it its charm. Its soil is humanized and made dear by the spirits of those who
have lived on and in its neighborhood.” Its marshes have been made “candid and
simple, nothing witholding [sic] and free,” by Lanier and few have
breathed its clean salt air but have borne witness to its spell. Basil Hall
confessed it. Audubon lingered on its shore.
[page 18]
Sir Charles Lyell studied
it; Miss Murray and Miss Bremer have spoken of it. Aaron Burr
and Owen Wister have written in its praise, and Mrs. Fanny Kemble
Butler has illustrated in burning words the beauty of its woods and the
profusion and sweetness of its flowering shrubs and vines.
Its story commenced long years before its English occupancy. In
Shea’s History of the Roman Catholic Church we read of the Santa Domingo,
established in 1570 by the Brotherhood of St. Dominic on the Island of Assao (as
St. Simon’s was then called), of its sack, burning and destruction in 1586; of
its renewal in 1610 by the Order of St. Francis, and of its final extinction and
destruction in the years 1686 to 1702. No permanent or resident tribe appear to
be in possession after that date, it having become but a fishing and hunting
station for wandering troops of the great Creek nation. In 1736 General
Oglethorpe planted here a Scotch Colony, most of whom came from
Invernesshire; Mackays and Cuthberts are the names most frequently
met with. Two years later Frederica was made a garrison town, six companies of
his regiment being there stationed. Barracks were built and a regular system of
fortifications completed. With this the town and island assumed a new
importance it being the ocean fortress upon which rested the colonial line of
defense. Fort Argyle on the Ogeechee formed the right flank; Fort Howe on the
Altamaha the center, and Frederica commanding the sea approach on the left
became the headquarters of the General commanding and the home of the founder of
the future state.
From Frederica he planned the invasion of Florida and from there he
marched in 1740, calling to his aid Col. Palmer with 400 South
Carolinians and the Highland Rangers of Darien. This company numbered 65 men.
Commanded by the lineal chief and leader John Mohr McIntosh, every man
between the ages of 20 and 45 had been called to the muster and not a recreant
had been found. Wm. McIntosh, eldest son of John, but 16 years of
age, implored his father’s permission to accompany him. Being denied the
comradeship he waited until one day’s march had elapsed, then alone and on foot
he followed the little army. Through deep woods, by scarce marked trails he
traced their steps, always resting a day’s march in the rear. Not until the
crossing of the St. John’s River was reached did he allow himself to overtake
the advancing force. At that ferry he made himself known, was received into the
Company, enrolled into service, and given the coveted comradeship. At the fatal
Fort Moussa engagement he fought bravely and was one of the twenty-six who alone
survived to return to the Altamaha; his father was taken prisoner and sent to
Madrid, and not exchanged until 1745.
In 1742, came the Spanish Invasion; 5,000 soldiers and 29 vessels of
war with their transports composed the attacking force. To meet them
Oglethorpe had but his single regiment of regulars, three hastily armed
brigs or schooners, the remnant of the Darien rangers, and the Skidaway Scouts
under Captain Noble Jones. His
[page 19]
marvelous victory, the enemy’s
outrageous defeat has been a thrice-told tale. George Whitfield declared
there was nothing like to it told in history, and that it nearly resembled the
Biblical victories of the inspired leaders of the Jewish chronicles.
The years that followed 1742 were the palmy days of St. Simon’s and
Frederica. The General commanding made it his headquarters and home. Ships
cleared from England direct to Frederica. The older men farmed their allotments
and found ready sale for their produce. The woods, the streams, the sea gave
food in profusion. The young men found employment as guides, boatmen, or
laborers for the military administration; some as clerks or purveyors to the
camps block houses, or military stations.
There are many errors in general belief concerning this Battle of
Bloody Marsh. The truth as I conceive it, is as I have heard it related by
Mr. Spalding, who received the account from his grandfather, present in the
engagement. “Monteano having reduced Fort St. Simons one-half mile north
of the lighthouse, landed his forces and went into camp with his 5,000 men on
the lands lying around the Ocean House and those now called Couper’s Point. On
the day following he ordered his war vessels up to Gascoigne Bluff where a
landing was effected. On the next day these vessels attacked the Frederica
fortifications and were repulsed, chiefly by the batter of guns “in the woods”,
where John Stephen’s house now stands. Monteano then determined
on a land attack and ordered an armed reconnaissance made. Captain Sanchez*
was placed in command, who followed the road from Fort Simons to Frederica.
This road then edged the marshes from Fort St. Simons to the place now known as
Harrington, where it bent directly west. At this point the English forces were
stationed and met the Spaniards, defeating them with heavy loss and taking
prisoner the commander. The Spanish fell back; the English pursued in hot
temper and haste. At the place now known as Kelwyn [Kelvin] Grove a force of
Spanish infantry detailed from the main camp, made a counter stroke and threw
the pursuing column under command of Capt. Raymond Demere,† into general
disorder, driving them back northward. In the haste and confusion Capt.
Sutherland’s Company of regulars and the Highland Rangers of Darien, were
separated from the main command under Capt. Demere and concealed
themselves in the thick woods “200 yards south of the house now occupied by
John Postell”. The attack by the relieving force of the Spaniards having
succeeded and the English having been driven northward, the remnant of the first
command with the relieving force, fell back to the more open ground near the
marsh (Bloody Marsh) stacked arms, broke ranks, and awaited orders from the
Commanding General,
*Capt. Sanchez
was exchanged for Capt. John Mohr McIntosh, taken prisoner at Fort Manasa
in 1840 but not until 1844 was the exchange affected so slow were their
communication between the Colony and Madrid.
†The Demeres of Georgia, are descended from Raymond
and Paul Demere, both captains of the British army. The St. Simons
people for Raymond, the Savannah people for Paul, who was killed
by the Indians at Fort London on the Tennessee River.
[page 20]
Capt. Sutherland and
Capt. Hugh Mackay, from their concealed position in the woods perceiving
their unwatchful attitude, determined on an attack. Capt. Mackay
occupied the rather high ground just where Wm. Postell’s house now
stands; Capt. Sutherland the woods where the monument has been erected.
Upon signal a heavy fire was opened upon the disorganized enemy, who were
immediately thrown into utter confusion. Many were killed, many hunted down by
the Indians, who on sound of the firing had hurried through the woods to join
the little force. Few Spaniards regained the camp. Not more than 1200 of
Monteano’s 5000 had been engaged, but the determined resistance created
great doubt in Don Montegano’s mind. The final abandonment of the
invasion did not follow as a result of Blood Marsh, but came from fears
engendered in the heart of the commander by the rumored sailing of a strong
squadron of war vessels from Charleston, the arrival of which would have
completely cut his communications with Havana and St. Augustine. It was fear of
this that liberated St. Simon’s and Frederica, but “fortune favors the brave.”
The people of St. Simon’s had not joined their kinsmen of Darien in
protest against the introduction of slavery. Their signatures were not affixed
to the prophetic clause, “And as freedom must be as dear to them as to
ourselves, we cannot think otherwise than if they are brought amongst us, they
will one day prove a scourge to ourselves, our children, or children’s
children”. Ease of life, governmental employment, and a growing prosperity had
sapped even a Scotch sense of justice and right. The Treaty of 1763, through
which Florida became British territory, gives a final blow to the importance of
St. Simon’s and to the port of Frederica. “A scrap of paper” signed by their
Majesties of Spain and Great Britain, erased St. Simon’s from the war map of the
Colonies, and noted Frederica as “no longer a station necessary to the defense
of the British Colonies of North America”, relegating her to the place she had
ever since held, as but a tradition and a memory. The war of the revolution
justified and emphasized that estimate, and so it came about that the Island
from 1785 to 1861 entered in to a life distinguished but by the personalities
and characteristics of its residents, and by the charm of a society vastly
different from what was in general met with, in the country districts of the New
World.
It was in 1795 that the island life changed from its primitive form
which had been that of small farms with owners of small means and smaller
ambitions to a very different and distinctive class; for at first the land
grants had been of scant acreage generally to discharge soldiers, to artisans or
storekeepers; in one case, in that called “The Village”, the grant had been of
1000 acres to a community of Moravians, under a Capt. Hermsdorf, who
resided in “a village”, and there built a church. James Mackay had
acquired a tract of 600 acres at the North End and 800 at St. Clair; Mr.
Ladson of Charleston a grant of Hampton, 1000 acres; James McIntosh,
the 1000 acres adjoining Mr. Ladson; James Spalding
[page 21]
600 acres at the South End, now
known as Retreat; with these exceptions, the grants had been small allotments,
often not exceeding 100 acres; and much of the Island was still covered by the
virgin wood, and no great number of slaves had yet been introduced to further
the clearance of the lands.
It was in the year 1795 that Major Pearce Butler bought of
Mr. Ladson of Charleston, the Hampton Point tract, and of Mr. McIntosh
an adjoining grant of the same acreage. Two years previously, Mr. John
Couper had settled himself and family on the more easterly point called
Cannon’s Point. Major Butler was an officer of the British Army, a son
of Sir Pearce Butler, the lineal representative of the extinct dukedom of
Ormand. His life had been spent in the army; he had married a Miss Middleton
of South Carolina and on the breaking out of the revolutionary war had resigned
his commission and espoused the cause of the Colonies. He had been a member of
the Continental Congress, a delegate appointed to visit the armies in the field;
a member of the convention that framed in 1785 the constitution of the United
States, had not prospered in business or finance, and in 1795 had removed to
Georgia in search of fresher and richer lands. With him came his intimate
friend and agent, Mr. William Page, who had before established himself in
Bryan County but was led by his inclinations to St. Simon’s Island.
*Major Butler’s temperament and training was altogether
military and he brought to his new home an overweening sense of his own
importance and a superiority to all whom he might find as neighbors or
residents.
Mr. John Couper, had when a lad of 17, left Scotland to seek
his fortune in the Western World, had taken service with the house of Buchannan
& Co. of Glasgow and St. Augustine, at the meager wages of $125 per year “and
found”; had from 1763 to 1766 given them faithful and diligent service; had then
with his boyhood and lifetime friend and emigrant of the same date James
Hamilton, entered into commercial business for themselves; had prospered,
had made hosts of friends, and with Mr. Hamilton was now embarked into
great agricultural interests. He had married Miss Rebecca Maxwell of
Bryan County, and in 1792 made St. Simons his home. The larger interests of
Hamilton & Couper were distant 14 miles on the tide waters of the Altamaha, and
the plantation of 4500 acres and 600 slaves was called Hopeton. This acreage
included 2500 of pine, useless save for lumber as a fuel.
Mr. James Spalding was established at the South End in a
tract of 800 acres; his home was at “Orange Hall”, one mile from Gascoigne
Bluff. Mr. Spalding’s death threw this place into the market and it was
purchased by Wm. Page, Esq., with whose family it has always been
identified and known as the “Retreat Homestead”. Mr. James Hamilton has
seated himself at Gascoigne Bluff
*It was more military hateur [sic]
than conceit, for Mr. Couper said he was a good neighbor and citizen.
[page 22]
on tract made by the purchase of
smaller grants into a plantation, upon which he had placed some one hundred
slaves.
The Demere Homestead of Mulberry Grove adjoined the
Hamilton estate. The Demere estate of Harrington Hall was five miles
to the northward of Mulberry Grove; the latter is where the family burial plot
is located, and from whence the “Mary de Wander” or Ghost Walk takes it way for
the river whose waters cover the hapless girl of many sorrows. At Frederica
there were few that I can recall; in my memory it seemed to be populated only by
widows, old maids and old men who had no families, for Capt. Stephens had
not yet come from abroad there to reside. At Lawrence, Capt. James Fraser,
half-pay British officer, lived with his wife, who had been Miss Ann Cowper
[sic]; at Long View, Mrs. McNish, with her charming daughter, who became
Mrs. Layton [sic] Hazlehurst, resided for the greater part of the
year; at Kelwyn [sic] Grove, Benjamin Cater had succeeded his father
Thomas and had married Miss Ann Armstrong. Pike’s Bluff and West
Point were the residences of Dr. Thomas Hazzard and his brother, Col.
Wm. Hazzard.
“The Village” had in the year 1850 passed into the possession of
George Baillie, a nephew of Alexander C. Wylly’s, and in 1812 had
been purchased by my grandfather. With him resided a niece, herself a
Baillie, who had married Colonel Wardrobe of the British Army, a
gentleman very advanced in age and now retired on half-pay.
At St. Clair, almost in sound of his voice, lived Dr. William
Fraser, a retired surgeon, distinguished for his long service in the East
Indies; his wife was Frances, daughter of Capt. Wylly. He soon
removed to Darien and made his home on “The Ridge” at a place he called “St.
Ronans”.
Dr. Grant’s home was at Oatlands, two miles north of the
village; the Abbotts on the Western side, and as yet no one at Black
Banks; The Goulds having not yet come to the South from their far
Northern home; in this however I may be mistaken, for among my earliest memories
I recall talk of “Rosemount”, the Gould home, now called St. Clair.
To recapitulate, in the first decade of the 19th century we find a
society in which are numbered the son of a great English family, a soldier, an
ex-Congressman, an associate in the framing of the Constitution, a co-laborer
with Jefferson, Madison, Franklin, and Washington; with a
gentleman of Scotch birth, endowed by nature with the rarest gifts of heart and
mind, and humor; as his nearest neighbor, and but a mile to the south at
Lawrence we enter the house of a soldier of the Peninsular War, one who had
stood beside Sir John Moore at Corunna, and served at Waterloo; a few
miles southward at The Village we meet Capt. Wylly, half-pay captain in
the British army, whose services had commenced with the taking of Savannah and
ended with the surrender of his sword at Yorktown. In his household you will
meet Col. Wardrobe, his nephew by marriage, who had followed the British
flag from boy-
[page 23]
hood and led his battalion in
Europe, India and Asia; a son-in-law, Dr. Wm. Fraser, is often a
visitant; his life until now had been years of service as surgeon to the
military forces of the East Indies; his wife was Frances, eldest daughter
of Capt. Alexander Wylly. These men had seen life in many phases and
many countries. Their talk was not always of the desirability or
non-desirability of rain, nor of the growth of corn, cotton or garden truck; at
times at least, on this selvage of civilization, stories were recounted, battles
and sieges remembered, and the great events of history re-told—the life was a
mélange of old world courtesy and refinement, intermixed with a democratic
simplicity. Only Major Butler’s household was evidence of great wealth
to be found; but everywhere was immense comfort, absence from debt, and
unbounded hospitality. To be a guest of one family was to be a welcome visitant
to all; the tables were spread with homegrown viands, the glasses were filled
with wine and brandy of foreign growth; whiskey was yet unknown; rum punch
closed the evening; they were hard drinkers, but carried their liquor well and
seldom were overcome, or if such did come about, no disgrace save the confession
of a personal weakness followed. The women were angels, bearing their
crosses uncomplainingly, almost unconsciously, always silently.
I have been telling the tale of a time far anterior to my own days;
one more page and I shall bid farewell to recollections of what I have heard,
and confine myself to what I have seen and known.
The St. Clair house, in which Caroline G. Wylly was born in
1811 had by 1820 passed into the ownership of Major Pearce Butler; he
gave it for a nominal rent into the hands of a club formed by the planters of
St. Simons solely for social pleasures, and called the St. Clair’s Club. Here
monthly dinners were given, each member furnishing in rotation, dinner, service,
and the attachments, wine and punch; I have been told that great emulation
existed in the style and quality on these occasions; visitors and guests came
from Savannah and Augusta, and the manners of the time warranting it, the
occasions were the scenes of extraordinary conviviality verging, I fear, into
hard drinking and the recountal of the most surprising adventures and
experiences, intermixed with song and story, for the penalty was heavy to him
who told no story or sang no song, and so declared himself but a “niddling”.
Let us picture the dinner of December the 7th, 1821. The hour is
five p.m. The slanting rays of the sun crimson the green lawn and light the
festoons of moss that strive to hide the scars of age. The room is warmed and
cheered by the glowing coals in a great fire-place; the table with covers laid
for fourteen, is clothed in the snowiest of damask and lit by a score of candles
made from the wax of the myrtle berry which cover the salt marshes; the brass
candlesticks shine like virgin gold; the dishes are of the palest blue, East
India china. The waiters, James Dennison from The
[page 24]
Village, Sandy and
Johnny from Cannon’s Point, assisted by old Die and Sam Froid,
have since nine in the morning been busy in the kitchen. The guests arriving,
not one, whatever his age, so effeminate as to use carriage or chaise are
mounted on wiry steeds, whose only living had been drawn from moss, marsh and
shucks, but who shew in gait and mettle their descent from Spanish and Arab
stock. They are met each by one, or oftener two black boys, who “like eagles to
the carrion” await the fragments of the feast.
The guests of the Club coming with their hosts, were Capitaine du
Bignon, Dr. James M. Troup, and Mr. Thomas Charlton of
Savannah. The club members present, John Couper, Dr. Wm. Fraser, Capt. John
Fraser, Capt. Wylly, Wm. Page, Raymond Demere, Alexander Wm. Wylly, George
Baillie, Benjamin Cater, Wm. Armstrong, and Daniel Heyward Brailsford.
The dinner was not served in courses, save that the two soups, one a
clam broth, the other chicken mulligatawny, were brought on first, the fish,
shrimp pies, crab (in shell) roasts, and vegetables were all placed in one
service; the dessert was simple, tartlets of orange marmalade, dried fruits and
nuts. The dishes disposed of, amid general gossip and talk, and the cloth
drawn, the great punch bowl with its mixture of rum, brandy, sugar, lemon juice
and peel, was brought in. The wine glasses were pushed aside and stubby pottle-shaped
glass mugs were handed round; and the chairman of the meeting, rising, announced
that the health of the President of the United States would be drank, standing
and with cheers. Mr. Charlton responding made appropriate remarks,
saying the thanks of the whole country were due our legislative magistrate for
his wise conduct of public affairs; again much cheering. After this opening of
the evening, there was much filling of mugs, nodding of heads, one to the other,
with short words of good wishes; such as “Happy days to you”, “Here’s to You”,
and the like. Capt. DuBignon with a voice slightly husky, gives his
song, “Cheer up my lads, Cheer up”; Capt. John Fraser responds to his
call with, “A valiant soldier I dare to name”, which is received with
acclamations; “Surely a fine tenor in a man will cover a multitude of faults and
imperfections”.
Dr. Wm. Fraser is called on for his Hindoo [sic] song, which
with quite a Scotch accent he gives:
“Musha be cusha go-wa-be-go
Tasa-be-tasa no-be-no
Bad a dil go-wa-be-go
Tasa-be-tasa no-be-no”.
For fear all my
readers are not Hindoo scholars I translate:
“Songster sweet, begin
the lay
Always fresh and ever gay;
Bring me quick, inspiring wine,
Always fresh and ever fine.”
Four verses follow,
which I forget; once I knew them all.
[page 25]
Do not think dear
reader, that the whole purpose of these dinners was the gratifying of the
materialistic enjoyments of eating and drinking. George Baillie has been
discussing Sheridan and Moliere with his uncle, Capt. Wylly, and has
said, “Wit is only what every one would have said could they have thought of
it.” Capt. Wylly has responded, “Wit, then, George is in embryo
in us all”. “Yes, dear uncle”, answers George, “call in a good surgeon
and even yourself could be delivered of it.”
Dr. Troup has been recounting to Major Page the
incidents of his late visit to an Indian cousin in the Alabama Creek territory.
He had visited Alexander McGilveray at Broken Arrow, in the Coosa
Valley. Gen. Knox, Secretary of War, he says, had written Washington
that the “McGilveray commanded 10,000 warriors and exercised an imperium
in imperio” (Sparks Life of Washington) over the Creek Confederacy”. He tells
of the beauty and the richness of the valleys of the Coosa, Etiwah and Tombigbee,
and of the Indian villages almost towns he had seen with gardens of maize,
pumpkin and peas, all cultivated by the women alone.
Dr. Fraser has been telling to Raymond Demere the
story of a Mogul empire, where he has seen diamonds, rubies and pearls the loot
of the common soldier; his hearer’s eyes sparkle and flash with covetousness,
not for the gold alone, but with regret for a wrecked youth, but for which he
might have hoped to win both wealth and love.
Nine strikes, and “Auld Lang Syne” is sung with joined hands; the
horses are called for. Major Page and Capt. Wylly are the first
to say good night; attended by their faithful body-servants, James Dennison
and old Neptune, they ride away, James and Neptune very
watchful, for should such service be needed they will mount behind and not leave
Master until safe on his couch.
Was ever a Fergus MacIvor more faithful to his chief and Lord? than
James Johnny [sic] or Neptune to a Wylly, a Couper,
and a King? who in all likelihood had purchased their fathers or
themselves in a Charleston open market. Can I forget Denbow, who on the
night of his master’s murder, on seeing the consorting of the wife with the
murderer, stole the child Benjamin, carried him on his back, through the
woods to Major Page at Retreat, and said, “Major, this boy is in
danger of his life where he was, and I bring him to you”. The murderer and wife
fled, Major Page was by the Courts made guardian, preserved the property,
had the child educated, and in time graduated from Yale.
I shall now leave this record of days and years that are long past
and endeavor to picture the people and homes as I knew them in 1857. I have
said, I was often to be found at Cannon’s Point, now the home of James
Hamilton Couper, an uncle by his marriage to my father’s sister. At his
lovely residence was gathered almost every thing that could attract, first a
household of young people of near my age; a garden where every fruit and flower
bloomed and ripened; an orchard in which the fig, peach, pomegranate, orange and
lemon gave golden offerings in luxurious profusion; a
[page 26]
wood of olive whose sad
grey-tinted leafage seemed to hold Gethsemane in perpetual remembrance; a stable
where horses stood impatient for bit and bridle; a river whose waters lapped the
shore within a stone’s cast of door and window, and breathing at night a melody
caught from forest and spacious marsh; a library filled with priceless treasures
from Paris, Vienna and London; while on wall of hall and dining room were shown
copies of Claude Loraine, Rembrandt, and LeBrun, with “The Aurora” to give
welcome as you crossed from the entrance doorway; a host who never said a word
that was not well-considered and prepared, whose hours for work, for exercise,
for reading, for writing, were parceled out in a systematic memoranda and whose
store of information was immense; whose large family treasured and preserved
every word that fell from his lips, not one of them, bright as they all were,
ever recognizing the humor of the situation, or the atmosphere of the home
interior.
I recall meeting a visitor who had spent the night at the Point, and
my saying, “I know you had a pleasant visit”—“an instructive one” was his
answer. I was shown to Mr. C’s library, and our business interview was
quickly and most satisfactorily concluded. I was told the tide, not allowing me
to leave, Mr. C. hoped I would stay the night; a specimen of coral from
the Pacific lying on the table, Mr. C. took it up and explained most
clearly and elaborately how by the labor of the tiny insects, islands, almost
continents, had been built up in the Eastern oceans. He was most interesting,
fortifying his statements with quotations from Sir Charles Lyle and other
geologists. He then looking over a memoranda, said he was forced to keep an
engagement, adding that dinner would be at 4:30, he excused himself for leaving
me. He had not left five minutes before Mrs. Couper came in, saying she
was sorry Mr. Couper had been called out, but that “he broke an
engagement for no one”.
Seeing the coral, she launched into the same account
of the labors of the insect world, word for word, I heard it re-related. She
left, saying dinner would be hurried; who should enter then, but Alexander
Couper; he walked straight to the cursed rock, and again I heard Mr.
Couper’s essay reeled off, word for word. He said a hive of bees he
thought, was about to swarm—would I help him? which I decidedly declined. He
left, saying he would send Robert with me. Robert came, and was
already started on the thrice-told tale when I begged, on account of the heat,
the privilege of a little air. So you see, Charles, my visit was, as I
have said, very instructive but not very entertaining.”
The eldest son, Hamilton, a lawyer by profession, was almost
the most gifted man I have known; endowed by nature with an exquisite sense of
humor, joined to a mind that had imbibed all the beauties of literature and
art. The third son, my senior by two years, was an artist of great promise.
His landscape work was especially lovely and striking, his coloring of wood and
sky absolutely true. Both of these sons died before 1863, victims to army
[page 27]
fever, now called “enteric”. The
eldest of the daughters was lovely in person, mind and character; ; she died in
1897, and has left daughters at the remembrance of whom my heart fills with a
thankfulness that I have known and seen the goodness and sweetness of their
lives. Of the other daughter, what shall I write? What words shall I use? In
later years she gave me a love, of which I knew I was unworthy. In her person,
in her mind, in her heart was embodied all that make woman precious. She saved
me from myself. Then, alas, why should she have been called and I left? Around
the blackened walls of this home, even now, topped with its green crown of date
palm and leaf, cling no thoughts but those of love, truth and courtesy,
intermixed with a personal individuality, charming to remember, a trinity of the
good, the beautiful and the true.
The fourth son, James M. Couper, a few months younger than
myself became very intimately associated with my life, we chose the same
profession, Civil Engineering, and until 1861 we worked in the same sections on
railroads and connecting systems, we entered the Confederate Army at the same
time, he in a Mississippi regiment, I in a Louisiana. He escaped from Fort
Doneldson and again from Vicksburg, by his courage and address and now lives in
Atlanta beloved by all who know him.
Hopeton Plantation is situated on the south branch of the Altamaha
River, 16 miles from Brunswick. The lands comprising the estate were purchased
in 1804 by Mr. John Couper and James Hamilton in joint ownership.
As early as 1765 these two lads but 17 years of age had left Renfrewshire,
Scotland, to seek their fortunes in this western world. Taking passage in the
same ship they landed in St Augustine, the newly-acquired British possession,
comparatively penniless, but rich in energy and honesty or purpose. They had
never lost sight of each other but had been partners in every venture, and by
1770 had embarked into small undertakings which had prospered. In Savannah they
had opened a store which had brought good returns; in Sunbury, Liberty County,
Couper & Hamilton was a firm known and respected. They had lived through the
Revolutionary War without incurring the enmity of the exasperated parties; and
in 1793 had come to St. Simons intending to make it their home. Mr. Couper
had married Miss Rebecca Maxwell, of Bryan County, and Mr. Hamilton
a Miss Janet Wilson of Philadelphia; 1800 had found them both domiciled
on the Island, Mr. Couper at Cannon’s Point, Mr. Hamilton at
Gascoigne bluff [sic], with their boyhood friendship and lifetime devotion still
unabated. They had some money and good credit, and now sought a larger
investment in the one industry of the South, the raising of cotton, sugar, or
rice; and so it came about that they bought in 1805 from David Deas and
Arthur Middleton the tracts of land which they called Hopeton, after
Wm. Hopeton their friend, financier and banker. Not an acre was then
cleared, and upon it they placed a large force of negroes, with mangers and
overseers to see to the reclamation of the rich swamp lands.
[page 28]
Mr. Couper’s eldest son,
James Hamilton Couper, was named in 1816 as sole manager; his education had
been closely attended to; his natural industry and mental gifts were great; he
had graduated with honor from Yale, and had then been sent to Holland to study
the reclamation of submerged lands, returning with an enthusiastic belief in the
possibilities; he had assumed the task when but 20 years of age; but 200 acres
of he swamp and richest land had as yet been diked and reclaimed with about the
same amount of high land. To the end of making the place a financial success
the young man bent all his energies. So well did he conduct and direct affairs,
that when 1827 he married, the Hopeton plantation was already acknowledged as a
model by all.
All his first crops had been of cotton, but finding that from the
richness of the soil, the plant grew too late in the season to properly mature
the lint, he shifted to sugar cane, planting in 1827 and 1828 as much at [sic]
800 acres. Later from cane he went to rice. The steam engine for generating
the power, the mill for crushing and all other machinery were bought and
imported from Bolton & Watts, of Sheffield, England, the last-named being the
inventor of the use of steam, and junior partner of Bolton & Watts. In 1907
when I sold the Hopeton place as agent for Mr. Richard Corbin to the
Shaker Colony of Ohio, they broke up all this machinery and sold it as junk.
From 1816 to 1858 Mr. Couper remained in sole and absolute
charge; from 1816 to 1827 as representative of Couper & Hamilton; from 1826 to
1836 as representative and agent for James Hamilton, who had bought his
father’s interests; from 1836 to 1857 as co-executor with General Cadwalder
of Philadelphia, of the estate of Hamilton and also trustee for the
heirs, three grandchildren, Isabella, Constance and Richard.
General Cadwalder assumed charge of all Pennsylvania and northern property.
Mr. Couper of the Georgia planting interests, now amounting to 582 slaves
and the planting and harvesting of more than a thousand acres of rice, such a
number represented something more than 200 able-bodied laborers.
Although Mr. Couper was deeply interested in the affairs of
Hopeton and had made it a model to all lovers of scientific agriculture, by
methodical and systematic use of his time, he had leisure to cultivate his
scientific tastes so much so as to cause his correspondence to be solicited by
man y of the learned Societies.
He was recognized as the best planter in the district, as a most
humane and successful manager of slaves, as the leading conchologist of the
South, and as a microscopist whose researches into the then new field of germ
life attracted attention in the laboratories of al the universities.
In the winter of 1832 editor J.D. Legare of The Southern
Agriculturist, of Charleston, during a tour of Georgia’s sugar district, was a
guest at Hopeton. He gives an account of his visit in several numbers of the
Agriculturist in 1833. I quote:
[page 29]
“We remained several
days at Hopeton, enjoying the hospitality of J. Hamilton Couper, during
which time we were busily employed in viewing the plantations and taking notes
of what we saw and heard.
“We hesitate not to say Hopeton is decidedly the best plantation we
have ever visited, and we doubt whether it can be equaled in the Southern
States; and when we consider the extent of the crops, the variety of the same,
and the number of operatives who have to be directed and managed, it will not be
presumptive to say that it may fairly challenge comparison with any
establishment of the United States, for the systematic arrangement of the whole,
the regularity and precision with which each and all of the operations are
carried out, and the perfect and daily accountability established in every
department”.
“The proportions of the crop at the time of my visit were 500 acres
in rice, 170 in cotton, and 330 in cane”.
On the occasion of his second visit to America, Sir Charles Lyell,
the distinguished English geologist, became a guest at Hopeton, in January,
1846. He writes:
“During a fortnights at Hopeton we had an opportunity of seeing how
Southern planters live and the conditions and prospects of the negroes on a
well-managed estate. The relations of the slaves to their owners resembles
nothing in the Northern States. There is a hereditary regard approaching
attachment on both sides, much like that existing between lords and their
retainers in feudal times. The slaves indentify [sic] themselves with their
masters, and the sense of their own importance rises with his success in life;
but the responsibility of the owner is great, and to manage a great plantation
with profit is no easy task; much judgment is required and a mixture of
firmness, forbearance, and kindness”—and so on and son, for many pages. He
adds: “I may be told this is a most favorable specimen of a well-managed
estate; if so, I affirm that a mere chance led me to pay this visit”.
Miss Bremmer and Miss Amelia Murray both visited
Hopeton, and in her “Homes in the New World”, Miss Bremmer wrote in the
highest possible praise of all she saw.
Miss Murray wrote: “Only now am I made aware of ……’s
resignation of the editorship of my letters. I am sorry, but I must sacrifice
individual friendships and tell of my own honest convictions and truth”.
It was in February, 1857 that I was asked to join a house-party at
Hopeton given by Mr. Couper as a farewell to his life’s labor, as Trustee
and executor to the estate of James Hamilton, the youngest of his wards,
Richard Corbin, having reached his majority, he had obtained letters
dismissing the trusteeship and the executorship, had bought of Constance
Corbin de Montmart the lands now called Altama and Carr’s Island, and from
her sister had purchased the Hamilton plantation on St. Simon’s Island,
and 180 negroes. At “Altama” a house was being built, placed in what is known
as “The Old Indian Fields”. Mr. Couper now proposed to
[page 30]
resign his management, to
recommend his brother Wm. Audley Couper as his successor, and to retire
and devote his energies to his own affairs.
The number of guest was large; a Mr. Cavendish, M.P.,* and
his traveling companion, Capt. Deveux of the Hoe Guards, were the honor
personages; Miss Mary Elliott of Savannah, Messrs. R.M. Stiles and
Bryan of Savannah, Wyatt Dickinson and H.D. Twigg of
Augusta. Miss Carrie Elliott was also a visitor and a Mr. Ballard
said to be a suitor of Miss Fanny Fraser, who was also present. Mr.
Couper took charge of Mr. Cavendish and Deveux in the morning.
| I at this time was astonished to see what a systematic division of
time could do in the doubling, nay more than trebling the amount of work
transacted during the day. Mr. Couper was closing up the accounts of a
fifty years’ stewardship, entailing the balancing of hundreds of thousands of
dollars in expenditures, receipts, losses and gains; all to be placed in their
special and respective columns. To this task he devoted two hours, from near 6
to 7:30 a.m.; to the plantation affairs he gave from 8 a.m. to 12 m. [sic]; to
his guests from England, whom he met first at luncheon, he devoted from 12 to 2
p.m.; from 2 to 4 p.m. he spent in his library, writing or reading (alone); at
4:15 to the minute he awaited the appearance of the family and all belonging to
the household in the drawing-room; at 4:35 Bulala at the door, announced,
“Dinner is ready, Sir”. The dinner was served in courses; wine was handed,
always sherry and Madeira, on special occasions champagne, never claret or
French wines. By 5:30 the cloth was drawn, Mr. C. arose with the ladies,
Bulala placed cigars before the guests. Mr. C. Filled [sic] his
second glass of wine, wished “Good fortune and health to all”, and retired to
his study. The men smoked, drank one or two glasses of sherry, and joined the
ladies; no whiskey, brandy or alcoholic drink was ever served at meals, but were
placed on the side-board.
In testimony of what systematic and methodical use of time can do, I
shall mention the tasks undertaken and successfully carried out by this
marvelous worker in the years 1850 to 1857.
In 1849 Mr. Isaac Barrett, of Charleston, having come into
possession of the rice plantation of Champney’s Island, and the negroes attached
to it, 200 in number, offered Mr. Couper $2,500 to superintend the
management, giving him the choice of the overseer to reside on the place, which
was accepted. In the year 1850 Dr. James M. Troup dying, his will
disclosed Mr. Couper named as co-executor with his son Brailsford
on the estate comprising 300 negroes, and 1,100 acres of rice land. The will
also disclosed a debt of $70,000 as a lien on land and negroes, the heirs, five
in number, were despairing. Mr. Couper took charge,
*This Mr. Cavendish, member of Parliament and nephew of
Lord Palmerstein, was in after days assassinated in Phoenix Park, Dublin,
by Burke Fenier, leader and the force bill passage—was the germ from
which sprung the “Home Rule” party of Ireland. “The blood of the martyrs is the
seed of the Church”, “extreme measures” breed their own cures.
[page 31]
placed an overseer, Mr.
Hutchinson, in whose ability he had confidence, in immediate charge; said to
the heirs, “Each of you draw upon me for $1,200 payable monthly, and in ten
years I will return you the property free of debt”. He paid all the debts in
seven years, and in the eighth year after the death of Dr. Troup, divided
the estate free of debt. To recapitulate, for the seven years preceding the
year 1857 he had managed and disbursed the monies arising from the labor of 592
negroes, belonging to the estate of Hamilton, cultivating never less than
1000 acres of rice. The same care and attention had been paid to the Barrett
property, comprising 200 negroes, and a corresponding acreage of crops, and in
1850 he had added the entire supervision of and direction of the encumbered
Troup estate of 250 negroes and 600 acres of rice. Nor did any of these
properties suffer from neglect; all were so administered so as to be paying and
profit-making plantations. I hardly think an equal can be found, should the
whole South be searched for instances in successful and scientific agriculture.
It was during this visit that Mr. Couper told me that his
books and engravings had cost him $40,000, and I have always thought that in the
removal in 1862 by Alexander Couper some of his most valuable works must
have been lost or left at Cannon’s Point, as was his father’s voluminous
correspondence; certainly I clearly remember that in after days I could not find
some when on short visits to James M. Couper; for instance, a very
valuable portfolio of copies of Rafael’s cartoons; a Virgil of
extremely old date, which I in particular remember his telling me was the most
valuable single volume on his shelves.
In 1857 he had bought all of Constance and Isabella
Corbin’s share of the estate, with one exception, which was the non-purchase
of Wright’s Island, valued at $27,000; so that at that late time of life he had
burdened himself with a debt of more than $80,000; had the troubles of 1861 not
ensued, all would have gone well, but with a lien on lands and negroes, the
latter of which in 1865 were no longer an asset, and the disasters of the
re-construction period, all Altama, Carr’s Island, and home, reverted to the
Corbin family. Hamilton’s plantation was alone preserved, and that
was sold to Meigs & Dodge in 1874 for $14,000. Cannon’s Point was
sold in 1866 for $16,000; every dollar was lost in rice planting.
It is hard to believe that in 57 near all the lands of the St.
Simons Island were in cultivation. In riding southward from Cannon’s Point,
save for narrow strips of wood, one passed from field to field of corn and
cotton. The Butler Place was in full occupation, with the other
plantations there were about 3,500 acres in the highest state of production.
The return averaged 300 pounds of clean lint to each three acres planted in
cotton. This quality of Sea Island being worth from 42 to 50c per pound; 1,600
to 1,700 acres were devoted to this—the only money crop. The remaining acreage
was placed in corn, potatoes, peas, and forage. The 1,600 acres gave an income
of about $60,000, almost the whole tillage was with the hoe; great attention was
paid to the fertilization,
[page 32]
always from cowpen and stable, to
which great quantities of grass and rush were hauled during the summers and
winters. At Retreat Mrs. King kept 30 yokes of oxen perpetually at this
work, planting as much as 75 acres of rutabagas as winter feed. She was the
most skillful agriculturist on the Island and noted still more for her careful
selection of seed, through which the improvement of the Retreat staple was
constant and uniform.
At Retreat a different welcome was extended you, a true Liberty Hall
greeting was given every one, young and old did just as they pleased and made
their own choice in pursuit of amusement.
The eldest son devoted himself to plantation affairs, and with his
mother directed and guided the growing and preparation of the cotton crop. So
skillful was the guidance that the Retreat brand on a bale ensured 50c per
pound, whilst elsewhere from 42 to 44 cents was the best that could be
realized. The fertilizing of the land was closely attended to, and every acre
in cotton was expected and made to yield at least 75 pounds of clean
lint, which equaled $37.50 per acre.
The second son was at Yale, preparing for the practice of law. His
death at the battle of Fredericksburg, December, 1862, ended a most promising
career. My friend Mallory Page King, schoolmate, college chum and
comrade in the Confederate struggle, was then like myself, fonder of outdoor and
social life than of study or work. Both of us had eaten too freely of the fruit
of the land of the lotus. The father, the Hon. Thomas Butler King, M.C.,
was devoted to national and State politics and seldom long at his home. Only
twice in my many visits did I meet him; his stays on the Island were brief, but
when he came it was a jubilee day to white and black. No work was exacted on
the day following his arrival. The daughters drew lots who should be the first
to have the seat next to him, and rotated the coveted position every twenty-four
hours.
The sons sat beside him in the library, or road with him when
outdoors, listening with greedy ears to his talk, which was full of information
and enlivened with anecdotes of the great men he had met in Washington,
California, or Europe. He knew that a full hand ensures a joyful welcome, and
the morning after his coming, the rooms looked as though Xmas had come again;
not a child was forgotten, and to the elder daughters the remembrances were
splendid and costly.
The home was located in a wooded clump, a hundred yards from the
beach. To reach it, you passed through a most lovely flower garden, different
in one way from any that I have known. Mrs. King did not love and scarce
tolerated the flower that did not repay the plucking by its sweet odor. She
called them “plants without souls”; no camellias or exotics flaunted in the sole
pride of beauty, but violets, hyacinths, oleos and all sweet shrubs in glorious
profusion. The historian Higginson, who saw it in its deserted years of
the sixties says: “The most lovely garden I have ever seen”, and always steeped
in hyacinthine odors”.
[page 33]
The daughters were
charming, winning all hearts by their grace, courtesy and spirit.
To one of them had been granted every spell with which woman can be
armed. Even her silence was eloquent, for she listened most divinely. Of
Madame Recamier, Mrs. Fanny Kemble Butler wrote: “She listened
and you were lost”. Sure it is a rare accomplishment, rather a gift; but
to woman an invincible and deadly weapon. So closely does it appeal to the
innate vanity—inherent—even if concealed in every man’s heart.
At The Village home of my widowed grand mother was found a
beautifully managed farm, not plantation. This stately and lovely “lady of the
manor” as many called her, with her two unmarried daughters, presided over the
best-managed household I have seen. The house was large, and often filled with
relatives—some from the Bahamas, some from England, or Savannah; her servants
were better trained than any I have known, not perhaps to the nicety of Mrs.
Brailsford’s, whose butler, as I was about to help myself to rice,
whispered, “With fish, Marse Charles, only potato and bread”.
Mrs. Wylly, after the death of her husband, never changed the
fashion of her dress; always, morning, noon and evening she wore a black silk
skirt, with bodice of the same, a kerchief of the finest and snowiest cambric
crossed over the front, and in the back, descended to the waist; her snowy white
hair, of great length and thickness, was coiled around a beautifully shaped
head, and surmounted by a cap with wide side laplets [sic]. In her old age, 70
years, I remember thinking she was the most stately and lovely woman I had ever
seen. She was dignity itself, exacting from all, even her only son and
daughters, the most scrupulous respect in manner and speech; to her
grandchildren she was more generous than her means warranted, “tipping them in
English fashion”. When visited by the younger ones, she led them into the
drawing room, where hung portraits of Nelson and Wellington, and
bid them mark the look and appearance of “the greatest men of the 19th century”.
In truth she never became an American, and looked with no favor upon
those who had aided in the independence of the United States. Neither herself
nor her husband should ever have returned to Georgia; the brother, who remained
in the English service, greatly exceeded him in fortune and prosperity; his
return was a mistake induced solely by his repugnance to the Act of
Emancipation, which in 1808 was imminent and certain, and by an infounded [sic]
belief in the “sacredness of property”.
Major Butler resided at Hampton Point from 1795 to 1815,
making visits during the summers to South Carolina and Philadelphia, at which
place after the death of his wife he made his permanent home; his very large
estate equally divided between St. Simons and Butler’s Island on the Altamaha,
was managed and directed by his agent and head overseer, Mr. Roswell King,
a native of New England and after Mr. King’s resignation by Roswell
King, Jr. The regulations and methods employed were very
[page 34]
different from those customary on
the sea coast. The keynote to the system was the demand for the complete
isolation of the Butler properties. No visit to neighboring plantations
was ever permitted, and no intercourse of any kind allowed with the outside
world; their language was unintelligible to those not familiar with the dialect;
industry and thrift were encouraged and rewarded, but the example of a higher
civilization was completely lost through the enforced isolation.
Major Butler had erected his first house, large and spacious,
of half tabby and half wood, at the exact intersection of Jones Creek and
Hampton River. It was from this house that Aaron Burr during his
enforced retirement, wrote his delightful letters to Theodosia. In one
he writes:
Hampton Point,
August, 1804.
“I am
quite settled. My establishment consists of a housekeeper, a cook, and chamber
maid, seamstress, and two footmen, two fishermen, (the family of negroes known
as Bennets, were the fishermen of the Butler family for four
generations. None of the name ever did anything but fish,) and four boatmen
always at my command; the laundry work is done outside”.
Again, on another day he writes:
“Madame: J’ai bein diner et J’ai fait mettre moi writing desk sur
le talbe a diner. What a scandalous thing to sit here alone drinking champagne,
and yet, Madame, I drink your health, mais buvons a la sante de mon hote et bon
ami Major Butler”, and so on.
I have written there was no great wealth save in Major Butler’s
case. I was wrong, for no one spent all they made, and that is the truest and
greatest wealth; comfort, independence and contentment were to be seen in every
household.
The house from which Aaron Burr wrote was undermined in 1824
by a great freshet and swept away; its foundations can still be seen in the
river at low tide; the home occupied by Mrs. Fanny Kemble Butler in 1838
was destroyed in 1863 by the Federal troops. It had been the residence of
Roswell King, Jr., manager and agent for Pearce Butler, who was born
Pearce May, a grandson of Major Pearce Butler, and had changed his
name to Butler; it was this Roswell King, Jr. who is constantly
alluded to by Mrs. Fanny Kemble Butler, under the initial “K”. The
foundations of the house are still to be seen, though hard to find on account of
a thicket of myrtle; they are within fifty feet of the bluff, near the present
intersection of Jones and Hampton Rivers; the place in which Mrs. Wister
lived one winter when a young lady, is two miles south of Hampton Point, 300
yards west of the white gate; the house Mr. and Mrs. Leigh lived
in is the old hospital, 200 yards west of the Roswell King house, it is
now destroyed, its location is marked by the well which was between it and the
river bluff; the avenue, one of the finest I ever saw, has been destroyed by
storm, fire and time.
At Broadfield, the residence of Dr. James McGilveray Troup
was found a family of four daughters and two sons, the youngest, Robert,
six months my senior; the eldest, Dr Brailsford Troup,
[page 35]
fourteen years older;
and between these were the sisters. The mother had been Miss Camilla
Brailsford, daughter of William Brailsford and Maria Heyward,
who had removed from South Carolina to Georgia about 1801. A sister, Eugenia
Brailsford, had married John Bell of Darien; a third had become
Mrs. Jacob Wood of Potosi Island; and the only son was married to Jane
Spalding, a sister of my mother’s.
His home was at Sutherland Bluff, McIntosh County. Dr. Troup’s
paternal property was situated on Sapelo River and was called “The Court House”,
thirteen miles from Darien; on it were over 100 negroes employed in the raising
of cotton of a lower grade than that produced on the island, but worth from 35
to 40 cents per pound. In addition, great attention was paid to cattle and
sheep, for the tract was large (more than 3000 acres).
The Broadfield plantation was devoted to the culture of rice, and
not until the death of Mrs. Maria Heyward Brailsford did it become the
residence of the Troup family. Until then they had resided in Darien in
the winters, and in the summers at Baisdon’s [sic] Bluff, where the Doctor had
established himself upon a high bluff overlooking a wide and beautiful river;
the place is now a station on the G.C.&P. Railroad, and is called Crescent, from
the horse-shoe bend of the river.
At the Troups’ a stricter etiquette of manner and behaviour
prevailed than in most of the houses I visited. Mrs. Brailsford,
grandmother of the younger people, was a strict disciplinarian, and had brought
from Carolina to Georgia much of the habit of life that belonged to that older
state. Dr. Troup, a son of Catherine McIntosh of Alabama, was
himself something of a formalist and a “Sir Charles Grandison” in manner;
he was by nature an epicure, and in his household was found the most exquisite
cuisine and the choicest materials for the table. I remember once my father
showing him what he thought a remarkable fine saddle of mutton; his saying,
“Yes, Mr. Wylly, the animal was a fine one, but for four days it is but
sheep, and not until the fifth does it become mutton, and so few of us here
consider that”.
The dinners were served solemnly and elaborately, and eaten, I might
almost say, reverently. It was at their summer home that I best remember them.
The house was of tabby with very large parlor and dining room, and confined
sleeping compartments. Mrs. Camilla Troup herself was a stickler for
propriety of bearing and demeanor. As a mere boy I remember witnessing the
lessons given her daughters as to the correct and proper mode of entering a room
where company was assembled. Seating herself in an arm chair at the end of the
“long room”, she required each of the young ladies to enter, advance halfway up
the room, and while sweeping a courtesy of greeting, to lift their eys [sic] to
an imaginary company. Two of the daughters I recall always received
commendation; one was often rebuked with “Don’t make such a cheese of your
skirt, Celia”. The older sister took no part in these lessons, or at
least was absent from all rehearsals.
[page 36]
The
younger ladies were also required to use back-boards a portion of the day. A
back-board was a light board of 6 x 10 inches wide in the center and tapering to
arms the size of a broomstick; when these arms were placed under the armpits and
by them the center closely pressed an upright and dignified carriage was
assured. As late as 1845 I saw my sister condemned to that penance. In 1901 I
was reminded of this old usage. Mrs. Sarah Wister, calling on Mrs.
Wylly, had asked for Mrs. Couper, then 80 odd years of age. On
entering Mrs. Couper’s room and seeing her seated, she swept the most
beautiful courtesy before advancing to greet her. I little thought what dear
and delightful memories would in later years be associated with the Broadfield
plantation, though under another name, for in 1848 Miss Ophelia Troup,
having married George C. Dent, they had built a house and made a home on
a part of the large estate and called it “Hofwyl”. The whole estate with the
exception of the New Hope settlement, in time had come into the possession of
their eldest son, James T. Dent, and when in 1891 I removed to Brunswick
and made Glynn County my home, I was fortunate enough to be made welcome in this
the one surviving type of the vanished Southern home.
James Dent combined in himself all the personal and mental
gifts that men and even women can desire: Manliness, and gentleness; simplicity
and polish of demeanor; generosity of hand, and, rarer, generosity of thought,
had all found their home and resting place in his mind and soul; in his person
grace and tact of speech were natural gifts, inherited from father and mother.
Mentally he was self-created, with a mind improved by education, and close
reading—I say self-created, for education cannot create, the most it can
do is improve.
Few of us follow the line to which we are best adapted; some chance
wind diverts us. James Dent’s life should not have been restricted to
that of a country home—beautiful and endearing as he made it—he was better
suited to the broader fields of a metropolitan and cosmopolitan life; so
sensitive was his nature to the attrition and brilliancy only to be attained by
congenial companionship. I have thought that the chance wind that diverted him,
beating him away from the attainment of what was the highest in him, was an
instinctive love of horse, rod and gun; but what matters it? for his memory is
dear to all who knew him; in his company was found pleasure, instruction, and
clean mirth. On the 11th of October, 1913, he departed this life, leaving the
world poorer by the loss of a man regretted by all, mourned by many, and to me a
great blank. His daughters survive him, two of the five perfect women that the
Koran allows to live at one time on this earth. I am a good Christian, but a
Moslem in some of my beliefs.
Some description of the manner and habit of the men and women of
whom I have written is I conceive due the reader of these pages, and I quote a
letter received in 1883 from a relative born in 1807, which touches upon this
subject:
[page 37]
He
writes: “The planter of those days (1820 to 1845) retained the habits of their
colonial progenitors; they gave more attention to the etiquette of manner, dress
and of the table than is now required. They drank each other’s health and
proposed formal toasts which were drunk in bumpers; if their doors were opened
wider than was always pleasant, that is to casual and unaccredited visitors,
there was such a superfluity of service and such measured courtesy on the part
of the host, that impudence itself was kept in order. They were a generous race
and could make allowance for personal weaknesses, and threw a veil over the
frailities of their brothers; but to cant, hypocrisy, and meanness they were
unsparing”.
In a book I have published, I wrote of them, “If great generosity of
heart, great honesty of purpose, unbounded sympathy with the oppressed and
unblemished integrity can outweigh the faults arising from impulsiveness and
excesses attributable in a great measure to the habits of the day, then the men
of the past age have little to fear in the judgment to be meted out. They were
exceedingly scrupulous in regard to keeping their word; an anecdote may perhaps
better illustrate this disposition than an assertion:
“Who made
the heart; ‘tis He alone
Decidedly can try us;
He knows each chord—its various tone
Each sprint—its various bias:
Then at the balance let’s be mute
We never can adjust it;
What’s done we partly may compute
But know not what’s resisted.”
—Burns.
Mr. Bryan had been an officer in the
American Army; had been taken prisoner at the surrender of Charleston to Gen.
Clinton; had been sent to the hulks, where prisoners were confined, and had
fallen under the displeasure of the Commandant of the British prison vessel; he
had conceived that Captain ---- had taken advantage of his position and not
treated him with the courtesy due from an officer to another whose fortune it
was to be in his power; in time he was exchanged; he immediately sought out the
Captain and said, “I am now a free man, I shall send a friend to you with a note
demanding a meeting with sword or pistol.” The British Captain replied, “I meet
no one on account of the official discharge of my duty”.
Captain Bryan retorted: “I say to you you are a coward and a
poltroon, and I would travel a thousand miles to spit on your grave”.
The was in 1778. Captain Bryan was living on Broughton
Island planting rice in 1802, and a sloop was loading cargo for Charleston. The
mail was brought to him and in a New York paper he read a notice of Captain
----’s death and burial at Jamaica,
[page 38]
Long Island”. He walked directly to the plantation wharf,
where the sloop was lying, said to the Captain, “twenty-three years ago I said
to Captain ---- of the British navy, that if ever I heard of his death I would
travel a thousand miles to spit on his grave; I have now no ill feeling
to him, but I must keep my word; load only enough rice to serve you as ballast,
discharge the rest; we will sail for New York this afternoon”. As he ordered,
so was it carried out; he was twenty-eight days in passage; never made New York,
but anchored in Barnegat Sound. Mr. Bryan landed, walked to the Jamaica
church yard, spit twice on Captain ---’s grave, returned to the sloop, and
ordered the captain to sail for Broughton Island and complete his cargo for
Charleston. There was no malice in his heart, “I was seasick for twenty-four
days” and more he said, “of the fourty-two [sic] that it took me to make the
round trip; and even when most desperately so I felt conscious of no spite or
malice towards the dead, but only of an oath fulfilled.
A few lines back I quoted from a letter written me by an
octogenarian in 1883, in which it is stated “more attention was paid to dress
than is now required”. I have a clear recollection of the garb of my
grandfather and of Dr. James M. Troup, both born in 1774. I remember the
first and most striking effect was given by the cravat which invariably, morning
and night, was composed of a very large cambric handkerchief which had been
folded diagonally and then into successive folds, culminating into a band two
and one-half inches wide; the center of this was placed under the chin; the ends
passed behind the neck and brought back to the front, where it was tied into a
small knot; the shirt collar was obliterated; behind this neck armor rose the
coat collar, very high and most often of velvet; the coat itself was a
cut-a-way, ornamented with brass buttons. I cannot recollect the color of the
linings; the vest was a three button, showing an elaborately pleated
shirt-front, and was nearly always of a buff color.
In summer the trousers were of yellow nankeen (almost khaki) in
winter of a gray or of a dark shade; boots, never shoes; completed the attire.
In place of an overcoat an elaborate black broadcloth cloak with innumerable
frogs and fastening was invariably worn. All old engravings show this cloak as
a drapery of grey, dark blue, or black; this mode of dress belonged to and was
worn by the men of advanced years and who were fathers of families in the years
that followed 1820. For that of the next generation I cannot do better than
quote Mrs. Jane Welsh Carlyle’s letter to Thomas Carlyle, in which
she tells on June, 1845 of a visit she has had paid her by Count D’Orsay,
(the glass of fashion and mould of form)—and describes his dress of that day.
“Comparing it with what he had worn on her first meeting him in
1828; “When first I met him at Lord ---- he wore in the morning a blue
satin-cravat with an immense turquoise, a yellow velvet vest, a green cloth coat
lined with cream-colored satin, trousers of light grey. On this visit of
fifteen years after, he was more
[page 39]
modest in his taste; he had a brown coat with black velvet
collar, a velvet vest of a lighter shade of brown; trousers of a light color, a
great gold chain festooned over the front of vest.”
This was the style which, when a boy of sixteen I saw softened for
the fashionable young men of 1850; had modified the garb retaining only the vest
of most gaudy design and color; strawberries in cut velvet was a favorite with
black trousers; the coats however were often garnished with glittering buttons.
As late as 1854 I have seen the elegants of that day at a ball wearing claret
colored spike-tailed coats with bright metal buttons. Their vests were of white
velvet, on which a pattern in arabesque had been cut out; their neck attire was
a voluminous scarf hiding the shirt front, the collars of which were high and
standing reaching near to the ears.
The table service at meals was more formal than now. The ladies
were always handed into their seats by the gentlemen, who had been informed by
host or hostess whom they were to escort.
The soup was served separately and after that, roasts, boiled and
vegetables came on in one service. The desserts succeeded as a separate
service, and when the cloth had been drawn, figs, nuts and raisins were placed
on the mahogany.
I remember perfectly when the fashion of placing flowers on the
table first came in. Mrs. Stiles on her return from Vienna, introduced
it in Savannah and it very quickly spread over the low country, and from there
outwardly. It was at Hopeton that I first saw flowers in 1856, on the dining
table. I am sure it spread from there to the Troups, Spaldings and
Nightingales.
Before closing these memories of Broadfield, Hopeton and Butlers,
all typical rice plantations, I shall advert to the great change and absolute
abandonment that has come to this the richest and most productive section of the
state. In 1859 in the rice district of the Altamaha was found; Broadfield,
Elizafield, Evelyn, Hofwyl, New Hope, Altama and Hopeton on the Glynn County
side; in McIntosh, Wrights, Carrs, Cambers, Champneys, Butlers, Generals and
Broughton Islands and on the mainland, Rhetts, Sidon, Ceylon, Potosi, Greenwood,
and some places of smaller extent, every one were the homes of people of
refinement, culture and wealth; in them were comprised of diked, banked, and
drained lands, 7,500 acres, valued at market and cash sales, at $600,000.00;
engaged in the cultivation of these 7,500 acres were 2,800 negroes, valued at
$450.00 each, $1,260,000.00; the stock, steam power, and plantation outfits at
$80,000.00. Total capital invested $1,940,000.00.
From the 7,500 acres was yearly reaped 255,000 bushels of rice.
This rice, after deducting freight and commission, $210,000.00. The cost of
supporting a negro was $20 per year, $56,000.00. Net return, $154,000, or 7 5/8
per cent. on the capital of $1,940,000.00.
[page 40]
APPENDIX: (Note to above)
LIST OF LANDS AND SLAVES ENGAGED IN THE CULTURE
OF RICE IN THE ALTAMAHA VALLEY IN 1859.
|
Lands Diked & Banked acreage |
Negroes |
Broadfield, Hofwyl, New Hope |
1,000 |
300 |
Evelyn |
300 |
125 |
Elizafield |
400 |
150 |
Hopeton, Altama, Carrs Island, Wrights Island |
1,000 |
400 |
Butler’s |
1,000 |
500 |
Champney’s |
600 |
175 |
Broughton’s |
500 |
125 |
Camber’s |
1,000 |
200 |
General’s |
300 |
By Butler Force |
Rhett’s |
300 |
120 |
Sidon and Hopestill |
400 |
200 |
Ceylon |
300 |
120 |
Cathead places |
500 |
250 |
Potosi Island |
400 |
120 |
|
8,000 |
2,785 |
In this year (1915) this industry has entirely
disappeared, and of the 7,500 acres, not four hundred acres are in cultivation;
lands that had a collateral value in every bank in the State, of more than fifty
dollars an acre, are already reverted in to swamp, or are fast passing into a
jungle of marsh, wood and water; great sums of money have been lost by the
former owners in the effort to re-establish their prosperity and productiveness,
which in every instance known to me have ended in financial disaster; the
reasons that caused this are manifold: high cost of labor, high interest
charges on borrowed money, and insufficient protection against high waters and
storms; at present every rice place on the Savannah, the Ogeechee and the
Altamaha is practically abandoned, and are no longer an asset in their owners’
ledgers, but rather a charge and incumbrance [sic].
I have not mentioned or endeavored to describe the fashion of dress
adopted by the lovely women of my day; I know I could never do justice to the
grace and taste displayed. I leave to the modern reader the consciousness that
they will never excell [sic] their grandmothers in the deft management of skirt
and draper.
In the opening of this manuscript I wrote, “Many and immense changes
have occurred in the conditions of life and accepted thought of the community in
which I have lived”. I have told of the “deluge” of ’65 which swept away the
industries, the fortunes, and the homes that I knew. I have tried to picture
them as they were, and am not sure it had not been better to have enwrapped them
in
[page 41]
a web of silence and memory, but a greater change in spirit
and thought has come to the living generation of men and women.
The men of today have far more of the negative virtues and fewer of
the positive than had his predecessors. They calculate more closely and are
less moved by emotions; they average more alike, and have fewer
personalities; education is more uniform and thorough but I have found fewer
good conversationalists, reconteurs [sic], or imparters of information gained by
study or travel; they marry later in life and with eyes undazled [sic] by
passion, count carefully the cost. In physique they are superior, owing to the
careful hygiene of the day, but weaker in constitution and less able to
withstand fatigue and sickness. I acknowledge betterment but I doubt the
greater lovableness [sic]—Peter denied Christ, but to him as granted the Keys of
Heaven: for he repented.
The mind and the heart are very different organs—the one appreciates
and is voluable [sic] in praise of a Galahad, the other pulses and throbs with
the great passion of Launcelot [sic], who most moves our inmost selves.
Guenvere [sic] or the modest Virginia being saved from shipwreck? Launcelot or
the knight in quest of the Holy Grail? Trilby or Blanche Bagot? “Sponse of
Taffy”?
END OF PART ONE.
Winter’s tale, Act IV. enters
Time—“Your patience this allowing, I’ll turn the glass and give the scene as
though you’d slept”.
“All of us have a wing to add to the house we are building, and I
would wish before I die to lift the curtain on “The Tragedy of the Sixties”.
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