Aiken County, S.C.

Sandhills, Thoroughbreds, & Cotton Mills

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Welcome to Aiken County, South Carolina

Founded March 10, 1871

We are so please you dropped in to check us out. We have been 'doing' genealogy for more than 30 years! You'd think after all that time, we'd have all the answers! Not even close. We are always looking for new cousins and related families. Please let us know how you fit into our puzzle.

We do not create history. We share the pieces we discover. We welcome your discoveries as we create vivid colorful images of the past. Visit us on social media - Aiken & Barnwell County GenWeb.

Sandhills, Thoroughbreds, & Cotton Mills

A river of sand called “Sand River” runs through Hitchcock Woods from the Aiken city limits through Horse Creek Valley, which can become quick sand after a heavy rain. It is the source of Native American legends and one of the most beautiful and unusual features of Hitchcock Woods. It is not uncommon for the rains to wash the flow of sand leaving behind discoveries of Old Edgefield Pottery and other treasures that bear witness to the inhabitants of the area more than 250 year ago. South Carolina is known for three distinct types of folk-art: Sweetgrass basketry, Catawba pottery, and Edgefield pottery, largely produced by Dave, a literate slave. This area of discovery is significant as Aiken County was created in 1871 from parts of Barnwell, Edgefield, Lexington, Orangeburg counties. When searching for early records you will want to include these adjoining counties in your search. Records from the early Aiken County courthouse are not available. The original courthouse built in 1872 with funds from wealthy mill owner William Gregg, Jr., burned in January 1970. The current building was built in 1881.

Aiken is famous for breeding thoroughbreds which began with the Aiken Steeplechase Association founded in 1930. The Aiken Trials are the first leg of Aiken's Triple Crown events which began in 1942. New York financier William C. Whitney, who brought polo to the city in the late nineteenth century, established the Aiken Winter Colony for the Northern elite who traveled south to play polo and buy and sell thoroughbreds. When searching for ancestors, remember many of the people buried in Aiken have roots up North and you will want to expand your search as Aiken experienced a population explosion in the early 1940's.

Southern cotton mill villages have been a deeply rooted feature of this area for two centuries. In 1845 William Gregg built the first cotton mill at the head waters of Horse Creek establishing the village of Graniteville. The cotton mill is a southern born industry which is the roots of the people who lived out their lives as mill workers. The cotton mills provided opportunity for steady wages that could not could be found on farms. The idea of being able to provide for their families meant prosperity and a new way of life for those who came to the area. What began with Graniteville Mill in 1845 soon found those same waters of Horse Creek powering Warrenville Mill, Langley Mill, Bath Mill, Seminole Mill, and the Clearwater Finishing Plant until the last mill closed in the mid 1980's. That booming new way of life also found itself in a new form of class and social discrimintation which writer Erskine Caldwell captured in his novels "God's Little Acre" and "Tobacco Road". Cormac McCarthy's play, The Gardener's Son, is based on the 1876 murder at Graniteville Mill. From murder to threats of unionization, the 1886 mill strikes would see wealthy mill owners shut down the mills preventing families from earning wages until they gave up on the idea and went back to work for low wages and poor working conditions. The people of Horse Creek Valley endured it all. South Carolina began issuing death certificates in January 1915. It is in the early records that is found documentation of the various lung diseases caused by inhaling decades of cotton fibers before OSHA established safe working conditions. The last operating cotton mill in Horse Creek Valley closed in 1985.

With more than a century of class rivalries between the Aiken wealthy elite and their derrogatory references to the working class of the Valley as "mill rats", it is those "mill rats" who worked and sustained the area economy making it possible for the wealthy families such as the Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, and Astors, who came to spend money in the resort towns of Aiken and North Augusta, to enjoy their eleveated style of living. The men of the Valley worked in the mills and it was their wives and daughters who cooked, cleaned, took in washing, and tended the children of the wealthy Northerners. During this time of flourishing wealth, North Augusta was a hot spot on the “Chitlin’ Circuit” where Ella Fitzgerald, Jimmie Lunceford, Cab Calloway and his Cotton Club Orchestra, Louis Armstrong, and Dizzy Gillespie frequently played Jazz and sang the blues. It was Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, and other Hollywood figures who came to listen and be entertained between rounds of golf and horse track races. Between the two cities of Aiken and North Augusta is where you will find the working class people in the cemeteries along Hwy 1 and Hwy 421 east of the City of Aiken.

Image credit: Sand River postcard. USC Digital Libraries Collection. Copyright not evaluated by USC.




Savannah River Plant

The Savannah River Site (SRS) was constructed during the early 1950s to produce the basic materials used in the fabrication of nuclear weapons during the cold war era. SRS covers 310 square miles of land in Aiken County boarding Barnwell County and the Savannah River. Small towns, villages, and people were displaced to make way for the site. The SRS Museum sugarcoats the removal of 6,000 people and nearly one thousand cemeteries to make way for what was referred to then as the 'bomb plant'. It was not a happy exidus.

SRS and the USC Archealogy Department have partnered to share the two volumes of documentation that records the removal of cemeteries from the area. The work is not without errors. Download the two volumes to search at your leisure. In the records you will find photos of homes, buildings, and cemetery removals. Some of the locals moved to other areas such as "New" Ellenton, Jackson and Hawthorne. Some families cut their losses and took the money being paid for their homes and land leaving the area in search of a new future and a willingness to start over. For many who were forced to sell and move away from ancestral lands it is still a painful subject. For the earliest workers who suffered medical disabilities due to exposure to various forms of radiation, they are the beneficiaries to healthcare and disability compensation by the Federal government.

Today, the site promotes an evironment of ecology and preservation that represents a legacy of the national defense system. This historical accounting of the separation is filled with photos and maps of the area. Those looking to see the ancestral homesites and landmarks for themselves can register for site tours. You must be a US Citizen and have government issued identification to be admitted.

There is an enormous amount of genealogical information in the records I have linked to above. It is a huge task that needs many volunteers to extract the data. If you would like to help, please contact me.

Read more about Aiken County on Wikipedia

Incorporated Towns

Click on the tabs below to read about the incorporated towns of Aiken County.

Aiken

The city of Aiken was named for William Aiken. It is one of the first rail road towns of early American. Connecting Charleston with Hamburg, the 136 mile track made it the largest rail road in the nation. In 1871 the county was formed from portions of Barnwell, Edgefield, Lexington and Orangeburg counties. By the late 1800's the area was known as a health resort with wealthy Northerns flocking to the area where they soon took up winter residences. In the 1950's the face of the county was forever changed with the US Government began to develop what would become the Savannan River Site, one of the largest nuclear defense facilities in the modern south.

Cochran Cemetery

Levels Baptist Church Cemetery

Postcard image, no copyright, UofSC Digital Libraries.

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The Valley

Horse Creek Valley, or "The Valley", as it is known by locals, is featured in a one hour documentary, Horse Creek Valley: A Tail Worth Telling, of the area found here. The film is also available in two parts (one and two) on the Facebook social media site hosted by the South Carolina Humanities, a state program of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Wikipedia Map, Public Domain.

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New Ellenton

The city of New Ellenton brands itself as "The Atomic City". Image 1956 Aiken, S.C. Map.

Berry Cemetery

Map image UofSC Digital Libraries public domain.

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Beech Island and Jackson

Very Little information is available on the development of Jackson, S.C.

Beech Island is the oldest inland settlement in the US laid out under the order of Governor of South Carolina in 1730.

Pentecost United Methodist Church Cemetery

Zubly Cemetery is the oldest known cemtery in Beech Island. David Zubly, Jr. was buried there in 1790.

More about Fort Moore and Savanno Town is available through the Beech Island Historical Society.

Map image UofSC Digital Libraries public domain.

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Monetta

Monetta is a city located in both Aiken and Saluda Counties. Most information seems to link Monetta mostly with Saluda county.

Williams Cemetery

Map image UofSC Digital Libraries public domain.

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North Augusta

The area of North Augusta nearest the current locations of the Aiken to Augusta bridges, on the Hill overlooking the Savannah River, was once known as Hamburg. This thriving market place was founded by Henry Shultz who named it after the area of Germany in which he was born - although this story of his birth is said to have been debunked. He was the owner of the original Augusta to Aiken Bridge, which after his financial demise was siezed by the State of Georgia. He was a poor boy who came to this country and earned himself into the a position of one of the welathiest men in the area. He was the owner of the Bank of Hamburg and part owner of the Steamboat Company of Georgia and the Augusta wharf. On March 24, 1825 Marquis de Lafayette recounted his visit to the area noting "its port was already filled with vessels." By 1860, Hamburg had become a ghost town. The town disappeared for good after the July 1876 Reconstruction riots.

Henry Shultzis said to have left a bequest to be buried at the top his hill, Shultz Hill, standing straight up with his backside turned across the Savannah River toward Augusta, Ga. He died October 13, 1851, a pauper having lost not one but three fortunes in his lifetime.

Shultz Hill Cemetery can be found here.

Abandoned Cemetery can be found here.

Bogeyville Cemetery


Postcard image with hand written note is on back side can be found here.

North Augusta was a well known Winter retreat for wealthy Northerners. Pine Heights Sanatorium was the health clinic of the period for wealthy hotel guests. Read more about North Augusta.

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Perry


Perry, S.C. is named for Benjamin Perry, a Provisional Governor during the Civil War. The town was originally named Wagener but the name was changed in 1888 when another town was officially given the same name. In the early 1900's the area was a majopr agriculture producer of cotton and asparagus.

Map image UofSC Digital Libraries public domain.

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Salley

Salley was originally settled in 1735 as John's Town by 3 Swiss-German families through land grants given by King George II.

Map image UofSC Digital Libraries public domain.

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Wagener

The current town of Wagener was originally named Pinder Town.

Gunter Family Cemetery

Howell Family Cemetery

Seivern Baptist Church Cemetery

Map image UofSC Digital Libraries public domain.

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Windsor

New Windsor was established and first settled by 200 Swiss/Palatine immigrants in 1737. The Windsor District and New Windsor Township has a long history of appearance and disappearance in South Carolina History. The area that once prospered failed in the shadow of Augusta just across the Savannah River in neighboring Georgia. Read here about the Native American tribes in the area of Windsor.

Information on Windsor and New Windsor township of the Swiss Palentine inmigration can found here.

Mt. Beulah Baptist Church Cemetery

Map image Beech Island Historical Society.

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Villages & Hamlets

Surrounding Counties




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