Pass auf: War 9 Monate vor der Geburt (25. Dezember 1794) des Kindes (Edward Harleston) bereits verstorben (12. September 1793).
Pass auf: War 9 Monate vor der Geburt (25. Dezember 1794) des Kindes (Edward Harleston) bereits beerdigt (??-09-1793).
Er ist verheiratet mit Elizabeth Faucheraud.
Sie haben geheiratet am 17. April 1766 in South Carolina, er war 27 Jahre alt.Quellen 2, 4
Kind(er):
John Harleston II was a Colonel during the Revolutionary War and was taken prisoner at the fall of Charles Town.
In the mid 1760s, Colonel John Harleston purchased Richmond Plantation. It is said that Colonel Harleston was almost unable to buy the land because he was thrown from his horse while crossing a bridge, and his money, bills of credit from the Province, was soaked in the river. He attempted to dry the money on the side of the road, but a gust of wind blew it back into the water. He jumped in to retrieve the bills and rode off to Richmond, arriving just before the purchase deadline.
Harleston soon added Villa, Bossis, and Rice Hope Plantations, as well as land and a home on the Charleston peninsula, to his land holdings. Richmond Plantation, however, was his country seat. From there, he represented the parish of Saint John’s Berkeley in the Twenty-Eighth Royal Assembly (1768) before the Revolution and the Third General Assembly (1779-1780) after the war.
Richmond’s land was used primarily for rice production, but its other resources helped to increase its prosperity. Clay was used to produce bricks, livestock and other crops were grown and sold, and lumber was harvested from the wooded areas of land. On a productive rice plantation such as Richmond, slaves would have made up the majority of the residents. When Harleston died in 1795, an inventory was taken of his property, indicating that 138 slaves lived and worked at Richmond Plantation.
The plantation was passed down to Colonel Harleston’s descendants until after the Civil War when it was sold to another rice planter. This was common practice at this time; many families in the area were forced to sell land owned for generations to cover debts or taxes, or they were simply offered a price too good to refuse. Richmond was sold again in 1896 and by the turn of the century, the white plantation house built by Colonel Harleston had been destroyed by a fire.
Colonel Harleston and some of his descendants were buried at Richmond Plantation in a walled cemetery. The first grave was that of Colonel Harleston, in 1793. The final burial took place in 1851.
The rice fields, though no longer producing rice, are clearly defined by the landscape along the riverfront. Two cypress rice trunks, constructed in 1859, are still visible above the water line. The gates of these trunks were donated in 1989: one to the Charleston Museum, the second to the State Museum in Columbia.
RIN: MH:N199
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