Record of Peter Gitton the sum of seventy five pounds being in full for my passage to Carolina of him the paid Peter Gitton tours Gitton Magdalene Colton Judith Gitton and Francis Bonnd written my hand this 27th M day of Elle 1685
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Excerpt from the Escape Account of Judith Gitton
An excerpt from the escape account of Judith Gitton (Baird): “ For eight months we had suffered from the contributions and the quartering of the soldiers, on accounts of religion, enduring many inconveniences. We therefore resolved on quitting France at night, leaving the soldiers in their beds, and abandoning the house with its furniture. We […]
Peter’s Letter to His Father
To: Mr. Manigault In South Carolina Hon’d Sir Bristol 5th June 1750 We arrived here last Sunday after a pleasant though dangerous Passage, for off of the Banks of Newfoundland we met with several monstrous Islands of Ice, which with the Help of a Gale of Wind, had like to have shortened our Passage some […]
Peter’s Letter to His Mother
To: Mrs. Gabriel Manigault In South Carolina Jan. 28th, 1751 Hon’d Madam, London, February 20th, 1750 Without any apology, I sit down to trouble you with a long letter. I received about two months ago a letter from you dated the 30th of Sep, wherin you very kindly inform me, you had not then heard […]
The Gitton Family Passage
The following documents are records and accounts of the process that was involved in Huguenot efforts to seek freedom from persecution and opportunity for the accumulation of wealth. Conditions for Huguenots remaining in France were perilous – “the South Carolina refugee Judith Giton, who then lived in the town of La Voulte, Vivarais, had her […]
Peter Manigault’s Correspondance With His Family
Peter Manigault’s letters to his parents during some of his travels are important pieces of history for several reasons. For one, they display the financial differences of the time – the rich in England were far more extravagant than those in America, even after colonization had begun. Second, we are offered a look into cultural […]
Reflections on the Course
I was extremely excited about this class when I realized that the majority of work was going to be independent archive research. Even though I understood that the work would be intensive, the goal of the class was unique and thoroughly interesting. Overall, the knowledge I have gained from this semester has been well worth […]
Healing and Horticulture in Charleston : The Abbreviated Works of Dr. Alexander Garden
THE GARDEN PAGE still trying to create this page, just test text featured here for the time of testing the page creation. Fun Fact 1: Dr. Garden earned his M.D. while living in the SC Colony in 1752. He is one of America’s first colonially educated physicians. Fun Fact 2: the Gardenia flower is named […]
Healing in Charleston : Horticulture, Medicine, and Early Influences
The American landscape was shaped and chartered those who took active roles in capturing its beauty and power. Before an industrialized lifestyle the colonies on the east coast of North America boasted flora that the Old World had never known. There was a bounty of amazing plants along the coast and specifically in the fertile […]
Music in Colonial South Carolina
In comparison to other early American colonies, the Carolina’s were unique in respect to their heightened culture and social entertainment. Charleston was particularly interested in upholding a luxurious, high-class reputation, rather than enforcing a spiritual focal point. Many scholars parallel the behavior of Charlestonians to that of eighteenth century Britains, and use the slogan carpe […]