Richardson-Sinkler Connections

Richardson-Sinkler Connections

Planting, Politics, Horses, and Family Life, 1769-1853

  • Author: Little, Harriet Clare Sinkler
  • Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
  • ISBN: 9781611179729
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781611179736
  • eISBN Epub: 9781611179736
  • Place of publication:  South Carolina , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2019
  • Month: June
  • Language: English

A fascinating look at the private lives of prosperous landowners in antebellum South Carolina

Offering a richly textured picture of early national South Carolina, Richardson-Sinkler Connections includes more than 150 letters and documents left by the prominent Richardson and Sinkler families, who lived in the Santee region between Charleston and Columbia. Prosperous landowners related by both blood and marriage, the families made their fortunes as planters of indigo, rice, and cotton.

The Sinkler family established homes south of the Santee River starting around 1700, and Richard Richardson arrived from Virginia about 1730. The second James Sinkler died in 1800, leaving four children, only one of whom had completed his education. Thirteen years old when his father died, the second son, William Sinkler, was mentored by his older first cousin/brother-in-law, state representative and later governor James B. Richardson, who closely followed the boy's progress as he pursued his studies in the North. William would go on to build Eutaw plantation in what is now Orangeburg County and, like his cousin James, pursue a passionate interest in horse breeding and racing, even building a racetrack on his property. In addition to revealing details about matters of politics, farming, education, travel, and racing, the letters also describe the difficulties of visiting across the Santee River, in the Sandhills where the Richardsons lived. The linchpin of the two families was James Sinkler's widow, Margaret, who was adored by her niece/stepdaughter, Ann, as well as by the Richardson nephews and many others. Her letters, and Ann's, open a fascinating window into women's lives of the era.

Thorough annotations with genealogical notes and charts trace the complicated relationships between the Sinklers and Richardsons, as well as among other prominent families of the region and state. The book includes more than forty illustrations, including portraits, sketches, photographs of plantations and other sites, plats, and maps.

  • Cover
  • Richardson-Sinkler Connections
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Editorial Method
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations
  • One. Signs of the Times—Introducing the Families
  • Two. Family Matters
  • Three. Politics, Horses, Planting, and Other Business
  • Four. Mentoring Another William—William H. B. Richardson
  • Five. The Twilight Years
  • Six. Everybody Loves Seaman
  • Seven. Reflections
  • Epilogue
  • Appendix A. People and Places of Interest
  • Appendix B. Contract for the Construction of Eutaw Plantation
  • Appendix C. Exhibition of Charleston College, 1829 Program
  • Appendix D. Customs Documents
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index

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