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“The CivilWar and itsAftermath

inMount Pleasant”

“Surrender”

A

bout 12 o’clock on Saturday,”

Tew’s letter continued, “three barges

landed from the fleet and as I had been

elected intendent (mayor) by the people

on Friday, in that official capacity I

surrendered the town, submitting to the

military authority of the U.S. and was promised protection

to persons and private property. The

boats were commanded by Lt. Gif-

ford. They brought a small U.S. flag ashore and hoisted it

for a while on the lighthouse.”

Tew described the officers as being very courteous and the

men quite peaceful, as were others from the Union fleet who

followed them into town later that afternoon and on Sunday.

Union Army Col. Edward E. Potter’s official report in-

cludes the following. The march’s starting point is not known.

“On Feb. 19 (Sunday) we began the march toward

Charleston with the 144th New York Volunteers and the

55th Massachusets. At Andersonville, the 32nd U.S. Col-

ored Troops joined the column. A number of Negroes with

carts loaded with household goods were met on the road

who readily turned back with us. About 100 head of cattle

were captured, which were being driven up the country. At

7 p.m., the column arrived at the Christ Church lines. Sev-

en guards were captured here and another two near Mount

Pleasant. The troops bivouacked at Christ Church, leaving

Col. A.A. Hartwell, 55th Massachusetts, in command.

“I rode with my staff to Mount Pleasant and crossed the

harbor in a small boat, arriving in Charleston at midnight.”

About 11 a.m. Monday, three regiments of Negro troops

under the command of Col. Hartwell marched into town.

This is the tenth part in a series about Mount Pleasant’s role in the Civil War. It has been

offered to Mount Pleasant Magazine by former Post and Courier editor and writer

John L. All, who resides East of the Cooper and is passionate about preserving its history.

We hope you will enjoy this tale about Mount Pleasant’s past.

–The Editors

By JOhN l. All

Tew’s letter to his daughter relates the events of that day:

“Many of the Negroes from the plantations came down

with the Army train, and together with those from the

village made quite a multitude of shouting wild creatures

whom the thought of freedom had changed from quiet to

transports of uproarious joy. I must tell you what I did for

my own.

“A few days before, I gave them $50 and told them the

money would soon be worth nothing and advised them to

buy whatever they could then. I also told them that when

the troops came, they knew they were free to go or stay as

they pleased; if they stayed, as long as I had anything to eat,

they would share as they always had done.”

Some of Tew’s former slaves left the following Wednesday

without a word of leave-taking. How many departed is not

known; four were still with him on Feb. 26 when he wrote

the letter to his daughter.

The Confederacy was in its death throes. As for Mount

Pleasant and the rest of the Lowcountry, it was an occupied

land. For some, the worst was yet to come.

Photo by Jose Gil.