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Major john Marshall Whilden

- “The Boy Major”

John Marshall Whilden was one of five brothers who

fought for the Confederacy; all were the sons of Elias

Whilden, Mount Pleasant intendant (mayor) from 1857

to 1858 and whose stately home still

stands at 226 Bennett St. He was a

member of the Citadel Class of 1864 and the gun com-

mander of #1 Gun Battery stationed on Morris Island,

which fired on the Union “Star of the West” in 1861 while

it was attempting to supply Union troops on Fort Sumter.

This was the shot that began the Civil War.

At the age of 23, Whilden was promoted to major and

in charge of the Coast Rangers of the 23rd South Carolina

Infantry at the Second Battle of Manassas in Virginia. He

personally led his regiment on four charges and was killed

in action on Aug. 30, 1862, still carrying the battle flag.

When federal troops occupied Charleston and the

surrounded the area, the Whilden home served as Union

headquarters. Another brother also was killed in the war;

the two of them were among approximately 17,000 South

Carolina men lost fighting for the Confederacy.

Cornelia hanCoCk

Born a Quaker in 1840 in Hancock’s Bridge, New

Jersey, Cornelia Hancock was a woman ahead of her time.

During the Civil War, she accompanied her brother-in-law,

a doctor, to the

Gettysburg bat-

tlefield, where

she volunteered

as a Union

Army nurse but

was rejected

by Dorothea

Dix because of

her youth and

good looks.

Undaunted, she persevered and served both at Gettysburg

and Petersburg.

Following the war, Hancock was sent to Mount Pleasant

as a missionary by the Philadelphia Friends Association for

the Aid and Elevation of Freedmen. She established a school

for 50 children of former slaves in the old Presbyterian

Church, which she described as “dilapidated.”

She later moved into a home in the village that was large

enough to act as both a school and her residence. While still

under federal rule, the town donated a lot on which to build

a two-story schoolhouse at the corner of King and Com-

mon streets. The school, built with funds from the Freed-

man’s Bureau, was named for Henry Laing of Philadelphia,

who provided money to support the school. For the next

10 years, Cornelia served as Laing School principal before

returning to Philadelphia, where she helped create the So-

ciety for Organizing Charity and the Children’s Aid Society

of Pennsylvania. She died in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in

1927, at the age of 87.

In 1940, the Laing School became part of the public school

system, the first accredited black school in South Carolina.

In her letters, published in 1965, Cornelia expressed

her contempt for the former rebels: “I would like to …

put all the Secesh (Secessionists) in the poorhouse and

keep them there till they die.” Her mother cautioned her

to be “more prudent.”

Carlyle MCkinley

While still in his early teens, Carlyle McKinley fought

for the Confederate cause in the defense of Atlanta. Born

by pam gabriel

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50

Following the Civil War, Christ Church Parish and the small Village of Mount Pleasant lay in ruins. With no slave

workforce, the large plantations were deserted. The summer homes of the wealthy in the Village were abandoned. The

remaining residents farmed, fished and shrimped to survive. Small businesses were established and slowly the town

thrived. The biggest change came following the opening of the Cooper River Bridge in 1929. Residents turned to

catering to the tourists who passed through town on their way to Sullivan’s Island and the Isle of Palms.

–The Editors

Influential Icons

When federal troops occupied the area around Charleston, the

Whilden home served as Union headquarters.

Cornelia Hancock established a school for the children

of former slaves in the old presbyterian Church.

The second in a series

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