Some facts about Charleston that I learned at the South Carolina Historical Society:
"Of all the slow places on the planet, it was the slowest."
From "Charleston Politics in the Progressive Era," a thesis written in 1963:
New Progressivism: an aversion of the common people to the aristocracy.
Charleston Mayor John P. Grace (Mayor 1911-1915, 1919-1923) was an Irish Catholic politician and lawyer who was a believer in majority rule and an antagonist of aristocratic privilege. Traditionally, politicians in Charleston were "boni" (aristocracy of English or Huguenot ancestry).
"The government of the city had long rested in the hands of a few old families, among them the Gadsons and the Rhetts. The overthrow of this ancient and aristocratic rule (with the election of Grace) was spoken of by the New York Sun as being not a mere change in municipal government, but the fall of a dynasty which had controlled the city politically, financially and socially for a century and a half."
(If you're interested in this, here is another article: http://www.thestate.com/2011/03/20/1743237/after-charlestons-fall-the-mob.html)
After Grace, however, the next few mayors were of the "boni" class-- Thomas P. Stoney (though unusual because he did not live South of Broad) and Burnet Rhett Maybank (mayor of Charleston 1930-1938) are prime examples. Maybank was the direct descendent of five South Carolina governors.
I have lots more info on this, but just wanted to give a general overview. If you have any questions or would like more resources, let me know. I think it's an interesting parallel with the elected monarchy of Hamlet.
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Showing posts with label Battles for power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Battles for power. Show all posts
Saturday, July 20, 2013
1917 Harper's Magazine
Here are some snippets from a travel article about Charleston, published in Harper's magazine in 1917:
"Without being exactly one pattern, [the houses] were of a general type which I found continually repeated throughout the city. A certain rather narrow breadth of stone or brick or wood abuts into the street, and as wide a space of veranda, colonnaded and rising in two or even three stories, looks...over a more or less ample garden ground."
"Nearly all the gardens are shut in by high brick walls and it is something fine to pass in or out by the gate of such a garden, with a light iron-work grill overhead and small globes on the high shouldered brick piers..."
"The tobacco chewing habit, so well-nigh extinct in the North, is still rife in the South."
"To this moment, I do not know what must be the prevalent feeling concerning slavery. It was intimated only once, from lips that trembled with old memories in owning and affirming the Negroes, "They were slaves, but they were happy.'"
"Their presence is of an almost unbroken gloom......[they have] little or no gradation from absolute black to any lighter coloring...but there may be paler shadings of the mulatto, the quadroon, the octaroon, but I did not notice them, though more than once I took persons for white who would have shown to the trained eye as black."
"Without being exactly one pattern, [the houses] were of a general type which I found continually repeated throughout the city. A certain rather narrow breadth of stone or brick or wood abuts into the street, and as wide a space of veranda, colonnaded and rising in two or even three stories, looks...over a more or less ample garden ground."
"Nearly all the gardens are shut in by high brick walls and it is something fine to pass in or out by the gate of such a garden, with a light iron-work grill overhead and small globes on the high shouldered brick piers..."
"The tobacco chewing habit, so well-nigh extinct in the North, is still rife in the South."
"To this moment, I do not know what must be the prevalent feeling concerning slavery. It was intimated only once, from lips that trembled with old memories in owning and affirming the Negroes, "They were slaves, but they were happy.'"
"Their presence is of an almost unbroken gloom......[they have] little or no gradation from absolute black to any lighter coloring...but there may be paler shadings of the mulatto, the quadroon, the octaroon, but I did not notice them, though more than once I took persons for white who would have shown to the trained eye as black."
Monday, June 10, 2013
Charleston, early 20th century
By the early twentieth century, Charleston seemed more like
a medieval city than a modern port. Hogs and dairy cows lived in the alleys and
walked the streets, while buzzards provided a primary public sanitation
service. The city had no professional fire department or police force. In a
city becoming known as “too poor to paint and too proud to whitewash,”
Charleston’s elite had little interest in or vision of economic renewal. Most
shops and even banks in the city opened in late morning, closed at midday to
allow the proprietors to enjoy a long and leisurely three o’clock dinner, then
reopened briefly before sundown. Charlestonians had the reputation of being
lost in a dreamy contemplation of the past. Grace was unwilling to let the city
sleep. He instituted a series of reforms that began its modernization, such as
raising taxes to pave roads and build sidewalks. Grace held o ffi ce from 1911
to 1915 and again from 1919 to 1923 . Seeing the city’s potential for tourism,
in his second term he saw to it that the city contributed to the building of
the Francis Marion Hotel, which still stands on the corner of King and Calhoun
streets across from Marion Square. The city finally developed professional
police and fire protection and other services. Farm animals disappeared from
the streets. But the old elites of the city hated Grace. He lost in 1915 by a
handful of votes to Tristram T. Hyde. Armed partisans for Grace and equally
well-armed partisans for his opponent showed up at Democratic Party
headquarters at the corner of George and King streets. A scuffle over ballots
led to a wild shootout. Two ballot boxes were hurled into the street, a
Charleston News and Courier reporter was shot and killed, and only intervention
by police and local militia ended the violence. Meanwhile, although African
Americans lacked any meaningful vote in the early twentieth century, they did
more than simply accept the marginal place whites attempted to assign them.
Unable to challenge Jim Crow as a social system, they worked to improve their
position within it. These efforts planted seeds of resistance that would come
to fruition in the civil rights struggle.
Bass, Jack. Palmetto State : The Making of Modern South
Carolina.
Columbia, SC, USA: University of South Carolina Press, 2009.
p 76.
http://site.ebrary.com/lib/baruch/Doc?id=10559535&ppg=93
Copyright © 2009. University of South Carolina Press. All
rights reserved.
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