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Tag Archives: charleston

Robert Smalls, from Harper's Weekly, June 14, 1862

Baptists and the American Civil War: December 1, 1863

South Carolinian Robert Smalls, a former slave who had worked in Charleston’s shipyards, became a hero to the North in May 1862 when he commandeered the Confederate transport CSS Planter in Charleston Harbor and steered the ship to safety and freedom for himself and his crew of slaves and their families, behind nearby Union naval…

December 1, 2013 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.

Baptists and the American Civil War: November 9, 1863

The editors of the Richmond Daily Dispatch today reprint a patriotic story from Charleston that recently took place in a Baptist church: The Charleston Mercury, reporting the proceedings of the Baptist Association of that city, says: A pleasant incident occurred, which it may be interesting to relate. In the collection taken up at the Baptist…

November 9, 2013 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.

Baptists and the American Civil War: November 7, 1863

Dual Baptist narratives continue in South Carolina this month, intertwined yet divergent. Many white citizens (including Baptists) of Charleston, South Carolina, a city besieged by nearby Union naval forces since July, have fled inland and northward to Orangeburg. The roster of refugees, mainly women and children, continues to grow as winter looms. An area with…

November 7, 2013 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.

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