Hilton Head Monthly September 2021

Page 74

IICITY GUIDEII

Beautiful HISTORIC BLUFFTON

The historic Church of the Cross was built in Bluffton in 1854.

BY EDWARD THOMAS

BY EDWARD THOMAS

Bluffton is known as one of the fastest-growing municipalities in South Carolina — more than 146% growth in the past decade. But it wasn’t always this way. Here is a brief overview of its history to provide some perspective.

The Earliest Days

Two key individuals to be remembered when speaking of Bluffton’s beginnings are Sir John Colleton and James B. Kirk. Sir John left the British Isles for Barbados to seek his fortune, but in 1663 when King Charles II was restored to the throne, he and seven other pals of the king were granted a vast stretch of land in America called “Carolina.” It included all the territory between Virginia and the lands around the Savannah River (then under the control of Indian tribes and the Spanish). Colleton arrived by sailing ship to Charles Town (now Charleston). James B. Kirk showed up 120 years after Colleton, as the overseer of the cotton fields still owned by the Colleton family south of the Broad River which bisects Beaufort County. At age 27 he purchased the fields from Colleton’s great granddaughter — Louisa Caroline Graves. Then, with his new 14-year old wife, Mary Baldwin, built a large house overlooking the May River near today’s Calhoun Street where they reared 16 children. 72 // H I LT O N H E A D M O N T H LY. C O M

Kirk also built a school in 1823 and hired tutors from England. He helped buy up a one square mile tract of land near his home which he platted and sub-divided into lots and streets. The original square-mile town was initially known as Kirk’s Bluff but was later changed to Bluffton.

Incorporated and Burned Down

The Town of Bluffton was officially incorporated in 1852 by the South Carolina General Assembly. Excessive Federal tariffs on cotton and other local cash crops intended for international trade negatively impacted plantation owners in southern Beaufort County who launched a protest called “The Bluffton Movement.” This uprising eventually led to South Carolina seceding from the United States, forming the Confederacy. When the Union Army invaded South Carolina, the town (with the exception of two churches and some residences) was burned to the ground on June 4, 1863. Progress stood at a standstill in Bluffton for more than 80 years as the town tried to economically re-establish itself. In the 1980s the original one-square-mile town with approximately 700 residents was quaint, but poor. The town was designated a National Register Historic District


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Articles inside

Dining Briefs

1min
page 170

Perspective

2min
pages 178-180

Picture Perfect

8min
pages 152-157

Full of Fellowship

2min
pages 158-159

Destination: Love

2min
pages 148-151

Bringing People Together

5min
pages 142-147

Real Estate News

9min
pages 114-133

Q & A with the Mayor

2min
page 82

Technology Essentials

9min
pages 102-113

Meet the City Manager

1min
page 83

Timeless Attraction

2min
pages 78-79

Learn from the Library

6min
pages 84-101

Landmarks

1min
pages 76-77

Evolving History

3min
pages 74-75

Meet the Town Manager

1min
pages 72-73

History Lesson

4min
pages 64-65

Landmarks

1min
pages 66-67

Meet the Town Manager

1min
pages 62-63

Q & A with the Mayor

3min
pages 70-71

A Numbers Game

2min
pages 68-69

Q & A with the Mayor

3min
pages 60-61

News

4min
pages 16-17

Data Driven

1min
page 59

Contributors

2min
pages 14-15

Opinion

1min
pages 12-13

At The Helm

1min
pages 10-11

Community Connection

4min
pages 34-35

Photos of the Month

4min
pages 30-33

Pets to Adopt

1min
pages 18-19
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