Today, we visited the Magnolia Cemetery, located right in downtown Greenwood.
Here's what it looks like from the air:
The arrow points to the one "Find a grave significant famous person, David Wyatt Aiken, more about him in a bit.
The cemetery is certainly an old one, with lots of folks who were born pre Civil War.
Lots of ornate markers, mausoleums, and so forth.
D. Wyatt Aiken
David Wyatt Aiken
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In office
March 4, 1877 – March 3, 1887 |
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Preceded by
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Succeeded by
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In office
November 28, 1864 – December 21, 1866 |
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Personal details
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Born
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Died
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Resting place
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Political party
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Profession
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Military service
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Allegiance
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Service/branch
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Years of service
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1861–64
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David Wyatt
Aiken (March 17,
1828 – April 6, 1887) was a Confederate army officer during the American Civil War and a postbellum five-term United States Congressman from South
Carolina.
Biography
Early life
Aiken was born
in Winnsboro, South Carolina, and received
his early education under private tutors. He attended the Mount Zion Institute
in Winnsboro and graduated from South Carolina College in Columbia in 1849. He taught college for two
years before marrying Mattie Gaillard in 1852 and engaging in agricultural
pursuits, owning a plantation and travelling
extensively in Europe and throughout
the United States. He became the editor of the Winnsboro News and Herald,
and was married a second time to Miss Smith of Abbeville, where Aiken settled and continued to
farm. In 1855, Aiken became a founding member of the State Agricultural
Society.
Civil War, Reconstruction
In 1858 Aiken
attended a political convention in Mobile, Alabama, and began speaking publicly
in favor of secession.[1] With South
Carolina's secession and the advent
of the Civil War, Aiken enlisted in the Confederate Army as a private in the
7th South Carolina Infantry. He was later appointed adjutant of the regiment
and in 1862 was elected its colonel. He led it in the Peninsula and Northern Virginia Campaigns. He was
severely wounded by a shot through his lungs at the Battle of Antietam in September 1862. After his lengthy
recovery, he commanded his regiment in the Gettysburg Campaign in Joseph
B. Kershaw's brigade, seeing action
near the Peach Orchard in the Battle of Gettysburg. However, lingering effects of his
wound soon forced Aiken to administrative duty in Macon,
Georgia for a year,
before he resigned from the Confederate army in mid-1864 and returned home.
He was a member
of the State house of representatives from 1864–66 and served as secretary and
treasurer of the Agricultural and Mechanical Society of South Carolina in 1869.
Aiken was a prominent figure in the Reconstruction-era Democratic party and a leader in efforts to suppress
the voting rights of recently emancipated slaves. He publicly called for the
assassination of a black state legislator, Benjamin F. Randolph, saying “never to suffer this man
Randolph to come into your midst; if he does, give him four feet by six.”[2] On October 16,
1868, Randolph was assassinated by three men in broad daylight. Aiken was
detained by state authorities on suspicion of being an
accessory-before-the-fact, and freed on $5,000 bond. No one was ever brought to
trial for Randolph's assassination.
Grange activist, magazine publisher
In 1872, Aiken was an activist on behalf of The National Grange of the
Order of Patrons of Husbandry, more commonly known as the Grange, organizing 76 local
chapters across South Carolina. Local Grange chapters in the South frequently
served as centers for Red Shirt activities in support of white
supremacy.[1] Aiken was a
member of the executive committee of the National
Grange from 1873–85,
served as its chairman in 1875, and was president of the South Carolina Grange
from 1875–1877. Starting in 1869, Aiken was a correspondent of The Rural
Carolinian, a magazine for southern planters and farmers.[3] He eventually
became editor and owner and held those positions until 1877.[1]
Congressional service, death
Aiken served as
a delegate to the Democratic National Convention at St. Louis in 1876, and was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-fifth and to the four succeeding Congresses
(serving from 1877 until 1887). He was chairman of the Committee on Education
in the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Congresses. With his
health declining, Aiken became an invalid during his last term in office and
was not a candidate for renomination in 1886.
Aiken died in Cokesbury, South Carolina, and was
buried in Magnolia Cemetery in Greenwood, South Carolina.
His son, Wyatt
Aiken (1863–1923),
also served in Congress and a first cousin, William Aiken, Jr., became a Congressman and Governor of South Carolina.
So, Col. Aiken is reasonably famous:
That's his wife next to him. |
The Col. was a big man in the Grange movement. |
This is the first official listing of the new Register of Historical Places visits.
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