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Slave Houses, Gregg Plantation is a set of two historic log slave cabins located on the campus of Francis Marion University at Mars Bluff, Florence County, South Carolina. There were originally 8 cabins, but only these two remnants survive. They were built before 1831, and occupied until the early 1950s.
Francis Marion was born in Berkeley County, Province of South Carolina around 1732. His father Gabriel Marion was a Huguenot who emigrated to the Thirteen Colonies from France at some point prior to 1700 due to the Edict of Fontainebleau and became a slaveowning planter. [3]
General Francis Marion Bamberg (1838–1905), the builder of the General Francis Marion Bamberg House, played an important role in the growth of the town and county of Bamberg, South Carolina.
Peter Horry (March 12, 1743/1744 – 28 February, 1815) was an American planter who served as an officer in the southern theater of the American Revolutionary War.He served under the command of Francis Marion, waging a guerilla war against the British and Loyalist forces.
He had owned slaves but joined the bi-racial Readjuster Party after the Civil War. [194] John Lawrence Manning (1816–1889), 65th Governor of South Carolina, in 1860 he kept more than 600 people as slaves. [195] Francis Marion (1732–1795), Revolutionary War general, most of the people he enslaved escaped and fought with the British. [196]
After Tory raiders destroyed most of his property and frightened his family, he informed the British that they had violated the terms of parole. He rejoined the war. During this period, Pickens joined Francis Marion (known as the Swamp Fox) and Thomas Sumter as the most well-known partisan leaders in the Carolinas. Sumter also resumed fighting ...
english: built in 1831 to house slaves on the gregg plantation; aka as hewn log houses. they were largely constructed by slaves themselves. THEY WERE LARGELY CONSTRUCTED BY SLAVES THEMSELVES. THEY HAVE BEEN MOVED SEVERAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT LOCATION OF THE FRANCIS MARION UNIVERITY GROUNDS
Motte and her remaining family and household slaves moved to the overseer's house. In May 1781, patriots Brigadier General Francis "Swamp Fox" Marion and Lt. Col. Henry Lee III of Virginia were sent by General Nathanael Greene to capture Fort Motte.