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  1. Information about Silk Hope Plantation, including its location, history, land, crops, owners, slaves, buildings, and current status.

  2. Home and burial place of Sir Nathanial Johnson, born in the County of Durham, England, in 1644. Knighted in 1680, was a member of Parliament, and Governor of Leeward Islands. He came to South Carolina in 1683 and settled at Silk Hope, from here he sent, in 1699, samples of silk to England.

  3. Silk Hope Plantation was created by William Butler through a land grant in 1759. Silk Hope came into the Thomas Savage family through the marriage of Thomas Savage to William Butler's daughter, Mary Elliott Butler. The Savage family lived winter and spring at Silk Hope and part time in Charleston, SC.

  4. For much of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Silk Hope was owned by the prominent slaveholding families the Manigaults and the Heywards. Ironically, Silk Hope was one of the earliest plantations to demonstrate the feasibility of rice culture in South Carolina, which it.

  5. Sep 16, 2019 · Silk Hope Plantation, eastern branch of the Cooper River, Huger. Early attempts at rice and silk production happened here. Silk Hope was the property of Governor Nathaniel Johnson (died 1713), who is buried on the property.

  6. Dec 6, 2018 · Ways Station (now Richmond Hill), Station No. 1-1/2 on the Savannah, Albany and Gulf Railroad, was built on land belonging to William J. Way. He was the first station master and co-owner of Silk Hope rice plantation. Construction of the rail line began in Savannah in 1856 and continued southwest.

  7. The massive importation of slaves to grow sugar, coffee, and later cotton, encouraged the emergence of a fully developed, and highly repressive, slave society. The concentration of plantations near the coast meant that runaway slaves found a ready safe haven in the dense jungles of the interior.

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