Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Feb 17 Betty McGee Creek Bridge

 

It's muddy out there

Back in 2019, the process began to replace the bridge at Thornburg Farm over Betty McGee Creek. The old bridge had survived many years and remained in place with a cable attached to a tree. About 5 years back, the Uwharrie Trailblazers raised the bridge and built up supports after it took a beating during a storm. It had a railing before the storm but that was gone. It survived again until 2 years ago when it was left tilted both lengthwise and widthwise. The Trailblazers asked the Forest Service what could be done. An engineer looked at it with Mike Spisak, then the district ranger. Some flagging went up about 100 feet downriver and it stayed there until last week.


The Forest Service hired a contractor from China Grove to built a new bridge. No expense was spared. This one is a beauty. 


The dirt bike helps when a tool is needed back at the truck parked by the trailhead.



The old bridge


The trail will jog over to the bridge and back on the other side. These relocations will be done by the contractor. It looks like about 100 feet on both sides. This work has already been roughed in and fill dirt being used to secure the supports. Quite a few golf balls have been unearthed during this work. Oddly, all were found on river right. None on the other side.



The contractor also will re-grade the road from Thornburg farm to the creek, although it looks like it needs more than re-grading.

Jan 12 Caw Caw


Caw Caw Interpretive Center is a Charleston County Park encompassing land which made up parts of several rice plantations. We walked over the entire park mainly bird watching. Just before leaving we came to the site of the Locust Hill Plantation manor house. There was nothing remaining. When reading about the plantation later, I learned that many of the slaves from Locust Hill joined the Stono Rebellion or the Slave Rebellion of 1739. The store where the slaves armed themselves was very near the plantation. After arming themselves, a number of Locust Hill slaves joined the group.


Here is the story copied from PBS.org:

What exactly triggered the Stono Rebellion is not clear. Many slaves knew that small groups of runaways had made their way from South Carolina to Florida, where they had been given freedom and land. Looking to cause unrest within the English colonies, the Spanish had issued a proclamation stating that any slave who deserted to St Augustine would be given the same treatment. Certainly this influenced the potential rebels and made them willing to accept their situation. A fall epidemic had disrupted the colonial government in nearby Charlestown (Charleston), and word had just arrived that England and Spain were at war, raising hopes that the Spanish in St. Augustine would give a positive reception to slaves escaping from Carolina plantations. But what may have actually triggered the rebellion on September 9th was the soon-to-be-enacted Security Act.

In mid-August, a Charlestown newspaper announced the Security Act. A response to the white's fears of insurrection, the act required that all white men carry firearms to church on Sundays, a time when whites usually didn't carry weapons and slaves were allowed to work for themselves. Anyone who didn't comply with the new law by September 29 would be subjected to a fine.

Whatever triggered the Rebellion, early on the morning of the 9th, a Sunday, about twenty slaves gathered near the Stono River in St. Paul's Parish, less than twenty miles from Charlestown. The slaves went to a shop that sold firearms and ammunition, armed themselves, then killed the two shopkeepers who were manning the shop. From there the band walked to the house of a Mr. Godfrey, where they burned the house and killed Godfrey and his son and daughter. They headed south. It was not yet dawn when they reached Wallace's Tavern. Because the innkeeper at the tavern was kind to his slaves, his life was spared. The white inhabitants of the next six or so houses they reach were not so lucky -- all were killed. The slaves belonging to Thomas Rose successfully hid their master, but they were forced to join the rebellion. (They would later be rewarded. See Report re. Stono Rebellion Slave-Catchers.) Other slaves willingly joined the rebellion. By eleven in the morning, the group was about 50 strong. The few whites whom they now encountered were chased and killed, though one individual, Lieutenant Governor Bull, eluded the rebels and rode to spread the alarm.

The slaves stopped in a large field late that afternoon, just before reaching the Edisto River. They had marched over ten miles and killed between twenty and twenty-five whites.

Around four in the afternoon, somewhere between twenty and 100 whites had set out in armed pursuit. When they approached the rebels, the slaves fired two shots. The whites returned fire, bringing down fourteen of the slaves. By dusk, about thirty slaves were dead and at least thirty had escaped. Most were captured over the next month, then executed; the rest were captured over the following six months -- all except one who remained a fugitive for three years.

Uncomfortable with the increasing numbers of blacks for some time, the white colonists had been working on a Negro Act that would limit the privileges of slaves. This act was quickly finalized and approved after the Stono Rebellion. No longer would slaves be allowed to grow their own food, assemble in groups, earn their own money, or learn to read. Some of these restrictions had been in effect before the Negro Act, but had not been strictly enforced.










 

Apr 20 Waterwall on Walker Creek

  Waterwalls redirect floodwater back into the creekbed. There is one very near the Uwharrie Trail on the Walker Creek section. This one is ...