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The Discoverers
Following on the heels of
Columbus' discovery of the New
World in 1492, Spanish ships
sailed up the Carolina coast in
the early 1500s. In 1562, when
Frenchman Jean Ribaut sailed here,
there was no visible evidence of
Spanish presence. Ribaut claimed
the area for France and set up a
fort on a nearby island now known
as Parris Island, home of the U.S.
Marine Corps Recruit Depot.
Arrival of Englishmen and Scotsmen
The
English arrived in 1629. King
Charles I named the region between
Virginia and Florida after himself
(Carolina).
In
1663, Sir John Colleton sent Capt.
William Hilton from Barbados to
explore the new Carolina region.
The island was later named Hilton
Head in his honor.
Permanent Settlement
The
first Englishmen permanently
settled on the Island in 1717. In
that year, John Barnwell started a
500-acre plantation in what is now
called Hilton Head Plantation, on
the north end of the Island.
Many
other families came to the Island
in the 18th century, including
Baynards, Lawtons, Baldwins,
Davants, Draytons, Mongins, Popes,
Scotts and Stoneys.
Indigo was the primary crop. Eliza
Lucas, who became Eliza Pinckney,
an amateur botanist and plantation
wife, developed indigo at her
father's plantation near
Charleston.
Cotton Wealth
After the Revolutionary War,
cotton was introduced. At the peak
of the cotton prosperity, 26
plantations occupied the Island.
Additional African labor was
brought to the Island.
The
Gullah culture of the Island's
black people, which combines
aspects of African and European
traditions, came into being during
this Antebellum period.
Civil War Occupation
The
old way of life on these
plantations came to an abrupt halt
with the start of the Civil War.
President Abraham Lincoln and
Union commanders believed that the
key to victory for Union forces
lay in the blockade of all
Confederate ports. Port Royal
Sound at the north end of Hilton
Head was his first target.
Several hours after the battle for
Hilton Head began, the rebel
soldiers put up a white flag and
boarded boats to take them to the
mainland.
Post
War
After the war, Hilton Head
suffered from the wave of poverty
that afflicted all Southern
states. The Gullah, descendants of
slaves, took over about 20 percent
of the land on the Island.
The
Recent Past
In
the early 1950s, Gen. Joseph
Fraser and Fred C. Hack saw the
potential of Hilton Head Island as
a vast tree farm. They purchased
thousands of forested acres on the
Island for timber.
It
was Joseph Fraser's son, Charles,
who developed Sea Pines and
orchestrated the early growth of
the Island into a resort
community.
Modern-day Developments
The
completion of the Cross Island
Parkway, which connects the
Island's north and south ends via
a 6-mile stretch of toll road, is
one of the most recent stepping
stones in Hilton Head's
development. Construction of the
5.6-mile highway began in February
1995, but its conception dates
back to November 1957, when
developer Charles Fraser proposed
a similar route that also would
have connected the north and south
ends of Hilton Head Island via a
bridge over Broad Creek. |