Edgefield County, SC
Total population (1850): 39,262
Enslaved population (1850): 22,725
Percent slave: 58%
Extant nineteenth-century inquests: 524
Date range: 1829-1899
Percentage of violent crimes in county sample: 39% (202/524)
The small, rural district of Edgefield, South Carolina was the Deadwood of its day, amassing a reputation for murder and mayhem unique in the nation. Forget the gangs of New York, the toughs in tailored suits strutting about Edgefield's Court House Square were up for almost anything. Take this typical exchange between Thomas Cherry and Charles Cobb.
Cherry: "You Damn puppy."
Cobb: "What are you?"
Cherry: "Do you mean to call me a Damn puppy?"
Cobb: "What are you?"
Cherry: "If you call me a Puppy, I will ag you in the face."
Cobb: "You are nothing else."
With that Cherry stabbed Cobb through the face with an umbrella.
"If we over in Edgefield insult each other, there is generally a fight or a funeral afterwards," noted Ben Tillman, one of the ten men of the district to serve the state as governor. Like Tillman, circuit judge Thomas Mackey took an almost perverse pride in the region's reputation. "I am going to hold court in Edgefield," he told a friend, "and I expect a somewhat exciting term, as the fall shooting is about to start."
Like most reputations, Edgefield's was at once deserved and exaggerated. At 39 percent, Edgefield County does have the highest proportion of violent crimes in the CSI:D sample. At 35 percent, Greenville County is not that far behind. More important, Edgefield's reputation for affairs of honor masks the mountain of dishonorable violence revealed by the morgue. Men spoiling for a fight on the street are rarely much different at home. In June 1893, Bill Gasten was sitting near his wood pile when his wife emerged from the house to draw some water from the well. Something she said set him off and he grabbed up a walking stick, hit her with it, then threw her down and began choking her. Emerging from the kitchen, her sister grabbed up the stick and told Bill to "let his wife alone." She had just started back to the kitchen when Bill cracked her head with a hoe.
Edgefield County, SC Inquests
Name | Deceased Description | Date | Inquest Location | Death Type | Death Method |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Peter | negro man | June 16, 1838 | at a Mr. Azariah[?] Abneys | Homicide | stick |
Mary Blocker | December 6, 1894 | at R H Parks | Accident | strychnine | |
Edward Horton | August 7, 1879 | near Wesley Barrs[?] | Accident | sunstroke | |
Manerva Sanders | March 22, 1890 | at Webb S.C | Accident | tornado | |
James Blocker | May 6, 1897 | Accident | train | ||
Richard | negroe Boy | April 21, 1863 | in the District of Edgefield | Accident | train |
Emanuel Johnson | October 7, 1893 | at Wards | Accident | train | |
Ezekiel Thomas | February 4, 1879 | near Johnstons | Accident | train | |
Fannie Ford | March 5, 1893 | at Trenton S.C. | Accident | train | |
Isaac | negro man | December 1, 1856 | at a point on the South Carolina Rail Road [?] Brooks Mill creek | Accident | train |
Albert Brunson | June 26, 1895 | at Edgefield CH | Accident | train | |
George Delaughter | April 30, 1861 | at the Hamburg Passenger Depot | Accident | train | |
Wallace Halloway | June 25, 1895 | at Edgefield Court house | Accident | train | |
Henry Peterson | June 13, 1893 | at Ridge Spring | Accident | train | |
Andrew | negro man | October 6, 1855 | on the track of the South Carolina Rail Road | Accident | train |
Sam | negro man | October 19, 1856 | on the track of the South Carolina Rail Road between the Paper Mill and Marsh's | Accident | train |
Hugh Wetherford | June 25, 1895 | at Edgefield CH | Accident | train | |
Unknown | October 10, 1869 | at Graniteville | Accident | train | |
Charles Cobb | March 13, 1893 | at or near Johnston | Homicide | umbrella | |
Aron | slave, boy | June 15, 1862 | near the White house | Suicide | vine |
Henry Langley | April 2, 1848 | at Wm Vances | Accident | wagon | |
John Radford | April 12, 1860 | at the residence of John Radford | Accident | wagon | |
Billy | November 28, 1857 | at the South Carolina Rail Road | Accident | wagon | |
Uriah Koon | October 16, 1847 | at the house of Col John Hunt | Accident | wagon |