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At the University of South Carolina is a striking classical Greek building known as the South Caroliniana Library. It was built in 1840 by the outstanding architect Robert Mills and was said to be the first American college building for a separate library.
The building anchors one side of the open end of a “horseshoe” of sturdy dignified buildings all built before the War for Southern Independence. Antebellum South Carolina College was intended to be and was a strong, recognised institution with an internationally distinguished faculty. The Library contained rare materials, including a first edition Audubon. The Library escaped Sherman’s fires but South Carolina College did not escape Reconstruction and suffered the same decline as its impoverished state. In the World War II era some insightful people who loved their State, led by Robert Meriwether, formed a South Caroliniana Society. The Society was allowed to take over the Library for the keeping of its assiduously collected historical materials. The Library thus for decades became busy as a major research institution, drawing outstanding historians from around the world to its collections. In the early 2020s it was decided that the Library need “renovation,” a project completed in 2023. I am not surprised to see the Library “brought up to date,” but I am abysmally disappointed at the extent of the “renovation.” Everything reflecting South Carolina history and culture is gone. I expected the removal of the stone plaque to Preston Brooks, who thrashed the cowardly Charles Sumner of Massachusetts who had refused a duel for his insults. But I did not expect to see the entire removal of anything reminiscent of South Carolina. The Library is now full of trivial “exhibits” that would not be out of place in an Ohio museum. It has also become something of a center for African American materials and meetings, which is fine. The greatest loss is the removal of the gallery of fine paintings of outstanding South Carolinians, including women, that once was a striking feature. A few years ago, for more than a decade, the University had a President who had left Michigan just ahead of the sheriff. His tenure finally was ended when an out-of-state newspaper dug up documents from a landfill and he went to his proper place in the penitentiary. I mention this because this fellow tried to remove the portraits to the president’s mansion. But they were the property of the South Caroliniana Society, which blocked his attempt. But the times have changed. The “renovated” Library has replaced the portraits with exhibits and inferior paintings of unknown people. The precious art has been moved and hidden in a closed room in the big modern library. Insider information tells me that one of the portraits is damaged and another missing. This remarkable vision of old South Carolina history and culture can no longer be seen in public. I cannot really blame what has happened on increased African American influence or on the Woke ideology pervasive in academic institutions. The real cause is that the leaders of the State have abandoned their heritage and created a world of Babbitry. They have yearned for a university that resembles the American mainstream, a second string Ohio State.
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The 17-year-old Emma LeConte kept a full diary during the havoc reeked by Sherman’s uniformed arsonists and looters on the city of Columbia, South Carolina, which she saw up close. Incomplete and distorted versions of the diary have been made into books in the past. The true and complete thing has now been provided by two outstanding Southern historians—Karen Stokes and James Kibler. Shotwell Publishing has just brought out their work as The Diary of Emma Leconte: A Story of War and Survival, 1864-1865. Emma lived on the South Carolina College campus in what is now known as Lieber College, a place where I spent a good deal of time in earlier and better years. Lieber is at the open end of what is called The Horseshoe, two lines of wonderful antebellum buildings. It is directly across from the now de-Southernised South Caroliniana Library, where I also spent a lot of time. Emma was the daughter of Joseph LeConte, an eminent scientist and professor. She saw and heard what was going on during the December night when Sherman was at work intimidating women and old folks, destroying their houses and other city institutions, and looting the property of the population. She also observed and recorded the aftereffects. The liberators in blue did not spare the black people from their atrocities. On the positive side, some of the Union soldiers were so drunk that they perished in their own fires. The college remained relatively unscathed, though in the midst of a large devastated area. It had a wall around it made up of sturdy buildings and was considered not to have much useful loot. Union soldiers did manage to set fire to the roofs of two buildings where wounded Southern soldiers were, but the wounded men were able to put out the fires. Emma felt deeply the sufferings of her family and friends and townspeople, but she recorded facts. Those interested in this book should also look for Joseph LeConte’s ‘Ware Sherman: A Journal of Three Months’ Personal Experience in the Last Days of the Confederacy. The book was published in 1937 by another of LeConte’s daughters, Caroline, with interesting drawings. The LSU Press brought out a version in 1999, but the work is now rare and hard to find. LeConte and his brother John were Confederate scientists. He vividly describes the weeks following the fire, during which he made trips to the country to bring back food to devastated Columbia while avoiding being made prisoner by the Union. This is relatively unnoticed history. Among other insufficiently noticed history was the good will shown by some Northerners after the war. Joseph and his brother were among the first professors to be appointed to the newly-established University of California at Berkely in the late 1860s. They were already distinguished, versatile, and prolific scientists and they were recommended by many of the distinguished scientific men of the time. Their careers in California were long and honoured. Joseph became the president of several national societies and was noted, among other things, as a conservationist. It was the University of California Press that first published ‘Ware Sherman.” While refamiliarising yourself with the destruction of Columbia, also take a look at A City Laid Waste, the 2005 edition of the work of the great William Gilmore Siimms, also a firsthand witness to the event who wrote shortly thereafter. His newspaper report, later a pamphlet, is called The Capture, Sack, and Destruction of the City of Columbia. It is good to remember the destruction of Columbia which is greatly documented, although it was only one of hundreds of such happenings. There are people, including local carpetbaggers, who still retell Sherman’s lie that the fire was caused by Confederates. Keep in mind what happened to our people, mine and yours, when their independence and self-rule was dishonourably suppressed by the invasion and conquest of their own government which they had founded and had until then supported with sacrifice. |
AuthorClyde Wilson is a distinguished Professor Emeritus of History at the University of South Carolina He is the author or editor of over thirty books and published over 600 articles, essays and reviews Archives
April 2026
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