Subject: Huguenot Church in St. Dennis Parish Resent-Date: Sun, 13 Sep 1998 21:06:16 -0700 (PDT) Resent-From: [email protected] Date: Sun, 13 Sep 1998 23:56:44 -0400 From: "Steven J. Coker"Reply-To: [email protected] Organization: http://members.tripod.com/~SCROOTS/index.html To: [email protected] Transactions of the Huguenot Society of South Carolina No. 5. pp 63-66, Charleston, South Carolina, 1897. Press of Walker, Evans & Cogswell Co. CHURCH IN ST. DENNIS PARISH, ORANGE OR FRENCH QUARTER. Allusion has already been made to the Huguenot Church in the Parish of St. Dennis. Soon after the Revocation and contemporaneously with the settlement on the Santee, several families of French refugees - the annals of the time say 32 - located on the banks of the eastern branch of the Cooper River. Their settlements extended from Quinby Creek southwardly and they were numerously seated on the stream now known as French Quarter Creek.[1] This settlement was distinguished by the name of Orange or French quarter. We may infer from the bequest of C�sar Moze, already mentioned, that a Church was organized by the Huguenots in that quarter, and a house of public worship erected about the year 1690, thirteen years before the first Episcopal Church at Pompoin Hill in the adjoining parish of St. Thomas. Humphrey says: "The Rev. Mr. Hasell was sent to the parish of St. Thomas in 1709, and was the first Rector of the Parish Church built of brick in 1707-8." The St. Thomas Church which still stands (1897), is located on a bluff of the eastern branch of Cooper River between the plantations Middleburg and Longwood. The St. Dennis Church which was probably never of brick has disappeared for years. It may have been near the residence of the Brabant plantation, at one time owned by Bishop Smith of South Carolina. This was near French Quarter Creek where it crosses the St. Thomas public road and generally accessible from all points of the settlement. There are several unimportant places in the neighborhood whose names now much changed in their spelling, are thought to have been French. Kirwan or Kirvan is one, by which a small creek emptying into French Quarter Creek is known. The last surviving members of the original settlement in 1870 was Mr. Dutart the original spelling of which name was Dutarque. [*] In reference to the missionary labors of Mr. Hasell, Humphrey says: "A great many young persons descended from dissenters of various tenents conformed to the Church of England and several young men of French parentage in Orange Quarter who understood English, constantly attended this Church (the St. Thomas's Church). This district of Orange Quarter is a French settlement, but in the first division of the country into parishes, was a part of St. Thomas's Parish. Few of the people attended service in the English Church for want of the language. The major part usually met together in a small Church of their own where they made a pretty full congregation when they had a French minister among them. They were poor, however, and unable to support their minister, and made application to the Assembly of the Province to be made a parish and to have some public allowance for a minister, Episcopally ordained, who should use the liturgy of the Church of England and preach to them in French. Accordingly they were incorporated by the name of the Parish of St. Dennis, 'till such time as they should understand English." The Rev. Mr. Le Pierre was the only minister of the Huguenot Church in the Orange quarter whose name has been transmitted to us. He died in 1728.[*] He appears to have been, like the members of his Church, in indigent circumstances. He was never Episcopally[*] ordained and could therefore never have received a license to preach from the Bishop of London. He was consequently never a real Rector and was necessarily excluded from the benefits of the Church, Act of 1706, which provided for a maintenance out of the public Treasury of the several ministers having parochial cures. He was indeed an object of charity and the Assembly, in view of his necessities, by Act of Oct. 1711, appropriated for his relief the sum of �20 currency, which by Act of June, 1712, was increased to �100 currency. Humphrey moreover states that during the Yemassee war of 1715, Col. Rhett, the Agent of the Missionary Society, was pleased very kindly to pay all missionaries who applied to him the money the Society had directed he should receive, and also the Reverends Le Pierre and Richebourg, two French missionaries not employed by the Society, �30 each. They were both preparing to leave the country on account of their great want, but were prevented by so seasonable a relief. The first regularly ordained Minister of St. Dennis Parish was John James Tissot who received his appointment from Dr. Gibson, Bishop of London. He officiated in the French language, using Mr. Durell's [2] translation of the book of common prayer. In the year 1755, the Rev. Commissary Garden informed the Society that most of the French refugees who had dwelt in the parish were dead, and that their descendants, understanding the English language, had united themselves to the Church of the Province and of which many had become communicants. The Rev. Mr. Tissot died in 1763, and in 1768 an Act was passed for vesting the lands and effects, lately belonging to the French Church in the Parish of St. Dennis, in the Church Wardens and Vestry of St. Thomas and St. Dennis Parish. The Huguenot names found in the early records of the Parish of St. Thomas and St. Dennis are Videau, Dupr�, Poiterin, Huger, Bonneau, Dutarque, Roche, Simons, Lejeau, Lesesne and others. ---------------- 1 The present Mr. Langdon Cheves, grandson of the distinguished congressman of the same name, a thoroughly painstaking investigator into the records of the past, is of the opinion that the Orange Quarter, or French Quarter Settlement, consisted of the refugees who arrived on board the ship of war Richmond, in 1680, as related on page 4. 2 John Durell, a Huguenot refugee, who sought an asylum in England. He was pastor of the French Church of the Savoy, in the Strand, London, 1861. [*] Indicates that a handwritten note reading "error" was found at this place in the document. These notes were made at unknown dates by an unknown critic (or critics). No supporting reasons for the inserted comments are found. ==== SCROOTS Mailing List ==== ********** STOP QUOTING ABOVE THIS LINE ********** Remaining subscribed or otherwise using the Forum in any manner constitutes acknowledgment that you have read and agreed to the Forum Policy Statement. The policy is provided automatically with new subscribe requests and is posted at the Forum web sites. http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ridge/9980/index.html SUBSCRIBE SCRoots-L mailto:[email protected]?body=subscribe SUBSCRIBE SCRoots-D mailto:[email protected]?body=subscribe UNSUBSCRIBE SCRoots-L mailto:[email protected]?body=unsubscribe UNSUBSCRIBE SCRoots-D mailto:[email protected]?body=unsubscribe Reading is to the Mind, what exercise is to the Body. - Joseph Addison