 New Bordeaux
Posted by: TheConaways
N 33° 55.327 W 082° 24.811
17S E 369340 N 3754420
New Bordeaux settlement in McCormick County, SC
Waymark Code: WMPR1
Location: South Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 09/06/2006
Views: 41
The French landed in South Carolina in 1764 to found New Bordeaux, a town to be located in the Hillsborough Township. The town is long gone, but a cross stands at the site of the 1764 Worship Site just up the road, and several prominent Huguenots are buried at the nearby Badwell Cemetery.
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Text on marker.
Side 1
The town of New Bordeaux, the last of seven French Huguenot colonies founded in colonial S.C. and the only one in the upcountry, was established 1 mi. E in 1764. After Protestants fleeing religious persecution in France petitioned the British crown for land to create a permanent settlement in S.C., they received a 28,000-acre grant in the newly-formed Hillsborough Township.
Side 2
Almost 200 French Huguenots led by Rev. Jean Louis Gibert (1721-1773) landed at Charleston in April 1764 and began settling here in August. Others followed, including a group led by Jean Louis Demesnil De St. Pierre (d. 1776), which arrived in 1768. The colony, which produced silk and wine on a modest scale, later furnished a militia company during the American Revolution.
Marker Name: New Bordeaux
 Marker Location: Roadside
 Type of Marker: Other
 Marker number: 33-13
 County: McCormick

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