Wally Waits
©2014
Since the majority of English and Welsh citizens were farmers,
it is highly likely that John Waight was a farmer, too. Born about 1708, he lived during the period
of great change. Manors were enclosing
farm land in a shift to raising livestock.
Lords were changing from “open farming” to the concept of tenant
farming. The estate’s land was assigned
to specific families in exchange for annual payments. The result of these changes was a large number
of farmers were losing their livelihoods.
In the 1760’s, this change was nearly a century old. Perhaps the Waightes had tried tenant farming
and, as many did, found it unsustainable.
Whether or not they were either newly arrived from the farm, or they
were giving up on living in a city (Bristol?); in 1767 the decision was made to
immigrate to the British colonies in the New World.
The Waightes were apparently recruited to make the trip by
the offer of the owner of the ship St. Helena. He would ferry the six across the Atlantic in
exchange for the Colony of South Carolina’s payment for Protestant
immigrants. This probably explains how
the choice was made to go to a southern colony.
This also suggests that the Waightes were nearly indigent at
least to the point of being unable to pay their own way and still have enough
money left over to start fresh. They very
well may have boarded the St. Helena with only a little money in their pockets,
a few small possessions and the clothes on their backs.
After the St. Helena left the port of Bristol, England, it
sailed for more than a month southwest across the Atlantic Ocean to its home
port in Charlestown, Colony of South Carolina.
The St. Helena was usually loaded with a freight cargo. This is the only known time the St. Helena took
immigrants to Charlestown.
Philadelphian Pelatiah Webster[1]
arrived at the same port three years earlier.
His first view of the coast was of “low lands” and very few places of
raised land. The Waightes on board the
St. Helena probably had the same view and experiences.
There were a few seagoing ships visible in the harbor. On Monday February 1st, five
vessels had arrived at Charlestown. The
next day two more arrived. On Wednesday,
when the St. Helena arrived, it was one among six that arrived in the harbor. While no more sailed into Charlestown on Thursday,
Friday saw the arrival of 25 new ships including four[2]
that probably sailed from Bristol on the same wind as the St. Helena.
The St. Helena was one of about 450 that arrived at the
entrance to the Charlestown harbor in 1768.[3]
Captain George Arthur ordered the
lowering of the sails and then dropped anchor.
The “harbor bar at Charleston” required ships of 200 tons or more to
lighten their load in order to cross into the harbor.[4] With a cargo capacity of 1000 barrels, the
St. Helena could carry 625,000 pounds of rice. This capacity meant that the St.
Helena was rated at over 300 tons. So
Capt. Arthur would have waited for the harbor pilot. Before long, a small sailboat arrived at the
St. Helena’s side bearing the harbor pilot who guided the St. Helena across the
sand bar that blocked much of the harbor’s entrance. It took a couple of hours for the St. Helena
to drop anchor a second time once inside the harbor.
In 1765, Webster’s ship dropped anchor 100 fathoms, or about
600 feet, from shore near the “market house.”
This market house was one for the sale of fish. Two other markets were for vegetables or
produce and for meat. They served much
like a farmer’s market of the present day and were opened each morning by the
ringing of bells. Later travelers
observed buzzards feasting on the beef, pork and fish remains at the markets.[5]
Sloops arriving from Caribbean ports were small enough to
sail directly up to the wharf. The wharf
led directly to the Customs House. The Royal
Customs House was where the passengers and cargo passed through and officially
entered the colony. Trading companies
counted their incoming and outgoing cargo at the Customs House. The people there would have included buyers
and sellers making deals, clerks tallying the barrels and crates of merchandise
being on-loaded and off-loaded, and the curious townsman looking for the latest
foreign news about events in the other colonies and overseas.
Businessmen would be especially interested in the latest
information about the changes in currency exchange rates and the demand for
commodities in European markets.[6]
Merchants would eagerly listen for news about ships reaching foreign ports and the latest losses of ships at sea.
Merchants would eagerly listen for news about ships reaching foreign ports and the latest losses of ships at sea.
At the Custom House, there were many crates and barrels
stacked in preparations for loading on either outgoing freighters or freight
wagons destined for the Charlestown businesses.
The port at Charlestown was much smaller than the ports at
Philadelphia or New York City, and was tiny compared to English or European
ports. In British shipping, however, the
Charlestown port was second only to that of Virginia and Maryland. Most of the
arrivals dropped anchor from December to May when Charlestown was at its
busiest.[7]
The Brig Lord Dungannon also arrived Wednesday, but shortly
after the St. Helena dropped anchor. It brought
139 Irish immigrants to Charlestown. They
were among the 3,000 Irish who arrived between 1761 and 1768.[8]
There was a Waits family aboard the Brig Lord Dungannon. It consisted of John (age 24), Mary (age 23)
and Eleanor (age 2) among the passengers.
Given that this brigantine put to sea at Belfast, Ireland, there is
little likelihood of a close family connection with the Waightes. This idea about non-kinship is reinforced by
the fact that the Irish family did not select land near the Waightes, nor are
there later records that might suggest any type of association.
The Lord Dungannon was a “bounty” ship that carried a human
cargo much like a “slaver” ship did. The
difference between the two was that the Irish were recruited by ship owners to
immigrate.[9] Many were said to have suffered greatly from
little food and crowding during their voyage.
The colony paid the ship owners £2 for the Irish youth between the ages
of 2 and 15. For adults over the age of 15 there was a payment of £4 sterling.
Activity at the Charlestown harbor just bustled and hummed
starting Friday. To the Waightes, the
crowded harbor would have been a topic of conversation. A survey in 1770 counted 1292 dwelling houses
and an estimated population of 5,000 white and 5,800 black inhabitants.[10]
The Waightes had to find lodging in a tavern at as none was
provided by the colony for the immigrants.
Until the colonial government paid 20 shillings each to help the new
immigrant survive until their first harvest, the Waightes had been forced to
spend the meager savings they had when boarding the St. Helena.
After wandering about the streets of Charles Town for ten
days, it was time for the immigrants to go to apply for the land promised by
the colonial government. It was a
madhouse on Feb. 13th when the Waightes entered the state house.
They followed the Irish immigrants who were aboard the Brig.
Lord Dungannon. Just like the Irish, they
were asked to hand over a “certificate of good character.” This certificate could have been signed by
either a court official or a church minister.
If they had no certificate, they had to attest that they were of
Protestant faith. Then the immigrant
swore allegiance to King George II.
As the Waightes meandered their way from the Colonial
Secretary’s office, to the Treasurer’s office, they jostled elbows with the
other immigrants trying to stay together as they moved through the State
House. At last, the six Waightes were
paid £6, which amounted to 120 shillings sterling to cover the cost of
necessities such as tools and seed for starting a farm. One pound in 1768 was worth $180 in today’s
dollars.[11]
The money set aside by the Colony of South Carolina to fund
the immigration program was all spent by the following July. At that time, the flood of new settlers
ended. Payment for immigrants ended
except for a couple of ship loads of immigrants, for who had sailed before word
arrived in European ports that the colony was no longer paying for Protestant
immigrants.
Thereafter, the colonial government ceased recording the
arrival of immigrants. The records were
never kept for people who could afford their passage fares, or who had friends
or family to pay the fare for them.
[1] Journal
of a Voyage to Charlestown in So. Carolina by Pelatiah Webster in 1765.
Found at http://books.google.com/books?id=m7E-AAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=inauthor:webster+inauthor:pelatiah&hl=en&sa=X&ei=3rUtVNbJB4-byASbyoD4Cg&ved=0CDkQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false
[2]South
Carolina Immigrants, 1760 to 1770, by Moreland & Warren, p. 259-260. The four Bristol ships were the Ship Indian King, Snow Elizabeth, Brigt. Unanimity, and Brigt. Barclay.
[3] Charleston
Business on the Eve of the American Revolution, by Leila Sellers, p. 11.
[4] Charleston
Business on the Eve of the American Revolution, by Leila Sellers, p. 4. The “bar” was the sand and silt that piled up
at harbor entrances often requiring ships to be lightened before entry into the
harbor. The harbor pilot knew where the
deeper water was enabling to sail across gaps where the bar was lower.
[5] Charleston
Business on the Eve of the American Revolution, p. 21.
[6] Robert
Morris: Financier of the American Revolution, by Charles Rappleye, p. 11,
25.
[7] Journal
of a Voyage to Charlestown in So. Carolina by Pelatiah Webster in 1765, p.
7.
[8] South
Carolina: A History, by Walter B. Edgar, p. 59.
[10] Charleston
Business on the Eve of the American Revolution, p. 15.
[11] Historical Currency Conversions, at http://futureboy.homeip.net/fsp/dollar.fsp?quantity=1¤cy=pounds&fromYear=1768,
says that 1 English pound in 1768 would equal 180.3 USD in 2014. One British pound also was the same as 20
shillings.
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