Lot 914

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Description:

Alva M. Lumpkin Jr. family papers and photographs 18th through 20th centuries, consisting of;
personal journal of Alva M. Lumpkin, Jr. December 25, 1945-1950 with additional entry in 1999;
FORENSIC ELOQUENCE SKETCHES OF TRIALS IN IRELAND FOR HIGH TREASON, ETC. New York: Brisban and Brannan, 1806. Leatherbound book inscribed: Thomas Waties on title page;
18th century manuscript map for Betaw swamp and areas belonging to Colonel William Waties, H14 1/2" W19"
1742 dated William Bull signed land grant, Craven County, H10" W22";
3 scrapbooks and quotation book kept by John P. Thomas Jr.;
Candy Yaghjian Waites (South Carolina, b.1943) LUMPKIN FAMILY HOME, watercolor, framed, signed; lower right, sight size; H8" W10";
assortment of 19th through 20th century letters by Waties, Thomas and Lumpkin family members;
together with variety of family photos, CDVs and two early 19th century portrait miniatures of ancestors and one sterling framed portrait of officer, possibly Capt. John C. Waties monogramed KCW (Kate Calhoun Waties).

Provenance: Willodene Rion Lumpkin collection.
Alva Moore Lumpkin Jr. (1921-2005)
Alva Moore Lumpkin (1886-1941)

Other Notes: Alva M. Lumpkin Jr. (1921-2005) was the son of Representative Alva M. Lumpkin (1886-1941) and Mary Sumter Thomas Lumpkin (1885-1966). He attended Davidson College, and graduated from the University of South Carolina and USC Law School. He was an Army veteran of WWII, and began his practice of law in the firm founded by his grandfather, John Peyre Thomas, Jr. (1857-1946).
He served in the SC House of Representatives from 1948-1950.

Alva Moore Lumpkin (1886-1941) was a United States Senator from Columbia, South Carolina. He was a prominent lawyer in the city and also served in the South Carolina Senate and South Carolina House of Representatives. He descended from the Calhoun, Thomas, Parker, Rutledge and Waties families of South Carolina.

Thomas Waties (1760-1828) was a Revolutionary War hero who served under Francis Marion. Following the war he served the state of South Carolina as a lawyer and judge. He ran a large plantation near the village of Stateburg and was a member of the convention who voted to ratify the Constitution in 1788.

John Peyre Thomas, M.D. (1796-1859) was born at Betaw Plantation in Berkeley County, South Carolina and was educated at South Carolina College. He owned several plantations including Oak Grove, Pineville and Buckpond. His son Colonel John [Jack] Peyre Thomas was born in 1833 (died 1912). He was educated at the Citadel. In 1861 he commanded a battery at Commings Point on Morris Island and was commended by Gen. Beauregard for his skills. After the battle he became the Superintendant of the Arsenal in Columbia. He also organized a regiment of volunteers called Thomas's Regiment for the defense of Columbia in 1864 and he was given the title of Colonel. After the war he returned to Columbia where he was active in politics, editing the PHOENIX and the SOUTH CAROLINIAN. He then moved to Charlotte and founded the Carolina Military Institute. He then reopened the Citadel in Charleston in 1882. He married Mary Carolina Gibbes and they too had a son named John Peyre Thomas Jr. (1857-1946).

John Peyre Thomas Jr. was educated at South Carolina College and the Carolina Military Institute. He taught briefly at CMI before attending law school at the University of Virginia. He moved back to Columbia and became active in education as Chairman of the Board of Education, then Professor of law at the University of South Carolina and later Dean of the Law School. One of the city schools in Columbia is named after him. He married Mary Sumter Waties.

John Waring Parker (1803-1882) married Catharine Devaul Calhoun (1807-1892). He was a prominent physician in Columbia, South Carolina and Superintendent at the Lunatic Asylum.

Captain John Waties (1828-1872) was the son of Thomas Waties (1794-1830) and Maria Huger Rutledge (1794-1840). In 1853 he married Frances Augusta Parker (1830-1909) daughter of John Waring Parker (1803-1882) and Catharine Devaul Calhoun (1807-1892).
He operated a law practice with William K. Bachman before and after the Civil War. He served as a Captain in the Palmetto Artillery, Company B and was promoted to Chief of the Mounted Artillery of General Jackson's Cavalry Division. He was injured in the battle of Franklin. His obituary published in the Daily South Carolinian on April 30, 1872 stated that the injuries he sustained during war so weakened his constitution that he suffered from illness until his death of an unknown disease in 1872.

    Condition:
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December 2, 2012 1:00 PM EST
West Columbia, SC, US

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