St. George Dorchester Parish, South Carolina

United States South Carolina  St. George Dorchester Parish

Also known as St. George Parish.

History
Before the American Revolution, the state church of South Carolina was the Church of England (also called the Anglican Church, and later the Protestant Episcopal Church). Besides keeping parish registers, the church kept many records of a civil nature in their vestry books. The Vestry was as much a political body as a religious one. The wardens and commissioners were responsible for the roads, education, the poor and orphans, voting and collecting taxes in addition to their church duties.

Founded
St. George Dorchester Parish (Dorchester, Dorchester, SC) was created in 1717 from the northwest part of St. Andrew's Parish on the northwest side of Berkeley (1682-1768) County.

Boundary
Borders: St. Andrew's, St. James Goose Creek, St. Paul's, St. Bartholomew's, and since 1768 St. Matthew's parishes. For a map, see: Early parishes in South Carolina. An overlay of districts is available at Carolana.com.

St. George Dorchester Parish served Dorchester County and historic Charleston District. The British burned the church during the Revolutionary War, and despite being rebuilt in part, it fell into disuse.

Research Guides

 * South Carolina Archives Summary Guide: St. George Dorchester Parish, available online, courtesy: South Carolina Department of Archives and History.

Cemetery
McElligott made a professional reading of the tombstones at the ruins of this church:


 * McElligott, Carroll Ainsworth. "St. George's Church Cemetery, Dorchester County," The South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Spring 1985):87-90.

Select graves at St. George's Parish Church Cemetery are described in various Find A Grave databases:


 * 1) Old Saint Georges Anglican Church Cemetery (18 graves)
 * 2) Saint George's Parish Church Cemetery (10 graves)
 * 3) Saint George's Episcopal Church and Cemetery (1 grave)

Members of the DAR did a survey of St. George's Church Cemetery:


 * National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution. Cemetery Records of South Carolina. Typescript. . [Includes St. George's Church Cemetery in Dorchester.]

Census
A 1726 Census for St. George Dorchester Parish survives. It was taken by Rev. Francis Varnod and is kept in the Archives of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in London (Letter dated 21 Jan 1726, Reference A19, 104). It lists the names of heads of household and statistics on white men, women, and children, as well as slaves. Abstract:


 * Floyd, Randleson A. "Names and Number of the Inhabitants of St. George's Parish, South Carolina as Inclosed in Mr. Varnod's Letter of 21 January 1725/6 to The Society for the Propogation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts," The South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research, Vol. 33, No. 2 (Spring 2005):77-79.

1790 and 1800 censuses of the parish have been published:


 * Jarrell, Lawrence E. Early Colleton, South Carolina Census. Complete Transcription of the Federal Census Records; 1790 Charleston District Census, St. Bartholomew's, St. George's-Dorchester; St. Paul's and St. John's-Colleton Parishes; 1800 Colleton District Census--St. Bartholomew's, St. George's-Dorchester and St. Paul's Parishes; 1810 Colleton District Census. High Point, N.C.: Alligator Creek Genealogy Publications, 1998.

Parish History
For an early history of the parish, see Chapter 18, St. George's Parish, Dorchester, pages 345-350, in:


 * Dalcho, Frederick. An Historical Account of the Protestant Episcopal Church in South Carolina from the First Settlement of the Province, to the War of the Revolution; with Notices of the Present State of the Church in Each Parish and Some Account of the Early Civil History of Carolina, Never Before Published. Charleston: E. Thayer, 1820. ; digital versions at Google Books; Internet Archive.

Websites

 * Parish Church of St. George, Dorchester, The Historical Marker Database
 * The Bell Tower of St. George's Marker, The Historical Marker Database