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Fort Hill Walking Tour
Item 14 of 23
This is a contributing entry for Fort Hill Walking Tour and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.
The oldest part of Fort Hill was constructed around 1803 to serve as a manse or parsonage for a nearby church, Hopewell-Keowee Presbyterian, today called Old Stone Presbyterian Church. Reverend James McElhenny served as a part-time pastor of the church and built Clergy Hall. In 1810, twenty-five enslaved persons were living with Reverend McElhenny, his wife Susannah Wilkinson, and their family. This room served as the kitchen for Clergy Hall and the large fireplace along one wall was the primary cooking fireplace. During the Calhouns' time, this room became the family dining room and today it is Fort Hill's Gift Shop and small item display room.

Family Dining Room and Museum Shop

Family Dining Room and Museum Shop

Gift Shop

Gift Shop

Family Dining Room and Clergy Hall Kitchen

Family Dining Room and Clergy Hall Kitchen

Order of Leopold Medallion as Presented to Thomas Green Clemson by King Leopold I (on display in this room)

Order of Leopold Medallion as Presented to Thomas Green Clemson by King Leopold I (on display in this room)

Thomas Green Clemson Signet Ring depicting Marcus Aurelius

Thomas Green Clemson Signet Ring depicting Marcus Aurelius

Display Case containing small personal items pertaining to the people of Fort Hill

Display Case containing small personal items pertaining to the people of Fort Hill

The McElhenny's would have used the fireplace in this room as the primary cooking fireplace for the home, but the Calhouns' chose to move their kitchen to a separate building. This was often done during the time to protect from the spread of potential fires, as well as to stem some of the heat that would have been pouring from the kitchen in the hot summer months. In the display cases in this room are a variety of small artifacts from the Calhoun and Clemson families.

These objects can reveal a great deal about the lives of the people who lived at Fort Hill, things like: documents detailing Calhoun's commission as Secretary of War, buttons from his travel cloak, and even a gift from Japan. In another case you will see pieces connected to the women of the Calhoun and Clemson families: earrings and a necklace, a lace bobbin, an ivory parasol handle, and even a piece of mourning jewelry. Mourning jewelry is a tradition common during the Victorian era and the woven bracelet inside the second case is made of John C. Calhoun's hair, and even contains a lock of his hair in the face of the bracelet. This would have been worn by one of the Calhoun women who mourned the loss of John C. Calhoun after his death in 1850.

“Educational Resources | Clemson University, South Carolina.” Accessed May 21, 2020. https://www.clemson.edu/about/history/properties/ed.html.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

image courtesy of Fort Hill

image courtesy of Fort Hill

“Fort Hill, Clemson University Campus, Clemson, Pickens County, SC,” image, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, accessed July 22, 2020, https://www.loc.gov/item/sc0118/.

image courtesy of Fort Hill

image courtesy of Fort Hill

image courtesy of Fort Hill