Bill Text: SC H4173 | 2023-2024 | 125th General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: State House Grounds, erecting a monument to Robert Smalls

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-04-05 - Member(s) request name added as sponsor: S.Jones [H4173 Detail]

Download: South_Carolina-2023-H4173-Introduced.html
2023-2024 Bill 4173 Text of Previous Version (Mar. 28, 2023) - South Carolina Legislature Online

South Carolina General Assembly
125th Session, 2023-2024

Bill 4173


Indicates Matter Stricken
Indicates New Matter


(Text matches printed bills. Document has been reformatted to meet World Wide Web specifications.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A concurrent RESOLUTION

 

TO allow FOR THE ERECTING of A MONUMENT TO ROBERT SMALLS on the state house grounds.

 

Whereas, the members of the General Assembly propose a monument of enduring historical significance to Robert Smalls, an escaped slave who became a Civil War hero and a legislator in the South Carolina General Assembly and served five terms in the United States House of Representatives; and

 

Whereas, Robert Smalls was born a slave on April 5, 1839, in Beaufort, South Carolina. He was the son of Lydia Polite but owned by John McKee; and

 

Whereas, during the Civil War, Mr. Smalls, illiterate and twenty-three years old, escaped by commandeering the Confederate ship, the Planter, on which he worked, delivering its black passengers from slavery to freedom through a gauntlet of gunboats and forts. Thereafter, he served the Union Army as a civilian boat pilot with distinction in numerous engagements, acted as a spokesperson for African Americans, and was made the first Black captain of an Army vessel for his valor; and

 

Whereas, Mr. Smalls served in the South Carolina House of Representatives, the South Carolina Senate, and the United States House of Representatives, enduring violent elections to achieve internal improvements for coastal South Carolina and to fight for his Black constituents in the face of growing disenfranchisement; and

 

Whereas, Mr. Smalls spoke openly in defense of his race and his party. Even with the rise of Jim Crow laws, Mr. Smalls stood firm as an unyielding advocate for the political rights of African Americans; and

 

Whereas, he was one of the first South Carolinians to advocate successfully for compulsory education; and

 

Whereas, Mr. Smalls played a critical role in bridging relations between the Black and White communities during and after Reconstruction; and

 

Whereas, he was the founder of the Enterprise Railroad Company of Charleston; and

 

Whereas, Mr. Smalls also served as brigadier general of the South Carolina Militia; opened a store for freedmen and a school for black children; published a newspaper, the Beaufort Southern Standard; and served as the U.S. Customs collector at the port of Beaufort; and

 

Whereas, he promoted the establishment of the US Naval Station at Port Royal and the purchase of Parris Island; and

 

Whereas, in 2007, the US Army named a ship after an African American for the first time, the support vessel Maj. Gen. Robert Smalls; and

 

Whereas, Mr. Smalls married Hannah Jones and, upon her death, remarried Annie Wigg. He had four children: Elizabeth, Sarah, Robert, Jr., and William Robert; and

 

Whereas, Mr. Smalls died in Beaufort on February 22, 1915, in the same house behind which he had been born and served as a slave, and later came to purchase; and

 

Whereas, a monument to honor Robert Smalls would represent the remarkable contributions, achievements, and accomplishments of this forgotten son of South Carolina and would serve as an overdue tribute to the many slaves who sacrificed alongside him. Now, therefore,

 

Be it resolved by the House of Representatives, the Senate concurring:

 

That the members of the General Assembly, by this resolution, and notwithstanding another provision of law, specifically and solely allow for the erecting of a monument to Robert Smalls on the State House grounds.

 

Be it further resolved that a copy of this resolution be forwarded to the State House Committee.

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This web page was last updated on March 28, 2023 at 08:39 PM

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