Butler Island (Georgia)
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Butler Island is an 1,600-acre (647.5 hectare)
island An island (or isle) is an isolated piece of habitat that is surrounded by a dramatically different habitat, such as water. Very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys. An island ...
in the
Altamaha River The Altamaha River is a major river in the U.S. state of Georgia. It flows generally eastward for 137 miles (220 km) from its origin at the confluence of the Oconee River and Ocmulgee River towards the Atlantic Ocean, where it empt ...
in McIntosh County,
Georgia Georgia most commonly refers to: * Georgia (country), a country in the Caucasus region of Eurasia * Georgia (U.S. state), a state in the Southeast United States Georgia may also refer to: Places Historical states and entities * Related to the ...
, United States. Part of the Altamaha River Delta, the island is located south-southeast of
Darien, Georgia Darien () is a city in and the county seat of McIntosh County, Georgia, United States. It lies on Georgia's coast at the mouth of the Altamaha River, approximately south of Savannah, and is part of the Brunswick, Georgia Metropolitan Statisti ...
. The Altamaha River divides in the delta, and the northernmost branch is -long and called the Butler River. This flows north of the
boomerang A boomerang () is a thrown tool, typically constructed with aerofoil sections and designed to spin about an axis perpendicular to the direction of its flight. A returning boomerang is designed to return to the thrower, while a non-returning ...
-shaped Butler Island. Interstate 95 crosses the west section of Butler Island. US Route 17 crosses east section of Butler Island, and connects it to General's Island and Darien. A local landmark is the -tall brick chimney of the
Butler Island Plantation Butler Island Plantation is a former rice plantation located on Butler Island on the Altamaha River delta just South of Darien, Georgia. It was originally owned by Major Pierce Butler (1744–1822) and was also owned by Tillinghast L'Hommedieu H ...
rice mill.


Major Butler

Butler Island was named for its original owner, Major
Pierce Butler Pierce or Piers Butler may refer to: *Piers Butler, 8th Earl of Ormond (c. 1467 – 26 August 1539), Anglo-Irish nobleman in the Peerage of Ireland *Piers Butler, 3rd Viscount Galmoye (1652–1740), Anglo-Irish nobleman in the Peerage of Ireland * P ...
(1744–1822), a Founding Father and a U.S. Senator from South Carolina. Butler was the third son of an Irish baronet and an officier in the
British Army The British Army is the principal land warfare force of the United Kingdom, a part of the British Armed Forces along with the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force. , the British Army comprises 79,380 regular full-time personnel, 4,090 Gurk ...
, who came to the Colonies to quell a 1768 uprising in Boston. He married Mary Middleton in 1771, an heiress from a South Carolina slaveholding family. He took the American side in the Revolutionary War, serving as Adjutant-General of the South Carolina Militia.Pierce Butler
from National Constitution Center.
He was one of South Carolina's four delegates to the 1787 Constitutional Convention, at which he was an ardent defender of slavery. He served in the U.S. Senate from 1789 to 1796, and returned to fill out an unexpired term, 1803–1804.


Georgia plantations

Following his wife's 1790 death, Major Butler sold off the last of their South Carolina holdings and invested in Georgia Sea Island plantations. The plantations initially were worked by his South Carolina enslaved,Jingle Davis, ''Island Time: An Illustrated History of St. Simons Island, Georgia'' (Augusta: University of Georgia Press, 2013). but he purchased 80 Virginia enslaved in 1801, and a group of enslaved recently shipped from West Africa in 1802. The West Africans had experience in rice-growing, and learned enough English to be added to the workforce in 1803. In the early decades, the cash crop was the cotton grown on St. Simon's Island, but as Hampton's soil became depleted, the cash crop became the rice grown on Butler Island.
Roswell King Roswell King (May 3, 1765 – February 15, 1844) was an American enslaver, plantation manager, businessman, planter, and industrialist. Together with his son, Barrington King, he founded Roswell Manufacturing Company in the Georgia Piedmont, establ ...
managed Major Butler's Georgia plantations from 1802 to 1819. He conducted a slave census in 1803, listing 540 enslaved by name, and rating each by her/his ability to labor—a "quarter," "half," "three-quarters," or "full" hand. Most plantations had a white overseer, with a trusted black "headman" or "driver" working under him. At its height, the Butler Island Plantation had a white overseer, a black "head driver," and four "drivers."Mart A. Stewart, ''What Nature Suffers to Groe: Life, Labor, and Landscape on the Georgia Coast, 1680-1920'' (Augusta: University of Georgia Press, 2002), p. 128.
Major Butler was a stern disciplinarian, governing the slaves on his plantation with military strictness. The Butler plantations were models of efficiency. Everything needed was manufactured on the plantation from shoes and clothes to furniture and tools. After a visit to Butler's Island, Sir Charles Lyell wrote: "The negro houses were neat and whitewashed, all floored with wood, each with an apartment called the hall, two sleeping rooms, and a loft for the children." Sea Island cotton was the main crop at Hampton, while rice was cultivated at Butler's Island.
Five months after his burning of the White House in the
War of 1812 The War of 1812 (18 June 1812 – 17 February 1815) was fought by the United States, United States of America and its Indigenous peoples of the Americas, indigenous allies against the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, United Kingdom ...
, British Admiral George Cockburn sailed into the Altamaha River Sound, in January 1815. He offered freedom to the enslaved Africans held by Major Butler on St. Simon's Island, and 138 of them accepted the offer. The British Navy transported the newly-freed to
Nova Scotia Nova Scotia ( ; ; ) is one of the thirteen provinces and territories of Canada. It is one of the three Maritime provinces and one of the four Atlantic provinces. Nova Scotia is Latin for "New Scotland". Most of the population are native Eng ...
, and assigned them the surname "Butler." Major Butler became the largest slaveholder in coastal Georgia, "owning as many as a thousand slaves and cultivating three plantations—Hampton on St. Simons Island, Butler Island in the Altamaha River opposite Darien; and Woodville, several miles further up the Altamaha above Butler's Island."Margaret Davis Cate, ''Our Todays and Yesterdays: A Story of Brunswick and the Coastal Islands'' (Brunswick, GA: Glover Bros., Inc., 1930). Woodville was used to grow corn and raise livestock for the plantations. Hampton was located on St. Simon's Island, about downstream from Butler Island. The Butler Island and Hampton plantations operated as a unit. About 60% of the enslaved were housed in four settlements on Butler Island. Cultivation of rice required more strenuous work than cotton, and the Butler Island workforce was younger and stronger. Because of the threat of
malaria Malaria is a mosquito-borne infectious disease that affects humans and other animals. Malaria causes symptoms that typically include fever, tiredness, vomiting, and headaches. In severe cases, it can cause jaundice, seizures, coma, or death. S ...
, pregnant women, many of the children, older workers, and the infirmed were housed at Hampton, which was considered healthier.William Dusinberre, ''The Dark Days: Slavery in the American Rice Swamps'' (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996). Between 1819 and 1834, "over half of the children at Butler Island had succumbed o deathbefore age six." Roswell King, Jr. succeeded his father, managing the Butler plantations from 1819 to 1838,Buddy Sullivan, ''"All Under Bank": Roswell King, Jr. and Plantation Management in Tidewater Georgia'' (Hinesville, GA: Liberty County Historical Society, 2003). and from 1841 to 1853. At the time of his February 15, 1822 death in Philadelphia, Major Butler held 638 enslaved Africans on the Georgia plantations.Michael Karpyn, "Pierce Butler and Charles Ingersoll," ''Exploring Diversity in Pennsylvania History'' (PDF)
from Historical Society of Pennsylvania.


Rice production

Rice was grown in sunken, flooded fields, and required a complex management of fresh water to maximize the yield. Dikes were built around the paddies to keep out the
brackish water Brackish water, sometimes termed brack water, is water occurring in a natural environment that has more salinity than freshwater, but not as much as seawater. It may result from mixing seawater (salt water) and fresh water together, as in estuari ...
that surrounded them at high tide. In tidewater Georgia, rice was usually ready to harvest in late August, when the grains were starting to harden. The flooded paddies were drained, and workers used small sickles to sever each stalk at the base. The stalks were bound into sheaves, and stacked in ricks for the rice to cure. The stalks were cut away, and the cured rice boiled in vats, dried, and threshed to separate the kernels from the chaff. The kernels then were pounded using wooden
mortar and pestle Mortar and pestle is a set of two simple tools used from the Stone Age to the present day to prepare ingredients or substances by crushing and grinding them into a fine paste or powder in the kitchen, laboratory, and pharmacy. The ''mortar'' ( ...
s to loosen the hulls, the hard outer coating of each grain. The pounded kernels then were carried in tightly-woven baskets up a ladder into the
winnowing barn Winnowing barns (or winnowing houses) were structures commonly found in South Carolina on antebellum rice plantations. A winnowing barn consists of a large shed on tall posts with a hole in the floor. Raw, husked rice was carried up into the barn ...
, a small building atop tall stilts. The pounded kernels were scattered out through a
trap door A trapdoor is a sliding or hinged door in a floor or ceiling. It is traditionally small in size. It was invented to facilitate the hoisting of grain up through mills, however, its list of uses has grown over time. The trapdoor has played a pivot ...
in the floor, for the wind to blow away the hulls as the heavier
brown rice Brown rice is a whole grain rice with the inedible outer hull removed. This kind of rice sheds its outer hull or husk but the bran and germ layer remain on, constituting the brown or tan colour of rice. White rice is the same grain without the h ...
fell into a pan on the ground. The brown rice was "polished" into white rice by soaking it in vats to loosen the bran, the thin inner coating of each grain. The wet brown rice then was kneaded until the bran and germ separated from the white grain. The pounding with mortar and pestle was the most exhausting physical labor in the process. To relieve this, Roswell King attempted to build a pounding mill in 1803. This was to be powered by the tidal movements of the river, but building a solid foundation in the spongy soil proved difficult, and having to wait until hours when the tides were moving limited the mill's efficiency. By 1816, a water-powered mill was functioning, and two pounding machines were pounding the rice kernels. "All phases of producing the rice crop, except the pounding, were done by hand."


Steam mill

I have been over the rice mill, under the guidance of the overseer and headman Frank, and have been made acquainted with the whole process of threshing the rice, which is extremely curious. The number of hands employed in this threshing mill is very considerable, and the whole establishment, comprising the fires, and boilers, and machinery of a powerful steam engine, are all under Negro superintendence and direction. — Fanny Kemble, 1838.
The decision to build a steam-powered mill was made in 1832. Roswell King Jr. had wooden pilings pounded into the highest section of Butler Island, the plantation yard beside the Butler River landing, to bear the weight of the 14-horse-power steam engine and its brick chimney. The mill was completed in December 1833, and exposed problems in the
production line A production line is a set of sequential operations established in a factory where components are assembled to make a finished article or where materials are put through a refining process to produce an end-product that is suitable for onward c ...
. The threshing and winnowing tasks done by the workers were quickly outpaced by the pounding and polishing tasks powered by the steam engine. None of the threshing workers were able to keep up, and the steam engine was shut down to give them a break. Similarly, winnowing required wind to blow away the hulls, so the steam engine was idle on windless days. The coopers fell behind in making tierces (small barrels) to pack the processed rice. The steam engine required a steady supply of wood for fuel, so more acres of pine forest were purchased. The steam engine was resented by the workers, creating "a perpetual monotonous burden," as Fanny Kemble described it.


Butler family

Major Butler disinherited his only surviving son, Thomas (1778-1838), along with Thomas's French-born wife and daughter. The only one of the Major's four daughters to have married and borne children was Sarah, who married Dr. James Mease of Philadelphia in 1800. In his will, Major Butler directed that Sarah Butler Mease's sons would be his heirs if they irrevocably changed their surnames to "Butler." Her younger son, Pierce Butler Mease (1810-1867), upon attaining his majority in 1831, legally changed his name to Pierce Mease Butler. Her elder son, John A. Mease (1806-1847), had resisted doing so when he attained his majority. He married Gabriella Morris (1808-1871) in 1827, and their son Pierce, born in 1829, lived only a year. Their second child, Elizabeth (1830-1862), was excluded from inheriting because of her gender. Sarah Butler Mease died in February 1831. In December, John A. Mease followed his brother's lead and legally changed his surname to "Butler." Each inherited a half-interest in Major Butler's plantations and enslaved Africans.


Pierce Mease Butler

Pierce Mease Butler married British actress
Fanny Kemble Frances Anne "Fanny" Kemble (27 November 180915 January 1893) was a British actress from a theatre family in the early and mid-19th century. She was a well-known and popular writer and abolitionist, whose published works included plays, poetry ...
in 1834. She and their two young daughters spent their first winter with him at Butler Island in 1838. Kemble believed that she could persuade Butler to give up slaveholding, but was wrong. She complained about plantation manager King, Jr. having fathered children by enslaved women, but her husband refused to do anything about it. Kemble's first-person experience with slavery inspired her memoir: ''
Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838–1839 ''Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838–1839'' (the ''Journal'') is an account by Fanny Kemble of the time spent on her husband's plantation in Butler Island, Georgia. The account was not published until 1863, after her marri ...
''. The couple separated in 1847, and Butler divorced Kemble in 1849. He prevented her from seeing their daughters for years. John A. Butler was captain of Philadelphia's
First City Troop The First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry, also known as the First City Troop, is a unit of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard. It is one of the oldest military units in the United States still in active service and is among the most decorat ...
, and served in the Mexican War. He saw no action, and died of dysentery in camp on December 23, 1847. Like his grandfather, John A. Butler used the terms of his will to impose control long beyond his death. His estate was held in trust for his widow Gabriella (providing she never remarry) and for his 17-year-old daughter, Elizabeth. John A. Butler named his brother Pierce and his fellow First City trooper Dr. Thomas C. James as executors and trustees of his estate.Frances Kemble Wister, "Sarah Butler Wister's Civil War," ''The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography'', vol. 102, no. 3 (July 1978). The trust would be dissolved and his estate settled only after Elizabeth married and produced a son who lived to his majority and legally changed his surname to "Butler." Should these conditions not be fulfill, the estate would go to his brother Pierce, or to Pierce's eldest son. (Pierce Butler had only daughters.) Elizabeth Butler married Julian McAllister in 1848, but both of their sons died before attaining majorities. All three of the McAllister daughters lived long lives, but, like their mother, were excluded from inheriting. In his will, John A. Butler also directed that his interests in the Georgia plantations be sold, but his brother Pierce and widow Gabriella actually used his estate to expand those interests. In August 1853, Pierce and the John A. Butler estate jointly bought the adjacent 700-acre (283 hectare) plantation on General's Island. In July 1854, Elizabeth Butler, the only surviving child of Major Butler, died in Philadelphia. "Aunt Eliza" had held a
life interest A life interest (or life rent in Scotland) is a form of right, usually under a trust, that lasts only for the lifetime of the person benefiting from that right. A person with a life interest is known as a life tenant. A life interest ends when ...
in the plantations, and her death triggered the clause in John A. Butler's will that his interests in them be sold. The never-married Eliza also left a bequest to Pierce Butler, which enabled him to buy out most of his brother's share in the plantations. The John A. Bulter estate retained a half-interest in the enslaved Africans on the plantations, but none of the land. In 1844, the Butler Island rice mill was producing up to a million pounds of processed rice per year.Frances Ann Kemble, ''Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839'', John A. Scott, ed. (Augusta: University of Georgia Press, 1984). With the addition of the General's Island plantation, the mill's output increased to two million pounds per year in the mid-1850s.


Great Slave Auction


The largest sale of human chattels that has been made in Star-Spangled America for several years, took place on Wednesday and Thursday of last week, at the Race-course near the City of Savannah, Georgia. The lot consisted of four hundred and thirty-six men, women, children and infants, being half of the negro stock remaining on the old Major Butler plantations which fell to one of the two heirs to that estate. Major Butler, dying, left a property valued at more than a million of dollars, the major part of which was invested in rice and cotton plantations, and the slaves thereon, all of which immense fortune descended to two heirs, his
rand The RAND Corporation (from the phrase "research and development") is an American nonprofit global policy think tank created in 1948 by Douglas Aircraft Company to offer research and analysis to the United States Armed Forces. It is finan ...
ons, Mr. John A. Butler, sometime desceased, and Mr. Pierce M. Butler, still living, and resident of the City of Philadelphia, in the free State of Pennsylvania. Losses in the great crash of 1857-8, and other exigencies of business, have compelled the latter gentleman to realize on his Southern investments, that he may satisfy his pressing creditors. This necessity led to a partition of the negro stock on the Georgia plantations, between himself and the representative of the other heir, the widow of the late John A. Butler, and the negroes that were brought under the hammer last week were the property of Mr. Pierce M. Butler, of Philadelphia, and were in fact sold to pay Mr. Pierce M. Butler's debts. The creditors were represented by Gen. Cadwalader, while Mr. Butler was present in person, attended by his business agent, to attend to his interests. — Mortimer Thomson, ''The New York Tribune'', March 9, 1859.
Pierce Butler squandered a fortune estimated at $700,000, but was saved from bankruptcy by the`sale of his half of the 919 enslaved Africans on the plantations.
The Great Slave Auction The Great Slave Auction (also called the Weeping Time) was an auction of enslaved Africans held at Ten Broeck Race Course, near Savannah, Georgia, United States, on March 2 and 3, 1859. Slaveholder and absentee plantation owner Pierce Mease ...
was held on March 2–3, 1859 at Ten Broeck Race Course outside
Savannah, Georgia Savannah ( ) is the oldest city in the U.S. state of Georgia and is the county seat of Chatham County. Established in 1733 on the Savannah River, the city of Savannah became the British colonial capital of the Province of Georgia and later t ...
. Butler sold 436 enslaved Africans in the largest single sale in American history."Butler Family," ''New Georgia Encyclopedia'' (2002)
from University of Georgia Press.
Most of the enslaved were transported by train, but a group went by steamboat from Darien to Savannah. All were housed in the racetrack's stables, where prospective bidders were given the four days leading up to the auction to inspect them.Kwesi DeGraft-Hanson, "Unearthing the Weeping Time: Savannah's Ten Broeck Race Course and 1859 Slave Sale," (Emory University, 2010). "The slaves were sold off in family groups of two to seven persons each … ndbrought $303,850, or an average of more than $708 per head." Mortimer Thomson, a reporter for the '' New York Tribune'', traveled to Savannah and posed as a bidder, questioning the enslaved and attending both days of the auction. His extended account, by turns snide and sympathetic, was printed in the ''Tribune'' on Monday, March 9, and caused such a sensation that it was reprinted on March 11. It also was reprinted in newspapers in other Northern cities, and as a pamphlet by the American Anti-Slavery Society. The sale erased most of Pierce Butler's debts, but still left him owing about $127,000, including $59,925 to his late brother's estate. The 1860 U.S. Census listed 505 enslaved Africans living on Butler Island, all the property of the John A. Butler estate.


Civil War

Pierce Butler spent the
Civil War A civil war or intrastate war is a war between organized groups within the same state (or country). The aim of one side may be to take control of the country or a region, to achieve independence for a region, or to change government policies ...
in Philadelphia. He had been in Georgia at the April 1861 outbreak of the war, and returned to Philadelphia in August. He was charged with treason, and detained at
Fort Hamilton Fort Hamilton is a United States Army installation in the southwestern corner of the New York City borough of Brooklyn, surrounded by the communities of Bay Ridge and Dyker Heights. It is one of several posts that are part of the region which i ...
, Brooklyn, New York City, August–September 1861. In February 1862, the Union Navy imposed a blockade of the Altamaha River, and occupied St. Simon's Island and Butler Island. Two regiments of U.S. Colored Troops—the
2nd South Carolina Infantry The 2nd South Carolina Infantry Regiment, also known as 2nd Palmetto Regiment, was a Confederate States Army regiment in the American Civil War. History Formation The 2nd Palmetto Regiment was formed for state service on April 9, 1861 under th ...
, under Col. James Montgomery, and the
54th Massachusetts Infantry The 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that saw extensive service in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The unit was the second African-American regiment, following the 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Infan ...
, under Col.
Robert Gould Shaw Robert Gould Shaw (October 10, 1837 – July 18, 1863) was an American officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Born into a prominent Boston abolitionist family, he accepted command of the first all-black regiment (the 54th Mas ...
—landed on St. Simon's Island in early June 1863. Montgomery was the senior officer, and on June 11, he ordered his regiment to loot the deserted town of Darien. Shaw committed only one of his companies to the looting, and limited them to items that would be useful in camp. Once looted, Montgomery ordered Darien burned to the ground. Shaw wrote his parents: "I told him I did not want to take the responsibility of it, and he was only too happy to take all of it on his own shoulders." Shaw later described the raid as a "Satanic action." The enslaved Africans on the Butler plantations gained their freedom in 1863, by the Emancipation Proclamation. The military occupation of Butler Island and St. Simon's Island lasted into 1866.Frances Butler Leigh, ''Ten Years on a Georgian Plantation Since the War'' (London: Richard Bentley and Son, 1883).


Post-war

The daughters of Pierce Butler and Fanny Kemble held opposing views on slavery. Sarah Butler (1835-1908) married Dr. Owen Jones Wister of Philadelphia in 1859, and kept a diary during the early years of the war. She shared the abolitionist views of her mother, whose ''Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839'' was finally published in 1863.Fanny Kemble and Pierce Butler, Part 4
from PBS.
Frances "Fan" Butler (1838-1910) was close to her father, and shared his pro-slavery views. Pierce Butler and his daughter Fan returned to Georgia in March 1866 to reclaimed the plantations. She wrote that all the enslaved who had been held by the John A. Butler estate remained on the properties, and seven of those who had been auctioned in 1859 returned to them. The formerly enslaved agreed to work as sharecroppers, in exchange for sharing the rice crop, 50-50. Pierce Butler committed to support the elderly until their deaths, and to three years of support for young children. Pierce Mease Butler died in Georgia of malaria in August 1867, and was buried at
Christ Church Burial Ground Christ Church Burial Ground in Philadelphia is an important early-American cemetery. It is the final resting place of Benjamin Franklin and his wife, Deborah. Four other signers of the Declaration of Independence are buried here, Benjamin Rush, ...
, Philadelphia, in February 1868.


Frances Butler Leigh

Fan Butler took over management of the plantations. About 300 workers tended the rice on Butler Island, and about 50, the cotton on St. Simon's Island. Her contracts with the formerly enslaved required approval by the Freedmen's Bureau, and she paid workers $12 per month plus food, clothing and shelter. She converted an existing Butler Island building into a school, infirmary and church, and hired a black graduate of a Pennsylvania seminary as instructor/minister. An English cousin on the Butler side, Rev. James Wentworth Leigh, visited Butler Island in November 1869.Catherine Clinton, ed., ''Fanny Kemble's Journals'' (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009). Fan Butler and her sister traveled to England the following summer, and visited the Anglican minister. The couple's engagement was announced in December, and they were married in England in June 1871. The Leighs remained there until their return to Georgia in Autumn 1873. During Fan Butler's absence, the rice mill, steam engine, along with related buildings were destroyed in a fire, presumed to have been arson: "By this fire about fifteen thousand dollars' worth of property was destroyed, including all our seed rice for the coming planting." The Leighs returned to Butler Island in November 1873, and rebuilt the mill. Rev. Leigh conducted services for the free-black workers in the school. These led to his conducting services in a barn in Darien, and the founding there of an African-American Episcopal congregation in 1875. Frances Butler Leigh donated Darien town lots inherited from her father, and its congregants constructed St. Cyprian's Episcopal Church, which was dedicated in 1876.St. Cyprian's
from St. Andrew's and St. Cyprian's Churches.
Rev. & Mrs. Leigh returned to England in January 1877. Sarah Butler Wister's son, novelist
Owen Wister Owen Wister (July 14, 1860 – July 21, 1938) was an American writer and historian, considered the "father" of western fiction. He is best remembered for writing '' The Virginian'' and a biography of Ulysses S. Grant. Biography Early life ...
(1860-1938), inherited his mother's half of the plantations.Malcolm Bell Jr., ''Major Butler's Legacy: Five Generations of a Slaveholding Family'' (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1987). He was the last family member to own land on Butler Island, and sold off the last of the properties in 1923.


Colonel Huston

Tillinghast L'Hommedieu Huston Tillinghast L'Hommedieu Huston (July 17, 1867 – March 29, 1938) was an American civil engineer and businessman. He co-owned the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball with Jacob Ruppert from 1915 to 1923, turning them from one of the worst ...
purchased the Butler Island Plantation in 1926. Huston converted it into a dairy and lettuce farm. He also built the Huston House on the property in 1927. File:West Darien Historic District in Darien, GA, US (29).jpg, St. Cyprian Episcopal Church, Darien, Georgia


See also

*
Butler Island Plantation Butler Island Plantation is a former rice plantation located on Butler Island on the Altamaha River delta just South of Darien, Georgia. It was originally owned by Major Pierce Butler (1744–1822) and was also owned by Tillinghast L'Hommedieu H ...


References

{{authority control Islands of McIntosh County, Georgia River islands of Georgia (U.S. state)