Mar 12 - Mar 14, 2010 - St. George Baptist Church - Copy Cat Youth Ministry - Call St. George Baptist for more information.
Apr 29 - May 02, 2010 - The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund's “The Wall That Heals”, http://www.vvmf.org is coming to Orangeburg during the 2010 Orangeburg Festival of Roses, held in Edisto Memorial Gardens.
On April 5, 1889, several leading citizens of color, having determined the need for a cemetery to be established at Orangeburg for its residents of African descent, combined their efforts to charter the Orangeburg Cemetery Association. The individuals listed on the organizations original charter of incorporation are Rev. E.C. Brown, Major John H. Fordham, Rev. A.G. Townsend, Abram Middleton, B.J. Lloyd, W.L. Buckley and R.W. Jewell. The formalization of the association followed closely upon the purchase of a tract of land acquired on April 1, 1889 by Rev. E.C. Brown on behalf of the fledgling cemetery organization. The final payment on the site was made on September 3, 1896. The Rev. Brown was reimbursed by sale of individual shares in the property at $10 per share. Rev. Brown subsequently deeded the land to the Orangeburg Cemetery Association.
Officers of the Association who signed the deed were Major John H. Fordham, listed
as Vice President, Rev. A.G. Townsend, listed as Secretary, and Rev. D.M. Minus
(whose position as an officer was not specified). The cemetery is considered to be the
oldest, non-church affiliated, private cemetery organized for African Americans in
Orangeburg County. The property remained in private hands from 1938 until the 1990s
and was maintained by a vigilant group of private citizens. Lillie Jackson Matthews
(1893 - 1987) and Hazel Tatnall Pierce (1888 - 1982) were pioneers in the Orangeburg
Cemetery restoration project. In 1975 they appealed to churches and civic organizations
to send people out early on Saturday mornings, with their own tools, to clean up the
cemetery. Many came and worked faithfully. These two women served lemonade and
bologna sandwiches to those who worked to clean the cemetery, which looked like a
wilderness. They worked for months, but with hand tools, were not able to accomplish
much.
In 1984 a committee of six interested people including Maude Lawerence, Sadie Dash McNair, Rev. & Mrs. John Salley, Daniel Moore, and Geraldyne Zimmerman formed an ad hoc committee to take up the challenge. They wrote as many plot owners as they could locate asking them to contribute $25 a year to help improve the appearance of the cemetery. About 100 of the 300 people written answered, some contributing as much as $100. With this money Herbert Myers was hired to help with the project. Members of the Epsilon Omega Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity and Councilman Bernard Haire joined the group. Councilman Haire soon got Mayor Martin C. Cheatham interested in the project. Mayor Cheatham then made it possible for the committee to meet with City Council.
In 1987 the Association received a Keep America Beautiful Award for work in conserving the cemetery property, through the efforts of a local Girl Scouts Troop, directed by Mrs. Geraldyne Zimmerman. Later the cemetery site was recognized by presentation of the Readers’ Digest Award for Community Service. This $500 award was used for cemetery improvements and upkeep.
Management of the property was transferred from the private Cemetery Association to the City of Orangeburg in 1994 and the site was annexed as a public historic resource under the supervision of the City of Orangeburg Parks and Recreation Department.
After the transfer of the cemetery to the City of Orangeburg was completed in 1994, a committee was formed to raise money to fence in the cemetery and make other improvements. Members of the present Cemetery Committee are Janye Clement, Charlotte Dixon, Harvey Durant, Vickie Green, Jerry Govan, Jr., Maude Lawerence, John Lessane, Jr., Eugene A.R. Montgomery, David Philips, Ellen Robinson, Buster Smith, James Sulton, David Wallace, Mimi Wannamaker, Clemmie Webber, Michael A. Wolfe, John H. Yow, and Geraldyne P. Zimmerman. Mayor Martin C. Cheatham was an active member until his death in March 2001.
This committee worked hard and had several successful campaigns. Mayor Cheatham was responsible for tapping many resources to help with the project. His enthusiasm and hard work was a prime factor in making the project successful. Most of Orangeburg’s leading families of African descent purchased shares in the Cemetery Association and many prominent educators, religious leaders, physicians, entrepreneurs, agriculturalist and other professionals are interred at this highly significant historic site.
1. Rev. Nelson Cornelson Nix
1866 - 1944
Distinguished educator, religious leader, and business man, Nix was born in Barnwell
County, SC, the son of Charity Gilliard and Allen Nix. He attended secondary school in
Barnwell County and later matriculated at Claflin University completing the normal
course of study in 1890. He finished his college level work at Claflin and Benedict
College, fulfilling requirements for the A.B. and A.M. degrees from Claflin. He later
received doctorate of divinity degrees from both Claflin and Benedict in 1907, and
completed further post-graduate study at the University of Chicago.
When the Colored Normal Industrial Agricultural and Mechanical College of South
Carolina (now South Carolina State University) was organized in 1896, Nix was
immediately invited to join the faculty, becoming head of the Mathematics Department,
and later was made Dean of the School. In addition, Nix became a noted minister and
religious leader in the Baptist denomination and was instrumental in the establishment of
Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church in Orangeburg. Nix owned and operated a 200 acre farm in
Orangeburg County. A Mason and Pythian, Nix married the former Sylvia Robinson of
Orangeburg.

2. Benjamin Gilbert Johnson
1906 - 1981
Born in Cope, SC, Johnson moved to Orangeburg with his mother and sisters where they
were later joined by his father. He received his elementary, high school and college
education from Claflin University. Johnson accepted Christ at an early age and was a
faithful member of Trinity Methodist Church in Orangeburg. He served on the Steward
Board, as a church school teacher, Secretary of the Methodist Men, and was the first
President of the Golden Age Club. For many years he worked as a clerk at Maxwell’s
Grocery Store. In 1951 he began work at South Carolina State College as Assistant
Military Custodian and remained there in that capacity until 1971 when he retired.
3. Marion Raven Birnie Wilkinson
1870 - 1956
The wife of Robert S. Wilkinson, Mrs. Wilkinson herself a prominent educator and social
activist. A native of Charleston, she was a graduate of the Avery Normal Institute and
taught there as well before she married in 1897. She was quite involved in campus
activities while her husband was president, and for many years afterward. She was
instrumental in founding a chapter of the Young Women’s Christian Association on the
campus and in overseeing the construction of the Marion Raven Wilkinson YWCA Hut,
known as the “Y Hut,” in 1925. Mrs. Wilkinson was also quite active in the larger
Orangeburg community. She founded the Sunlight Club; was one of the founders of the
South Carolina Federation of Negro Women; and was an officer in the National
Association of Federated Negro Women. Mrs. Wilkinson also founded the Wilkinson
Home, a home for black girls.
4. Robert Shaw Wilkinson
1865 - 1932
Wilkinson was a native of Charleston who, like Johnson Whittaker, attended the United
State Military Academy at West Point but did not graduate. He graduated from Oberlin
College in 1891, then taught at Kentucky State College until 1896, when he came to
Orangeburg as one of the first faculty members of the new Colored Normal, Industrial,
Agricultural and Mechanical College of South Carolina (later South Carolina State
College). Wilkinson taught physics and mathematics before becoming President of the
college in 1911 when Thomas E. Miller resigned. Wilkinson, who led South Carolina
State through a period of transition and growth in which the campus and the curriculum
were both transformed, commented in 1931 that it was necessary “to provide for
maintaining the present program and allowing for future expansion. What investment
can promise more for the future of the Negro and of South Carolina?” He also served as
President of the Negro Land Grant College Association and the Palmetto State Teachers’
Association.
5. Miller Fulton Whittaker
1892 - 1949
Son of Johnson C. Whittaker, Miller Whittaker was himself a prominent educator who
served as the third President of SC State College (1932 - 1949). Whittaker, who had been
at the college since 1913, had been professor and Dean of the Division of Mechanical
Arts and was an architect who designed several buildings on the college campus
including Bradham Hall (1916), Manning Hall (1916), Lowman Hall (1917), Hodge Hall
(1928), and the Home Management House (1928); his design for Hodge Hall was his
master’s thesis in architecture from Kansas State University. He also served as President
of the Conference of Land-Grant Colleges and of the State Association of College
Presidents, Deans, and Registrars.
6. Johnson Chesnut Whittaker
1859 - 1931
Whittaker is best-known for an incident that occurred in 1880 while he was a cadet at the
United States Military Academy at West Point. Born a slave in Camden, he was one of
several blacks who attended the University of South Carolina during Reconstruction; he
was appointed to the Academy in 1876. He was attacked in the middle of the night by
masked white cadets who slashed and beat him, then tied him to his bed and left him
bleeding there. The authorities concluded, after the court-martial, that since no white
cadet admitted to attacking Whittaker, then the young South Carolinian must have faked
the attack to draw attention to himself, and he was discharged from the Academy.
Whittaker returned to South Carolina and received a law degree at USC. He practiced
law in Sumter before beginning his teaching career at SC State College. Only three of
twenty-three black cadets who attended West Point in the 1870s and 1880s, including
Whittaker, graduated and received their commissions in the United States Army.
Whittaker received a posthumous commission as a second lieutenant in the US Army in
1994.
7. Henry Winfield Embly
1882 - 1943
Henry Winfield Embly was enrolled as a boarding student in the newly established South
Carolina State College in the fall of 1896. Upon receiving the L.I. Degree (Licentiate of
Instruction) he was elected Teacher Principal of Calhoun County Colored Schools. He
held this position until September 1916 at which time he and his family moved to
Orangeburg, SC. Shortly following his settling in Orangeburg he and his wife purchased
an appropriate site directly across from what is now South Carolina State University for
the construction of Embly’s Cafe and Boarding House. This was the first over-night
accommodations available to African Americans in Orangeburg. The timing of the
establishment of Embly’s Cafe and Boarding House was a significant factor in South
Carolina State College’s ability to attract entertainers, speakers and educators of note
prior to World War I.
The site of this early Cafe and Boarding House continue to experience uninterrupted
Embly ownership and occupancy.
8. Sulton Family Plot
John Sulton, a white American of Turkish ancestry, who married a “free woman of
color,” began a flourishing lumber business in Orangeburg which ran for nearly 140
years. In a 1931 issue of “Southern Lumberman,” a story was written about J.J. Sulton
and Sons which claimed it to be, “ ‘ . . . the only lumber manufacturing enterprise of
consequence entirely owned and operated by Negroes.’ ” It started with a ground mill in
the woods, which eventually grew in number to seven, and these mills were moved
around to wherever needed. In 1920 a large plant was built near the railroad on what is
now Whaley Street which housed a sawmill, planing mill and kilns. The building
remained until the mid 1960s when timber became more scarce and it took more
resources to keep the business going.

9. Alton Elvin Bythewood, Sr.
1876 - 1937
Owner and operator of one of the first funeral homes in Orangeburg, Mr. Bythewood
served as Treasurer and Cemetery Manager of the Orangeburg Cemetery Association and
the Burial Society for many years. After his death his second son took over the
management of the funeral home as well as management of the cemetery.
10. Vastine Thomas Whaley
1874 - 1925
Vastine Thomas Whaley, better known as “Pink Whaley” was born in Orangeburg
County on April 1, 1874. Born of mixed parents, he became an astute businessman
dealing in farming, cotton buying, and real estate. He held the mortgages of many blacks
and whites in Calhoun and Orangeburg Counties. Through these efforts, he was said to
be one of the wealthiest negroes in South Carolina. “Pink Whaley” was also a leader in
the Republican Party.
“Pink Whaley” was shot to death in St. Matthews as he was sleeping on a bench at the
Southern Depot on August 29, 1925. His assassins were never found.

11. Addison Evans Quick
1857 - 1926
Addison Evans Quick was born to slaves in Richmond County North Carolina. His
father was a house carpenter of some repute of Marlboro County, SC, and his mother was
a seamstress and sewed for white families in the neighborhood.
About 1877, he was converted and joined the A.M.E.Z. Church at his old home in
Rockingham. He also attended the public schools there until he entered the State Normal
at Fayetteville, NC, in 1874. In 1880 he married Lucy Ann Allman and they had ten
children. During this time Quick affiliated himself with the Methodist Episcopal Church,
North, and in preparation for his life’s calling, he entered Gammon School of Theology
in Atlanta, GA.
Quick ministered at several churches in South Carolina, among them were Wesley
Methodist Episcopal Church in Beaufort, SC, and Trinity United Methodist Church in
Orangeburg. During his final years he was affiliated with the Baptist church and died in
Beaufort, SC, in 1926.
12. Monroe Crawford, M.D.
1894 - 1976
Crawford is best known for his contributions to the field of medicine. In 1927 he was
recognized for diagnosing the first known case of Tularemia in South Carolina. In 1934
he received recognition for his special treatment of Malaria Fever in Orangeburg County.
13. James Arthur Pierce, Sr.
1876 - 1937
Pierce was among the first group of students to register at the Colored Normal, Industrial,
Agricultural and Mechanical College of South Carolina in 1896. In 1902 he received the
degree of “Licentiate of Instruction.” After serving as Superintendent of Mayesville
Institute in Mayesville, SC, for seven years, he returned to the college and worked in the
division of Mechanical Instruction for twenty-seven years, and in 1934 received a B.S.
degree from the college.
14. John Moreau Maxwell, Sr.
1884 - 1938
Maxwell, son of South Carolina State Senator Henry Johnson Maxwell and Martha
Louisa Dibble Maxwell, owned and operated Maxwell’s Staple and Fancy Groceries at
189-191 East Russell Street in Orangeburg from 1904 until his death in 1938. The
Maxwell store employed eleven full-time and several part-time workers, and was
considered among the finest in the state according to Asa H. Gordon in Sketches of
Negro Life and History in South Carolina. After his death the store was operated until
1951 by several of his surviving children, however, it is no longer standing.

15. Reverend Abram Middleton
1827 - 1901
Rev. Abram Middleton lived a remarkable life as a businessman, Methodist minister,
statesman and father. Although he was born into slavery in Charleston in 1827, he
became literate and hired-out his skills as a master carpenter and contractor before he
gained his freedom at the end of the Civil War. He then purchased property in Midway,
SC and built a home for his family there and served two terms as school superintendent in
the Barnwell District. He was enrolled in the state militia. Middleton was a delegate to
the 1868 South Carolina Constitutional Convention in Charleston, and became one of the
founding Trustees of Claflin University when it was formed in 1869 in Orangeburg, SC.
The Rev. Middleton built 28 churches, gave one and bought one for the South Carolina
Methodist Episcopal Church Conference (now know as the United Methodist). His son,
Nathaniel Hill Middleton, born before the Civil War, was one of the first two graduates
of Claflin University and became a medical doctor. A grandson, Earl M. Middleton,
trained as one of the famed Tuskeegee Airmen and served in the South Carolina
Legislature for ten years while owning a real estate and insurance businesses which is
still thriving in Orangeburg.
The Rev. Middleton was stricken by death “at his post” in the pulpit preaching the
gospel. The next Minutes of the SC Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal
Church noted in his memorial that, “He died poor in this world’s goods, but enormously
rich in that inheritance that is incorruptible, undefiled and that fadeth not away. His
legacy to the Conference and to his family is a stainless record, a pure life.”
16. Joshua Enoch Blanton
1880 - 1970
Born in Rice, Virginia, the son of Emily Crowder and Walker Blanton, Joshua was
educated at Hampton Institute in Hampton, VA, and later became an instructor in
Agriculture for the historic Penn Normal School of St. Helena Island, SC. St. Helena had
forged a special relationship with Hampton in part as a consequence of the “Port Royal
Experiment,” a Union based movement to determine the effectiveness and feasibility of
African American Emancipation prior to the conclusion of the Civil War.
Blanton eventually served as Governmental Farm Demonstration Agent for Beaufort
County, SC, from 1907-1912 and was promoted to the position of Superintendent of the
Penn Normal School, which provided the experience and expertise in administration that
later afforded him the opportunity to become Principle of Vorhees College (1922-1947)
in Denmark, SC. Blanton worked to strengthen and reshape the educational program of
Vorhees establishing a supportive alliance with the Episcopal Church.
In addition to his academic activities, Blanton served in France as a representative of the
War Department following the First World War, during the period of the Armistic
visiting 275,000 African American troops, with Dr. H.H. Proctor and Miss Helen Hagen.

17. Reverend Alonzo Gray Townsend
1853 - 1937
Born in Charleston, SC, Townsend married Emma Harleston also of Charleston. To this
union, three daughters and four sons were born. Left a widower, he married Ocala
Robinson who took excellent care of him in his declining years. Rev. Townsend’s father
died when he was two, and at the age of nine, he began working in order to help his
mother financially. Rev. Townsend began preaching at an early age. At 14, he was
conducting prayer meetings. He entered the SC Methodist Conference in 1878 and
retired in 1931. He held many pastorates, from Centenary in Charleston to the humblest
mission. He was a District Superintendent several times. He was a teacher at Claflin
University and a member of the South Carolina Head of Examiners.
18. James McPherson
1843 - 1906
Mr. James McPherson served with distinction as a Warden of the City of Orangeburg
from 1881 - 1883. Also interred in the McPherson family plot is a son of James
McPherson, who was the first African American mail carrier in the Orangeburg area.
19. Laval David Dash
1878 - 1928
From childhood, Dash always wanted to work for himself. He was a southern black
farmer and laborer born in the 19th century with a limited education. What Dash did
have going for him was a handsome, high-stepping horse. Dash purchased a surrey, a
light four-wheeled two-seater commonly called a “hack” and began a taxi business.
Dash’s Taxi Service was the first taxi business owned and operated by a black or white
man in Orangeburg. When the automobile began to take the place of horse and surrey,
Dash purchased a T-Model Ford. On Christmas Eve 1928, Mrs. Mattie Rufus Dash
found her 50-year-old husband dead beside his car after having made his last pickup for
the day. She stepped into her husband’s shoes and hired a driver until her oldest son,
then 13, was granted special permission to chauffeur a taxi. Dash’s Taxi service grew to
a 10-cab taxi fleet during the World War II era.

20. Major John H. Fordham
1856 - 1922
Born in Charleston, SC, John Fordham received a liberal education at Avery Institute.
He later took a three-year course of study under Rev. J.B. Seabrook, Rector of St. Mark’s
Episcopal Church. Subsequently, he read law under Rev. Seabrook and was admitted to
the Bar in 1874. He later moved to Orangeburg where he engaged in a number of
endeavors, such as Coroner of Orangeburg County, Postal Clerk in the Railroad Mail
Service, and Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue. He later returned to private life and
resumed the practice of law. He was a member of Trinity Methodist Church and he and
his wife, Louisa Smith, had nine children. The title “Major” came about because he was
one of the organizers of the Carolina Light Infantry of Charleston, which was the first
colored brigade organized in the South. He was appointed Judge Advocate with the rank
of Major, a position he held until disbandment of the brigade.
21. Florella Fordham
1880 - 1973
Miss Fordham, daughter of Major John H. and Louisa Fordham, attended Claflin College,
graduating in 1900. With sheer determination, and over her parents’ objections, she went
to Hampton Institute in Virginia to get her nurses training. She came home to
Orangeburg a R.N., the only one so highly trained in town. For years Miss Fordham was
the only nurse doctors could call on to assist in home maternity cases . . . and for a time
after she began practicing nursing, there was not even a hospital in Orangeburg.
In 1932, she became the resident nurse for SC State College. She stayed until 1952 when
she retired - for the first time. Because she was still a very active woman, and the love of
her profession, she allowed herself to be “re-activated” in 1953 when she went to Claflin,
her Alma Mater, as the resident nurse. She retired from Claflin in 1959 after 56 years
devoted to nursing.

22. Mildred Roberts Lindsey Cooke
1898 - 1967
Known as the “Orangeburg Song Bird,” Cooke lived her entire life in Orangeburg and
was in demand all over the country to sing at weddings, funerals and other special
occasions.
23. Julia Moorer Breeland
1882 - 1952
Julia Moorer Breeland was a black cosmetician called “Madam Breeland” by her
students. Even though her clientele was white, she operated the first cosmetology school
for blacks in South Carolina. She graduated from South Carolina State College in 1905,
and she made and distributed her own brand of beauty products.
On July 15, 1936, she organized the South Carolina Beauticians Association with twenty six
members and served as its President for four years. This organization is now called
the South Carolina State Cosmetology Association affiliated with both regional and
national associations and has a membership of several thousand.
Visit Orangeburg Cemetery
Be sure to download the Orangeburg Cemetery Brochure before you go!