NEW!! A treasure trove of information about the early
Wardlaws in Abbeville! PLUS! Accompanying data about the slaves they had on the plantations! Lists names and sale prices.
There is a lot of info here, some of it duplicates of what we already know, but fills in many details of early life there in Abbeville and goes
into detail about the history of the slaves and who they went to. Doing a search here may reveal something relevant to your branch. Please write me with any questions or comments, or any additions
you may have. dianewardlaw7@yahoo.com
I will be adding much of this info into the two trees on Ancestry.com: 'America Wardlaws' and 'Black Wardlaws'. Let me know if you'd like
a link to get into it.
Joseph (D25) Wardlaw who lived in Abbeville County, South Carolina owned several
properties. The name of this plantation is unknown, however after Wardlaw's
death his probate papers called it the "Homeplace", and why this page is
named the Joseph Wardlaw Homeplace Plantation.
This plantation is where he lived and where he grew cotton. In 1804, Joseph
purchased 1/3 share of the Cotton Gin from his father-in-law, John Waller's
estate left to the son John N. Waller who died about the same time as his
father for $579. Some think the plantation was originally called Cotton Hill
Plantation although there are no records to confirm this. Over the years the
property is believed to have been sold off in land tracts to build homes
therefore the exact location where the plantation house stood is also
unknown although some believe the Quay-Wardlaw house is one in the same.
This plantation and most of the slaves, at the death of Joseph (D25) Wardlaw in
1852, were left to Wardlaw's son, Hugh Waller (E78) Wardlaw.
Joseph (D25) Wardlaw, like his father (Hugh (C4) Wardlaw), was a slaveholder. He had about 100+ slaves
named in his probate papers in 1852.
The Quay Plantation located in Abbeville County home was built by the first
owner, John Quay, about 1786. Quay sold the property to James (D21) Wardlaw about
1798. James Wardlaw lived there most of his life. His plantation grew
cotton. This home is now known as The Quay-Wardlaw House.
This house, built ca. 1786, is thought to be the oldest house in Abbeville.
It was built as a two-story log building by John Quay, who also ran a tavern
here. He sold it ca. 1798 to James (D21) Wardlaw (1767-1842) and his wife, Quay's
stepdaughter Hannah Clarke (1778-1825). James (D21) Wardlaw was the Abbeville
postmaster and Abbeville District deputy clerk of court 1796-1800, then
clerk of court 1800-1838. Ten of the Wardlaws' eleven children were born in
this house.
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James (D21) Wardlaw 1767 - 1842 served as Deputy Clerk of Court for Abbeville
County with Major John Bowie in 1796. During this time he also worked as a
surveyor, a school-master, and a merchant continuing to operate the tavern
and stagecoach stop established by John Quay, his wife Hannah's stepfather.
In 1800 the South Carolina Legislature changed the designation of the
state's counties to districts. James (D21) Wardlaw was appointed as the first
Clerk of Court for Abbeville District. He held that post until 1838. He
was also the Abbeville Court House "Village" first post master.
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Two sons were delegates to the Secession Convention: David Lewis (E59) Wardlaw
(1799-1873), state representative and Speaker of the S.C. House, and later a
judge; and Francis Hugh (E60) Wardlaw (1800-1861), newspaper editor, state
chancellor, and state representative, from Edgefield. This house was later
owned by Col. Thomas Thomson (1813-1881), state representative, delegate to
the Secession Convention, Confederate officer, state senator, and judge.
James (D21) Wardlaw had 64 slaves listed in his probate inventory at the time of
his death in 1842. The slaves were divided and sold off to family members
and others.
David Lewis (E59) Wardlaw was born in 1799. He passed away in 1863. Signer of the
South Carolina Ordinance of Secession.
He was the first white child born in the Abbeville District, in 1799 in the
Quay Tavern. He was a delegate to the Secession Convention in 1861, a law
partner to Patrick Noble, and Gen. Samuel McGowan's father-in-law.
-------------------
When William Alfred Wardlaw was born on 6 November 1816, in Abbeville,
Abbeville, South Carolina, United States, his father, James (D21) Wardlaw, was 48
and his mother, Hannah Clarke, was 38. He married Iwanowna Tilman on 23
April 1840, in Abbeville, Abbeville, South Carolina. They were the parents
of at least 7 sons. He died on 10 November 1876, in Charleston, Charleston,
South Carolina, United States, at the age of 60, and was buried in Upper
Long Cane Cemetery, Abbeville, Abbeville, South Carolina.
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Francis Hugh (E60) Wardlaw was born in 1800. He passed away in 1861. Chancellor
and Judge Francis Hugh Wardlaw, Born 16 December 1800, Died 29 May 1861. He
was a member of the Secession Convention of 1860; he was the author of the
Ordinance of Secession and was one of the signers.
Francis Hugh (E60) Wardlaw, son of James (D21) Wardlaw and Hannah Clarke Wardlaw, was born
at Abbeville Court House, S. C., December 16th, 1800; was baptized by Rev.
Robert P. Wilson, of the Presbyterian Church; went to the common English
schools of Abbeville, taught by Francis Walker, William Sadler, Flinn,
Clary, Hooper, James Curry, and Thomas Fulton. In 1812 he went to
Willington, in Abbeville District, and there attended for two years Dr.
Waddell's famous Classical Academy. He spent the year 1815 at home at
Abbeville Court House, in studying arithmetic, algebra, trigonometry, and
surveying, under Captain William Robertson, and in writing in the Clerk's
office under his father, then Clerk of the Court for Abbeville District. He
entered the South Carolina College April 13th, 1816, and graduated with
first honor of his class in December, 1818. Read law in the office of A.
Bowie, Esq., at Abbeville Court House, and was admitted to practice law at
Charleston, January, 1822, and equity at Columbia, May, 1822. He settled at
Edgefield near the end of February, 1822, and practiced law there in
partnership with Whitfield Brooks until the fall of 1825; with William
Garrett from 1826 to 1828; with D. L. Wardlaw from 1831 to 1841, and with
William C. Morange from 1841 to 1846; was editor of a newspaper at Edgefield
from March, 1829, to the spring of 1832; elected to the State Convention
from Edgefield in 1832, and to the House of representatives of South
Carolina Legislature in 1834 and 1838; was partner of R. H. Spann's in 1850;
was elected Chancellor December 3rd, 1850, and Judge in the Court of Appeals
December 21st, 1859; delegate from Edgefield in the conventions of 1852 and
1860, being one of only four or five persons who were members of all three
conventions above mentioned; 1832, 1852, and 1860.
He was married at "Airville" near Hamburg, in Edgefield District Wednesday
evening, April 22nd, 1835, to Ann Gresham Lamar, daughter of Thomas Gresham
Lamar and Martha Leland Cary, by Rev. Henry Reid, Presbyterian minister from
Augusta. By this union he had seven children, three of whom died young. One
son, Lieutenant Thomas GTresham Lamar (F36) Wardlaw, was killed at Fort Moultrie, July 17th,
1862, another son, Francis Hugh (F39) Wardlaw, died December 5th, 1887, at Edgefield
where he was practicing law. One son and one daughter only are now living,
Mrs. J. W. Hill, of Edgefield, and J. Lewis Wardlaw, of Fairfield County.
Chancellor Wardlaw died at Columbia in the house of Major Theodore Stark,
May 29th, 1861, and was buried at Edgefield Court House, South Carolina.
----------------------
Joseph James (E66) Wardlaw died in Walhalla on Wednesday, July 2nd, 1873, in the
sixtieth year of his age. Dr. Wardlaw was a native of Abbeville county, and,
until the last year, had spent his whole life near the place of his
nativity, and in the midst of friends who knew and appreciated his high and
excellent qualities of mind and heart.
Dr. Joseph James (E66) Wardlaw was born October 29th, 1814, at Abbeville, and was the ninth
child of James Wardlaw. He received his early education in the school of
Henry Fulton, near this place, and took a high stand in his class. He
entered the South Carolina College in 1831, and, after a course of study
extending over two years, graduated with the degree of A.B. in 1833.
Returning to Abbeville, he began the study of medicine in the office of Dr.
S. V. Caine, a physician of considerable note and rare skill. In 1834-35 he
attended lectures in the Charleston Medical College, and then entered the
Jefferson Medical College at Philadelphia, where he graduated with
distinction in 1836. As a student, Dr. Wardlaw was industrious and
pains-taking; as a physician, kind, skillful, and untiring; a genial,
affable gentleman; an affectionate husband, an indulgent father, and a pure,
steadfast, and unyielding Christian. For a number of years he had held
positions of honor and trust in the Presbyterian Church at this place, and
in his death the Church has sustained a heavy loss.
Dr. JosephJames (E66) Wardlaw was an indefatigable worker, and his whole life was spent in
alleviating the sufferings and ministering to the afflictions of his
fellow-men. Like the good Samaritan, he went about doing good, and in the
abode of poverty as well as at the bedside of the wealthy his skill overcame
disease, and his godly walk and conversation contributed comfort and peace
and joy to world-weary, departing pilgrims.
Dr. Joseph James (E66) Wardlaw was a patriot, and in the late war, by his personal influence
and the blood of his children, did more than his part to sustain the
fortunes of the Southern Confederacy. After the war, reduced in means,
bereft of sons upon whose stout arms he had hoped to depend, he devoted his
energies anew to the duties of his profession, and labored manfully in the
cause of suffering humanity.
For the last year Dr. Wardlaw had resided at Walhalla, where, in the bosom
of an affectionate family, from the effects of an accident received a short
time since, he died on last Wednesday. His body was brought to this place on
Friday, and conveyed to the Presbyterian church, where the funeral sermon
was preached by the pastor, Rev. J. L. Martin. The sermon was touching and
powerful, and at the record of the virtues of the deceased, many eyes unused
to weep were suffused with tears. After the sermon, the remains were carried
to Long Cane cemetery, and, in the presence of a large number of
sympathizing friends and acquaintances, all that was mortal of Dr. Joseph J.
Wardlaw was laid to rest.
----------------
Robert Henry (E63) Wardlaw was born on 28 April 1778, in Abbeville, South Carolina,
his father, James (D21) Wardlaw, and his mother, Elizabeth Coulter. He married Lucy Hodges about 1807, in
Abbeville, South Carolina, United States. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 1 daughter. He
died on 6 April 1812, in his hometown, at the age of 33, and was buried in
Greenville Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina.
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Joseph (D25) Wardlaw lived in Abbeville County, South Carolina. He owned several properties. The name of this plantation is unknown, however
after Wardlaw's death his probate papers called it the "Homeplace", and why this page is named the Joseph Wardlaw Homeplace Plantation. This plantation is where he lived and where he grew cotton. In
1804, Joseph purchased 1/3 share of the Cotton Gin from his father-in-law, John Waller's estate (left to the son John N. Waller who died about the same time as his father) for $579.
This plantation and most of the slaves, at the death of Joseph Wardlaw in 1852, were left to Wardlaw's son, Hugh Waller Wardlaw.
Joseph Wardlaw, like his father, was a slaveholder. He had 102+ slaves named in his probate papers in 1852. The slaves were listed in groups,
with the first two groups identified as being mother's and their children. It is unknown if the other groups on the list are families or simply groups. Their names (numbers after the name indicate
more than one person on this plantation with that particular name) and values are as follows:
Cherry's family:
Cherry, valued at $600
Rose, valued at $600
Annis, valued at $600
Agg, valued at $475
Sarah, valued at $300
Mary(1), valued at $500
Allen, valued at $750
Albert(1), valued at $700
total for Cherry's family $4525
Harriet's family:
Harriet, valued at $150
Edmond, valued at $700
Watt, valued at $700
Albert(2), valued at $700
Horace, valued at $300
total for Harriet's family $2550
Washington(1), valued at $750
Leuisa, valued at $600
Jack(1), valued at $400
total for the above group $1750
Abraham Whitlock, valued at $650
Patsey, valued at $450
Bob(1), valued at $450
Charles(1), valued at $500
Huldy, valued at $300
Nelley, valued at $250
Phillis, valued at $200
total for the above group $3200
Fanny(1), valued at $450
Willis, valued at $450
Jack(2), valued at $700
Rosetta, valued at $600
John(1), valued at $500
Martha, valued at $375
Jenney, valued at $200
William, valued at $350
total for the above group $3625
Nancy(1) & child (unnamed) valued at $500
Eliza, valued at $600
Caroline, valued at $600
Bob(2), valued at $650
Daniel, valued at $650
Lucy(1), valued at $600
Charles(2), values at $300
Lear, valued at $250
Mary(2), valued at $200
total for the above group $4350
Henry, valued at $000
Abraham Cort, valued at $250
Mariah, valued at $475
Sylvia & child, valued at $625
Jim, valued at $775
Ishbell, valued at $600
Elick, valued at $400
Joe(1), valued at $250
total for the above group $3375
NOTE: it is possible that Mariah and Abraham Cort later married, see the profiles of Abraham Dallas (1849-) and Miria J "Mariah" (Unknown)
Dallas (1852-There were children young enough to be them enumerated in the 1850 census (see table below).
Lucinda(1), valued at $200
Siller(1), valued at $200
Fanny(2), valued at $175
Phill, valued at $700
Anarchy, valued at $600
Patrick, valued at $500
total for the above group $2375
Dick, valued at $750
Jane, valued at $500
Cinda(2), valued at $450
Antony, valued at $300
Billey, valued at $350
Isack, valued at $850
Simon, valued at $600
total for the above group $3800
Big Nancy(2), valued at $75
John(2), valued at $600
Rachal & child, valued at $625
Cillar(2), valued at $550
Lizey & child, valued at $650
Ann, valued at $700
Pattey, valued at $600
Ceasar, valued at $650
total total for the above group $5100
Margaret, valued at $450
Jacob, valued at $550
Jeuda, valued at $350
George, valued at $400
Milley, valued at $300
Dolly, valued at $300
Nancy(3), valued at $250
total for the above group $2600
Uriah, valued at $200
Hampton, valued at $250
Ephraim, valued at $150
Angellan, valued at $000
Charles(3), valued at $1000
Squire, valued at $675
Polly & child, valued at $600
Betsey, valued at $500
total for the above group $3375
Tom, valued at $500
Mahale, valued at $400
Augustus, valued at $600
Mittard?, valued at $450
Lewis, valued at $350
Leroy, valued at $300
Philding, valued at $250
Washington(2), valued at $200
Old Lucy(2), valued at $150
Old Handy, valued at $000
total for the above group $3200
Antrom, valued at $500
Moses, valued at $400
Caty, valued at $50
Cinthea, valued at $75
Wallis, valued at $300
Aaron, valued at $650
Joe(2), valued at $000
Stephen, valued at $700
total for the above group $2675
The United States Census records how many slaves Joseph Wardlaw owned through the years.
1810 census[
10 slaves
1820 census showed 27 slaves under Joseph Wardlaw:
12 males slaves to age 14
4 male slaves age 14-26
5 female slaves to age 14
4 female slaves ages 14-26
2 female slaves ages 26-45
The 1830 census showed that Joseph owned 44 slaves.
9 males under age 10
11 males ages 10-24
6 males ages 24-36
6 females under age 10
6 females ages 10-24
6 females ages 24-36
The 1840 census showed that Joseph owned 68 slaves.
68 slaves
11 males under age 10
13 males ages 10-24
8 males ages 24-36
4 males ages 36-55
10 females under age 10
14 females ages 10-24
2 females ages 24-36
5 females ages 36-55
1 female age 55-100
Joseph Wardlaw is also listed on the 1850 slave schedule in Abbeville County, South Carolina, with 66 slaves.
The Quay Plantation was located in Abbeville County, South Carolina. The home was built by the first owner, John Quay, about 1786. Quay sold
the property to James Wardlaw about 1798. James Wardlaw.lived there most of his life. His plantation grew cotton. This home is now known as The Quay-Wardlaw House.
James Wardlaw had 64 slaves listed in his probate inventory at the time of his death in 1842.
Old Molly, value $00
Simon, value $600
Richmond, Rachel, & Lucy, value $1000
Elsey, value $150
Harry, value $400
Nelson, Peggy, Martha, Jefferson & McDuffie, value $800
Thomas, boy, $500
Peter & his wife Hannah, value $900
Webster, Sarah, Clementine, Hazzard, Albert, & Betsey Ann, value $1700
Gilbert, boy, value $500
Cressy, girl, value $500
Frank, black smith, value $625
Jack & his wife Juda, value $600
Aquilla & his wife Sofa, Kitty, George, Jackson, Cornelia, Duff Green, Jinny, value $2500
Middleton & his wife Tabba, Maria, Lindy, Ben, Celia, Lizanne?, Powel, & Dick, value $1800
Joshua, value $750
Ishmael, value $550
Kizzy & her children, Tamar, Henry, & Lydia, value $850
Jacob, carpenter, and Charlotte, value $1275
Bay, boy, value $500
Matilda & her child Catherine, value $600
Frank & wife Fanny, Charles & Becky, value $1200
Jerry, the ditcher, value $300
Kizziah & her children Richard & Willis, value $700
Bob, value $700
Dorcas, a weaver, value $375
The slaves were divided and sold off to family members and others.
to D.L. Wardlaw
Fanny & Gilbert, value $575
Jacob & Charlotte, value $1310
Matilda & Catherine, value $690
Bob, value $796
Elsey, value $146 less Molly $100, total value $46
to Francis H. Wardlaw
Cressy, girl, value $566, sold to D. S. Wardlaw
Tamar, girl, value $400
Jerry Hole Rives, value $584.75 (see William A. Wardlaw)
to Robert H. Wardlaw
Coleman, value $600
Acquilla, Sophey, Kitey, George, Jackson, Cornelia, Duff Green, & Jinney, valued at $3060
Jack & Judy, value $775
to Joseph J. Wardlaw
Moses
Nelson, Peggy, Martha, Jefferson, & McDuffie, value $855
Richmond, Rachel, Lucy, value $1021, from A. C. Ramsey
to William A. Wardlaw
Dorcas, value $503
Simon, value $730
Hannah, value $370
Keziah, Richard, Willis, Miranda, value $1202
add Jerry Hole Rivas, $18.75
to Thomas C. Perrin
Billy, value $425
Peter, value $775
Ishamel, value $675
Jerry, value $300
to Lewis J. Patterson
Harry & Celia, value $590
John & Dick, value $600
Joshua, value $856
Polly, value $650
Thomas, value $600
Middleton, Tabby, Maria, Lindy, Ben, Powel, Sims, & Judy, value $2261
Kizzy, Tamar, Henry, & Lydia, value $1201
Frank, Fanny, Beck, & Charles, value $1200
deduct 1 negro Tamar to F. H. Wardlaw, $400
to A. C. Ramsey
Mariah, $535
Richmond, Rachel, Lucy, value $1020 (deduct to Jo's J. Wardlaw)
to Wm Bowie
Ann, Van Bosen, & George, value $810
to Wm H W Claw
Webster, Sarah, Clementine, Hazzard, Albert, & Betsey Ann, value $2460
to John L. Boyd
Frank & Jack, value $1200
The letters from Hiram Tilman to his father, Major Alfred Wardlaw, between the years 1857-1862 comprise the Letters to Alfred Wardlaw,
1857-1862 Collection. Sent from Memphis, Tennessee and other various locations to Charleston, South Carolina, these letters primarily concern slaves on the Wardlaw family plantation, the transport of
slaves to Memphis, Tennessee and Hiram Tilman’s military service along the Mississippi River during the American Civil War. In addition to the letters, this collection also includes documents with
lists of furniture sent to Abbeville District, South Carolina.
A check of three deed books that go into 1844 show the following transactions of Joseph Wardlaw having to do with slaves--there were numbers of
others concerning land. If you need to make an exhaustive check on whether Joseph bought any slaves in Tennessee, though, you should check Tipton County deeds, for Wardlaw's section of our county was
in Tipton before Lauderdale was formed.
Deed Book dated 6 Oct 1841 Joseph Wardlaw to Rezin S. Byrn negro man slave named George about 19 years old for $750.
Book B, 14 Dec 1842 Joseph Wardlaw sold to James L. Talbot of Madison County a negro girl slave named Minerva about 11 years old of a brown
complexion and "now in my possession in the town of Ripley "for $235. She was delivered into the
possession of Joseph W. Perkins as agent of Talbot.
Book B. p 252 - 6 Jan 1843 There must have been a suit in Circuit Court "Commissioners of Ripley vs Hiram C. Keller, Isaac J. Pinson, and John
H. Chapman" and as a result the Court ordered the sale of these slaves which Joseph Wardlaw bought: Peter about 30: Winny, a woman about 50; Maria about 20; Henry about 4; Wilson about 2; a boy child
about 4 months; Jefferson, 11; Essex, 12; and Mary 7. The sale was at the house of Hiram C. Keller on 17 Oct 1842. Book B, p 434 - 6 Jan 1844 Joseph Wardlaw to Hiram C. Keller for $420, his rights
to
the following negro slaves by virtue of a bill of sale for them from Samuel A. Thompson, a constable of Lauderdale Co.: Peter about 30: Winny
about 50: Maria about 21; Henry 5; Nelson 3; a boy child about 18 months: Jefferson about 12: Essex. a boy about 12; Mary about 8; They were sold under an execution from Circuit Court on 17 Oct 1842
and Wardlaw became the purchaser for $387, and he acknowledges
the above amount of $420 to be in full satisfaction for all his claim to the negroes. The Goodspeed History (Lauderdale, etc. edition) is
available for $30 from Southern Historical Press; also at the same price from Byron Sistier & Associates. Sistler has a website www.mindspring.com/~sistier from which you can order it. Southern
Historical charges 53.50 sah for the first book ($1.50 for additional); Sister charges $4.50 for an entire order.
Many of the Wardlaw slaves took the Wardlaw name. There is a family tree called 'Black Wardlaws' on the Clan Wardlaw page.
This is the Will of Rev. John Waller 1801.
He gives his slaves to his children and lastly his daughter Frances Jane who married Joseph (D25) Wardlaw. Those particular slaves may have
either kept the surname of the owner, Waller, or taken the name Wardlaw, now belonging to Joseph Wardlaw and Frances Jane.
Gravestone shown is of Rev. John Waller. See more on my tree 'Ancestry.com'
Here is the Will:
Will of the Reverend John Waller. Proven 11th Day of December 1801, A. Hamilton, O.A.D.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my daughter Ann Marshall my Negro's Leah and all the children she now hath with the future increase of the said
females also David . . . to her and her heirs forever.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my son Benjamin my negro man Jeffrey to him and his heirs forever. I also confirm the bargain he and I have made
by which I am to give him Alek & a Bay Colt for Sukey & her child Gabriel which said slaves are to be exchanged the twenty-fifth instant. But I desire my wife should have the services of
Jeffrey during her life.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my daughter Phebe Turnermy Negro's Dinah with the children she now hath and future increase. Also that at my
wife's death, I give unto my said daughter my negro boy named Henry to her and her heirs forever.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my son John Nichodemus my negro man Charles. Also at my wife's death, I give unto my said son my negro man Catus
. . . to him and his heirs forever.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my Mary Magdalen Watsonmy Negro's Delpha with the children she now hath with future increase. Also, at my wife's
death, I give unto my said daughter my negro boy named Winston to her and her heirs forever.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my son Thomas Baxter my four Negro's Bob, Patrick, Tavenaugh and Tillitha . . . to him and his heirs
forever.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my Elizabeth Chiles three Negro's Sukey and her child Gabriel and Nancy & future increase. But in case
anything should prevent the exchange of the Negro's between my son Benjamin & myself the 25th instant, then I give my said daughter . . . what I was to give my son Ben for Sukey and her child. I
also give unto my said daughter . . . at the death of my wife, two negro's Phil & Mary . . . to her and her heirs forever.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my daughter Dorothy my negro's Jonathan and Abba. . . I also give unto said daughter, at my wife's death, my
three Negro's Rachel and Adam and Leannis & future increase to her and her heirs forever.
Item- I give and bequeath unto my daughter Frances Jane my two negro's little Abram and Lilly. I also give unto my said daughter, at my wife's
death, my three Negro's OldAbram and his wife Isbell and her youngest child named Wallis & future increase to her and her heirs forever.
I have some other information on Rev. John from several sources, including the Encylcopedia of Virginia BIography and a book, Lives of Virginia
Baptist Ministers.
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF WARDLAW SLAVES NAMED AND EXTRACTED FROM HISTORICAL RECORDS
We have indicated in italics, the record from which these nomes were extracted. Wardlaw, Aaron - Estate of Capt Hugh Wardlow, 1802-1833,
Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Aaron (child of Loose) - Estate of Nancy Wordlow, 1806, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Aaron - Estate of Joseph / Wardlow, 1852, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Abel (child of Bas) - Estate of
John Wordlow, 1791 & 1826, Abbeville SC Wardlaw, Abraham - Estate of Joseph J Wordlow, 1852, Abbeville, SC
Wardlaw, Abraham Whittock - Estote of Joseph J Wardlow, 1852, Abbeville, SC
Wardlaw, Acquilla (daughter of Sein/Seta & Big Jack, sister of Jude (renamed Nance/Nancey], b.1900 - James Wardlaw's
Book of Slaves Wardlaw, Adeline - Estate of Capt Hugh Wordlaw, 1802-1833, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Agg (Cherry's family) - Estate of Joseph J
Wordlow, 1852, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Agoey, b.Jan 1817 - Jomes Wardlow's Book of Slaves Wardlaw, Albert, b.2 Nov 1839 - James Wardlow's Book of Slaves
Wardlaw, Albert - Estate of James Wordlow, 1840, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Albert (Cherry's family) - Estate of Joseph / Wardlow, 1852, Abbeville,
SC Wardlaw, Alfred - Estate of James Wardlow, 1854, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Alice - Estate of Capt Hugh Wardlaw, 1802-1833, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Allen (Cherry's family) - Estate of Joseph / Wardlow,
1852, Abbeville, SC Wardlaw, Alse (Elsy) - Estate of John Wardlow, 1791 & 1826, Abbeville SC
Wardlaw, Ambrose, b.1814 / d.1815 - James Wardlaw's Book of Sloves and many others.