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WELCOME...
The district was
occupied for thousands of years by succeeding
cultures of indigenous peoples. By the time of
European encounter, Siouan-speaking tribes, such as
the Pee Dee, Cheraw and Catawba, inhabited the
Piedmont area above the fall line.
The Orangeburg Judicial District was chartered by
European Americans in 1769 from a mostly unorganized
upland area between the Congaree and Savannah
rivers. A county, initially of the same name but
later called Orange, was organized within the
district but de-organized in 1791, after the American
Revolutionary War.
The southwest portion bordering on the Savannah
River, about half of Orangeburg District, was
separated and organized as Barnwell District in
1800. In 1804 the northern third of the district was
separated to form the new Lexington District, which
gained another, smaller portion of Orangeburg
District in 1832.
During the nineteenth century, the districts and
counties were developed chiefly as cotton
plantations for short-staple cotton. This
development followed the invention of the cotton gin
in the late eighteenth century, which made the
processing of short-staple cotton profitable. The
county became a center of labor by black slaves on
the plantations, who were transported from coastal
areas and the Upper South to cultivate and process
cotton. Those brought from the coastal areas were
likely of the Gullah culture and language. The
enslaved African Americans greatly outnumbered the
white planters and non-slaveholding whites.
Reflecting the patterns of nineteenth-century
settlement, the area is still chiefly agricultural
and majority-African American in population.
In 1868, under the revised state constitution during
the Reconstruction era, South Carolina districts
were organized as counties. Resident voters were
enabled to elect their state representatives rather
than having them chosen by the state legislature, as
was done previously. Election of representatives by
the state legislature had kept the districts
dominated by the elite owners of major plantations
in the Low Country and elsewhere. The changes in
rules expanded participation in the franchise by
more male residents. Emancipation of slaves after
the war under newly ratified federal constitutional
amendments resulted in freedmen voting. Using voter
intimidation, white Democrats took control of the
state legislature by the end of the century; they
passed state electoral laws and a new constitution
that essentially disfranchised most blacks, a
situation that lasted until after the federal
legislation of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
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Neighboring
Counties:
Calhoun Co. - north,
Clarendon
Co. - northeast,
Dorchester Co. - southeast,
Berkeley
Co. - southeast
Bamberg Co. - south,
Colleton Co. - south,
Aiken Co. -
west,
Barnwell Co. - west,
Lexington Co. - northwest
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