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Lowndes County and the American Revolution

Lowndes County, Mississippi possesses multiple ties to the American Revolution and the War of 1812. Its very namesake, Congressman William Jones Lowndes (1782-1822), had multiple connections to the Revolution. William's father, Rawlins Lowndes (172-1800) was briefly governor of South Carolina during the war. In addition, William married Elizabeth Pinckney (1781-1857), the daughter of Federalist leader Thomas Pinkney, veteran of both the Revolution and the War of 1812.

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In addition, Lowndes County is the burial place of eight veterans linked to both wars who served or contributed in various ways. We include a list below to recognize their stories and local connections.

William Jones Lowndes

William Jones Lowndes was born at Horseshoe Plantation in St. Bartholomew’s Parish on February 11, 1782, the son of Rawlins and Sarah Jones Lowndes. Although christened William Jones, he never used his middle name. A severe childhood bout with rheumatic fever left him with an enfeebled body but did nothing to dull his exceptional mind. Educated at private academies in England and Charleston, Lowndes was a model student and outstanding orator. He studied law in the office of Henry William DeSaussure and Timothy Ford and was accepted to the bar in 1804, but he practiced for less than a year before quitting the legal profession. On September 10, 1802, Lowndes married Elizabeth Brewton Pinckney, the daughter of former governor Thomas Pinckney. The marriage produced three children.

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In 1804 Lowndes was elected to the General Assembly, representing St. Philip’s and St. Michael’s Parishes in the House of Representatives until 1808. He quickly became a respected and important member of the assembly, where he supported bills to establish public schools and to prohibit slave importations. He also authored the so-called Compromise of 1808, an amendment to the state constitution that provided the upcountry with more equitable representation in the General Assembly. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the state Senate in 1808.

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Although a Democratic-Republican in his political views, Lowndes nevertheless was a strong critic of Thomas Jefferson’s handling of the deteriorating relationship between the United States and Britain and France. In 1810 Lowndes was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, where he became a leading member of the “War Hawks,” a faction of young congressmen who strongly favored a military resolution of the nation’s dispute with Britain. Working with fellow congressmen Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, and others, Lowndes pushed to strengthen the nation’s defenses and ardently supported America’s entry into war in 1812. A gifted legislator and persuasive speaker, Lowndes rapidly established himself as one of the most influential members of Congress. He sat on important committees, serving at different times as chairman of the committees on naval affairs, ways and means, coinage, and foreign affairs. A nationalist, he helped author legislation creating the Second Bank of the United States and supported the enactment of protective tariffs in 1816. In 1817 Lowndes introduced a plan to pay off the national debt, which led to the elimination of the debt by 1835. In his final important public work, Lowndes and Clay led the successful effort in the House to pass the Missouri Compromise of 1820, which admitted Missouri as a slave state but recognized the right of Congress to limit slavery in the territories.

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Lowndes’s talent and influence in national affairs did not go unrecognized by his contemporaries. He declined two offers to become secretary of war and also turned down diplomatic appointments to Russia, Turkey, and France. Nominated for Speaker of the House in 1820, he lost the election by a single vote. In December 1821 the South Carolina General Assembly nominated Lowndes for the presidency. Sensible of the honor but also embarrassed by the damage the nomination had done to the candidacy of his close friend Calhoun, Lowndes tactfully responded that he did not believe that the presidency was “an office to be either solicited or declined.”

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During this time, however, Lowndes’s health began to deteriorate. He resigned his seat in Congress in May 1822 and sought a change of climate to improve his condition. After spending several months in the North, he sailed for London with his wife and daughter in October. Lowndes died en route on October 27, 1822, and was buried as sea.

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Sources:

Ravenel, Harriott Horry. Life and Times of William Lowndes of South Carolina, 1782–1822. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1901.

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Vipperman, Carl J. William Lowndes and the Transition of Southern Politics, 1782–1822. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989.

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South Carolina Encyclopedia Online:

www.scencyclopedia.org/sce/entries/lowndes-william-jones/

William Cocke

William Cocke (1748-1828)​ was an American politician, lawyer, statesman, and Revolutionary War veteran.

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Cocke was born in 1748 to Abraham and Mary Batte Cocke of Virginia. He practiced law in Amelia County and was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses.

 

In July 1776, he served as a colonel of a militia at the Battle of Island Flats in Tennessee. It pitted the American patriot militia against the British and allied Cherokee forces. It is considered the opening battle of the American War for Independence in the west.

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Later he traveled through much of what became eastern Kentucky and East Tennessee with pioneer and frontiersman Daniel Boone. 

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At the age of 65, Cocke enlisted as a private in the War of 1812 and served under Andrew Jackson in the Creek War. 

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He was elected to the Mississippi state legislature in 1813 and appointed by President James Madison to serve as an Indian agent to the Chickasaw Nation the following year.

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In 1821, Cocke was one of the commissioners appointed to lay out the town of Columbus, Miss. into lots in the sixteenth section.

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He died in 1828 and is buried in Friendship Cemetery.

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He has the unique distinction of having served in the legislature of Transylvania (Kentucky) colony, the assembly of Virginia, the North Carolina legislature, the Franklin Council of State, the Southwest Territory legislature, the Tennessee House, the U.S. Senate, and the Mississippi legislature. 

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Cocke's Findagrave entry: 

www.findagrave.com/memorial/8004425/william-cocke

John Murphy, Sr.

John Murphy Sr. was born in 1746 in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania (Later York County) to James and unknown Murphy. The family moved to what became York County, South Carolina in the 1760's. He married Jane Love, the daughter of Alexander and Margaret (Moore) Love.

 

During the Revolution, John volunteered as a private under Capt. Hugh Bratton in the South Carolina militia. Later, he fought under Gen. Sumter in the battles at Fishing Creek and Wright's Bluff (Fort Watson) where he was wounded in both thighs. He also served under Col. William "Danger" Thomson in the Third South Carolina Regiment.

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Murphy was an elder and leader of music at Bethesda Presbyterian Church in York County.

He moved to Madison County, Alabama in 1818 where he remained for five years, before coming to the Caledonia region of Lowndes County, Miss. He died May 8, 1834 and is buried in Unity Cemetery. 

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Further reading:

The family of John Murphy Sr. : from their arrival in America through the Civil War by James L. Murphy available at the Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System (G 929.2 MURPHY).

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Murphy's Findagrave entry:

www.findagrave.com/memorial/33857975/john-murphy

Mark Mitchell Harris

Born in 1790, Mark Mitchell Harris went on to marry Nancy Riley and have at least four children: John Riley, Mary Elizabeth, Mark Mitchell, and Frank.​

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He served as a 2nd Lieutenant during the War of 1812 and died in 1854. He is buried in Murrah Chapel Cemetery in Lowndes County, Miss.

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Harris' Findagrave entry:

www.findagrave.com/memorial/19049914/mark-mitchell-harris

Robert Murphy

Robert Murphy was born 1786 in York County, South Carolina, the first child of John and Jane (Love) Murphy Sr. He married Rachel Rainey, daughter of Samuel and Mary Rainey.

 

They moved to the Caledonia region of Mississippi around 1820. Robert and two sons-in-law, William G. Wright and Andrew A. Dowdle, built a mill on the Buttahatchie River.

 

He died April 30, 1836 and is buried beside his father in Unity Cemetery.

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Further reading:

The family of John Murphy Sr. : from their arrival in America through the Civil War by James L. Murphy available at the Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System (G 929.2 MURPHY).

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Murphy's Findagrave entry:

www.findagrave.com/memorial/33857985/robert-murphy

William Franklin Shields

William Franklin Shields was born in Georgia around 1798. He was appointed a midshipman in the United States Navy on February 2, 1814. He served on the USS Enterprise (1799)  which, during the War of 1812, was most famous for its battle and capture of the British Royal Navy ship Boxer on September 5, 1813. While Shields was not serving on the ship at the time, he did join the crew soon thereafter.

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He married Amanda Caroline G. Bouchelle on May 9, 1829 in Athens, Georgia. They had at least two children: Thomas P. and William B. in South Carolina. The family then moved to Lowndes County, Miss. sometime in the late 1830s. Amanda passed away around 1838 and Shields married her sister, Harriet L.C. Bouchelle on November 15, 1838. They had three children: Clara M., Blanche E., and Samuel J.

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He was placed on the reserve list as a Commander on September 13, l855. He died on June 30, 1856 in Marion County, Alabama.

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At the time of his death, Shields owned the following enslaved persons: Thornton, Jack, Smart, Stephney, Jerry, Julius, Wellsby, Jackson, Peter, George, Manga, Sarah, Louisa, Julia, Martha, Marina, Anne, Charlotte, Emeline, Sophia, Mary, Margaretta, and Osmyn. â€‹

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Records indicate that he is buried in an unidentified private cemetery in Lowndes County.

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Resource:

Shields' probate file (#892) is at the Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System in the Local History Department.​​​

Samuel Givens

Samuel Givens was born in Chester County, South Carolina on May 12, 1874. He enlisted in Capt. Winton’s Company of Tennessee Militia on Nov. 17, 1814 and was discharged on May 13, 1815.  He served at Mobile, Alabama.

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He married Cynthia Milligan on October 10, 1822 in Morgan County, Alabama. They had at least four children: Newton, James R., Mary M. and Zenas W.

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Givens lived in Lowndes County, Miss. as early as 1841 and worked as a farmer.​​

 

He died on March 18, 1889 and is buried in Egger Cemetery in Lowndes County. 

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Givens' Findagrave entry:

www.findagrave.com/memorial/34263299/samuel-givens.

Samuel A. Edmondson

Samuel A. Edmondson was born in 1794 in Camden, South Carolina. â€‹

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He is known for his famous ride to Nashville, Tennessee, in order to secure General Andrew Jackson's aid against the Creek Indians. Major John Pitchlynn, Choctaw interpreter for George Washington, furnished Edmondson's first horse. Edmondson brought Jackson news of the Fort Mims (Alabama) Battle and Massacre on August 30, 1813. Jackson immediately mobilized troops and led the campaign that would culminate in the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in 1814, which ended the Creek resistance.

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He married Jane Martin in Lowndes County and they had four children: Powhatan E., Robert Tecumseh, Sarah R. (later Halbert), and Rebecca P. (later Dowsing).

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Edmondson died in 1869 and is buried in Murrah Chapel Cemetery in Lowndes County, Miss.

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Edmondson's Findagrave entry:

www.findagrave.com/memorial/7302655/samuel-edmondson.

Asa Flood

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Asa Flood was born in 1795 in Buckingham County, Virginia to Moses and Mary Elizabeth Bondurant. He served in the 8th Regiment Virginia Militia during the War of 1812​.

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He married Jane W. Gray on October 24, 1821 in Morgan County, Alabama. They had at least five children including: Joseph, Victoria A., Judy J., Felix W., and Caroline.

 

He is listed as living in Lowndes County, Miss. as early as 1837. He worked as a planter. 

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Flood died around 1851 and was buried in Pine Grove, two miles north of Steens, Miss. Its current location is unknown.​

To donate to the Lowndes County America 250 Celebration make checks out to the Columbus-Lowndes Public Library or call 662-329-5300. 

CONTACT >

For more information call the Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System at 662-329-5300.

CONTACT >

T: 662-329-5300

F: 662-329-5156

E: mvance@lowndes.lib.ms.us

© 2025 by Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System.


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