Inscription
(Front) 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 Wardlaw (1767-1842) and his wife, Quay’s stepdaughter Hannah Clarke (1778-1825). James 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. (Reverse) Two sons were delegates to the Secession Convention: David L. Wardlaw (17991873), state representative and Speaker of the S.C. House, and later a judge; and Francis H. 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. Sponsored by Clan Wardlaw and the Abbeville County Historical Society, 2013
Location
Sources
More markers in Abbeville
Patrick Calhoun Family Burial
5.5 miles south of Abbeville is the burial ground of Patrick and Martha Calhoun, parents of John C. Calhoun.
Millwood Home of James Edward Calhoun
Half mile southeast is Millwood, home of James Edward Calhoun, 1796-1898, son of John Ewing and Floride Bonneau Calhoun and...
Bowie Family Memorial
Erected by the descendants of Abraham Bowie, who was born in Scotland and settled in Durham Parish, Charles County, Maryland, about 1700...
Abbeville’s Confederate Colonels
Abbeville, SC
AUGUSTUS J. LYTHGOE, 19 S.C. Inf.
Birthplace of Calhoun
On this land settled by his father Patrick Calhoun in the 1750s, defended against the Indians in the Cherokee War and the enemies of...
