Inscription
(Front) This plantation was once part of Boochawee Hall, owned by Governor James Moore (d. 1706). Moore left 615 acres to his daughter Rebecca, who married Thomas Barker (d. 1715) in 1709. Barker, who planted inland rice here, served one term in the Commons House of Assembly. In 1715, at the outset of the Yemassee War, Barker raised and commanded a company defending Goose Creek.
That spring Capt. Barker and 26 of his men were killed in a Yemassee ambush. (Reverse) Rebecca Moore Barker married planter William Dry (d. 1740), who served six terms in the Commons House of Assembly and was its Speaker 1728-29. In 1785 William Loughton Smith (1758-1812) acquired the plantation; he was a state representative and later U.S. Congressman and U.S. minister to Portugal.
Button Hall was owned by two of Smith’s grandsons after the Civil War, when it was subdivided and sold or rented to freedmen for small farms. Erected by the City of Goose Creek, 2007
Location
Sources
More markers in Berkeley
Stony Landing Plantation
Moncks Corner, SC
Here in 1863, the Confederate semi-submersible torpedo boat, Little David, first of its type, was constructed.
Old Moncks Corner
Moncks Corner, SC
Here was located the provincial town of Moncks Corner, deriving its name from Thomas Monck, an Englishman, who in 1735 purchased Mitten...
Santee Canal
Moncks Corner, SC
(1) This canal, twenty-two miles in length, connects the Santee and Cooper Rivers.
Mulberry Plantation
Originally granted to Sir Peter Colleton in 1679.
Goose Creek Church‡
Goose Creek, SC
The Parish St. James was founded by Act of Assembly in 1706.
