Unit Title:
Confederate pension applications, 1919-1929
Accumulation:
1919-1929
Created:
1919-1929
Creator:
York County (S.C.). Board of Honor.
Physical Description:
0.00 microfilm reels (partial microfilm reel), (35mm), 0.00 cubic ft., partial container (partial a)
Language:
English
Biography or History:
South Carolina began granting pensions to needy Confederate veterans and their widows in 1887, but initially limited the pensions to veterans who were disabled by loss of limb or other injury during the war and widows of soldiers or sailors who had died in service. Both had to meet means tests, which were made even more restrictive in 1900. Responding to a provision of the 1895 State Constitution, the General Assembly in 1896 expanded eligibility to poor uninjured veterans over 60 and poor widows over 60 and ushered in a major growth period for both pension funding and the number of applicants. Revisions enacted in 1900 refined the classification and procedures for pensions, defining a system that would remain in force until 1919. Unfortunately, few applications for Confederate pensions under any of the pre-1919 acts survive either at the state or local level. Act No. 176, 1919 S.C. Acts 275 established a Confederate Pension Department under the direction of a commissioner and a seven-member board and required all existing pensioners to reapply. The state board appointed a three-member board for each county to approve applications from local residents. Eligible pensioners included all veterans and widows over the age of sixty who had married veterans before 1890. The state pension board set the compensation and adjudicated any disputes forwarded from the county boards. The General Assembly provided $500,000 to pay for pensions. Changes the following year (Act No. 609, 1920 S.C. Acts 1099) eliminated the state board, named the comptroller general as pension commissioner, and authorized the local veterans camp to hear appeals of each county board's decision. Act No. 63, 1923 S.C. Acts 107 allowed African Americans who had served at least six months as cooks, servants, or attendants to apply for a pension. Then in 1924, apparently because there were too many applications, the act was amended to eliminate all laborers, teamsters, and non-South Carolinians by extending eligibility only to South Carolina residents who had served the state for at least six months as "body servants or male camp cooks."
Custodial History:
unspecified
Acquisition Information:
York County (S.C.). Board of Honor.
Scope and Content:
This series consists of county copies of pension applications and supporting papers filed by Confederate veterans. The state copies for York County do not survive. Information includes veteran's name and residence; military unit and rank; nature of any wounds or disabilities sustained by the veteran while in Confederate service; income and property of the veteran and his wife; and the date of the application.
Appraisal Information:
unspecified
Accruals:
no
Arrangement:
Series arranged alphabetically. For indexing purposes each application has been assigned a sequential number.
Conditions Governing Access:
none
Conditions Governing Use:
none
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements:
none
Other Finding Aid:
Names of applicants, witnesses, and commanding officers; places of residence; and selected subjects including military units and the term "Blacks, Confederate Service" are indexed in the repository's On-line Index to Confederate Pension applications. For this series, an attempt was made to standardize the names of military units in this index. County records relating to pensions and related records are described in Patrick McCawley, Guide to Civil War Records: A Guide to the Records in the South Carolina Department of Archives and History, published by the repository in 1994.
Location of Originals:
South Carolina Dept. of Archives and History, 8301 Parklane Road, Columbia, SC 29223
Alternative Form Available:
none
Related Material:
State copies of applications from all other counties except Williamsburg are available in the series Confederate Pension Applications, 1919-1938, in the records of the comptroller general. Approximately 250 applications under earlier laws are available in Series S126159, Applications for Confederate Pensions, 1888-1906. Most of these earlier applications date before 1895. Lists of persons receiving pensions were printed as part of the annual reports of the comptroller general in the series Reports and Resolutions to the General Assembly beginning in 1888. The 1901 list from the 1902 Reports and Resolutions has been reprinted in Brent H. Holcomb, editor, South Carolina's Confederate Pensioners in 1901 (Columbia, S.C.: SCMAR, 2001). The repository also holds county copies of pension applications and county pension lists from a number of other counties. The South Caroliniana Library at the University of South Carolina holds a Lexington County list of pensioners beginning in 1897.
Bibliography:
none
Other Descriptive Data:
Boxed with and filmed with Confederate Pension Papers, 1945-1965.
Processing Information:
None