THE SOUTH CAROLINIAN by Mary C. Simms Oliphant When Gus Graydon invited me to speak of Francis Simkins as a South Carolinian, he told me that he had first asked my son, Simms, if he thought I would be willing to come and that my son had replied: "Don't ask her if you don't mean it." My son was possessed of sound judgment as well as a sense of humor; he well knew I would be here today. Francis spoke in his best vein when he wrote of home and I am fortunate enough to be able to give you in his own words his feeling about Edgefield, family, South Carolina and the South as shown in a talk he made here some ten years ago: "During my childhood here in Edgefield," he wrote, "the family history was preserved in a few relics, in the tales of the elders, and in a fat scrapbook. We read this book as often as we did our Shakespeare and our Bible. Some would say that this volume should not have been believed; that it was filled with Victorian fustian gleaned from the reminiscences with which fifty-odd newspapers of South Carolina were loaded during the fifty years following the fall of the Confederacy. . . . But such critical disillusionment never en- tered my mind until, as a young man, I had the experience of being contaminated by the skepticism of Columbia University. Since then the sentimentality or the wisdom of mature years has prompted me to recover faith in the ancestors. Wide reading, supplemented by a conservative faith in history, has taught me that, at least among Southerners. an exalted life must be built upon the exaltation of the forebears.... "Thirty years ago," said Francis, "my father, the late McGowan Simkins, stood on the ruins of the Simkins family estate at Cedar Fields to tell the ladies of the Edgefield Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution of Arthur Simkins and his descendants ... the occasion of this address was McGowan Simkins' proudest day, for he had a profound sense of family pride. He was able to proclaim the Edgefield past as worthy of memory . . . `For my part,' he said, `I believe everyone should have a history of his family and preserve it as a legacy'." Francis then went on to relate that a professor of psychology had recently asked him what possible good there was in ancestor hunting, as he called it. Francis, always controversial, had replied that among Southerners at least it was among the most useful of endeavors. "To those of us," he said, "who are going down the scale financially and socially it is a means of boosting our pride, giving us consolations not unlike those of religion. To those of us who are climbing up the scale . . . ancestor hunting gives us something money cannot buy, a rationalization of our success in the eyes of neighbors who are always family conscious. May the descendants of Arthur Simkins," he concluded, ". . . make use of a proud heritage as a means of helping a crazy world back into the sanity and the mercy of their ancestors." Thus spoke Francis Simkins a decade ago, here where he was born on December 14, 1897, within a few blocks of this church, a second son and third child of Samuel McGowan Simkins, whose forebears were founders of Edgefield, and Sarah Raven Lewis Simkins who never forgot that she came to the red hills of the Piedmont from Charleston. It was from her that Francis learned how to tell a tale and how to put a tale down on paper. She was not beyond a little exaggeration or a bit of satire, arts she had learned from the trenchant pen of Colonel James T. Bacon, a tablet to whose memory is here on my right. Miss Sally, all agreed, was an inimitable story-teller, at times a teller of disillusioning tales about all of us; sometimes embarrassingly realistic and amusing. My own recollection of her goes beyond my actual acquaintance. In the stern days after the fall of the Confederacy, when money was almost non-existent, and one's pleasures were of one's own making, my father and Miss Sally and a few blithe young spirits rode about the country in a one-horse jenny wagon pulled by an old mule, giving amateur theatrical performances. Francis was gifted with the same satiric vein and love of gaiety as his mother, and, like her, was not above a bit of exaggeration himself, when he found it useful in making his point. He bore the name of the doctor who delivered him - Dr. Frank Butler, grandson of Governor Francis W. Pickens and son of the great Confederate general, M. C. Butler. Like most Edgefield boys of that day, Francis grew up without the creature comforts we take for granted. There was no plumbing in that small cottage on Columbia Road - few of us at that time had become acquainted with plumbing - and, while a backyard well supplied sweet cool water, it also supplied an occasional case of typhoid fever. An ample vegetable garden, pig pen and milk cow filled the family larder in summer, and fatback, home-cured hams and collard greens and the like were the delights of winter. I well remember the good things on Miss Sally's dinner table as well as the sparkling conversation around it. And so Francis came to manhood in this old town. Someone once said to me that whenever I spoke of Edgefield I sounded as though I were offering a toast. 'Twas well said; for there is a rare quality in this courthouse village which has given birth to or nurtured in its soil so many sons worthy of noble toasts-governors, ten of them; lieutenant-governors, five of them; statesmen, such as George McDuffie; chancellors, such as Francis Hugh Wardlaw and James Parsons Carroll ; preachers, such as Basil Manly of the Baptist Church here; editors, such as Maximilian LaBorde; heroes, such as the immortal James Bonham and William Travis of the Alamo, and that dauntless Edgefield girl, Lucinda Horne, who followed Company K throughout its Virginia campaign, nursing its sick and wounded and dying. This is the soil which produced such a race. And this is the same soil which, this the same people who produced Francis Butler Simkins-scholar, historian, author, orator, gentleman - and spokesman for the South, though never its apologist. In him was the same fearlessness, the same courage in the face of public opinion, the determination not to be made to conform, the charm and grace and wit and the warmth in friendship, and that unashamed pride in a good heritage which his father had and which marked those Edgefield statesmen and heroes of another age. The Simkins histories will serve as his memorial; in these he has made his own written record of his contribution to his state and to the South. For the South, as Francis saw it was a separate entity, and he was certain that, despite all calamities and threats of change, the South was tinged with an everlasting, worthwhile quality which would insure its survival. Today, all Edgefield is gathered in this dear church where Francis worshipped with Miss Sally and Mr. Mac. Here are representatives of the ancient families-the Woodsons, the Sheppards, the Tompkinses, the Mimses, the Wardlaws, the Garys, the Hollands, the Dunovants, the Colletts, the Bonhams, the Tillmans, the Rainsfords, the Pickenses, the Thurmonds, the Hughes, the Nicholsons, the Bacons, the Brooks, the Wigfalls, the Norrises, the Hammonds, the Butlers - and a host of others - if not here in the flesh are surely hovering in spirit to do honor to their compatriot and to mourn his loss with the Simkins family. And those of us from other precincts come as pilgrims offering oblation to the service of another Son of Old Edgefield.