Halsey Map | Preservation Society of Charleston
ArnoldusVanderhorst

ARNOLDUS VANDERHORST

 

Elected intendant September 12, 1785, succeeding Richard Hutson. Succeeded by John F. Grimké, September 1786. Elected intendant September 13, 1790, succeeding Thomas Jones; re-elected September 12, 1791. Succeeded by John Huger, September 1792.
Born 1748, died January 29, 1815, buried in St. Michael's Episcopal churchyard.
Son of Arnoldus Vanderhorst and Elizabeth Simons, married Elizabeth Raven 1771.
Merchant, planter in Christ Church Parish, on the Wateree and Congaree rivers in the midlands of South Carolina, and at his wife's plantation on Kiawah Island (St. John's, Colleton, Parish).
Militia captain at Haddrell's Point (1776), colonel (1782) under General Francis Marion; general (ca. 1804) in the Berkeley County Regiment of Militia.
Represented Christ Church Parish during three Royal Assemblies, 1772-1775, and in the First and Second Provincial Congresses. Represented Christ Church Parish in the South Carolina state house in the first two General Assemblies, 1776-1778, and in the State Senate for five General Assemblies, 1783-1791. Elected to the State House again in 1794, resigning when elected governor of South Carolina in December 1794. Represented St. Philip's and St. Michael's parishes in State House 1798-1799.

Bailey, N. Louise, Mary L. Morgan, and Carolyn R. Taylor. Biographical Directory of the South Carolina Senate, 1776-1985. Volume 2. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1986.
Charleston City Gazette, August 25, September 18, September 21, 1790; August 25, 1791.
Charleston Evening Gazette, September 12, 1785; September 11, 1786
Lockhart, Matthew A. "Vanderhorst, Arnoldus." Walter Edgar, ed. The South Carolina Encyclopedia. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2006.


 

Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of Congress www.lofc.gov

Vanderhorst Row, opposite Longitude Lane at 76, 78, and 80 East Bay Street. Arnoldus Vanderhorst built these three townhouses in 1800 as rental properties to be held for the benefit of his daughters.

 

Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress www.loc.gov

George N. Barnard, "Three gun batty, Vanderhorst Wharf, Charleston, S.C." 1865

 

US Department of Commerce, Coast and Geodetic Survey, “Charleston Harbor, 1865.” American Memory, Library of Congress memory.loc.gov

Battery on Vanderhorst Wharf, 1865

 

Mills Atlas, Charleston District, 1825. American Memory, Library of Congress http://memory.loc.gov

Location of Vanderhorst's plantation house on Kiawah Island.

 

Edmund Petrie, Ichnography of Charleston, South Carolina. London, Phoenix Fire Company, 1788. American Memory, Library of Congress http://memory.loc.gov

Location of Arnoldus Vanderhorst's dwelling house. His commercial wharf is marked 83 on this map.

 

provided

With his marriage to Elizabeth Raven, Arnoldus Vanderhorst came into possession of the east half of Kiawah Island. He directed construction of this plantation house, which was completed in 1803.

 

Preservation Society of Charleston

Arnoldus Vanderhorst's town house was at the south corner of East Bay Street and Longitude Lane, on the site of Governor Thomas Smith's earlier residence.

 

Preservation Society of Charleston
www.preservationsociety.org/