-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
DigitalProjectFinalRevised.Rmd
638 lines (411 loc) · 82.4 KB
/
DigitalProjectFinalRevised.Rmd
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
---
title: 'Pockets of Power: South Carolina''s Higher Education Landscape in the Nineteenth
Century'
author: "Sally Mauldin"
date: "2023-12-8"
output:
pdf_document: default
html_document: default
---
```{r setup, include=FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = TRUE)
```
**I. Introduction**
The date was March 22, 1897. It was a Monday in Denmark, South Carolina, a small Lowcountry town of about 700 people. South Carolina Senator Stanwix G. Mayfield sat alone in his Main Street office, pondering a curious visitor from earlier that day. Mayfield was a lawyer and visited with countless clients, constituents, and colleagues in that very office over the years, but this meeting was quite unlike any other of his career. He had just met someone whose life would become intertwined with his own and that partnership would challenge South Carolina’s higher education status quo.
Elizabeth Evelyn Wright was only 24 years old when she approached Senator Mayfield, the seventh child of a Black carpenter father and a full-blooded Cherokee mother.[^fn1] Her parents were both illiterate, born during the days of slavery, the latest generation in a long line of those who were not allowed to read or write. She hailed from Georgia, and her upbringing had been fraught with discrimination on two counts: first, due to her mother’s lineage, she was “resented” because the Cherokee “stood in the way of the white man’s conquest”; and second, due to her father’s lineage, she was seen as having “deprived” white men of a labor force as well as creating “an economic competitor” with that same coveted labor.[^fn2] She wanted out of Georgia, and the Tuskegee Institute provided her a different path. Booker T. Washington became her mentor, and she wanted to become a similar beacon of hope for others like her. She founded Voorhees University, a historically Black college in South Carolina, in 1897. It was the last higher education institution founded in South Carolina during the nineteenth century and the last of the five historically Black colleges and universities founded in South Carolina following the Civil War.
How is it that very few have ever heard of Elizabeth Evelyn Wright? Her accomplishments, particularly in late nineteenth century South Carolina as a person of color and a female, are surely worthy of note. The intersectionality of her gender and race makes Wright an anomaly of her time, her accomplishments unheard of in such a conservative state. As is often the case, however, “historical memory is…dominated by the perspectives of those who survived and triumphed.”[^fn3] While Voorhees survives to this day, Wright’s memory has been largely lost in the annals of South Carolina history, even to those well versed in the history of higher education.
Many higher education institutions opened and shuttered their doors across the country in the nineteenth century. This study focuses exclusively on South Carolina higher education institutions that existed in the nineteenth century and are still in existence and accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC). The institutions that found a way to survive from one century into two more centuries are the focus of this project. What made these institutions viable? What ingredients in their makeup allowed them to weather the many storms of the nineteenth century? Who founded the schools and for what purpose? Was there an agenda behind each school’s origins? If there was an agenda, what was it? Political? Financial? Religious? Racial? The higher education landscape is far too complicated to answer all of these questions about each of the 22 institutions that meet the criteria for inclusion in this limited project, but it does paint a picture of how higher education developed in South Carolina and who was involved in the process.
Higher education began in the South Carolina Lowcountry in 1775 and migrated westward across the state, arriving in the Midlands in 1801 and the Upstate in 1839. The movement began with two public schools, followed by an assortment of religious institutions. The state’s first female colleges were established in the 1840s and 1850s. The final frontier of nineteenth century higher education, historically Black colleges and universities were established in South Carolina beginning in 1869 with four more to follow before the close of the century. Unsurprisingly, higher education began with institutions that served white males as the only students, and this was the status quo in South Carolina from 1780 until the first female school was founded in 1845, over a half century after the College of Charleston began its operations. Even then, female educational opportunities were limited to private institutions until the opening of Winthrop College in 1886. Black people had to wait even longer for any higher educational opportunities and even those avenues only opened due to legislation during Reconstruction.
Charting the origins of higher education institutions in South Carolina through a database is a significant undertaking as it leads to new understandings about the political nature of the past to help form a different future. Imagining the solution as a digital humanities project allows for the creation of “common organizational models [that] would better oppose institutional and disciplinary inequities,” with a concrete goal of creating helpful dataset models and visualizations for scholarly and public consumption.[^fn4] The first two centuries of United States higher education history are steeped in trauma, particularly with respect to the treatment of unfree people in those founding years. The trauma continues to be perpetuated as the "wealth that was expropriated from Black and Indigenous peoples through enslavement and colonization" was then "donated or granted to various institutions of higher education in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries" which "continues to circulate and produce more wealth for these institutions."[^fn5] Synthesizing these histories in one place allows previously unknown pockets of power to be uncovered to understand how and why these institutions operate.
The problem is that none of the scholarship has made broader connections between the powerful political figures who ruled the government and their influences in founding and establishing higher education, particularly during the long nineteenth century. It is not enough to uncover colonialism’s ideologies embedded in the foundations of a scholar’s home institution; rather, there are clusters of political influence that can be uncovered by investigating an entire state’s institutions. The political beliefs of these figures made their way into the very fabric of higher education, becoming part of the curriculum which ensured that those views were passed onto the next generation of leaders. An ugly cycle was born and perpetuated in the name of enlightenment for over two centuries.
Scholarship must include all types of institutions, ranging from all-male, all-white colleges to co-educational colleges to historically Black colleges and universities. The comparison between all different types of institutions will highlight the similarities and differences in how each type developed and who was responsible for founding ideologies ingrained in the institution’s mission and structure. The data must exist in the same dataset to see connections that may be missed when information for institutions is siloed. Digital interventions break through those siloes to visualize the data in a way where connections between people and institutions are clearly demonstrated. By focusing on a state, the end result will be a small world network, which allows for many interesting conclusions including “the time it might have taken for materials to circulate within and across communities and the relative importance of individual actors in shaping the past.”[^fn6] These network visualizations have the ability to connect small communities to global ones which makes “network analysis a promising methodology for connecting the historiographic traditions of microhistories and the Braudelian longue durée.”[^fn7] As the network visualizations allow for connections to be seen between institutions and the state, the possibility then exists to connect those circumstances to larger political movements in the entire United States.
Examination of the individuals who played a role in the founding of each school reveals that many of them held political roles in colonial South Carolina and beyond. This realization sheds light on the power that politicians exerted on higher education and vice versa. These men were not just university presidents, founders, and trustees; they were also governors, legislators, and Founding Fathers. They determined what laws would be passed, what priorities existed in the state capital, and perhaps most importantly, what position South Carolina would hold when it came to the institution of slavery. Their political ideologies spilled over into their service in colleges and universities, which meant that the very foundations of many of these institutions were shaped by the same people who believed that perpetuating a system that kept people unfree in the name of personal profit was right. They used their influence in the state house as well as on campuses statewide to teach the next generation of leaders (in many cases, their children) how to justify the existence of such a cruel and inhumane system, which indoctrinated countless young men to believe that what their forefathers did was not only justified but right. The entire state system was meant to serve one purpose through the antebellum period – maintaining everything exactly as it was using all available avenues including the legislature, the courts, churches, and educational institutions. This project shows that they were all intertwined, and the truth is that higher education institutions did not just "exclude historically and systematically marginalized communities" but were "founded and continue to operate at the expense of those communities."[^fn8]
When charting the number of each political role represented in the network visualization, it is clear that the most common role found across the network is that of legislator. The roles of governor/legislator and governor come in a distant second and third place. Data reveals that it was not uncommon for the same person to hold multiple political roles over the course of his or her lifetime.
More diversity appeared in higher education during Reconstruction and after, largely in part to federal legislation. Historically Black colleges and universities spread across South Carolina, although most of them were private and religiously affiliated rather than state supported. The participation of politicians in these schools (or the lack thereof) speaks to the importance white politicians placed on each specific college. The more politicians who played a part, the more important the college was to those in power. This meant that some colleges were more important in upholding the state's ideology than other colleges.
This study utilizes a dataset that includes information about 22 colleges and universities, all located in South Carolina. The data includes fields for founders, namesakes, benefactors, presidents, board members, and other key figures involved in the founding of the schools, along with information about location, land origins, and key years. There are nearly 300 individuals included in this study and biographical information about each one is included when possible. It is not a comprehensive dataset as some information was unavailable despite efforts to obtain it from the institution directly.
The dataset has limitations in its current state. The scope includes only the individuals involved in the founding of each college and university. As the schools were founded over the course of more than a century, the individuals who could have been involved in higher education in 1800 are different than those who were key figures in 1897. In this respect, the dataset is incomplete. This is a starting point for further study, and future plans include filling in the key figures at each of the higher education institutions at intervals throughout the long nineteenth century. Network visualizations are likely to show more points of intersection once the dataset is expanded.
Network visualizations show clear points of shared contact between schools, highlighting two distinct arcs of power with regional separation between the two. The Upstate region includes nine schools, eight of which are private with Clemson serving as the sole publicly funded higher education institution, and it did not exist until the late nineteenth century. There are 22 politicians in this network. Meanwhile, seven institutions existed in the Midlands, and two of these are public - the University of South Carolina and Winthrop. Four of these seven institutions were located in Columbia, South Carolina, suggesting that proximity to the state capital was considered important to the founders of these schools, with the other three located between 30 and 40 miles from Columbia. There are 22 politicians in this network. Finally, the Lowcountry had six institutions, and four of them are considered public. Half of them are HBCUs, and there are 32 politicians in the network for this region. These observations, courtesy of network visualizations, emphasize the volume of political figures who were involved in the higher education system.
Several trends are apparent when reviewing South Carolina’s data – 1. Public institutions were more likely than private schools to have networks with individuals who shared roles with multiple schools; 2. Public institutions were more likely than private schools to have multiple political players involved in the founding; 3. The Lowcountry and Midlands regions dominated the higher education landscape in the antebellum period while the Upstate enjoyed more relevance following Reconstruction, noting a shift of influence from traditional locations of political power; 4. Religious institutions played a vital role in the education of South Carolina’s youth as the majority of schools in the study were affiliated with a denomination; and 5. Despite the federal influence supporting them, HBCUs did not enjoy broad public support and were lacking in common figures of influence.
None of these findings are likely to be very surprising to scholars familiar with South Carolina in the nineteenth century; however, the extent to which politicians were involved in higher education and how that participation worked in conjunction with legislation to uphold slavery as a way of life is of note. In other words, how deeply politicians were involved in higher education, particularly at public institutions, signals a desire to inculcate the next generation to perpetuate the political ideologies of those involved. The overwhelming majority of these political figures were white men, and stories like those of half-Black, half-Cherokee Elizabeth Evelyn Wright were lost in favor of louder voices that overshadowed her in the General Assembly and Governor’s Mansion. This project seeks to draw attention to educators like Wright by first acknowledging those that had political power during her lifetime to emphasize how impressive her accomplishments (and others like her) were as they were done independent of the support of political figures who would become household names.
In the sections that follow, network analysis demonstrates the significant roles that politics and networks of power played within South Carolina's public higher education landscape. These pockets of power evolved in response to major historical events - the Civil War, Reconstruction, the Second Great Awakening - to name a few. The relationships between the key figures who founded each of these institutions reveal regions of power within the state that shifted over time and in response to larger historical narratives like emancipation and Progressivism. The network analyses raise a number of questions as well for future study.
**II. Historical Background**
**Higher Education in the Nineteenth Century**
Higher education in the United States at the turn of the nineteenth century existed with “virtually no government accountability or regulation.”[^fn9] Early on, politics began to find its way into the cracks of the new education system through the granting of college charters “as an aspect of political patronage” which was “an easy, inexpensive way for legislators and governors to reward supporters” with “no promise, explicit or implicit, of financial support from the state government.”[^fn10] The nineteenth century saw an increase in colleges and universities across the country, created by politicians without long term plans for how to sustain them. The antebellum period of the nineteenth century saw a marked increase in college enrollment as well with some data suggesting enrollment doubled between 1800 and 1860.[^fn11] This is underscored by the fact that there were only nine higher education institutions in the United States prior to the American Revolution, and there were about 250 institutions entering the Civil War, although not all were successful with an estimated 700 colleges trying and failing in the antebellum period.[^fn12] This time of growth was particularly dynamic after 1885.[^fn13] Higher education was also characterized by a “lowering of the standard” after the Civil War, meaning less rigorous standards for existing institutions.[^fn14] As the “officers” of colleges in the early years of the nineteenth century (president, faculty, trustees, etc.) were often “of one and the same mind,” it suggests a certain amount of political and intellectual hegemony that defined the higher education landscape of the time.[^fn15] Universities in this period were run by board of trustees “dominated by well-to-do businessmen and by presidents who were essentially businessmen in academic dress.”[^fn16]
From the outset, higher education in the United States was supposed to serve three purposes:
>First, the university would make each of its graduates into a force for civic virtue. Second, it would train a group of political leaders who would take a knightly plunge into “real life” and clean it up. Finally, through scientifically oriented scholarship, radical substitutes could be found for political procedures subject to personal influence. [^fn17]
The role that politics played in thinking through curriculum choices and what college was meant to do for its students is apparent. Civic duty repercussions are a primary lens through which to understand how and why colleges and universities developed the way they did. If the purpose of a college education was to prepare young men for leadership roles in state and local government, then it is exceptionally important to have a thorough understanding of who the educators were and what biases and influences they were subject to. The political ideologies of the university’s leadership would then be imprinted on their pupils, who viewed college as “good times, pleasant friendships, and, underneath it all, the expectation of life-long prestige resulting from the degree.”[^fn18] This mindset was amplified by an expectation in the nineteenth century college of “undivided loyalty” to the institution, which became even more explicit when coupled with the “homogenous student populations” found at most schools.[^fn19]
There was also a dramatic increase in religiously affiliated colleges, and most denominations were represented in this boom. The denominational schisms that were found in churches translated into colleges with the founders of these institutions operating in an “environment of national ambition, democratic aspiration, geographic isolation, and romantic imagination” with each denomination turning “their own rivalries into sets of competing colleges.”[^fn20] This movement was the result of the Second Great Awakening in the early part of the nineteenth century. Churches hoped that “Christianity would prevail in the lives of men,” and the “toleration that had characterized the colleges in the late colonial period and during the early years of the republic” were replaced by “denominational ambition.”[^fn21] Nationally, it marked a new trend for colleges and universities that was led by the Congregationalists in New England and the Presbyterians in the mid and southern states, with Baptists and Methodists bringing up the rear of this movement. Baptists and Methodists viewed colleges slightly differently, seeing them as “part of that apparently endless American process of coming to terms with an essentially middle-class society” as they were forced to admit that “no church could establish itself as a permanent refuge for the permanently meek and disinherited.”[^fn22]
The nineteenth century also saw the creation of colleges intended to educate females. The democratic nature of the new country meant that men could be a part of the government in avenues that were previously closed under the colonial leadership. In this sense, the “American woman possessed a responsibility which belonged to no other women in the world” as “her sons were free to partake actively in the affairs of government, and it was her obligation therefore to help prepare the manhood of tomorrow for responsible citizenship.”[^fn23] If females were to play this role at home and in motherhood, they needed to be educated themselves to a certain extent. Even so, the role of these female colleges usually included domestic studies as well as course material that would educate women on “how to help their husbands to make their fortunes.”[^fn24] Women could only be educated “up to a point,” as colleges for females were not “a very appropriate place” especially in the antebellum South when “all God had intended them for [was] marriage and motherhood.”[^fn25] Still, women persisted and a “handful of pioneers” moved forward, and attendance “swelled” after the Civil War, becoming a “torrent” in the twentieth century.[^fn26] It is estimated that there were at least 45 female colleges by 1860, and this growth was “one of the most distinguishing features of American higher education after 1850.”[^fn27]
Following the Civil War, federal legislation and programs led to increased growth of the higher education system in the United States. Between the Morrill Act and the Hatch Act, along with a “success of major pieces of legislation that expanded and consolidated federal interest in such fields as agriculture, military training, and engineering,” the federal government invested more heavily in colleges and universities than ever before, particularly between 1887 and 1914.[^fn28] Half of the 22 South Carolina institutions included in this study were founded after the Civil War’s conclusion in 1865, and five of those 11 colleges and universities are historically Black. This increase in federal funding “made possible the extension of the land-grant program to…black colleges in the Southern states” which “illustrated both the gains and the limits of higher education in the Progressive era.”[^fn29] Nothing contributed more to the transformation of higher education in the Reconstruction and post-Reconstruction era than the land-grant movement which “came closer to representing fundamental developments in American social and intellectual life,” which created “institutions intended, in part, to sustain an agrarian past.”[^fn30] This movement to focus on agricultural aims was supported by a widespread “belief that life was sounder, more moral, more character-building where the college was nestled among the hills or planted on the prairie.”[^fn31]
The nineteenth century saw the higher education system in the United States change dramatically. The number of institutions increased throughout the course of the century, and the aftermath of the Civil War brought forth a new category of institutions, historically Black colleges and universities, that was made possible by federal legislation. Over the course of the century, colleges and universities, particularly in the South, grappled with what a new version of the institution would look like following the Civil War, as colleges and universities “now lay prostrate, victims of war, poverty, or politics” with a “dependence on legislative support expos[ing] them to all the vicissitudes of politics,” and in some cases, the institution ceased to exist for the inability to reimagine itself and evolve from the antebellum days.[^fn32] The nineteenth century solidified the university as “largely an agency for social control” of which “the custodianship of popular values comprised the primary responsibility of the American university.”[^fn33]
**Higher Education and Slavery**
This digital project builds upon Alfred L. Brophy’s work, University, Court, and Slave, in which Brophy provides a survey of the political viewpoints of southern universities in the antebellum period, places where “well-educated faculty taught the students drawn disproportionately from the planter class that slavery was right, indeed, a necessity.”[^fn34] Further, these universities “justified themselves as places where students learned to defend southern values.”[^fn35] In this sense, the system of slavery was seen as a primary tenet of southern life, being supported not just by legislators and courts but also by educators. In a cruel twist of irony, colleges were supported by slavery in that the labor of the enslaved “afforded them [Southerners] leisure and money to obtain an education.”[^fn36] The entire higher educational system of the South was dependent upon the existence of slavery. For the purposes of this project, it is especially important to understand “how the pro-slavery ideas, taught in southern universities to the next generation of leaders, illuminate the intellectual world of southern politicians and judges.”[^fn37] To study colleges and universities is to study the ideologies of politicians. The two are inextricably linked. While Brophy focuses on the likes of the University of Virginia, the College of William and Mary, and Randolph Macon College, he does not take an in-depth look at smaller schools or at HBCUs. Additionally, his survey ends at the Civil War, so there’s a hole in the scholarship in terms of comparison to what happened in Reconstruction and post-Reconstruction.
Brophy notes that scholars can make a “compelling case that South Carolina College (now the University of South Carolina) was the single most important school for pro-slavery politicians and thinkers.”[^fn38] Scholars have recognized the importance of South Carolina’s higher education curriculum in how pro-slavery thought developed, so an in-depth exploration of the entire system will help people understand why these institutions were so influential. As there is “little disagreement among historians” about the “potency” of South Carolina College in “influenc[ing] several generations of political leaders,” it serves as an ideal place to begin to understand how politicians influenced colleges and vice versa.[^fn39] South Carolina College also served an interesting role in the power dynamics of South Carolina, as a “leading purpose” in its existence was to “create an institution that would help to unite a state seriously torn by up-country and down-country rivalries, by the legacy of bitterness inherited from internal conflicts of the Revolutionary era.”[^fn40] Despite its intended purpose to heal a fragmented state, South Carolina College was made in the image of the Lowcountry aristocracy.
Craig Steven Wilder credited higher education institutions for allowing the entire system of slavery to thrive in the United States, calling out colleges for not being “innocent or passive beneficiaries of conquest and colonial slavery,” noting that colleges “braided their histories and rendered their fates dependent and antagonistic” by standing “beside the church and state as the third pillar of a civilization built on bondage.”[^fn41] Colleges not only benefited from the institution of slavery but also helped to ensure that it would continue to be the status quo throughout the South. The best way to understand the influence of institutions is to strive to understand the people that built them. This study does exactly that in what was arguably the state most committed to slavery as a way of life.
**South Carolina History**
As a colony, South Carolina was comprised of a “heterogenous population” with unfree people outnumbering a “small” white society.[^fn42] Unsurprisingly, historian Walter Edgar argues that money “was at the root of slavery in South Carolina” and “greed was a more powerful stimulant than fear.”[^fn43] In order to combat the Black majority, the colony attempted to attract more white settlers to South Carolina. The result was an influx of immigrants that “settled in the backcountry” which created a “sectionally divided society” with the older and more politically influential families residing in the Lowcountry and newcomers settling in the Upstate.[^fn44] It is important to note that the “backcountry” was “mainly the home of small farmers.”[^fn45] Historian Robert Weir paints a picture of how small farmers and large planters existed in different parts of the colony:
>While the backcountry contained small farmers and a few large planters, the lowcountry was reputed to be made up entirely of big planters and their overseers. That, of course, was not quite true, but because most of the work force was enslaved, there were relatively few white laborers; and because slaves were also a form of capital that earned more for those who had more, the spread between rich and poor was greater. By almost any measure short of counting slaves as potential holders of wealth rather than a form of wealth, lowcountry South Carolina was the richest society in colonial America.[^fn46]
This sets the scene for the state of South Carolina during the beginnings of higher education. It underscores the importance of upholding the institution of slavery for planters to maintain their wealth. One of the mechanisms employed by South Carolinian enslavers was to perpetuate their way of life through educating the next generation to believe in the same ways of life through colleges and universities.
None of the 22 colleges and universities included in this study were established prior to the American Revolution, and no higher education institutions existed in South Carolina prior to American independence.[^fn47] There were few educational opportunities in South Carolina prior to revolution. Most individuals who received education beyond basic grammar school subjects traveled to England to be educated there. Wealthier South Carolinians who could afford the travel to England were numerous; in fact, Carolinians claimed the “largest contingent of American students in England during the late colonial period,” but South Carolinians were not pleased that the studies in England were necessary at all due to a lack of options in the colony.[^fn48] These voices grew louder calling for local options as the colonies marched closer to revolution, and these colonists began looking at schools in northern colonies in lieu of study abroad.
Many in “established leadership” chose to become even “more socially exclusive and politically conservative” after the revolution, with the “challenge to men of property” proving to “be relatively weak and ephemeral.”[^fn49] Many of the same families who controlled politics in colonial South Carolina continued to do so in statehood as well. Indeed, South Carolina politics distinguished itself in the antebellum period by the “extraordinary power of the legislature and the absence of parties” which “removed potential brakes on extreme action.”[^fn50]
It is impossible to discuss nineteenth century South Carolina without mentioning John Caldwell Calhoun, born in 1782 in South Carolina, amid the excitement and uncertainty of a new nation. While Calhoun’s name does not appear in this dataset as having any affiliation with the colleges and universities on the list, he did influence the higher education system in South Carolina. After studying at Yale, Calhoun traveled to Charleston and studied law with Henry W. DeSaussure, one of Charleston’s “most prominent lawyers,” a legislator, and founding board member at the University of South Carolina.[^fn51] Calhoun’s political career began in the South Carolina General Assembly in 1808, and he was elected to Congress in 1810. He rose to political prominence in Washington, and he served as vice president from 1825 to 1832. Calhoun is perhaps most remembered for the Fort Hill Address, published in 1831, that dealt with the notion of nullification in which Calhoun’s logic set up the argument that his successors would use after his death that ultimately led to the secession of South Carolina and other states from the Union.
As Calhoun’s political ideologies became the basis of political curriculum at South Carolina College, his views on slavery must be addressed:
>Calhoun had begun openly defending slavery by early 1836 during the debates over the mail crisis and abolitionist petitions, throwing aside much of his previous caution. And yet for the most part his defenses of slavery in those early speeches employed fairly traditional rhetoric…Slavery could not be destroyed without destroying southern society, and the South would resist that destruction… [^fn52]
He did not just defend the institution; he argued that “slavery was a positive good,” and he “recast the master-slave relationship for the modern world” describing it “in terms that political economists were using to describe the emerging system of industrial capitalism and its conflicts.”[^fn53] His ideologies on secession and slavery would be read by and taught to numerous southerners, becoming a legislatively mandated part of education at South Carolina College as his “work on government was made a text-book by act of Legislature.”[^fn54]
In Calhoun’s time and following his death, grammar school and secondary education was “inadequate at best and nonexistent at worst” in 1860 South Carolina, higher education was “much stronger,” particularly South Carolina College (now known at the University of South Carolina).[^fn55] Edgar describes the higher education landscape:
>For most of the nineteenth century the South Carolina College had a virtual monopoly on higher education in the state. The College of Charleston (chartered 1785), which had never been much more than an elementary school, closed in 1836; it reopened in 1838 as a municipal college, supported by the taxpayers of Charleston. [^fn56]
This underscores the importance of a thorough understanding of the founding of South Carolina College to better understand how it came to be the standard of higher education. Its location did more than attempt to bring two parts of the state together; its “proximity to the legislature and governor provided a superb laboratory for college students who aspired to be future state politicians.”[^fn57] Even following the Civil War, South Carolinians looked to the University of South Carolina as a barometer of federal Reconstruction efforts, as white citizens were horrified at the fact that the student body was 90 percent Black in 1875, considering it “one of the most heinous acts of Reconstruction.”[^fn58]
Despite its stronghold on higher education, religious individuals criticized South Carolina College for what they deemed to be inappropriate and secular curriculum. In 1839, Erskine College, a Presbyterian-affiliated institution, was founded in response to the alleged shortcomings of South Carolina College, although “friends of the South Carolina College in the General Assembly blocked the efforts of the new college to obtain a charter.”[^fn59] Erskine’s founders paid the lack of charter no mind and continued with their plans, creating one of the first four-year religious colleges in the state. The notion that South Carolina College wasn’t sufficiently pious continued to ripple across the state, spawning Furman College (Baptist), Wofford College (Methodist), Newberry College (Lutheran), and Columbia Female College (Methodist) in later years.
Following Reconstruction, South Carolina politics was dominated for a time by the Bourbons or Redeemers, signaling a return to the old-world order of antebellum days. It began with the election of 1876 in which Wade Hampton and others like him controlled the state yet again. The majority of white leadership at the time (85 percent) were alumni of colleges located in South Carolina with most of them holding degrees from South Carolina College.[^fn60] These political leaders believed that once the “old order” had been restored, their “mission [was] complete once they had made South Carolina safe for white man’s democracy,” making the critical mistake of assuming that it was “their due” to hold office with “no leadership, no ideas, no vision.”[^fn61] This would prove to be a costly miscalculation as a fiery young farmer gained traction and a following throughout the 1880s, calling for change from traditional political leadership and wielding a vision for forward progress that showcased white farmers as the centerpiece of his platform. Ben Tillman would usurp the entire establishment by the early 1890s.
A native of Edgefield, South Carolina, Tillman began the journey that would catapult him onto the national political stage rather humbly as a founder of the Edgefield Agricultural Society in 1885 with the goal of promoting agricultural reform as a possible solution to the economic despair South Carolina found itself in after the Civil War. Almost immediately, Tillman gained a following among white farmers. He set his supporters up as hard-working men while anyone who spoke against him was branded a politician. The political elite largely managed to defeat Tillman’s proposals until Thomas Green Clemson, son-in-law of John C. Calhoun, died in 1888 and left his estate (some 800 acres and roughly $80,000) to the state of South Carolina for the establishment of an agricultural college. The creation of Clemson College was exactly the type of public statement that the Farmer’s Movement needed to gain momentum; Tillman was elected governor handily in 1890, winning 32 of 34 counties.[^fn62] Tillman’s support of agricultural education “helped stimulate a move throughout the South to revitalize historic state universities.”[^fn63]
**III. Methodological Frameworks**
**Critical University Studies**
Higher education institutions have complex pasts, rooted in colonialism, slavery, capitalism, and discrimination. Their dark pasts need to be discovered, uncovered, and made public so that society can begin to grapple with the moral discrepancies woven throughout the fabric of these places of supposed enlightenment. The problem with popular perception of higher education institutions as bastions of free thought and free movement lies in the “selectively nostalgic narratives of US higher education history that invisiblize (make absent) colleges’ and universities’ structural complicity in racial, colonial, and ecological violence.”[^fn64] It is a difficult argument to make as popular perception is that the “United States became a world leader in educational attainment in the nineteenth century” as the “implicit public good practice spread from high school through college.”[^fn65] The only way to combat the idyllic visions of hallowed ivy halls is to research and disseminate as many historical truths as possible about the founding of these institutions.
Critical University Studies (CUS) is a particularly helpful theoretical framework through which to view this problem as it “encourages university inhabitants to look askance at these structures, and to query why they endure, how they came to take their current form, and whom they serve.”[^fn66] CUS seeks to understand the university as “both a discursive and a material phenomenon” by “turn[ing] a cold eye on higher education, typically considered a neutral institution for the public good, and foregrounds its politics, particularly how it is a site of struggle between private commercial interests and more public ones.”[^fn67] Those private commercial interests are not a new consideration brought on by the ability of universities to monetize inventions via patents. Rather, private commercial interests have existed since the founding of higher education in the United States. Upton Sinclair sounded the alarm early in his 1923 work, The Goose-step: A Study of American Education, writing that the “educational machine has been stolen…a bandit crew have got hold of it and have set it to work, not for your benefit, nor for the benefit of your sons and daughters,” and asserting that “young people are being taught, deliberately and of set purpose, not wisdom but folly, not justice but greed, not freedom but slavery, not love but hate.”[^fn68]
Previous CUS scholarship has not adequately addressed the circumstances that created the modern problems found at colleges and universities. While some works have detailed examples of problematic colonial origins in higher education, no comprehensive study exists that ties together the institutions of an entire state.[^fn69] Although generalities drawn from the history of a few select colleges can serve as a starting point, more research is needed beyond the larger, well-known institutions to paint a complete picture of the landscape of higher education at the point of its creation. Surveys are helpful for introducing the idea of CUS as a framework for historical understanding, but it is not inclusive and wide-ranging enough to draw broad conclusions.
**Using Network Analysis to Study Historical Clusters of Influence and Power**
Shawn Graham, Ian Milligan, and Scott Weingart note that network science is relatively new territory for historians (at least as of 2016), so there is limited work that has been done in this field.[^fn70] As this project includes institutions that were founded in different years, the temporal aspect of networks is an important consideration. This is an emerging field with “no consensus on how temporal networks should be represented.”[^fn71] One of the project’s challenges is visualizing networks over time and space by clearly showing change in the model. The best way to overcome the visualization challenge is to utilize “mixed-method approaches that integrate the strengths of humans and computers” to answer qualitative research questions.[^fn72] The answer of how to best do this lies somewhere between David J. Bodenhamer’s concepts on deep mapping and Manuel Lima’s thoughts on trees of knowledge that “can pragmatically express multiplicity (represented by its boughs, branches, twigs, and leaves) from unity (its central foundational trunk).”[^fn73] The goal is to create a tree of knowledge showing the roots of higher education throughout time and space. As Lima explains, “We act and live in networks, so it makes sense that we start thinking in networks.”[^fn74]
The idea of networks and how to best visualize them is central to this study as there are hundreds of people affiliated with the founding of 22 institutions. There is a precedent in the digital humanities for linking narratives to networks and vice versa as discussed in Viral Networks: Connecting Digital Humanities and Medical History.[^fn75] Network models have served to improve “our understanding of a variety of historical phenomena.”[^fn76] Network models demonstrate how people, places, and ideas were connected using visualizations to make previously unknown connections clearly visible. In fusing narrative and networks, the “mixed-method” approach can serve to “integrate the strengths of humans and computers” to answer “qualitative research questions.”[^fn77] Context in interpreting the network visualizations is key to understanding new knowledge that comes from the models. While Ewing and Randall’s work is primarily about medically related networks, the methodology works the same for tracing how ideas passed between higher education institutions and the individuals associated with them as long as the “connections among elements are more important than the mere presence or absence of the elements in isolation.”[^fn78]
**IV. Network Visualizations and Analysis**
Network analysis is particularly well-suited to this project as a digital intervention due to the expansive number of people in the dataset (over 300 nodes representing over 300 people) and the many complex relationships between individuals and institutions that need to be charted. The most complicated network visualization includes all institutions (22) and all people (295). Institutions are represented as orange nodes and people are shown as navy nodes. The shape of the person nodes corresponds to different political roles that the person held (i.e. Governor, Legislator, Founding Father, etc.). Any node shape other than a circle represents at least one political office. The colors of the edge lines represent the relationship between the person and the institution (i.e. Board member, President, Founder, etc.). The complexity of higher education and politics in nineteenth century South Carolina is seen in one visualization.
```{r message=FALSE, warning=FALSE, include=FALSE}
#Load libraries
library(visNetwork)
library(igraph)
library(dplyr)
library(tidyr)
```
```{r include=FALSE}
#Create edges and nodes from CSV files
edges <- read.csv("edges.version5.csv", stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
edges <- as.data.frame(edges)
nodes <- read.csv("nodes.version6.csv", stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
nodes <- as.data.frame(nodes)
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Create a column assigning colors to institutional relationships like President and Board Member
edges <- edges %>%
mutate(title = edges$Institution.Roles[1:302]) %>%
mutate(color = ifelse(edges$Institution.Roles == "Benefactor", "green",
ifelse(edges$Institution.Roles == "Board Member", "blue",
ifelse(edges$Institution.Roles == "President", "red",
ifelse(edges$Institution.Roles == "Key Figure", "darkgreen",
ifelse(edges$Institution.Roles == "Founder", "purple",
ifelse(edges$Institution.Roles == "Namesake", "turquoise", "gray")))))))
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Customize the nodes by color in network. Nodes are all of the people and each of the 22 institutions. Total of 317 nodes.
nodes <- nodes %>%
mutate(shape = ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Legislator", "square",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Founding Father,Legislator", "diamond",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Legislator,Governor", "triangle",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Foreign Ambassador,Founding Father,Legislator", "diamond",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Lt. Governor,Legislator", "square",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Founding Father,Governor,Legislator", "diamond",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Governor,Legislator", "triangle",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Governor's Staff,Legislator", "square",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Governor", "star",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Founding Father,Judge,Governor,Legislator", "diamond",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Foreign Ambassador,Legislator", "square",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Legislator,Governor's Staff", "square",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Judge,Legislator", "square",
ifelse(nodes$Political.Roles == "Foreign Ambassador", "open oval", "circle"
)))))))))))))))%>%
mutate(title = (nodes$id[1:317])) %>%
mutate(color = ifelse(nodes$Type == "Person", "navy",
ifelse(nodes$Type == "Institution", "orange", "tan")))
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Make data frames for edge and node legends
ledges <- data.frame(color = c("green", "blue", "red", "darkgreen", "purple", "turquoise"),
label = c("Benefactor", "Board Member", "President", "Key Figure", "Founder", "Namesake"))
lnodes <- data.frame(label = c("Person", "Institution"),
color = c("navy", "orange"),
ID = 1:2)
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Create network visualization including all institutions and all people
edges <- edges %>% rename(from = ID, to = ID.1)
visNetwork(nodes = nodes, edges = edges, height = 650, width = 1100) %>%
visIgraphLayout(layout = "layout_with_fr", randomSeed = 12) %>%
visNodes(size = 36,
label = paste(nodes$id),
title = title,
font = list("size" = 20)) %>%
visEdges(color = list(color = edges$color, opacity = 0.2),
hoverWidth = 20,
selectionWidth = 36) %>%
visInteraction(dragNodes = TRUE,
hover = TRUE,
hoverConnectedEdges = TRUE,
multiselect = TRUE) %>%
visLegend(addEdges = ledges, addNodes = lnodes, useGroups = FALSE, width = 0.12, position = "left")
```
Differences in numbers of connected individuals is clearly observed in this visualization. Smaller, lesser-known schools tended to have smaller spheres of influence and were not connected to the larger institutions through individuals. Examples of this include Benedict College, Erskine College, Lander University, Converse University, Columbia College, North Greenville University, Presbyterian College, Claflin University, Furman University, and Allen University. These schools were siloed from other institutions with no commonalities in their founding partners. It is interesting that all of these schools are private and religiously affiliated.
The size of the network for each school is varied despite all of them being religiously affiliated. Presbyterian College and Columbia College in particular had many participants involved in their founding, while Lander University and Erskine College have few individuals listed as part of the school’s origins. Interestingly, denomination does not seem to impact the size of boards and number of people involved as Presbyterian College and Erskine College are both affiliated with the Presbyterian denomination while Columbia College and Lander University are both affiliated with the Methodist denomination. It appears there was not a single pattern for how religiously affiliated institutions were created in South Carolina during this period.
The one exception involves the Lutheran denomination. There are two Lutheran institutions included in the dataset, and they shared a common board member in John Bachman. He served as an original board member at both the Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary, established in 1830, and Newberry College, established in 1856. In fact, Bachman was considered so important to the founding of Newberry College that his birth was celebrated on the campus as part of Founders’ Day celebrations, with a 1909 speaker stating that “the college was founded first by the Lord, then through the church, and particularly through those heroes of faith and sacrifice chief among whom was Dr. John Bachman.”[^fn79] Bachman is the common thread between the only two Lutheran schools in the dataset which suggests he was one of the most important voices for the Lutheran church, having served as a pastor for over 59 years at the time of his death in 1874.[^fn80]
One institution is woefully underrepresented with only one node. Unfortunately, records have not been located to fill in the entire network associated with the founding of Limestone University. Very little information is publicly available about the institution’s history. Repeated contact with the archivist at the school’s library did not yield any answers, so research about this particular school is ongoing. As the institution got its start as Limestone Sprig Female High School, it is unknown if the school even had a board for its earliest years. The lack of easily located records may be due to the fact that the school, while founded in 1845, struggled during the Civil War and was subsequently reimagined in 1881, ultimately being renamed as Limestone College in 1898.
It is immediately obvious that there are two major clusters of connected institutions. The first is comprised of Lowcountry and Midlands institutions and includes the College of Charleston, the University of South Carolina, and the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC).[^fn81] It is also immediately obvious that many individuals in these three networks served in various political roles. This is not surprising given the traditional stronghold that the Lowcountry (which includes the College of Charleston and MUSC) had on South Carolina politics. Political power was so deeply entrenched in the origins of College of Charleston that two Declaration of Independence signers were part of the founding board of trustees. The schools in this arc of power are older than the schools found in the other cluster. MUSC is connected to College of Charleston by David Ramsay, who served as a board member at the founding of each school. College of Charleston is connected to the University of South Carolina by Charles C. Pinckney, who served as a board member at the founding of each school.
The other cluster is comprised of Clemson University, Winthrop University, South Carolina State University, and Voorhees University. All four schools are products of the later nineteenth century. Clemson and South Carolina State serve as land-grant institutions, while South Carolina State and Voorhees are both historically Black universities. One individual connects Winthrop, Clemson, and South Carolina State – Ben Tillman. Although not displayed on the visualization, Tillman also served as a board member at the University of South Carolina by virtue of his position as Governor.[^fn82] State Senator Stanwix G. Mayfield connects South Carolina State and Voorhees, having served as a board member at both institutions. It is unknown what communication if any occurred between Tillman and Mayfield, although it is a future research question to be explored.
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Filter by private institutions
nodes.private <- nodes %>%
filter(Type.1 == "Private")
ledges.private <- data.frame(color = c("green", "blue", "red", "darkgreen", "purple", "turquoise"),
label = c("Benefactor", "Board Member", "President", "Key Figure", "Founder", "Namesake"))
lnodes.private <- data.frame(label = c("Person", "Institution"),
color = c("navy", "orange"),
ID = 1:2)
visNetwork(nodes = nodes.private, edges = edges, height = 650, width = 1100) %>%
visIgraphLayout(layout = "layout_with_fr", randomSeed = 12) %>%
visNodes(size = 36,
label = paste(nodes.private$id),
title = title,
font = list("size" = 20)) %>%
visEdges(color = list(color = edges$color, opacity = 0.2),
hoverWidth = 20,
selectionWidth = 36) %>%
visInteraction(dragNodes = TRUE,
hover = TRUE,
hoverConnectedEdges = TRUE,
multiselect = TRUE) %>%
visLegend(addEdges = ledges, addNodes = lnodes, useGroups = FALSE, width = 0.12, position = "left")
```
When the data is filtered to only include private religously-affiliated institutions, it is clear that these institutions were founded in siloes (with the notable exception of the Lutheran schools). It is also obvious that fewer political figures were involved in these origin stories. A total of 24 political figures appear among these 15 schools, with five institutions having no political figures in the network. The Lutheran cluster has the most political influence of any religious institutions with a total of nine political figures between the schools. When viewing just the private institutions, the number of people involved in politics shrinks considerably. There are also no individuals who served in multiple political roles.
The religious institutions did not follow the national pattern observed by Edward Rudolph when he noted that the religious education movement began with Presbyterians and Congregationalists and ended with Baptists and Methodists. Rather, it was the Baptists who led the charge in South Carolina as Furman College was the first religiously-affiliated college, founded in 1826. It was followed by the Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary and Erskine College (Presbyterian) in the 1830s. The Episcopalians were the last to join the religious college movement, appearing after the Civil War. South Carolina stands in contrast to national trends in the way that denominations entered the conversation, suggesting that certain denominations may have been stronger in South Carolina than elsewhere in the country. Contrary to national trends, rather than lagging behind other denominations, the Methodists and Baptists cultivated educational initiatives in the form of four institutions and three institutions respectively.
The Upstate enjoyed a "major religious awakening" which led to the "spread of evangelical Christianity knitted communities," and these churches became "institutional centers of community life and touchstones of community identity."[^fn83] Perhaps this revival explains why religious institutions existed in the Upstate long before any public institutions were founded. Unfortunately for the unfree people of South Carolina, Baptist preachers were far less likely to hold "antislavery leanings" than Methodists and Presbyterians, and the religious schools were split fairly evenly between these three and the Lutherans.[^fn84] No single denomination had a stronghold on the state.
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Filter by public institutions
nodes.public <- nodes %>%
filter(Type.1 == "Public" | Type.1 == "Proprietary")
ledges.public <- data.frame(color = c("green", "blue", "red", "darkgreen", "purple", "turquoise"),
label = c("Benefactor", "Board Member", "President", "Key Figure", "Founder", "Namesake"))
lnodes.public <- data.frame(label = c("Person", "Institution"),
color = c("navy", "orange"),
ID = 1:2)
visNetwork(nodes = nodes.public, edges = edges, height = 650, width = 1100) %>%
visIgraphLayout(layout = "layout_with_fr", randomSeed = 12) %>%
visNodes(size = 36,
label = paste(nodes.public$id),
title = title,
font = list("size" = 20)) %>%
visEdges(color = list(color = edges$color, opacity = 0.2),
hoverWidth = 20,
selectionWidth = 36) %>%
visInteraction(dragNodes = TRUE,
hover = TRUE,
hoverConnectedEdges = TRUE,
multiselect = TRUE) %>%
visLegend(addEdges = ledges, addNodes = lnodes, useGroups = FALSE, width = 0.12, position = "left")
```
A closer look at just the public institutions reveals a total of 50 political figures among the seven schools. That is more than double the number observed at private schools and spread over half the number of institutions. In many cases, the person held multiple political roles (i.e. serving as a legislator and also as governor). The individuals involved in these foundings were also important figures in the founding of the United States in some cases as evidenced by the five Founding Fathers who were a part of the College of Charleston's first board of trustees - Thomas Heyward, Jr., Charles Pinckney, Charles C. Pinckney, John Rutledge, and Arthur Middleton. Two of these individuals signed the Declaration of Independence while the other three signed the United States Constitution. That's some significant political star power in just one board, and that does not even count the eight legislators, the legislator/governor, and governor who also sat on that board at the same time.
The University of South Carolina also enjoyed considerable political influence with its board, which included a Founding Father (the same one from College of Charleston's board - Charles C. Pinckney), a governor, a legislator/governor, and six legislators. MUSC did not enjoy the same level of political involvement, having only six legislators as a part of its original board.
Of the Upstate schools, Clemson University had the most political board of any institution with 11 of the 13 original board members having served as legislators. This fact is surprising given Tillman's own explanation of why Thomas Green Clemson's will outlined the board of trustees in the manner it did:
>Another reason which our recent experience with the Legislature made us urge the life trustee-idea strongly, was the fact that a Board wholly controlled by political influences might warp and twist the College from its purpose and finally cause it to drift back to the ordinary literary type. We were anxious...to prevent the prostitution of the Institution to ends not intended by its founder. [^fn85]
Tillman, an original trustee and a key figure in the founding of Clemson College, claimed to not trust politicians and wrote of how he feared politicians could change the college from what Clemson had intended when he left his estate to South Carolina. This belief stands counter to the makeup of the board, made up of nearly 85% legislators. The board was rife with the very thing that Tillman wanted to avoid.
Records are incomplete with respect to South Carolina State, a historically Black college, but it is important to note that at least three governors were key figures in the founding of the school including Tillman, Cole Blease, and John Gary Evans. The names of Tillman and Blease in particular may be surprising given their well-documented ideologies, but the fact remains that South Carolina State exists in part due to their efforts.
It is interesting that The Citadel stands apart as the only public institution without any connections to another school. Perhaps this is due to its different nature as a military school. About half of the small group that were part of its founding held political office.
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Filter by HBCU institutions
nodes.hbcu <- nodes %>%
filter(HBCU == "TRUE")
ledges.HBCU <- data.frame(color = c("green", "blue", "red", "darkgreen", "purple", "turquoise"),
label = c("Benefactor", "Board Member", "President", "Key Figure", "Founder", "Namesake"))
lnodes.HBCU <- data.frame(label = c("Person", "Institution"),
color = c("navy", "orange"),
ID = 1:2)
visNetwork(nodes = nodes.hbcu, edges = edges, height = 650, width = 1100) %>%
visIgraphLayout(layout = "layout_with_fr", randomSeed = 12) %>%
visNodes(size = 36,
label = paste(nodes.hbcu$id),
title = title,
font = list("size" = 20)) %>%
visEdges(color = list(color = edges$color, opacity = 0.2),
hoverWidth = 20,
selectionWidth = 36) %>%
visInteraction(dragNodes = TRUE,
hover = TRUE,
hoverConnectedEdges = TRUE,
multiselect = TRUE) %>%
visLegend(addEdges = ledges, addNodes = lnodes, useGroups = FALSE, width = 0.12, position = "left")
```
Filtering the dataset to only include HBCUs yields a completely different picture for the five schools. These institutions are almost entirely siloed with the exception of South Carolina State and Voorhees University, connected by Senator Mayfield, a common board member at both. He holds the distinction of being the only person (politician or not) on the list who served at more than one HBCU. A lack of political figures is also immediately noticeable in this visualization. Benedict College had no politicians involved in its founding. Voorhees University only had Mayfield as part of its story. Allen University had a lone legislator among its founders. Claflin University had two governors involved in its founding; interestingly, one of the governors was the founder and namesake, albeit he served as governor of a different state. South Carolina State was subject to more political involvement, possibly due to its status as a land grant institution.
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Filter by integrated institutions
nodes.integrated <- nodes %>%
filter(Integrated == "TRUE")
ledges.integrated <- data.frame(color = c("green", "blue", "red", "darkgreen", "purple", "turquoise"),
label = c("Benefactor", "Board Member", "President", "Key Figure", "Founder", "Namesake"))
lnodes.integrated <- data.frame(label = c("Person", "Institution"),
color = c("navy", "orange"),
ID = 1:2)
visNetwork(nodes = nodes.integrated, edges = edges, height = 650, width = 1100) %>%
visIgraphLayout(layout = "layout_with_fr", randomSeed = 12) %>%
visNodes(size = 36,
label = paste(nodes.integrated$id),
title = title,
font = list("size" = 20)) %>%
visEdges(color = list(color = edges$color, opacity = 0.2),
hoverWidth = 20,
selectionWidth = 36) %>%
visInteraction(dragNodes = TRUE,
hover = TRUE,
hoverConnectedEdges = TRUE,
multiselect = TRUE) %>%
visLegend(addEdges = ledges, addNodes = lnodes, useGroups = FALSE, width = 0.12, position = "left")
```
This visualization shows the integrated institutions in South Carolina in the nineteenth century. There is only one institution on this visualization - Claflin University. It is included to make a sobering point, and that is that only one institution of 22 that still exist today welcomed all students regardless of race. It's interesting to note that there is little political involvement in Claflin's founding outside of one South Carolina governor and the founder/namesake/Massachusetts governor William Claflin. The influence that Claflin, a northerner, exerted on the institution bearing his name is apparent here as it is a different model than seen elsewhere in the state.
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Filter by year founded - antebellum version
nodes.antebellumfounding <- nodes %>%
filter(Year_Founded %in% (1770:1856))
ledges.antebellumfounding <- data.frame(color = c("green", "blue", "red", "darkgreen", "purple", "turquoise"),
label = c("Benefactor", "Board Member", "President", "Key Figure", "Founder", "Namesake"))
lnodes.antebellumfounding <- data.frame(label = c("Person", "Institution"),
color = c("navy", "orange"),
ID = 1:2)
visNetwork(nodes = nodes.antebellumfounding, edges = edges, height = 650, width = 1100) %>%
visIgraphLayout(layout = "layout_with_fr", randomSeed = 12) %>%
visNodes(size = 36,
label = paste(nodes.antebellumfounding$id),
title = title,
font = list("size" = 20)) %>%
visEdges(color = list(color = edges$color, opacity = 0.2),
hoverWidth = 20,
selectionWidth = 36) %>%
visInteraction(dragNodes = TRUE,
hover = TRUE,
hoverConnectedEdges = TRUE,
multiselect = TRUE) %>%
visLegend(addEdges = ledges, addNodes = lnodes, useGroups = FALSE, width = 0.12, position = "left")
```
When the data is filtered to only include schools that existed in the antebellum period (prior to 1860), the network shrinks from 22 institutions to 11 schools. Three of these were located in the Upstate, three were located in the Lowcountry, and five were located in the Midlands. No public schools existed in the Upstate in the antebellum period, but there were public options in both the Lowcountry and the Midlands, emphasizing that state-supported educated originated from the coast and moved westward across the state.
It is important to understand a bit about the economic state of South Carolina in the antebellum period to give this visualization context. In short, South Carolina's economy was based entirely on slavery, as the state "claimed a higher ratio of slaves to free people and a higher incidence of slaveholding than any other Southern state."[^fn86] It is obvious why white people had a vested interest in maintaing the system of slavery as the status quo. Further, these white planters "concentrated power...in the state legislature, where the plantation-dominated Lowcountry wielded more than its fair share of power."[^fn87] How better to maintain the existing system than to educate the next generation that it's the best and only way to conduct business? Knowing the value that white planters placed on legislators reveals the importance of the number of squares (legislators) seen in this visualization. These antebellum colleges were designed to uphold the old way of life, and no place was this more apparent than at the University of South Carolina, which has been called "the last will and testament of the expiring Federalist party."[^fn88]
```{r echo=FALSE}
#Filter by year founded - Reconstruction and after
nodes.reconstructionfounding <- nodes %>%
filter(Year_Founded %in% (1865:1900))
ledges.reconstructionfounding <- data.frame(color = c("green", "blue", "red", "darkgreen", "purple", "turquoise"),
label = c("Benefactor", "Board Member", "President", "Key Figure", "Founder", "Namesake"))
lnodes.reconstructionfounding <- data.frame(label = c("Person", "Institution"),
color = c("navy", "orange"),
ID = 1:2)
visNetwork(nodes = nodes.reconstructionfounding, edges = edges, height = 650, width = 1100) %>%
visIgraphLayout(layout = "layout_with_fr", randomSeed = 12) %>%
visNodes(size = 36,
label = paste(nodes.reconstructionfounding$id),
title = title,
font = list("size" = 20)) %>%
visEdges(color = list(color = edges$color, opacity = 0.2),
hoverWidth = 20,
selectionWidth = 36) %>%
visInteraction(dragNodes = TRUE,
hover = TRUE,
hoverConnectedEdges = TRUE,
multiselect = TRUE) %>%
visLegend(addEdges = ledges, addNodes = lnodes, useGroups = FALSE, width = 0.12, position = "left")
```
The other half of the 22 schools in this dataset were founded during Reconstruction and after. Six of these were located in the Upstate, three were located in the Lowcountry, and two were located in the Midlands. The development of higher education in the Upstate, particularly after the Civil War, is reflective of the Upstate's transformation from "an isolated subsistence region that served as a stronghold of Jeffersonian Republicanism in 1800" to "a mature cotton-producing region with a burgeoning commercial sector that served as a hotbed of Southern radicalism by 1860."[^fn89]
**V. Conclusion**
When questioned by Senator Mayfield about her intentions, Elizabeth Evelyn Wright explained that she "would build an industrial school...because it was God's will for her to do it," and upon hearing her justification, Mayfield agreed to hold 20 acres of his land for her to purchase until she was able to raise at least \$200.[^fn90] After her meeting with Mayfield, Wright set about the arduous task of finding funding for her dream. In a six month period, she implored sixty-six churches to contribute money for the cause, raising anywhere from \$6.62 to \$0.30 at a time, averaging \$2.80 per church, proudly presenting Mayfield with the required \$200 on Monday, September 6, 1897.[^fn91] Mayfield was astounded that she had managed to do it and asked her how she raised that much money so quickly. Wright let him know, "I didn't. God did it!"[^fn92] And just like that, a half-Black, half-Cherokee woman started what would become Voorhees University, a historically Black institution, in the state of South Carolina in 1897, a year in which Ben Tillman represented the state as a senator in Washington, D.C.
The tale of Voorhees University and its founder is not merely an inspirational tale. It is a most appropriate way to mark the end of the nineteenth century higher education story in South Carolina as the last institution to be founded in the century. It is fitting, perhaps even poetic, that the bookends of the century - the University of South Carolina and Voorhees - represent polar opposite goals and reasons for existence. Founded in 1801, the University of South Carolina was built as a bastion of politics and power, intended to keep the pro-slavery ideologies burning for future generations of South Carolinian leaders. At the other end of the century, Voorhees was founded as "a school for blacks, run by blacks and supported by blacks."[^fn93] It is hard to imagine two more diametrically opposed missions in nineteenth century South Carolina than these two schools. The colleges serve as mirrors for the larger movements that took place in the century - the Nullification Crisis, secession, Civil War, emancipation of the unfree, and Reconstruction. The complexities of the forces working behind the scenes in creating higher education were marked by changing ideologies as well, evidenced by Mayfield's involvement on two HBCU boards later in life while knowing that he rode in support of Wade Hampton with the Red Shirts as child.[^fn94]
The evolution of what took place in South Carolina over the course of 100 years is displayed beautifully in this study. The higher education landscape in the antebellum years consisted of institutions that catered to white people, particularly white men. Following the Civil War, a Reconstruction-era shift occurred in the type of institutions that existed and who they were meant for. Five colleges in this study (HCBUs) could not have existed in antebellum South Carolina because racism dictated that education was only meant for the white man (and occasional woman). As the Progressive era drew near, politics shifted with the arrival of Ben Tillman and that opened the door to education beyond a certain socioeconomic class of white men, which also signaled changes in curriculum to be less philosophical and more industrial. The century also saw higher education shift from the Lowcountry to the Midlands to the Upstate, spreading across the entirety of the state. The changes in higher education were drastic and were influenced by everything from politics to legislation to the desires and dreams of those in the trenches, doing the work of college founding. The changes wrought in higher education, however, would accomplish something that, while not immediately obvious, was deeply important in shaping twentieth century South Carolina. The seeds of different ideologies planted in colleges during Reconstruction and after raised up a new generation of thinkers, leaders, and protesters that sparked something different in the next century. This became important as higher education institutions "played a crucial role" in the movement to professionalize a variety of professions, with universities "serving as outposts of professional self-consciousness" which led to universities holding "an unquestioned power to legitimize, for no new profession felt complete - or scientific - without its distinct academic curriculum."[^fn95]
This project confronts higher education history in South Carolina through a CUS framework using digital interventions in order to emphasize both the expected as well as the unexpected connections. It is necessary to "foster an ecology of narratives about higher education" to "crack the currently hegemonic narrative" by "drawing attention to the harmful impacts of this hegemony and creating more space for alternative narratives to be engaged."[^fn96] The result of these narratives is not "to replace dominant narratives and create a new hegemony" but "to clear pathways for more complex, difficult, self-implicating questions and conversations about the colonial foundations of our institutions, about how these foundations shape present challenges, and about how we understand and address those challenges."[^fn97]
[^fn1]: J. Kenneth Morris. Elizabeth Evelyn Wright, 1872-1906: Founder of Voorhees College (Sewanee, Tenn: University Press, 1983), 3.
[^fn2]: Morris, 11.
[^fn3]: John R. Thelin. A History of American Higher Education (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011), 37.
[^fn4]: Sharon Stein, Unsettling the University (Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022), 5.
[^fn5]: Stein, 55.
[^fn6]: Shawn Graham, Ian Milligan, and Scott Weingart. Exploring Big Historical Data: The Historian’s Macroscope (London, England: Imperial College Press, 2016), 227.
[^fn7]: Graham, Milligan, and Weingart, 227.
[^fn8]: Anne B. McGrail, Angel David Nieves, and Siobhan Senier. “Digital Humanities as Critical University Studies: Three Provocations.” People, Practice, Power (United States: University of Minnesota Press, 2022), 316.
[^fn9]: Thelin, 41.
[^fn10]: Thelin, 43.
[^fn11]: Thelin, 69.
[^fn12]: Frederick Rudolph and John R. Thelin. The American College and University: A History (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1991), 47.
[^fn13]: Laurence R. Veysey. The Emergence of the American University (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1965), 264.
[^fn14]: Colyer Meriwether and Edward McCrady. History of Higher Education in South Carolina: With a Sketch of the Free School System (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1889), 53.
[^fn15]: Veysey, 57.
[^fn16]: Thorstein Veblen. The Higher Learning in America (Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015), 1.
[^fn17]: Veysey, 72.
[^fn18]: Veysey, 269.
[^fn19]: Veysey, 284-285.
[^fn20]: Rudolph, 54.
[^fn21]: Rudolph, 54.
[^fn22]: Rudolph, 57.
[^fn23]: Rudolph, 309.
[^fn24]: Rudolph, 309.
[^fn25]: Rudolph, 310.
[^fn26]: Rudolph, 313.
[^fn27]: Thelin, 84.
[^fn28]: Thelin, 135.
[^fn29]: Thelin, 135-136.
[^fn30]: Rudolph, 264.
[^fn31]: Rudolph, 95.
[^fn32]: Rudolph, 280.
[^fn33]: Veysey, 440.
[^fn34]: Alfred L. Brophy. University, Court, and Slave: Pro-Slavery Thought in Southern Colleges and Courts, and the Coming of Civil War (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2016), xvi.
[^fn35]: Brophy, 8.
[^fn36]: Brophy, 9.
[^fn37]: Brophy, 10.
[^fn38]: Brophy, 84.
[^fn39]: Thelin, 47.
[^fn40]: Rudolph, 60.
[^fn41]: Craig Steven Wilder. Ebony & Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the Troubled History of America’s Universities, (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2013), 11.
[^fn42]: Robert M. Weir. Colonial South Carolina: A History (Columbia, S.C: University of South Carolina Press, 1997), 205.
[^fn43]: Walter B. Edgar. South Carolina: A History (Columbia, S.C: University of South Carolina Press, 1998), 80.
[^fn44]: Weir, 205.
[^fn45]: Weir, 210.
[^fn46]: Weir, 213-214.
[^fn47]: Note that while the College of Charleston claims it was founded in 1770, it was not chartered until 1785.
[^fn48]: Weir, 251.
[^fn49]: Weir, 341-342.
[^fn50]: Weir, 344.
[^fn51]: Robert Elder. Calhoun: American Heretic (New York: Basic Books, 2021), 47.
[^fn52]: Elder, 335.
[^fn53]: Elder, 338-339.
[^fn54]: Meriwether, 162.
[^fn55]: Edgar, 299.
[^fn56]: Edgar, 300.
[^fn57]: Thelin, 48.
[^fn58]: Edgar, 392.
[^fn59]: Edgar, 300.
[^fn60]: Edgar, 407-408.
[^fn61]: Edgar, 429.
[^fn62]: Edgar, 437.
[^fn63]: Thelin, 140.
[^fn64]: Stein, 4.
[^fn65]: Christopher Newfield. The Great Mistake: How We Wrecked Public Universities and How We Can Fix Them (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016), 38.
[^fn66]: Tseen Khoo, James Burford, Emily Henderson, Helena Liu, and Z Nicolazzo. “Not Getting Over It: The Impact of Sara Ahmed’s Work Within Critical University Studies.” Journal of Intercultural Studies 42, no. 1 (2021), 84–86.
[^fn67]: Jeffrey J. Williams. “An Emerging Field Deconstructs Academe; The Birth of Critical University Studies.” The Chronicle of Higher Education 58, no. 25 (2012).
[^fn68]: Upton Sinclair. The Goose-Step: A Study of American Education. Project Gutenberg, 2021.
[^fn69]: Examples of CUS scholarship that explore the role that unfree people and colonialism played in the development of higher education in the United States include Sharon Stein’s Unsettling the University: Confronting the Colonial Foundation of US Higher Education and Alfred L. Brophy’s University, Court, and Slave: Pro-slavery Thought in Southern Colleges and Courts and the Coming of Civil War.
[^fn70]: Graham, Milligan, and Weingart, 232.
[^fn71]: Graham, Milligan, and Weingart, 232.
[^fn72]: E. Thomas Ewing and Katherine Randall. Viral Networks: Connecting Digital Humanities and Medical History (Virginia: VT Publishing, 2018), 113.
[^fn73]: Manual Lima. Visual Complexity Mapping Patterns of Information (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2011), 25.
[^fn74]: Lima, 71.
[^fn55]: Ewing and Randall, Viral Networks: Connecting Digital Humanities and Medical History (Blacksburg: Virginia Tech Publishing, 2019).
[^fn76]: Ewing and Randall, 113.
[^fn77]: Ewing and Randall, 113.
[^fn78]: Ewing and Randall, 120.
[^fn79]: The Newberry Weekly Herald (Newberry, South Carolina). Tue, Feb 9, 1909. Page 5.
https ://www.newspapers .com/image/173511104. Downloaded on Nov 1, 2023.
[^fn80]: The Charleston Daily News (Charleston, South Carolina). Monday, January 13, 1868. Page 3.
[^fn81]: Lacy K. Ford. Origins of Southern Radicalism: The South Carolina Upcountry, 1800-1860 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988), 5.
[^fn82]: Ben Tillman served on the University of South Carolina Board of Trustees by virtue of his political position of governor. This is not visualized because it did not occur at the founding of the institution. Founding relationships are the only ones that are a part of this dataset.
[^fn83]: Ford, 23.
[^fn84]: The University of South Carolina began life as South Carolina College. For the purposes of clarity in this analysis, I am utilizing modern institution names.
[^fn85]: Benjamin R. Tillman Account of Origin of Clemson College, Folder 50, Box 3, James Corcoran Littlejohn Collection, 1900 – 1961, Mss 68, Special Collections Library, Clemson University Libraries, Clemson, SC.
[^fn86]: Ford, 101.
[^fn87]: Ford, 101.
[^fn88]: Ford, 105.
[^fn89]: Ford, viii.
[^fn90]: Morris, 87.
[^fn91]: Morris, 92-93.
[^fn92]: Morris, 94.
[^fn93]: Morris, 51.
[^fn94]: "First Bamberg Senator Dies." The State Newspaper. Columbia, South Carolina. June 13, 1942. 9.
[^fn95]: Robert H. Wiebe. The Search for Order, 1877-1920 (New York: Hill and Wang, 1967), 121.
[^fn96]: Stein, 35.
[^fn97]: Stein, 35.