Lynch History
Hopsewee Plantation was originally part of the lands owned by
Thomas Lynch, I (deceased 1738). He owned most of the property on the
North Santee from Hopsewee to the intercoastal waterway, with seven plantations
in production. Hopsewee was built by the Lynch family between 1733 and
1740. This beautiful site was chosen of all the Lynch property for the
family home of Thomas Lynch, Sr. (1726-1776) Hopsewee overlooks the
beautiful Santee River and the rice fields which were its source of income until
the Civil War. Lynch was married to Elizabeth Allston,
of Brookgreen Plantation, another prominent Georgetown family, and they had two daughters Sabina (b. 1747) and Esther (b. 1748) and one son, Thomas Lynch, Jr. (b. 1749) After Elizabeth Allston died (c. 1755), Mr. Lynch married. Hannah Motte, and they had a daughter, Elizabeth (b. 1755).
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The Senior Lynch was a distinguished public servant and one of the most important Santee River planters. As a prominent Indigo planter, he was the first President of the Winyah Indigo Society founded in 1755. In 1751 he was the delegate elected to the Commons House of Assembly from Prince George, Winyah Parish where he served with the exception of one term until his death. He served on the 1765 Stamp Act Congress and in 1774 was elected to the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia. Lynch was highly esteemed by the founding fathers and in October, 1775, Lynch was appointed with Benjamin Franklin, and Colonel Benjamin Harrison as advisors to General Washington. However, in February 1776 he was paralyzed when he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage while in Philadelphia. His son, Thomas Lynch, Jr, was serving in the South Carolina militia and requested leave of his commanding officer, Christopher Gadsden, to join his ailing father. The request was denied but the
South Carolina Second Provincial Congress selected the son as a delegate to join his father in Philadelphia. Thus Thomas Lynch Sr. and Thomas Lynch Jr. were the only father and son team to serve the Continental Congress. Thomas Lynch Jr. was the fifty-second signer of the Declaration of Independence at 26 years of age and thus gave his birthplace, Hopsewee Plantation, a place in American History. The elder Lynch remained a member of the South Carolina delegation but was physically unable to sign the Declaration of Independence in the space left between the names of Edward Rutledge and Thomas Heyward, Jr. In December, 1776, while returning to South Carolina, the senior Lynch died and is buried in Annapolis, Maryland. Thomas Lynch, Jr. returned to South Carolina and retired from public life due to a malingering fever contracted during his service with the South Carolina militia in 1775. He and his wife, Elizabeth Shubrick, resided at Peachtree Plantation on the South Santee River. In 1779 he and his wife left for France by way of the West Indies to improve his health. Their ship was lost at sea with all passengers. He and his wife had no children.
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