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WILLIAMS, David Rogerson, a Representative from South Carolina; born in Robbins Neck, S.C.,
March 8, 1776; attended school at Wrentham, Mass., and Rhode Island College
(now Brown University), Providence, R.I.; studied law; was admitted to the bar
in 1797 and practiced for three years in Providence, R.I.; editor and
proprietor of the City Gazette and Weekly Carolina Gazette of Charleston, S.C.,
1801-1803; engaged in cotton planting and manufacturing in Darlington County,
S.C., from 1803 until his death; built the first cottonseed-oil mill in South
Carolina; elected as a Republican to the Ninth and Tenth Congresses (March 4,
1805-March 3, 1809); elected to the Twelfth Congress (March 4, 1811-March 3,
1813); brigadier general in the United States Army July 9, 1813, to April 6,
1814, when he resigned; Governor of South Carolina 1814-1816; member of the
State senate from 1824 until he was accidentally killed November 17, 1830,
while superintending the construction of a bridge over Lynchs Creek,
Witherspoons Ferry, on the road to Georgetown, S.C.; interment on his
plantation near Society Hill, Darlington County, S.C.
BibliographyCook, Harvey Tolliver.
The Life and Legacy of David Rogerson Williams. New York:
N.p., 1916.
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