300:. After a little over a year in the role, his position was filled by Lieutenant Colonel Harris, who had been relieved from active field service due to his failing health. Feeling he had been treated unjustly, Hardee resigned and returned to Savannah. There, he was appointed Agent of the War Department, whose headquarters were in the city. His role was to receive cotton arriving in Savannah from the
335:, the second volume of his memoirs. "His pencil did not drop from his weary fingers. His notebook lay on his table, ready for further recollections of the development of his beloved city," wrote his granddaughter Martha Gallaudet Waring, who had his works published. He was interred beside his wife at Bonaventure Cemetery. Waring died in 1943, aged 69, and was also buried in Bonaventure.
221:. (This block is a parking garage today.) At the time of their residence there, that portion of Bryan Street was a "respectable residential section (but not so now)." One of their neighbors was French physician Dr. Coppée and his family. Hardee's family lived on Bryan Street for around a year, before moving to "a more eligible location" on
159:, published by his granddaughter after his death, were written when he was over the age of ninety and became noted works on the history of the city's early years. His manuscript was accurate due to his verification of any subject he did not feel completely sure about. He died at his desk during the writing of the second volume in 1927.
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Late in Hardee's life, when he was the oldest surviving graduate of
Franklin College, his father's branch of the family had become extinct, for his paternal uncle and aunt, Charlotte, had no children, while the five children and two grandchildren of Fanny had all died. The succession of the
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175:, to physician John Hais Hardee and Isabella Seton Henry. He was one of their five children, all boys. His father died in 1835, aged 32, when Charles was four years old, and was buried in the family cemetery at the plantation.
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Hardee and his brother, John, were sent by their mother to visit their paternal grandparents, Major John Hais Hardee Jr. and Sarah Ellis, at Rural
Felicity in the fall of 1838. While there, during a visit to
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Hardee married Martha Jane
Gallaudet around 1850. They had ten known children: daughters Alice, Isabella, Margaret, Meta, Martha, Harriet, and Frances, and sons Charles, James, and Robert.
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He was given a position as Deputy
Collector of the Port and Assistant Depositary in the Savannah Treasury Department, filling a vacancy left by the death of John Boston.
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After becoming widowed, Hardee's mother moved to
Savannah, where her brother and two sisters, Charlotte and Fanny, had been living. The family arrived, on the sloop
319:. His daughter, Martha, died the same year, aged 26. He became a widower on March 17, 1900, when his wife died at the age of 67. She was interred in Savannah's
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244:, to pick up supplies for the house, their grandfather fell sick. He died on November 1, aged 69. Their grandmother followed a decade later, aged 74.
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and forward it through the blockade whenever the opportunity arose. He was later forced to evacuate
Savannah for a period of four months.
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213:, then continued to the eastern tenement of a two-story home that was in the process of being built midway between Jefferson and
292:, Hardee was second lieutenant in the adjutant general's department. He assisted Colonel John Dunwody in operating the camp at
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Henry-Seton family was left to his mother's descendants. His mother died in 1890, aged 83. She is interred in
Savannah's
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He was given the full name
Charles Seton Henry Hardee at his baptism. Charles Seton Henry was his lawyer uncle.
225:. Their new home was one tenement of a three-story brick building on the northern side of the street, between
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351:"Collection Number: 00307. Collection Title: Charles S. H. Hardee Reminiscences, circa 1830-1923"
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296:. He later became major and assistant adjutant general and was in charge of Camp No. 2 in
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After graduating in 1848, he returned to
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189:. They walked a short distance and climbed a long flight of stone steps from
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147:(August 9, 1830 – August 22, 1927) was an American historian based in
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Hardee died in
Savannah in 1927, aged 97, while at his desk writing
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In 1835, Hardee was entered into Chatham Academy in Savannah.
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Charles Seton Henry Hardee's Recollections of old Savannah
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Charles Seton Henry Hardee's Recollections of old Savannah
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Charles Seton Henry Hardee's Recollections of old Savannah
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Charles Seton Henry Hardee's Recollections of old Savannah
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Charles Seton Henry Hardee's Recollections of Old Savannah
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Charles Seton Henry Hardee's Recollections of Old Savannah
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Charles Seton Henry Hardee's Recollections of old Savannah
368:"Image 1 of [Reminiscences and Recollections]"
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217:streets, in the northeastern residential lot of
372:Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
185:, at the Lower Rice Mill wharf, to the west of
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138:Martha Jane Gaudet (c. 1850–1900; her death)
642:Reminiscences of Charles Seton Henry Hardee
543:Reminiscences of Charles Seton Henry Hardee
520:Reminiscences of Charles Seton Henry Hardee
500:Reminiscences of Charles Seton Henry Hardee
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460:Reminiscences of Charles Seton Henry Hardee
437:Reminiscences of Charles Seton Henry Hardee
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394:Reminiscences of Charles Seton Henry Hardee
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201:neighborhood. They continued west along
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357:'s Wilson Special Collections Library
104:Franklin College of Arts and Sciences
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282:, to tutor his two oldest children.
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565:"The Life of Noble Andrew Hardee"
703:Confederate States Army officers
666:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
646:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
626:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
606:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
586:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
547:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
524:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
504:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
484:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
464:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
441:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
421:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
398:The Georgia Historical Quarterly
167:Hardee was born in 1830, at the
37:Hardee in the early 20th century
275:, then branched off to Athens.
698:Writers from Savannah, Georgia
16:American historian (1830–1927)
1:
563:Parker, James (1975-07-30).
355:University of North Carolina
267:. From Augusta, he took the
263:, aboard the iron steamboat
664:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
644:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
624:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
604:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
584:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
545:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
522:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
502:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
482:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
462:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
439:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
419:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
396:, Martha Gallaudet Waring,
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145:Charles Seton Henry Hardee
25:Charles Seton Henry Hardee
247:Hardee began studying at
169:Rural Felicity Plantation
87:, Savannah, Georgia, U.S.
50:Rural Felicity Plantation
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173:Camden County, Georgia
54:Camden County, Georgia
317:Laurel Grove Cemetery
304:government or by the
569:Savannah Biographies
321:Bonaventure Cemetery
273:Union Point, Georgia
85:Bonaventure Cemetery
290:American Civil War
242:Brunswick, Georgia
187:East Broad Street
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151:. His memoirs,
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120:Notable work
67:(1927-08-22)
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693:1927 deaths
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302:Confederate
288:During the
92:Nationality
682:Categories
377:2022-06-22
339:References
215:Montgomery
203:Bay Street
195:Emmet Park
111:Occupation
233:streets.
114:Historian
231:Whitaker
199:Old Fort
183:Virginia
95:American
265:Chatham
193:up to
135:Spouse
106:(1848)
75:, U.S.
56:, U.S.
670:JSTOR
650:JSTOR
630:JSTOR
610:JSTOR
590:JSTOR
551:JSTOR
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508:JSTOR
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402:JSTOR
327:Death
229:and
227:Bull
155:and
62:Died
43:Born
271:to
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