Sullivans Island in Charleston County, South Carolina — The American South (South Atlantic)
Oceola / Patapsco Dead
Photographed By Charles R. Robbins, Jr., July 13, 2006
1. OCEOLA Marker
Inscription.
Oceola, also, Patapsco Dead. . (Grave Marker):
Oceola Patriot and Warrior Died at Fort Moultrie January 30th 1838. (Historical Marker):
A Seminole Leader. Perhaps Fort Moultrie's most celebrated resident was Osceola, famed Seminole leader who led his people in their fight to remain in Florida rather than submit to removal to the Indian Territory. Osceola was given freedom of the fort while being held here from January 1838, until his death from throat infection on January 30.
Patapsco Dead. Near the end of the Civil War on the night of January 15, 1865, the Union ironclad monitor U. S. S. Patapsco sank in Charleston harbor, victim of a Confederate mine. Sixty-two men lost their lives; five of them are buried here.
(Grave Marker):
Oceola
Patriot and Warrior
Died at Fort Moultrie
January 30th 1838
(Historical Marker):
A Seminole Leader
Perhaps Fort Moultrie's most celebrated resident was Osceola, famed Seminole leader who led his people in their fight to remain in Florida rather than submit to removal to the Indian Territory. Osceola was given freedom of the fort while being held here from January 1838, until his death from throat infection on January 30.
Patapsco Dead
Near the end of the Civil War on the night of January 15, 1865, the Union ironclad monitor U. S. S. Patapsco sank in Charleston harbor, victim of a Confederate mine. Sixty-two men lost their lives; five of them are buried here.
Location. 32° 45.586′ N, 79° 51.466′ W. Marker is on Sullivans Island, South Carolina, in Charleston County. Marker is on Middle Street. Located at Fort Moultrie Unit of Fort Sumter National Monument. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Sullivans Island SC 29482, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Also see . . . Wikipedia entry for Osceola. "On October 21, 1837, on the orders of U.S. General Thomas Sidney Jesup, Osceola was captured when he arrived for supposed truce negotiations in Fort Payton." (Submitted on January 19, 2009, by Kevin W. of Stafford, Virginia.)
Photographed By Robert, June 20, 2006
2. Oceola Marker
Photographed By Charles R. Robbins, Jr., July 13, 2006
3. Fort Moultrie
Photographed By Mike Stroud, August 14, 2011
4. Oceola and USS Patapsco Marker
Photographed By Mike Stroud, August 14, 2011
5. U.S.S. Patapsco Monument base
2 sides of the memorial are weatherworn as to render names unreadable
Photographed By Allen C. Browne, August 9, 2015
6. Osceola
This 1838 portrait of Osceola by George Catlin hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC.
“The Seminole Indians of the Southeast were directly affected by Andrew Jackson's policy of Indian removal, and although a portion of his tribe's leadership gave in to the federal government, Osceola led the resistance. Unlike Black Hawk, who fought the Americans in the West, Osceola did not take on the U.S. military in open battle, but conducted a campaign of guerrilla warfare, harassing federal authorities from the Seminole base in the Everglades. Osceola was captured after the Americans violated a flag of truce. He died in prison shortly thereafter, but the Seminole, famously, never surrendered to the United States.” — National Portrait Gallery
Credits. This page was last revised on December 12, 2019. It was originally submitted on January 18, 2009, by Charles R. Robbins, Jr. of Rock Hill, South Carolina. This page has been viewed 1,366 times since then and 50 times this year. Photos:1. submitted on January 18, 2009, by Charles R. Robbins, Jr. of Rock Hill, South Carolina. 2. submitted on January 19, 2009, by Kevin W. of Stafford, Virginia. 3. submitted on January 20, 2009, by Charles R. Robbins, Jr. of Rock Hill, South Carolina. 4, 5. submitted on August 16, 2011, by Mike Stroud of Bluffton, South Carolina. 6. submitted on October 29, 2015, by Allen C. Browne of Silver Spring, Maryland. • Kevin W. was the editor who published this page.