Henry Shultz
Henry Shultz | |
---|---|
Born | Klaus Hinrich Klahn October 10, 1776 Dahme, Duchy of Holstein |
Died | October 13, 1851 Hamburg, South Carolina, USA | (aged 75)
Nationality | Danish |
Occupation(s) | Developer, entrepreneur |
Known for | Founder of Hamburg, S.C. |
Henry Shultz (October 10, 1776 – October 13, 1851) was a colorful entrepreneur in Europe and the American South. He built an important bridge across the Savannah River at Augusta, Georgia, and founded the town of Hamburg, South Carolina.
Early Life
Shultz was born Klaus Hinrich Klahn in the village of Dahme on the Baltic coast of Holstein, at the time a duchy in personal union with the kingdom of Denmark. He left Dahme for the port city of Lübeck at age 16, in time becoming a wealthy trader there and in nearby Wismar. Economic dislocation during the Napoleonic Wars pushed Klahn’s business into failure. He changed his name, escaped his debtors to Altona, near Hamburg, Germany, and finally stowed away on a ship bound for America.[1]
Career
Shultz came to Augusta, Georgia in 1806 and took up as a laborer on the Savannah River pole boats. These carried upcountry produce such as tobacco (and later, cotton) to Savannah, Georgia, and returned with manufactured items such as metal goods, paper, and cloth. In 1809 he purchased his own boat.[2]
In 1814 he engaged the support of a 'mechanic' named Lewis Cooper, secured financing, and drove the construction of a Savannah River bridge at Augusta. Two previous bridges had been swept away by floods, but his bridge proved remarkably successful and served the city well until 1888.[3]
Shultz took advantage of the great success of his bridge, using it to capitalize the Bridge Company of Augusta, complete with currency known as 'Bridge Bills' that circulated widely.[4]
All of this came to an end during the Panic of 1819. The Bridge Company failed, the Bridge Bills became worthless, and the bridge itself fell into the hands of a creditor. The enraged Shultz concluded that the citizens of Augusta conspired against him to take away his bridge.[5] Driven to desperation, Shultz attempted suicide with a pistol in his mouth, but survived.[6]
As revenge, Shultz enlisted the support of property owners on the opposite side of the river, and in 1821 founded the town of Hamburg, South Carolina. The town grew quickly and by the end of 1821 had 84 houses and 200 inhabitants, directly competing with Augusta in its role as an upriver trading point. Shultz basically ruled the town as its 'Proprieter' and worked continuously to improve it by constructing improvements, increasing its water and road connections, and encouraging the opening of a bank.[7]
Shultz relentlessly and flamboyantly promoted his town. He used the newspapers to brag about Hamburg's success and deride the hated Augusta. Playing on the theme of retaining South Carolina commerce within the State, he successfully appealed to the legislature for tax exemptions and loans, that he used to buy a steamboat and construct buildings. He founded a Mechanics Society, and conducted a Mechanics Festival that amounted to an annual pep rally for his town.[8]
Hamburg grew quickly until Shultz was derailed by a series of mishaps. A suspect in Shultz's custody died during the investigation of a trunk stolen from a wagon. Shultz was confined in the district jail at Edgefield, and in a widely reported trial was convicted of manslaughter. He was sentenced to six months confinement, and then to be branded on the hand with the letter 'M'. Shultz obtained a pardon from the governor, and apparently escaped the branding.[9] But in the meantime, half of Hamburg was sold away in a Sheriff's sale.[10]
In 1828 Shultz found himself in jail again, this time for bankruptcy. While Hamburg itself had been a measured success, Shultz had difficulty getting paid for rents and for the sale of lots. Shultz was forced to turn his remaining assets over to his creditors, which included the State of South Carolina.[11] In the following years he was able to obtain some forgiveness and renewed support from the state, and despite his diminished role, continued to govern and support what he continued to call 'his' town.[12]
Death and Legacy
Shultz was continually forced to sell off properties in order to maintain himself. He died intestate and in poverty on October 13, 1851 at the age of 75 in Hamburg, S.C. To his death he maintained his alias and was generally believed to have been born in 'Hamburg on the Elbe'.[13]
Whether coincidence or not, Hamburg quickly declined during the 1850s, and by the time of the War was a ghost town.[14] The town enjoyed a resurgence during Reconstruction as a home for displaced freedmen, but in 1876 was the site of the Hamburg Massacre.[15] Hamburg once again dwindled until its final destruction in a Savannah River flood in 1929.
Shultz Township in present-day Aiken County is named in his honor.
Notes
References
- Budiansky, Stephen (2008). The Bloody Shirt: Terror After Appomattox. Viking Penguin. ISBN 0-670-01840-6. Section VI - pages 221-254.
- Chapman, John A. (1897). History of Edgefield County, South Carolina. Various Reprints. ISBN 0-8063-4696-5. pp. 20 and 236-243
- Cordle, Charles G. (1940). Henry Shultz and the Founding of Hamburg, South Carolina. Studies in Georgia History and Government. University of Georgia. OCLC 794924. 79-93 and 257-263
- Hughes, Peter (2010). The Sixth Hamburg Mechanic's Festival. The Carolina Herald and Newsletter, Vol. XXXVIII No. 2 (April, May, June 2010). South Carolina Genealogical Society.
- Scott, Edwin J. (1969) [1884]. Random Recollections of a Long Life, 1806 to 1876. Charles A. Calvo, reprinted by R. L. Bryan Co. ISBN 0-8371-1537-X. OCLC 5952211. pp. 25–28
- Stokes, Thomas L (1951). The Savannah. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-0621-5. pp. 244-251
- Voigt-Lassen, Irene (1965). Ein Dahmer wurde Städtebauer an der Savannah. Jahrbuch für Heimatkunde im Kreis Oldenburg/Holstein, 9. Jahrgang. pp. 245-249
External links
- Henry Shultz and his Town of Hamburg, SC Accessed December, 2016
- First Steamboat in Augusta - Henry Shultz's bridge in the background, accessed December, 2016