Camden, the oldest existing inland town in the state, was part of a
township plan ordered by King George II in 1730. The frontier
settlement, initially named Fredericksburg Township (later Pine Tree
Hill), took hold by the 1750s, as Quakers and Scots-Irish emigrants
and settlers from Virginia put down roots.
Joseph Kershaw, a native of Yorkshire, England, arrived in 1758
and established a store for a Charleston mercantile firm. He prospered
and by 1768 the town was the inland trade center in the colony. At his suggestion, the town became Camden, in honor of Lord
Camden, champion of colonial rights.
In May of 1780 the American Revolution returned to Charleston. It
fell. Lord Charles Cornwallis and 2,500 British troops immediately
marched to Camden and set up the main British supply post for the
Southern Campaign. For eleven months the citizens of Camden
understood the atrocities of war.
Two battles were fought near by. The Battle of Camden, the worst
American battle defeat of the Revolution, was fought on August 16,
1780 nine miles north of our museum. Nearby, General Nathanael Greene
and approximately 1,400 Americans engaged 950 British
soldiers commanded by Lord Francis Rawdon on April 25, 1781. It was a
costly British win and forced the Redcoats to evacuate
Camden.