Bonaventure Plantation
An October 1779 map by Antoine O'Connor, chief engineer of French Admiral-General Charles Henri Hector d'Estaing,[1] showing the location of Bonaventure
General information
LocationColonial Savannah, Province of Georgia
Coordinates32°02′37″N 81°02′42″W / 32.0435°N 81.0451°W / 32.0435; -81.0451
Completed1762; rebuilt after 1771
Destroyed1771 (fire); 1804 (fire)
Owner

Bonaventure Plantation was a plantation founded in colonial Savannah, Province of Georgia, on land now occupied by Greenwich and Bonaventure cemeteries. The site was 600 acres (2.4 km2), including a plantation house and private cemetery, located on the Wilmington River, about 3.5 miles (6 kilometres) east of the Savannah colony.

History

The plantation was founded in 1762[2] by British Army colonel John Mullryne, who had emigrated from Montserrat to Charleston, South Carolina,[3] initially, before moving south to Savannah.[4]

"The high ground, an extended river view, etc., made it one of the choicest sites near the city of Savannah and the first house was erected at that time, facing the center walk of the old garden," wrote Charles Colcock Jones Jr. in 1890.[4] "This garden extended in terraces from the plateau to the river."

The property fell into the possession of the Tattnall family after Josiah Tattnall Sr. (b. February 8, 1740),[5] of Charleston, married Mary,[5] the youngest daughter of John and Claudia Mullryne.[4] Josiah and Mary's second son, Josiah Tattnall Jr., was born at the plantation.[2][5]

Per Claudia Mullryne's will and testament, dated December 10, 1781, her daughter, Catharine Moore, a widow, was left "the mansion house called Bonaventure where she now resides." Upon Catharine's death, John and Claudia's grandson, the above-mentioned John Tattnall, would inherit the mansion, as well as "six hundred acres of land adjoining those of Josiah Tattnall." Josiah was also given a plantation called Placentia, adjoining Thunderbolt. Granddaughter Claudia Cattell Tattnall was deeded the "slaves etc."[6]

The first house, made of English brick, was destroyed by a fire on January 7, 1771.[7] John Berendt wrote in his 1994 book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil that a formal dinner party, held by either John Mullryne or Josiah Tattnall Sr.,[8] was in progress when one of the servants informed the host that the roof was ablaze and that nothing could be done to stop it. The host "rose calmly, clinked his glass, and invited guests to pick up their dinner plates and follow him into the garden", where they ate the remainder of their meals in the glow of the flames.[9] The house was replaced by a brick mansion.[2]

When Savannahians ousted and arrested royal governor James Wright in February 1776, John Mullryne and Josiah Tattnall aided his escape through Bonaventure to HMS Scarborough, a British naval vessel nearby.[10]

In 1779 the mansion was used as a hospital during the siege of Savannah.[2]

After the Mullryne and Tattnall actions in support of the Crown six years earlier, the Bonaventure estate was confiscated by the Revolutionary government in 1782 and sold at public auction to John Habersham, a friend of the Tattnalls, who sold the property in 1788 to Josiah Tattnall Jr., who had married two years earlier.[8] His wife, Harriet (née Fenwick), gave birth to three children who lived to adulthood: Edward (1788–1832), Harriet (d. 1819)[8] and Josiah III (1795–1871).

John Mullryne, who, along with Josiah Tattnall Sr., had fled the colonies during the Revolutionary War, died on January 6, 1786, in Nassau, Bahamas.[7]

Around 1785, Josiah Tattnall Jr. returned to Savannah and eventually bought back the Bonaventure property from John Habersham.[8]

Harriet died in 1802 and was buried at the plantation beside her five children who died in infancy: Mary, Claudia, Josiah, John and Sally.[8] Josiah Jr. died in 1803, a year after his wife, while in the Bahamas.[8] The orphaned children were raised in London, England, by their grandfather.[8]

The mansion was destroyed, by another fire, in 1804.[7]

In 1817, Josiah Tattnall Jr.’s children reclaimed their family's lands. After his sister's death in 1819 and his brother's in 1832, Bonaventure passed solely to Josiah III.[8] He had joined the United States Navy in 1812 and fought in the Mexican–American War.[8]

The estate remained in the Tattnall family until 1846, when Captain Peter Wiltberger (1791–1853)[8] became the new owner. The sale excluded the Tattnall family cemetery, but Wiltberger agreed to maintain it.[8]

Wiltberger died while in Brooklyn, New York,[11] shortly after purchasing Bonaventure and was buried at the estate beside his wife, Susan (1788–1849), and their son, Rutherford (1827–1932).[8] Another son, Major William Henry Wiltberger (1825–1872),[8] inherited the property. After fighting in the Civil War, in which he attained the rank of Major, he fulfilled his father's desire to turn part of Bonaventure into a public cemetery by forming Evergreen Cemetery Company on June 12, 1868.[8] Bonaventure came under the control of said company.[4] Major Wiltberger died in 1872 and was buried next to his family in section B, lot 3 of the cemetery he helped create.[8]

After the death of William, all titles to Bonaventure and the cemetery tracts were transferred to the Evergreen Cemetery Company by the executors of his estate. The Evergreen Cemetery of Bonaventure was bought by the city of Savannah on July 7, 1907, for $30,000.[8] Greenwich Cemetery became an addition to Bonaventure in 1933.[12]

Bonaventure Cemetery

The following notable members of the Tattnall family are buried in today's Bonaventure Cemetery,[13] on Mullryne Way:[8] Adjacent to the north is section F, which is known as Plantation Square, presumably where the mansion formerly stood.[14]

No Mullrynes are known to buried at either Bonaventure or Greenwich cemeteries.

References

  1. Engineers of Independence: A Documentary History of the Army Engineers in the American Revolution, 1775-1783, Paul K. Walker; The Minerva Group, 2002
  2. 1 2 3 4 Bonaventure Plantation - SavannahGA.gov
  3. "Spirited Away – Savannah Magazine". www.savannahmagazine.com. Retrieved 2022-12-03.
  4. 1 2 3 4 History of Savannah, Ga: From Its Settlement to the Close of the Eighteenth Century, Charles Colcock Jones (D. Mason & Company, 1890)
  5. 1 2 3 The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine, Vol. 14, No. 1 (Jan., 1913), pp. 3-19 (17 pages), D. E. Huger Smith
  6. Abstracts of Wills of South Carolinians Recorded in Savannah, Ga., B.F. Taylor (1940)
  7. 1 2 3 Tombstones I Have Known, Lamar Weaver, Charaman M. Campbell, 2001
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Historic Bonaventure Cemetery: Photographs from the Collection of the Georgia Historical Society, Arcadia Publishing (1998)
  9. Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (John Berendt; Random House, 1994)
  10. "BONAVENTURE: A HISTORICAL SKETCH" - Telfair Museums, July 27, 2018
  11. Ease and Elegance, Madeira and Murder: The Social Life of Savannah's City Hotel, Malcolm Bell, Jr. (1992), p. 552
  12. Greenwich Cemetery - SavannahGA.gov
  13. 1 2 Bonaventure Section E - SavannahGA.gov
  14. Bonaventure Cemetery Map
  15. 1 2 3 4 Georgia's Landmarks, Memorials and Legends, Lucian Lamar Knight (The Byrd Printing Company, 1914)
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