Beaufort's long history of wickedness stretches back to 1562, when
Captain Jean Ribaut built the ill-fated French outpost Charlesfort on
Parris Island, eventually destroyed by mutiny and starvation. Colonial
Beaufortonians were no strangers to thwarting the law, from the murder
of Charles Purry to the priestly misbehavior of Reverend William
Peaseley. The Revolutionary War brought civil strife to the area in the
form of bands of outlaws, and the early Federal years were times for the
gentlemanly? pursuits of drinking, gambling and fighting. Reconstruction
brought violence of several varieties as freedmen, carpetbaggers,
scalawags and others sought to develop a new order. Join local author
Alexia Jones Helsley as she delves into the history of these misbegotten
times in Beaufort's history, from the earliest instances of illicit
activity through the infamous Beaufort banking scandal of 1926.