Elias Horry


Elias Horry was a lawyer, politician, businessman and plantation owner who twice served in the South Carolina General Assembly as well as the intendant of Charleston, South Carolina, serving two terms from 1815 to 1817 and 1820 to 1821.

Early and family life

Horry was born in 1773 and received a private education suitable for his class. He joined Charles Cotesworth Pinckney's office as a law student.
He would marry twice. In 1797 he married Harriet Vanderhorst, who bore three sons and two daughters before her death: Thomas Lynch Horry ; Harriet Vanderhorst Horry Frost ; Ann Branford Horry and Elias Horry. The widower then married Mary R. Shubrick in 1817, who would bear Alicia Mary Horry ; Elias Horry ; and Richard Shubrick Horry.

Career

In 1793, Horry was admitted to the South Carolina bar. He represented St. James, Santee, in the South Carolina General Assembly from 1794 to 1804.
Horry was elected warden in September 1813 before becoming the interim intendant on March 30, 1815, after Thomas Rhett Smith resigned. On September 18, 1815, he was elected to a full term and then re-elected September 16, 1816, defeating Daniel Stevens. After four terms by two other mayors, Horry returned to the position, after having been elected on September 4, 1820 for one more term.
Many years later, he again served in the South Carolina House of Representatives, representing the Charleston area from 1830 to 1833.
Horry owned several plantations which he operated using enslaved labor, including: The Bluff, Wattahan, Milldam, Jutland, Camp Main, Camp Island, Newland, Midland and Millbrook plantations in Georgetown District and St. James, Santee, Parish.
at 59 Meeting St., Charleston, South Carolina from his father, Thomas Horry, and added the front portico.
Horry became president of the South Carolina Canal and Railroad Company in 1831.

Death and legacy

Horry died on September 17, 1834. He is buried at the Cathedral of St. Luke and St. Paul in Charleston, South Carolina. The Branford-Horry House in which he was raised and later lived in Charleston was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, and remains in private ownership.