This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Doar is the surname of an aristocratic family in the southern United States. Prior to the American Civil War, Doar family members were among the largest landowners in the South.
History
editThe family's fortune in the U.S. originates mainly from plantations in Charleston, Georgetown, Berkeley, Orangeburg, Barnwell and Beaufort Counties, South Carolina.
Among the plantations that the Doar family owned were: Doar Plantation, Doar Point Plantation, Palo Alto (now part of the University of South Carolina's International Center for Public Health Research), Harrietta (on the National Register of Historic Places including the Doar Family Cemetery), Woodville, Walnut Grove, Montgomery, Oak Grove, Buck Hall, Egremont, Elmwood, Woodside, Hopsewee (National Register of Historic Places and birthplace of Thomas Lynch, Jr., who signed the Declaration of Independence), Wedge and Windsor.
The Doars were among the founding members of the Church of England in the south-eastern United States, and were part of efforts to open the first public schools in the south, mainly in Charleston County, South Carolina.
References
editSources
edit- Doar, David. 1936. Rice and Rice Planting in the South Carolina Lowcountry
- University of South Carolina Institute for Southern Studies