Advertisement

Roderick A. “Lodd” Shaw

Advertisement

Roderick A. “Lodd” Shaw

Birth
Scotland
Death
1 Mar 1903 (aged 89–90)
Chesterfield County, South Carolina, USA
Burial
Chesterfield County, South Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
---4th Great Uncle Of Rick Wright---
..Copied from the book; The Shaw Brothers written by Tyther Shaw Blake:
--Roderick "Lodd" Shaw b. 1813, d. March 1, 1903, son of the first Shaw settler at McBee, Chesterfield Co., S. C. was said , born in Scotland and came to this country as a small boy, along with his parents and brother Murdock Wesley, landing in Charleston, S.C., and later removed to McBee, where he lived and died and is buried in the Shaw Family Cemetery.
--Roderick or Lodd, the name he was mostly known by, lived after marriage, just off Hwy. 85, now known as the McCoy Peach Orchard. This land was adjoining that of his brother Murdock.
--Roderick was a farmer and also a turpentine trapper. He and his brother both owned a number of slaves. Roderick owned a slave named Jim Mitchell, and when the Civil War was over, Roderick set him free. He left for a short while, but soon came back to live with his master. In Dec. 1865, Roderick gave Jim Mitchell 414 acres of land, a copy of the deed can be foud in this book. Jim is buried in the Shaw Family Cemetery along with other slaves belonging to the Shaw Family.
--It has been said that Roderick was married twice and had a daughter by his first marriage and that she married a Turner.
--Roderick "Lodd" was married second to Axie Sullivan, who lived near Jefferson, S.C. After his death and several years later, Axie suffered a stroke and was helpless in her last years. Her daughter Nealy, took care of her until her death in 1914, when Axie went to live with her son, Charlie. She died soon afterwards and is buried in the Shaw Cemetery.
--Known Children of Roderick and Axie Shaw:
Sallie Shaw 1859-1904
Daniel Shaw 1860-1868
Tilman Shaw 1860-1898
James Alexander Shaw 1861-1927
Archie Bishop Shaw 1863-1929
Jane Shaw 1868-1918
Nealy Shaw 1870-1914
James Charlie Shaw 1873-1934
Infant Twin Daughter Shaw 1880-1880
Infant Twin Daughter Shaw 1880-1880
---4th Great Uncle Of Rick Wright---
..Copied from the book; The Shaw Brothers written by Tyther Shaw Blake:
--Roderick "Lodd" Shaw b. 1813, d. March 1, 1903, son of the first Shaw settler at McBee, Chesterfield Co., S. C. was said , born in Scotland and came to this country as a small boy, along with his parents and brother Murdock Wesley, landing in Charleston, S.C., and later removed to McBee, where he lived and died and is buried in the Shaw Family Cemetery.
--Roderick or Lodd, the name he was mostly known by, lived after marriage, just off Hwy. 85, now known as the McCoy Peach Orchard. This land was adjoining that of his brother Murdock.
--Roderick was a farmer and also a turpentine trapper. He and his brother both owned a number of slaves. Roderick owned a slave named Jim Mitchell, and when the Civil War was over, Roderick set him free. He left for a short while, but soon came back to live with his master. In Dec. 1865, Roderick gave Jim Mitchell 414 acres of land, a copy of the deed can be foud in this book. Jim is buried in the Shaw Family Cemetery along with other slaves belonging to the Shaw Family.
--It has been said that Roderick was married twice and had a daughter by his first marriage and that she married a Turner.
--Roderick "Lodd" was married second to Axie Sullivan, who lived near Jefferson, S.C. After his death and several years later, Axie suffered a stroke and was helpless in her last years. Her daughter Nealy, took care of her until her death in 1914, when Axie went to live with her son, Charlie. She died soon afterwards and is buried in the Shaw Cemetery.
--Known Children of Roderick and Axie Shaw:
Sallie Shaw 1859-1904
Daniel Shaw 1860-1868
Tilman Shaw 1860-1898
James Alexander Shaw 1861-1927
Archie Bishop Shaw 1863-1929
Jane Shaw 1868-1918
Nealy Shaw 1870-1914
James Charlie Shaw 1873-1934
Infant Twin Daughter Shaw 1880-1880
Infant Twin Daughter Shaw 1880-1880


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement