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Burt-Stark Mansion

400 N Main St,
864-366-0166

about us

In the Burl-Mark Mansion the War Between the States finally came to an end. Here, on May z 1865, Confederate President Jefferson Davis, in retreat but still fighting, held the last council of war of the Confederacy. Present were cabinet Members Benjamin, Mallory, Reagan and Breckinridge and five Brigade Commanders, Ferguson, Dibrell,Vaughn, Duke and Breckinridge. Here, Davis was convinced by liis generals and Cabinet that the Southern resources were exhausted and that any attempt to fight another compaign would merely bring more misery to the region. It was in this house that President Davis finally admited, "All is indeed lost."

Built in the 183()'s by David Lesley, planter, lawyer, and Abbeville District judge, the Burt-Stark Mansion is in the Greek Revival style. It is furnished with Southern antiques, including furnuture, silver, crystal, rugs and paintings. The gracious dining room with its plantation hunt board recalls the hospitality for winch the house has always been known. Catching the sunlight as you enter the house is the rare stained glass crescent transom which connects the front and rear hallways. The transom was designed by Martha Calhoun Burt in honor of her French Hugenot heritage.

Believing that the Burt-Stark Mansion possessed significance in the history of the United States Mary Stark Davis, the last surviving member of the family who bought the house in 1900, donated her historic home and its contents to the Abbeville County Historic Preservation Commission so as to Dreserve it for future ire ner a lions.


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