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The Political Graveyard: Dennis family of Macbeth and Pinopolis, South Carolina

PoliticalGraveyard.com
The Political Graveyard: A Database of American History
Dennis family of Macbeth and Pinopolis, South Carolina

Note: This is just one of 1,164 family groupings listed on The Political Graveyard web site. These families each have three or more politician members, all linked together by blood, marriage or adoption.

These groupings — even the names of the groupings, and the areas of main activity — are the result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have, not the choices of any historian or genealogist.

  Edward James Dennis (1844-1904) — of Charleston County, S.C.; Berkeley County, S.C. Born in Charleston District (part now in Berkeley County), S.C., March 23, 1844. Served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; surveyor; cotton planter; lawyer; member of South Carolina state house of representatives, 1880-82, 1884-85, 1892-93 (Charleston County 1880-82, Berkeley County 1884-85, 1892-93); member of South Carolina state senate from Berkeley County, 1894-1904; defeated, 1886, 1890; died in office 1904; delegate to South Carolina state constitutional convention from Berkeley County, 1895. Member, United Confederate Veterans. Died in Macbeth, Berkeley County, S.C., May 24, 1904 (age 60 years, 62 days). Interment at Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Cross, S.C.
  Relatives: Son of William James Dennis and Sarah (McCants) Dennis; married to Adelaide Markley; father of Edward James Dennis (1877-1930); grandfather of Rembert Coney Dennis.
  Political family: Dennis family of Macbeth and Pinopolis, South Carolina.
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Edward James Dennis (1877-1930) — also known as E. J. Dennis — of Berkeley County, S.C. Born in Macbeth, Berkeley County, S.C., September 23, 1877. Lawyer; member of South Carolina state house of representatives from Berkeley County, 1900-04, 1916-18; member of South Carolina state senate from Berkeley County, 1904-06, 1910-14, 1918-22, 1926-30; died in office 1930. Methodist. Tried and acquitted in 1929 for conspiracy to violate the alcohol prohibition law. Shot and mortally wounded by Webster Lee 'Sporty' Thornley, on the street in front of the post office in Moncks Corner, S.C., and died the next day in a hospital at Charleston, Charleston County, S.C., July 25, 1930 (age 52 years, 305 days). Thornley was tried and convicted of murder; Glenn D. McKnight, who allegedly hired Thornley to murder Dennis, was tried and not convicted. Interment at St. John's Baptist Churchyard, Pinopolis, S.C.
  Relatives: Son of Edward James Dennis (1844-1904) and Adelaide (Markley) Dennis; married to Ella Mae Coney; father of Rembert Coney Dennis.
  Political family: Dennis family of Macbeth and Pinopolis, South Carolina.
  Epitaph: "Father - Leader - Statesman."
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
Rembert C. Dennis Rembert Coney Dennis (1915-1992) — also known as Rembert C. Dennis — of Moncks Corner, Berkeley County, S.C. Born in Pinopolis, Berkeley County, S.C., August 27, 1915. Democrat. Lawyer; member of South Carolina state house of representatives from Berkeley County, 1938-42; member of South Carolina state senate, 1942-88 (Berkeley County 1942-66, 14th District 1966-84, 37th District 1984-88); delegate to Democratic National Convention from South Carolina, 1944, 1948 (alternate), 1952, 1956, 1960; candidate for justice of South Carolina state supreme court, 1956. Baptist. Member, American Bar Association; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Freemasons; Scottish Rite Masons; Shriners; Lions; Woodmen of the World; Blue Key. Died June 20, 1992 (age 76 years, 298 days). Interment at St. John's Baptist Churchyard, Pinopolis, S.C.
  Relatives: Son of Edward James Dennis (1877-1930) and Ella Mae (Coney) Dennis; married, October 3, 1944, to Natalie Brown; grandson of Edward James Dennis (1844-1904).
  Political family: Dennis family of Macbeth and Pinopolis, South Carolina.
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Image source: South Carolina Legislative Manual 1964
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