The Life of General Francis Marion

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Life of General Francis Marion The Life of General Francis Marion Mason Locke Weems The Life of General Francis Marion Table of Contents The Life of General Francis Marion.......................................................................................................................1 Mason Locke Weems.....................................................................................................................................1 Preface............................................................................................................................................................2 Chapter 1........................................................................................................................................................3 Chapter 2........................................................................................................................................................9 Chapter 3......................................................................................................................................................12 Chapter 4......................................................................................................................................................16 Chapter 5......................................................................................................................................................20 Chapter 6......................................................................................................................................................21 Chapter 7......................................................................................................................................................24 Chapter 8......................................................................................................................................................26 Chapter 9......................................................................................................................................................33 Chapter 10....................................................................................................................................................37 Chapter 11....................................................................................................................................................41 Chapter 12....................................................................................................................................................45 Chapter 13....................................................................................................................................................50 Chapter 14....................................................................................................................................................53 Chapter 15....................................................................................................................................................58 Chapter 16....................................................................................................................................................61 Chapter 17....................................................................................................................................................65 Chapter 18....................................................................................................................................................67 Chapter 19....................................................................................................................................................72 Chapter 20....................................................................................................................................................75 Chapter 21....................................................................................................................................................78 Chapter 22....................................................................................................................................................81 Chapter 23....................................................................................................................................................84 Chapter 24....................................................................................................................................................88 Chapter 25....................................................................................................................................................90 Chapter 26....................................................................................................................................................96 Chapter 27..................................................................................................................................................100 Chapter 28..................................................................................................................................................104 Chapter 29..................................................................................................................................................106 Chapter 30..................................................................................................................................................108 Chapter 31..................................................................................................................................................110 Chapter 32..................................................................................................................................................114 i The Life of General Francis Marion Mason Locke Weems This page copyright © 2001 Blackmask Online. http://www.blackmask.com • Preface. • Chapter 1. • Chapter 2. • Chapter 3. • Chapter 4. • Chapter 5. • Chapter 6. • Chapter 7. • Chapter 8. • Chapter 9. • Chapter 10. • Chapter 11. • Chapter 12. • Chapter 13. • Chapter 14. • Chapter 15. • Chapter 16. • Chapter 17. • Chapter 18. • Chapter 19. • Chapter 20. • Chapter 21. • Chapter 22. • Chapter 23. • Chapter 24. • Chapter 25. • Chapter 26. • Chapter 27. • Chapter 28. • Chapter 29. • Chapter 30. • Chapter 31. • Chapter 32. The Life of General Francis Marion, a Celebrated Partisan Officer, in the Revolutionary War, against the British and Tories in South Carolina and Georgia by Brig. Gen. P. Horry, of Marion's Brigade, and M. L. Weems, formerly rector of Mount Vernon Parish. The Life of General Francis Marion 1 The Life of General Francis Marion −−−−−−−− "On VERNON'S CHIEF why lavish all our lays; Come, honest Muse, and sing great MARION'S praise." −−−−−−−− Preface. "O that mine enemy would write a book." −− This, in former times, passed for as sore an evil as a good man could think of wishing to his worst enemy. −− Whether any of my enemies ever wished me so great an evil, I know not. But certain it is, I never dreamed of such a thing as writing a book; and least of all a `war book'. What, I! a man here under the frozen zone and grand climacteric of my days, with one foot in the grave and the other hard by, to quit my prayer book and crutches, (an old man's best companion,) and drawing my sword, flourish and fight over again the battles of my youth. The Lord forbid me such madness! But what can one do when one's friends are eternally teasing him, as they are me, and calling out at every whipstitch and corner of the streets, "Well, but, sir, where's Marion? where's the history of Marion, that we have so long been looking for?" 'Twas in vain that I told them I was no scholar; no historian. "God," said I, "gentlemen, has made `many men of many minds;' one for this thing and another for that. But I am morally certain he never made me for a writer. I did indeed once understand something about the use of a broadsword; but as to a pen, gentlemen, that's quite another part of speech. The difference between a broadsword and a pen, gentlemen, is prodigious; and it is not every officer, let me tell you, gentlemen, who can, like Caesar, fight you a great battle with his sword to−day, and fight it over again with his pen to−morrow." "Burn Caesar!" replied they, "and his book too. If it were written in letters of gold, we would not read it. What have honest republicans like us to do with such an ambitious cut−throat and robber? Besides sir, your reasoning about scholarship, and fine style, and all that, does not, begging your pardon, apply at all to the case in hand. Small subjects indeed, require great writers to set them off; but great subjects require no such artificial helps: like true beauties, they shine most in the simplest dress. Marion is one of this sort: great in his simplicity. Then give us Marion −− plain, brave, honest Marion; that's all we want, sir. And you can do this better than any other man. You have known him longest; have fought closest by his side: and can best tell us of his noble deeds. And surely now, after all, you can't bear to let him die, and all his great actions, and be forgotten forever." This, I confess, went to the quick, and roused me completely. "What! Marion forgotten?" I exclaimed, "Marion forgotten! and by me!" No, never! never! while memory looks back on the dreadful days of the revolution; when a British despot, not the NATION, (for I esteem them most generous,) but a proud, stupid, obstinate, DESPOT, trampling the HOLY CHARTER and constitution of England's realm, issued against us, (sons of Britons,) that most unrighteous
Recommended publications
  • The Harvard Classics Eboxed
    0113 DSIS Qil3D THE HARVARD CLASSICS The Five-Foot Shelf of Books THE HARVARD CLASSICS EDITED BY CHARLES W. ELIOT, LL.D. English Poetry IN THREE VOLUMES VOLUME II From Collins to Fitzgerald ^ith Introductions and l>iotes Yolume 41 P. F. Collier & Son Corporation NEW YORK Copyright, igro By p. F. Collier & Son uanufactuked in v. s. a. CONTENTS William Collins page FiDELE 475 Ode Written in mdccxlvi 476 The Passions 476 To Evening 479 George Sewell The Dying Man in His Garden 481 Alison Rutherford Cockburn The Flowers of the Forest 482 Jane Elliot Lament for Flodden 483 Christopher Smart A Song to David 484 Anonymous Willy Drowned in Yarrow 498 John Logan The Braes of Yarrow 500 Henry Fielding A Hunting Song 501 Charles Dibdin Tom Bowling 502 Samuel Johnson On the Death of Dr. Robert Levet 503 A Satire 504 Oliver Goldsmith When Lovely Woman Stoops 505 Retaliation 505 The Deserted Village 509 The Traveller; or, A Prospect of Society 520 Robert Graham of Gartmore If Doughty Deeds 531 Adam Austin For Lack of Gold 532 465 466 CONTENTS William Cowper page Loss OF THE Royal George 533 To A Young Lady 534 The Poplar Field 534 The Solitude of Alexander Selkirk 535 To Mary Unwin 536 To the Same 537 Boadicea: An Ode 539 The Castaway 54" The Shrubbery 54^ On the Receipt of My Mother's Picture Out of Norfolk 543 The Diverting History of John Gilpin 546 Richard Brinsley Sheridan Drinking Song 554 Anna Laetitia Barbauld Life 555 IsoBEL Pagan (?) Ca' the Yowes to the Knowes 556 Lady Anne Lindsay AuLD Robin Gray 557 Thomas Chatterton Song from ^lla 558
    [Show full text]
  • Mars, Mammon--And Other Options Carl Skrade
    Intersections Volume 2004 | Number 20 Article 4 2004 Mars, Mammon--and Other Options Carl Skrade Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.augustana.edu/intersections Augustana Digital Commons Citation Skrade, Carl (2004) "Mars, Mammon--and Other Options," Intersections: Vol. 2004: No. 20, Article 4. Available at: http://digitalcommons.augustana.edu/intersections/vol2004/iss20/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Augustana Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Intersections by an authorized administrator of Augustana Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Mars, Mammon---and Other Options Carl Skrade Woe to those who go down to Egypt forhelp And rely on horses, Who trust in chariots because they are many And in horsemen because they are very strong, But do not look to the holy one of Israel Or consult the Lord! -Isaiah 31: 1 Blessed are the peacemakers, forthey shall be called the sons of God. -Matthew 5: 9 Overgrown military establishments are under any formof government inauspicious to liberty, and are to be regarded as particularly hostile to Republican liberty. -George Washington, Farewell Address, September 17, 1796 The conjunctionof an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience .... In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing forgranted.
    [Show full text]
  • Invincible Jumpchain- Compliant CYOA
    Invincible Jumpchain- Compliant CYOA By Lord Statera ​ Introduction Welcome to Invincible. Set in the Image comic book multiverse, this setting is home to older heroes and villains like Spawn, The Darkness, and The Witchblade. This story, however, focuses on the new superhero Invincible (Mark Grayson), the half-breed Viltrumite-Human hybrid and son of the world famous hero Omni-Man (Nolan Grayson). Invincible spends the beginning of his career working alongside the Teen Team, and with his father, to defend not only Baltimore but the Earth from many and varied threats. Little does he know that his father, rather than being an alien from a peace loving species, is actually a harbinger of war to the planet Earth. Viltrumites are actually a race bent on conquering the universe, one planet at a time. And with their level of power, not much can stop them. Fortunately, there is one secret the Viltrumite Empire has been hiding. Over 99% of the Viltrumite population had been wiped out using a plague genetically engineered by scientists of the Coalition of Planets, they are forced to wage a proxy war using their servant races against the Coalition, all the while sending individual Viltrumites out to take one world at a time, in their attempt to conquer the stars. As humans are the closest genetic match for the Viltrumite race outside of another Viltrumite, the remnants of this mighty alien race turn their sights on Earth in the hopes of using it as a breeding farm to repopulate their race. To help you survive in this universe, here are 1000 Choice Points.
    [Show full text]
  • Jun 18 Customer Order Form
    #369 | JUN19 PREVIEWS world.com Name: ORDERS DUE JUN 18 THE COMIC SHOP’S CATALOG PREVIEWSPREVIEWS CUSTOMER ORDER FORM Jun19 Cover ROF and COF.indd 1 5/9/2019 3:08:57 PM June19 Humanoids Ad.indd 1 5/9/2019 3:15:02 PM SPAWN #300 MARVEL ACTION: IMAGE COMICS CAPTAIN MARVEL #1 IDW PUBLISHING BATMAN/SUPERMAN #1 DC COMICS COFFIN BOUND #1 GLOW VERSUS IMAGE COMICS THE STAR PRIMAS TP IDW PUBLISHING BATMAN VS. RA’S AL GHUL #1 DC COMICS BERSERKER UNBOUND #1 DARK HORSE COMICS THE DEATH-DEFYING DEVIL #1 DYNAMITE ENTERTAINMENT MARVEL COMICS #1000 MARVEL COMICS HELLBOY AND THE B.P.R.D.: SATURN RETURNS #1 ONCE & FUTURE #1 DARK HORSE COMICS BOOM! STUDIOS Jun19 Gem Page.indd 1 5/9/2019 3:24:56 PM FEATURED ITEMS COMIC BOOKS & GRAPHIC NOVELS Bad Reception #1 l AFTERSHOCK COMICS The Flash: Crossover Crisis Book 1: Green Arrow’s Perfect Shot HC l AMULET BOOKS Archie: The Married Life 10 Years Later #1 l ARCHIE COMICS Warrior Nun: Dora #1 l AVATAR PRESS INC Star Wars: Rey and Pals HC l CHRONICLE BOOKS 1 Lady Death Masterpieces: The Art of Lady Death HC l COFFIN COMICS 1 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit: The Search for the Lost Disney Cartoons l DISNEY EDITIONS Moomin: The Lars Jansson Edition Deluxe Slipcase l DRAWN & QUARTERLY The Poe Clan Volume 1 HC l FANTAGRAPHICS BOOKS Cycle of the Werewolf SC l GALLERY 13 Ranx HC l HEAVY METAL MAGAZINE Superman and Wonder Woman With Collectibles HC l HERO COLLECTOR Omni #1 l HUMANOIDS The Black Mage GN l ONI PRESS The Rot Volume 1 TP l SOURCE POINT PRESS Snowpiercer Hc Vol 04 Extinction l TITAN COMICS Lenore #1 l TITAN COMICS Disney’s The Lion King: The Official Movie Special l TITAN COMICS The Art and Making of The Expance HC l TITAN BOOKS Doctor Mirage #1 l VALIANT ENTERTAINMENT The Mall #1 l VAULT COMICS MANGA 2 2 World’s End Harem: Fantasia Volume 1 GN l GHOST SHIP My Hero Academia Smash! Volume 1 GN l VIZ MEDIA Kingdom Hearts: Re:Coded SC l YEN ON Overlord a la Carte Volume 1 GN l YEN PRESS Arifureta: Commonplace to the World’s Strongest Zero Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • FRANCIS MARION UNIVERSITY DESCRIPTION of PROPOSED NEW COURSE Department/School H
    FRANCIS MARION UNIVERSITY DESCRIPTION OF PROPOSED NEW COURSE Department/School HONORS Date September 16, 2013 Course No. or level HNRS 270-279 Title HONORS SPECIAL TOPICS IN THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Semester hours 3 Clock hours: Lecture 3 Laboratory 0 Prerequisites Membership in FMU Honors, or permission of Honors Director Enrollment expectation 15 Indicate any course for which this course is a (an) Modification N/A Substitute N/A Alternate N/A Name of person preparing course description: Jon Tuttle Department Chairperson’s /Dean’s Signature _______________________________________ Date of Implementation Fall 2014 Date of School/Department approval: September 13, 2013 Catalog description: 270-279 SPECIAL TOPICS IN THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES (3) (Prerequisite: membership in FMU Honors or permission of Honors Director.) Course topics may be interdisciplinary and cover innovative, non-traditional topics within the Behavioral Sciences. May be taken for General Education credit as an Area 4: Humanities/Social Sciences elective. May be applied as elective credit in applicable major with permission of chair or dean. Purpose: 1. For Whom (generally?): FMU Honors students, also others students with permission of instructor and Honors Director 2. What should the course do for the student? HNRS 270-279 will offer FMU Honors members enhanced learning options within the Behavioral Sciences beyond the common undergraduate curriculum and engage potential majors with unique, non-traditional topics. Teaching method/textbook and materials planned: Lecture,
    [Show full text]
  • Accelerated Reader Quiz List
    Accelerated Reader Quiz List - Reading Practice Book Quiz ID Title Author Points Level 32294 EN Bookworm Who Hatched, A Aardema, Verna 4.4 0.5 923 EN Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People's Ears Aardema, Verna 4.0 0.5 5365 EN Great Summer Olympic Moments Aaseng, Nathan 7.9 2.0 5366 EN Great Winter Olympic Moments Aaseng, Nathan 7.4 2.0 107286 Show-and-Tell Lion, The Abercrombie, Barbara 2.4 0.5 EN 5490 EN Song and Dance Man Ackerman, Karen 4.0 0.5 50081 EN Daniel's Mystery Egg Ada, Alma Flor 1.6 0.5 64100 EN Daniel's Pet Ada, Alma Flor 0.5 0.5 54924 EN With Love, Little Red Hen Ada, Alma Flor 4.8 0.5 35610 EN Yours Truly, Goldilocks Ada, Alma Flor 4.7 0.5 62668 EN Women's Suffrage: A Primary Source History of the...America Adams, Colleen 9.1 1.0 42680 EN Tipi Adams, McCrea 5.0 0.5 70287 EN Best Book of Weather, The Adams, Simon 5.4 1.0 115183 Families in Many Cultures Adamson, Heather 1.6 0.5 EN 115184 Homes in Many Cultures Adamson, Heather 1.6 0.5 EN 60434 EN John Adams: Young Revolutionary Adkins, Jan 6.7 6.0 480 EN Magic of the Glits, The Adler, C.S. 5.5 3.0 17659 EN Cam Jansen and the Chocolate Fudge Mystery Adler, David A. 3.7 1.0 18707 EN Cam Jansen and the Mystery of Flight 54 Adler, David A. 3.4 1.0 7605 EN Cam Jansen and the Mystery of the Circus Clown Adler, David A.
    [Show full text]
  • Influence of Cavity Availability on Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Group Size
    Wilson Bulletin, 110(l), 1998, pp. 93-99 INFLUENCE OF CAVITY AVAILABILITY ON RED-COCKADED WOODPECKER GROUP SIZE N. ROSS CARRIE,,*‘ KENNETH R. MOORE, ’ STEPHANIE A. STEPHENS, ’ AND ERIC L. KEITH ’ ABSTRACT-The availability of cavities can determine whether territories are occupied by Red-cockaded Woodpeckers (Picoides borealis). However, there is no information on whether the number of cavities can influence group size and population stability. We compared group size between 1993 and 1995 in 33 occupied cluster sites that were provisioned with artificial cavities. The number of groups with breeding pairs increased from 22 (67.7%) in 1993 to 28 (93.3%) in 1995. Most breeding males remained in the natural cavities that they had excavated and occupied prior to cavity provisioning in the cluster while breeding females and helpers used artificial cavities extensively. Active cluster sites provisioned with artificial cavities had larger social groups in 1995 (3 = 2.70, SD = 1.42) than in 1993 (3 = 2.00, SD = 0.94; Z = -2.97, P = 0.003). The number of suitable cavities per cluster was positively correlated with the number of birds per cluster (rJ = 0.42, P = 0.016). The number of inserts per cluster was positively correlated with the change in group size between 1993 and 1995 (r, = 0.49, P = 0.004). Our observations indicate that three or four suitable cavities should be maintained uer cluster to stabilize and/or increase Red-cockaded Woodpecker populations. Received 3 March 1997, accepted 57 Oct. 1997. The Red-cockaded Woodpecker (Picoides numbers of old-growth trees for cavity exca- borealis) is an endangered species endemic to vation.
    [Show full text]
  • Violent Comic Books and Perceptions of Ambiguous Provocation Situations
    MEDIAPSYCHOLOGY, 2, 47–62. Copyright © 2000, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. Violent Comic Books and Perceptions of Ambiguous Provocation Situations Steven J. Kirsh Paul V. Olczak Department of Psychology State University of New York-Geneseo This study investigated the effects of reading very violent versus mildly violent comic books on the interpretation of ambiguous provocation situations, independent of trait hostility. 119 introductory psychology students read either a violent comic book, Curse of the Spawn, or a mildly violent comic book, Archie & Friends. After reading the comic books, participants read six short stories in which a child caused a negative event to happen to another child, but the intent of the peer causing this negative event was ambiguous. After each story, participants were asked a series of questions about the harmdoer’s intent, potential retaliation toward the harmdoer, and about the harmdoer’s emotional state. Responses were coded in terms of amount of negative and violent content. Results indicate that those male participants reading the violent comic books responded more negatively on the ambiguous provocation story questions than male participants reading the mildly violent comic books. For females, responding was primarily governed by trait hostility. These data suggest that hostile attributional bias may be influenced by gender, trait hostility, and exposure to violent media. Over the past two decades, voluminous research has focused on media influences (e.g., television, video games) on aggression. These studies consistently find that exposure to violent themes in media is significantly related to aggressive behavior and thoughts (Anderson, 1997, Berkowitz, 1984, Cesarone, 1998). An additional, yet understudied, source of media violence to which individuals are frequently exposed is comic books.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Augustine Under Three Flags
    SOUVENIR ST.AUGUSTINE UNDER THREE FLAGS PICTORIAL HISTORY OF Pub. by W. J. Harris Company, under the Auspices of the Historical Society—St. Augustine, Fla. Copyright 1925 . PREFACE In this work we have attempted a brief summary of the important events connected with the history of St. Augus- tine and in so doing we must necessarily present the more important facts connected with the history of Fort Marion. The facts and dates contained herein are in accordance with the best authority obtainable. The Historical Society has a large collection of rare maps and books in its Library, one of the best in the State ; the Public Library has also many books on the history of Florida. The City and County records (in English) dating from 1821 contain valuable items of history, as at this date St. Johns County comprised the whole state of Florida east of the Suwannee River and south of Cow's Ford, now the City of Jacksonville. The Spanish records, with a few exceptions, are now in the city of Tallahassee, Department of Agriculture ; the Manuscript Department, Library of Congress, Washington. D. C. and among the "Papeles de Cuba" Seville, Spain. Copies of some very old letters of the Spanish Governors. with English translations, have been obtained by the Historical Society. The Cathedral Archives date from 1594 to the present day. To the late Dr. DeWitt Webb, founder, and until his death, President of the St. Augustine Institute of Science and Historical Society, is due credit for the large number of maps and rare books collected for the Society; the marking and preservation of many historical places ; and for data used in this book.
    [Show full text]
  • One Hundred Nineteenth Commencement
    ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH COMMENCEMENT FRIDAY, MAY 8, 2015 LITTLEJOHN COLISEUM 9:30 A.M. 2:30 P.M. 6:30 P.M. ORDER OF CEREMONIES (Please remain standing for the processional, posting of colors, and invocation.) POSTING OF COLORS Pershing Rifles INVOCATION Sydney J M Nimmons, Student Representative (9:30 A.M. ceremony) Katy Beth Culp, Student Representative (2:30 P.M. ceremony) Corbin Hunter Jenkins, Student Representative (6:30 P.M. ceremony) INTRODUCTION OF TRUSTEES President James P Clements RECOGNITION OF THE DEANS OF THE COLLEGES Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Robert H Jones CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREE President James P Clements CONFERRING OF DEGREES AND DELIVERY OF DIPLOMAS President James P Clements RECOGNITION AND PRESENTATION OF AWARDS Norris Medal Algernon Sydney Sullivan Awards Alumni Master Teacher Award Faculty Scholarship Award Haleigh Marcolini, Soloist Clemson University Brass Quintet, Instrumentation Dr. Mark A McKnew, University Marshal CEREMONIAL MUSIC BOARD OF TRUSTEES Haleigh Marcolini, Soloist David H Wilkins, Chair .............................Greenville, SC Clemson University Brass Quintet, Instrumentation John N McCarter, Jr., Vice Chair ...............Columbia, SC David E Dukes ............................................Columbia, SC Prelude Leon J Hendrix, Jr. ............................... Kiawah Island, SC Various Marches and Processionals Ronald D Lee .....................................................Aiken, SC Louis B Lynn ...............................................Columbia,
    [Show full text]
  • Astillo De Sanmarcos NATIONAL MONUMENT Astillo Desan Marcos NATIONAL MONUMENT U
    astillo de SanMarcos NATIONAL MONUMENT astillo deSan Marcos NATIONAL MONUMENT U. S. Department of the Interior, J. A. Krug, Secretary National Park Service, Newton D. Drury, Director Castillo de San Marcos, in St. Augustine, Fla., was built 1672-1756 by Spain and was their northernmost military fortification on the Atlantic coast protecting the north- eastern dominions of Spain in America and giving safety to the homeward-bound Spanish plate fleet sailing the Gulf Stream route. CASTILLO DE SAN MARCOS is an ancient builders. The fort contains guardrooms, fortification dating from the Spanish Co- dungeons, living quarters for the garrison, lonial period in America. It represents storerooms, and a chapel. Nearly all the part of Spain's contribution to life in the rooms open on a court, about 100 feet New World, and'is symbolic of the explorer square. and pioneetspirit-the will to build from Although the castillo was the most im- the wilderness a newcenter of civilization portant fortification in colonial Florida, it and a hav@l1"it£gi't'i'iisdatnger. In this his- was by no means the only defense. Earth- toric structure, the Spanish people have works and palisades extended from the left us a heritage that is an important cul- castle to enclose the little town of St. tural connection with the Latin-American Augustine, an area of less than a square nations to .the south, as well as another mile. Far to the south, west, and north means of understanding the diverse old were military outposts. Sixteen miles to the ways that have contributed to the making south was the strongest of these, the stone of modern America.
    [Show full text]
  • The Complete Guide to Admissions – and More! at Francis Marion University
    The Complete Guide to Admissions – and More! at Francis Marion University - 1 - Table of Contents Introduction Introduction 2 Congratulations on your interest in Admission Requirements 3 Francis Marion University! General University Charges 9 FMU’s growing array of majors and Financial Aid & Scholarships 10 programs, its beautiful campus and University Scholarships ����������������������14 intimate academic environment, and University Life ��������������������������������������17 its surprising affordability attracts Special Programs 18 students from across South Carolina Student Organizations 21 and beyond Transfer Course Credits 22 This handy guide provides basic information related to the admissions process at FMU, and will help answer many of the most common questions asked by prospective students and their families Many students will receive this guide directly from an FMU admissions counselor during a one-on-one discussion about the university, but as new questions arise, don’t hesitate to contact us We look forward to serving you and to welcoming you to Patriot Nation! Office of Admissions Francis Marion University 8436611231 admissions@fmarionedu wwwfmarionedu - 2 - Admission Requirements Admission requirements at Francis Marion University vary depending upon the category of student under consideration Common categories are discussed on the following pages International students, students applying for readmission to the university, and transient students
    [Show full text]