Everything about The Treaty Of Beaufort totally explained
The
Treaty of Beaufort, also called the
Beaufort Convention, is the
treaty that originally set the all-
river boundary between the
U.S. states of
Georgia and
South Carolina. It was named for
Beaufort, South Carolina, where it was signed in
1787.
It set the boundary to be the
thalweg (centerline) of the
Savannah River, extending north into the
Tugalo River (now spelled Tugaloo), and up to the
headwater of its primary
tributary. At that time, the area hadn't been fully
surveyed, thus the somewhat ambiguous wording. If that headwater point was south of Georgia's border with
North Carolina (
nominally
latitude 35°N), then South Carolina would claim everything north of a due-west line from that point, and south of 35°N, as far west as the
Mississippi River. This claim was shown on some maps of the time, though it never took effect.
As it later was
discovered, the primary tributary of the Tugalo is the
Chattooga River, which does originate in North Carolina. In 1787 the area was
Cherokee territory and not considered part of either state. The
Treaty of 1816 officially extended the states' frontier northeast up the Chattooga River, where it remains the current boundary.
The other issue addressed was the
islands in the rivers, which the treaty assigned to Georgia, but in the two rivers (Savannah and Tugalo) known to be the border at the time. In these cases, the thalweg is drawn through the center of the more northerly (actually northeasterly) channel, curving gradually around the island. This part of the treaty was the subject of some later border disputes between the two states.
Legal interpretation
There have been two cases before the
U.S. Supreme Court regarding the
interpretation of this treaty. (The court has
original jurisdiction in such cases.)
The first
Georgia v. South Carolina case in
1922 was regarding the islands in the Tugaloo, which wasn't explicitly named in the treaty because that was prior to its discovery. Although the treaty prescribes the northerly branch as the boundary, and the Chattooga flows in a
perpendicular direction (putting
Rabun County, Georgia on the north side and
Oconee County, South Carolina on the south), Georgia was given the islands as in the lower rivers.
The second case of the same name was in
1989 and was more complex, regarding a Georgia island that had become a South Carolina
peninsula due to
dredging. Although South Carolina was in
adverse possession of the land, Georgia lost this case due to
acquiescence, rather than as a matter of the treaty's wording.
An
1876 case,
South Carolina v. Georgia, was about dredging for
navigation around an island in the river at the
port city of
Savannah, and not about the boundary location. Georgia won this case, allowing it to widen the
shipping channel on the Savannah side at the expense of water flow to the South Carolina boundary side.
The legal status of this treaty, given that the later
U.S. Constitution of
1789 made interstate treaties
unconstitutional, is now that of an
interstate compact. Just as such compacts must be
ratified by the
U.S. Congress, this treaty was ratified by the
Continental Congress, and is still considered to be legally binding.
Further Information
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