Between 1865–68, General Scott was assistant commissioner of the
South Carolina Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, popularly known as the Freedmen's Bureau. In July 1868, he resigned from the
Regular Army and entered politics.
Governor of South Carolina Later that year, he became the first governor of the reconstructed
South Carolina as a Republican. In 1870, the
South Carolina Constitution of 1868 lifted the rule that had until then prevented a governor's re-election until four years had passed since leaving office. This allowed Scott to become the first governor of South Carolina to be elected to two consecutive terms. He was re-elected by a majority of 33,534 votes of a total 136,608. During his time in office, Klan violence reached an all-time high, while simultaneously the federal government was attempting to withdraw force from South Carolina so as to return the state to "normalcy," this combination left Scott in an untenable position. The majority of those voting for Scott in both of his elections were newly freed
African-American Freedmen, South Carolina whites remained overtly and overwhelmingly hostile to him during his entire time in office. His political allies such as
African-American leader
Benjamin F. Randolph were assassinated by the Klan. Governor Scott took the step of arming African-Americans. He formed militias to defend the Republican government of the state and the militias were legally opened to anyone, however, South Carolina whites refused to join them, as a result they in effect became "black militias." In most of these militias the officers were white officers who had fought in the Union Army during the war, and in some cases were educated African-Americans from northern states who had moved to the state to work in the
Freedmen's Bureau after the war. Scott got support from President
Ulysses S. Grant, however the rest of the military and northern ambivalence in general hampered his efforts. In
Colleton County,
Charleston,
Columbia,
Georgetown County and
Beaufort County (which at the time included what is today
Jasper County as well) Scott had enough federal troops to effectively police the situation, keep the Klan and general white violence at bay, and ensure free and fair elections. However, in
Upstate South Carolina and a large handful of other rural areas he did not. Judge Richard B. Carpenter testified in an 1872 congressional hearing that voter fraud was involved in Scott's re-election, but Scott remained in office. Ironically, Carpenter not only owed him money at the time, but also continued to ask for more with the promise of political favors in return.
Franklin J. Moses, Jr., the first governor after him, claimed Scott "fraudulently signed state bonds in the St James Hotel in New York under the joint influence of alcohol and burlesque queen
Pauline Markham," known as one of "The British Blondes." He also regularly borrowed money from Scott.
Wade Hampton III, the third governor after Scott, who came to power as a result of a racist terrorist campaign led by the
Red Shirts militia, indicted him for allegedly "fraudulently issuing three warrants for $48,645 to non-existent payees in 1871." At the same time, he sent letters to Scott promising not to extradite him nor force him to stand trial. [MSS 176]
Return to Ohio In 1877 Scott returned to
Napoleon, Ohio, when
Democrats returned to power in the South Carolina executive, possibly out of fear of assassination. He settled down with his family, including his only son, R.K. Scott, Jr., who was known as "Arkie" because of his initials. On Christmas Day, 1880, 15-year-old Arkie went missing. He was "inclined to frequent taverns." Scott suspected he was hiding in the apartment of his friend Warren G. Drury, aged 23. When Drury refused to let him in, Drury was shot by a bullet from Scott's pistol and died the next day. Scott claimed his weapon accidentally discharged, and the subsequent murder trial consumed national attention. On November 5, 1881, he was acquitted of murder. Scott died in Napoleon and was buried in Henry County, Ohio. ==See also==