Each individual is listed here alphabetically by their last name. Their "position" is also cited exactly as it is recorded in Dr. Lewis's work, Neptune's Militia, "Appendix: Crew and Marines of the South Carolina, pages 135-170.
Charles Adams passenger
Joshua Barney passenger
Mr. -------- Bastre passenger
--------- Beardley passenger
William Brailsford passenger, volunteer
Henry Bromfield passenger
Augustine Buyck Dutch passenger, volunteer
William Jackson passenger, Major
Herman LeRoy Dutch-American passenger
Mr. -------- Mickson passenger
James Searle passenger
John Trumbull passenger
W.H. van Hasselt Dutch passenger
Benjamin Waterhouse passenger, doctor
Almost all of these "passengers" have been covered in detail in the earlier Part I post entry of "12/05/2014". All except for three of them:
Mr. -------- Bastre passenger
---------- Beardley passenger
Mr. -------- Mickson passenger
These three are the only "passengers" whose first names are unknown. Also, all three of them only have "passenger" cited as their "position" on board the frigate South Carolina. Unfortunately, there is little else known about these three gentlemen. As stated in the earlier Part I post of "12/05/2014", almost all of these men are assumed to have been on board the frigate for her maiden voyage when she left the Texel, Holland on August 4, 1781.
There is some more that may be known of "------ Beardley". In the source, "Founding Families: Digital Editions of the Papers of the Winthrops and Adamses, ed. C. James Taylor, 2014", for the journal entry dated "Sunday June the 17th 1781" we find the following entry, "After Church I went to see Mr. Bordly; a little after brother Charles and Mr. Brice came there, brother Charles, Mr. Bordly and I went out to take a walk." There may well be some confusion here over the names Beardley and Bordly but, this is simply conjecture. Later in the source, Founders Online, National Archives "To Benjamin Franklin from Alexander Gillon, 14 October 1781" we read, "Capt: Jackson of the 1st So. Carolina Infantry Mr. Trumbull, Mr. Boadely, & Young Mr. Adams (forced away by Capt: Jackson) are gone to Bilboa in the Cicero privateer Capt: Hill." As cited earlier, when the frigate South Carolina reached Corunna, Spain, several of the "passengers" sought to leave the frigate and went to Bilboa, Spain where they boarded the Cicero, a privateer out of Boston, Massachusetts for their final journey home to America. Again, it would appear that "------- Beardley" was among those who chose to debark from the frigate South Carolina. These are only slight misspellings of "------- Beardley's" last name and could easily be one and the same individual. This is all this blog writer has encountered so far concerning "------ Beardley". There is nothing at all concerning "Mr. ------ Bastre" or "Mr. ------Mickson".
In the full listing above, there are the names of fourteen men. This number, combined with the thirteen "captains" spoken of below in the post dated "03/03/2014", gives the number of twenty-seven. In Dr. Lewis's work, Neptune's Militia, page 35, it states that there were "...twenty-six passengers that Gillon welcomed aboard. These were individuals of importance, and they had no official shipboard duties". These two groupings being added together make twenty-seven individuals total. Therefore, it seems likely that these two sets of men taken together formed the entirety of the "passenger" lists for the frigate South Carolina when she left the Texel, Holland on August 4, 1781 and began her maiden voyage toward America.