List of the oldest buildings in South Carolina: Difference between revisions
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| [[Alexander Peronneau Tenements]] |
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| [[File:141 Church.JPG|100px]] |
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| 141 Church Street, South Carolina |
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| 1740<ref>{{cite book | title=The Buildings of Charleston | publisher=University of South Carolina Press | author=Poston, Jonathan | year=1997 | location=Columbia, South Carolina | pages=86-87}</ref> |
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| Alexander Peronneau built both this single tenement house and the neighboring double tenement at 143-145 Church St. circa 1740. |
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| [[Alexander Peronneau Tenements]] |
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| [[File:145 Church.JPG|100px]] |
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| 143-145 Church Street, South Carolina |
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| 1740<ref>{{cite book | title=The Buildings of Charleston | publisher=University of South Carolina Press | author=Poston, Jonathan | year=1997 | location=Columbia, South Carolina | pages=86-87}</ref> |
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| Alexander Peronneau built both this double tenement house and the neighboring single tenement at 141 Church St. circa 1740. |
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| [[Stiles-Hinson House]] |
| [[Stiles-Hinson House]] |
Revision as of 02:34, 13 May 2014
This article attempts to list the oldest extant buildings surviving in the state of South Carolina in the United States of America, including the oldest houses in South Carolina and any other surviving structures. Some dates are approximate and based upon dendochronology, architectural studies, and historical records. Sites on the list are generally from the First Period of American architecture or earlier. To be listed here a site must:
- date from prior to 1776; or
- be the oldest building in a county, large city, or oldest of its type (church, government building, etc.),
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Building | Image | Location | First Built | Use | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Middleburg Plantation | ![]() |
Huger | 1699 | House | Oldest wooden Plantation house in South Carolina |
Medway (Mount Holly, South Carolina) | ![]() |
Mount Holly | 1704-05 | House | Possible oldest house in South Carolina |
St. Andrews Episcopal Church (Charleston, South Carolina) | ![]() |
Charleston | 1706 | Church building | Oldest church building in South Carolina |
St. James Church (Goose Creek, South Carolina) | ![]() |
Goose Creek | 1708 | Church | |
Col. William Rhett House | 54 Hasell Street, Charleston | 1712 | House | ||
Pink House | ![]() |
17 Chalmers Street, Charleston]] | 1712 | House | |
Powder Magazine | ![]() |
79 Cumberland Street, Charleston | 1713 | Museum (originally the city's powder magazine) | |
Mulberry Plantation | ![]() |
U.S. 52, Moncks Corners | 1714 | Church | |
Hanover House | Clemson University, Anderson | 1714 | House | The house was relocated to Clemson University's campus when its original site in Berkeley County was inundated for the creation of Lake Moultrie in the 1940s. | |
John's Island Presbyterian Church | Johns Island, South Carolina | 1719 | Church | ||
Robert Brewton House | ![]() |
71 Church Street, Charleston | 1721 | House | |
Strawberry Chapel | ![]() |
Strawberry Chapel Road, near Cordesville | 1725 | Church | |
Christ Church | ![]() |
Mount Pleasant | 1726 | Church | |
Fairfield Plantation | ![]() |
McClellanville | 1730 | House | |
Fenwick Hall | ![]() |
Johns Island | 1730 | House | |
Thomas Rose House | ![]() |
59 Church Street, Charleston | 1733 | House | |
Thomas Dale House | 73 Church Street, Charleston | 1733[1] | House | ||
Hampton Plantation | ![]() |
McClellanville | 1735 | House | |
Hopsewee | ![]() |
South of Georgetown | 1735 | House | |
Thomas Lamboll House | ![]() |
19 King Street, Charleston | 1739 | House | |
Alexander Peronneau Tenements | 141 Church Street, South Carolina | 1740[2] | House | Alexander Peronneau built both this single tenement house and the neighboring double tenement at 143-145 Church St. circa 1740. | |
Alexander Peronneau Tenements | 143-145 Church Street, South Carolina | 1740[3] | House | Alexander Peronneau built both this double tenement house and the neighboring single tenement at 141 Church St. circa 1740. | |
Stiles-Hinson House | File:Stiles-Hinson front.jpg | 940 Paul Revere Dr., Charleston | 1742 | House | |
Drayton Hall | ![]() |
near Charleston | 1747-1752 | House | |
Thorntree | ![]() |
Kingstree, South Carolina | 1749 | House | |
Cabbage Row | 83-85 Church Street, South Carolina | 1749-1750[4] | House | ||
Capers-Motte House | 69 Church Street, South Carolina | 1750[5] | House | ||
Oakland Plantation | ![]() |
Mount Pleasant, South Carolina | 1750 | House | |
Beneventum Plantation House | ![]() |
Georgetown, South Carolina | 1750 | House | |
Prince George Winyah Episcopal Church | ![]() |
Broad and Highmarket Streets, Georgetown, South Carolina | 1750 | Church | |
Reardon House | Kingstree | 1750-1770 | House | ||
Fleming-Jenkinson House | Academy Street, Kingstree | 1750-1775 | House | ||
St. Michael's Episcopal Church | ![]() |
80 Broad Street, Charleston | 1751-1761 | Church | |
James Veree Houses | 58 Church Street, Charleston | 1754[6] | House | James Veree built this house in 1754 and the neighboring house at 60 Church St. a decade later. | |
St. Michael's Episcopal Church | ![]() |
80 Broad Street, Charleston | 1755 | House | The remaining structure was originally a guest house for a no-longer-standing plantation house. |
Ralph Izard House | 110 Broad Street, Charleston | Before September 1757 | House | ||
Peter Leger House | ![]() |
90 Church Street, South Carolina | 1759-1760[7] | House | |
William Cooper House | Indiantown, South Carolina | 1760 | House | ||
Samuel Wainwright House | 94 Tradd Street, Charleston | 1760 | House | ||
Joseph H. Rainey House | ![]() |
909 Prince Street, Georgetown | 1760 | House | |
Cooper-Bee House | ![]() |
94 Church Street, South Carolina | 1760-1765[8] | House | |
Blake Tenements | ![]() |
2-4 Courthouse Square, Charleston | 1760-1772 | County offices (original townhouses) | |
John Rutledge House | ![]() |
116 Broad Street, Charleston | 1763 | House | |
Pompion Hill Chapel | ![]() |
Huger, South Carolina | 1763 | Church | |
James Veree Houses | 60 Church Street, Charleston | 1764[9] | House | James Veree built this house in 1764 and the neighboring house at 58 Church St. a decade earlier. | |
Branford-Horry House | ![]() |
59 Meeting Street, Charleston | Before 1767 | House | |
McCrady's Tavern and Long Room | ![]() |
153 East Bay Street, Charleston | 1767 | House | |
St. Stephens Episcopal Church | ![]() |
St. Stephen, South Carolina | 1767-1769 | Church | |
Exchange and Provost | ![]() |
East end of East Bay Street at Broad Street, Charleston | 1767-1771 | Museum (originally a custom house) | |
William Washington House | 8 South Battery, Charleston | 1768 | House | ||
St. James Episcopal Church | ![]() |
Georgetown, South Carolina | 1768 | Church | |
Miles Brewton House | ![]() |
27 King Street, Charleston | 1769 | House | |
Rev. Robert Smith House | 6 Glebe Street, Charleston | 1770 | Residence of the president of the College of Charleston | ||
William Harvey House | 58 Meeting Street, Charleston | 1770 | House | ||
Heyward-Washington House | 87 Church Street, Charleston | 1771 | House museum | ||
Colonel John Stuart House | 104-106 Tradd Street, Charleston | 1772 | House | ||
Lewisfield Plantation | ![]() |
Moncks Corner, South Carolina | 1774 | House | |
Unitarian Church | ![]() |
4 Archdale Street, Charleston | 1772-1787 | Church | |
William Gibbes House | 64 South Battery, Charleston | 1772-1788 | House | ||
Blocker House | ![]() |
Route 25, near Edgefield | 1775 | House | |
Seibels House | Columbia | 1796 | House | Oldest house in the state capital | |
Congregation Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim | ![]() |
Charleston | 1840 | Synagogue | Oldest Jewish synagogue in South Carolina |
See also
- Oldest buildings in the United States
- Oldest churches in the United States
- National Register of Historic Places listings in South Carolina
References
- ^ {{cite book | title=The Buildings of Charleston | publisher=University of South Carolina Press | author=Poston, Jonathan | year=1997 | location=Columbia, South Carolina | page=73}
- ^ {{cite book | title=The Buildings of Charleston | publisher=University of South Carolina Press | author=Poston, Jonathan | year=1997 | location=Columbia, South Carolina | pages=86-87}
- ^ {{cite book | title=The Buildings of Charleston | publisher=University of South Carolina Press | author=Poston, Jonathan | year=1997 | location=Columbia, South Carolina | pages=86-87}
- ^ Poston, Jonathan (1997). The Buildings of Charleston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. p. 76.
- ^ Poston, Jonathan (1997). The Buildings of Charleston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 71–72.
- ^ Poston, Jonathan (1997). The Buildings of Charleston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 67–68.
- ^ Poston, Jonathan (1997). The Buildings of Charleston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. p. 80.
- ^ Poston, Jonathan (1997). The Buildings of Charleston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 80–81.
- ^ Poston, Jonathan (1997). The Buildings of Charleston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 67–68.