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White Oak Manor - Newberry — 2555 Kinard St., Newberry. White Oak Manor - Spartanburg — 295 East Pearl St., Spartanburg. Willow Brooke Court at Park Pointe Village — 3025 Chesbrough Blvd ...
The district encompasses 12 contributing buildings in the rural community of White Oak. The buildings in the district were built between about 1876 and about 1925, and includes three large frame residences (including a manse), a frame church with steeple, two frame store buildings, a cotton warehouse, and two vacant, wooded lots, some of which ...
On the north side of the library, are ornate French doors, with a semicircular arch in the Palladian style, that access the terrace. Centered on the east wall of the foyer is an arched opening, with fluted pilasters and keystone, that accesses a short hallway that steps down to the double door entry of the dining room.
Charleston: 98000423 White Hall Plantation House Ruins and Oak Avenue: Ridgeland: 78002511 Wicklow Hall Plantation: Georgetown: 74001837 Windsor Plantation: Edisto Island: 01000607 Woodland Plantation: Carlisle: 71000742 Woodlands: November 11, 1971: Bamberg: Bamberg
Roughly along the Ashley River from just east of South Carolina Highway 165, near Watson Hill (North Charleston), to the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad bridge 32°53′58″N 80°07′00″W / 32.8994°N 80.1167°W / 32.8994; -80.1167 ( Ashley River Historic
Meeting Street Manor is a housing complex located in the upper Eastside in Charleston, South Carolina, and was the city's first housing development. When built in the 1930s, the development was technically two racially segregated halves with separate names.
Perhaps the most notable feature of the gardens is the "Middleton Oak", or "Great Oak", a massive live oak tree with a trunk more than 10 feet (3.0 m) in diameter. [13] The east gardens stretch eastward from the main residence for approximately 200 feet (61 m) before descending in a series of terraces to the floodplain of the Ashley River.
In 1948, the Orphan House was under criticism by the Child Welfare League of America.As a result, the Charleston City Council began to question its operations. Two years later in September 1951, the Charleston Orphan House officially closed [1] and the commissioners of the Orphan House bought roughly 37 acres of a new site called Oak Grove Plantation in North Charleston.