Ashley River Historic District (Boundary Increase)

NW of Charleston between the NE bank of the Ashley River and the Ashley-Stono Canal and E of Delmar HWY (HWY 165), Charleston, South Carolina. County/parish: Charleston.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places October 22, 2010. NRIS 10000861.

17 contributing buildings. 67 contributing sites. 51 contributing structures. 1 contributing object.

From Wikipedia:

Ashley River Historic District

Ashley River Historic District is a historic district located west of the Ashley in the South Carolina Lowcountry in Charleston, South Carolina, United States. The Historic District includes land from five municipalities, almost equally split between Charleston and Dorchester counties. The district includes dry land, swamps, and marshes of the Rantowles Creek and Stono Swamp watershed.

The historic district includes historic and archaeological resources associated with the rice culture and phosphate mining of the early-eighteenth century to the mid-nineteenth century, and the hunting plantations and timber industry preserves of the late nineteenth century through the mid-twentieth century. Historically, the Wando, Cooper, Ashley, Stono, and Edisto rivers served as the primary transportation routes in the Lowcountry. These waterways were used for exploration and settlement, the movement of goods, and the cultivation of staple crops.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. Its boundaries were increased from 7,000 acres to 23,828.26 acres on October 22, 2010.

It includes some of the following separately listed sites as contributing properties:

  • Ashley River
  • Ashley River Road
  • Fort Bull
  • Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Trestle
  • Drayton Hall, a National Historic Landmark;
  • Magnolia Plantation and Gardens (Charleston, South Carolina);
  • Runnymeade Schoolhouse
  • Middleton Place, another National Historic Landmark
  • Old Dorchester;
  • The Laurels
  • MacLaura Hall
(read more...)

National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118997262

LC