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Lowndes Grove

Lowndes Grove
Lowndes Grove (House), Saint Margaret Street & Sixth Avenue, Charleston (Charleston County, South Carolina).jpg
Lowndes Grove in 1940
Lowndes Grove is located in South Carolina
Lowndes Grove
Lowndes Grove is located in the US
Lowndes Grove
Location 260 St. Margaret St., Charleston, South Carolina
Coordinates 32°48′6″N 79°57′58″W / 32.80167°N 79.96611°W / 32.80167; -79.96611Coordinates: 32°48′6″N 79°57′58″W / 32.80167°N 79.96611°W / 32.80167; -79.96611
Built 1786
Architectural style Georgian
NRHP Reference # 78002500
Added to NRHP 30 August 1978

The Lowndes Grove, also known as The Grove or Grove Farm, is a plantation house built in about 1786 on the Ashley River in Charleston. It is located on a triangular plot of land bordered by St. Margaret Street, 5th Avenue, and 6th Avenue. It was named to the National Register of Historic Places on 30 August 1978.

John Gibbes built a house and garden with greenhouses on The Grove before the Revolutionary War. The house was probably located near Indian Hill on the Citadel campus. It was likely destroyed in 1779, but the gardens remained. Around 1786, heirs of the Gibbes family divided the land into smaller tracts, and three of the northernmost parcels were acquired by George Abbot Hall. Since the 1791 inventory of Hall's estate mentioned a house, it is assumed that the house was built around 1786. The next owners were the Beaufain brothers of the West Indies who operated a small faming operation on the site. They sold the house, which they had named Wedderburn Lodge, to Mary Clodner Vesey. She, in turn, in 1803, sold the property to William Lowndes, who was elected to the U.S. Congress. He served in Congress until he resigned due to poor health in 1822.

After several owners, a Charleston businessman, Frederick W. Wagener, acquired the house. He was the president and one of the chief promoters of the South Carolina Inter-State and West Indian Exposition, which was held in 1901–1902. The exposition was held on his 250 acres (100 ha). The Lowndes Grove house was used as the Woman's Building.

It is a 1 12-story frame house on a raised basement. The top one and one-half stories are frame construction. The lower story and basement are stucco-covered brick. The house was probably designed in the Georgian style, but its original appearance has been lost during the course of many renovations. It probably had a double portico, modified in about 1830 into a five-bay upper piazza with Doric columns and balustrades. The three center bays project forward and have a pediment and oculus. The piazza and house have entablature with modillion and dentil blocks. In the 1830 renovations, the house was extended toward the rear. The sides of the house have nine over nine lights.


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