Hampton Park Terrace
Hampton Park Terrace is the name both of a neighborhood and a National Register district located in peninsular Charleston, South Carolina. The neighborhood is bounded on the west by The Citadel, on the north by Hampton Park, on the east by Rutledge Ave., and on the south by Congress St. In addition, the one block of Parkwood Ave. south of Congress St. is considered, by some, to be included. The National Register district, on the other hand, is composed of the same area with two exceptions: the northeasternmost block is excluded and an extra block of President St. is included.
History
The land upon which the neighborhood is built was rural land until approximately 1900. At about that time, a few streets began being laid out in the northern end of the city. A few small houses were constructed at that time, but most of the land remained undeveloped. In 1912, three large sections of the neighborhood were platted. Those sections roughly correspond to the northwest quadrant, the southwest quadrant, and the southeast quadrant. They were developed by, respectively, the Charleston Building & Investment Co., Hampton Park Terrace Inc., and the Allan family. The final quadrant to the northeast was sporadically developed through the 1930s by the Navy Yard Building & Investment Co.The neighborhood was, at the time, on the very edge of developed Charleston. At first, skeptics claimed that the development would fail, but within a month of the start of selling lots, more than 100 of the 251 original lots had been sold. The development was amid truck farming sites, but it benefitted from its location near the Ashley River and Hampton Park. A newspaper account at the time predicted that its success would start a move to suburban living in Charleston instead of in the lower peninsula because of these advantages: "No more desirable location for a home could be imagined-close to the river, away from the noise and bustle of the city, on the Rutledge avenue car line and close to the King street car line, bordering Hampton Park, beautiful now and to be doubly beautiful when plans now being worked out are completed, within sight of the Ashley River with its fresh salt breezes, and the whole area high and dry, sixteen feet above low water mark, within four blocks of the Mitchell School, the biggest and best of the schools of the city system."
The residents of Hampton Park Terrace celebrated the neighborhood's 100th anniversary in March 2012. The event included a performance by The Citadel's Regimental Band and Pipes and the unveiling of a state historical marker.
National Register Status
Most of the housing in the neighborhood was constructed between 1912 and 1925. The architecture of the neighborhood follows national trends of the period and represents a distinct break from the local tradition of Charleston's other historic areas. Nevertheless, because of its largely intact concentration of early 20th century buildings, the neighborhood was added to the National Register on September 26, 1997. The National Register designation included those blocks that were laid out and whose restrictive covenants were created by one of four related development companies. As a result, the northeast corner of Hampton Park Terrace was not included in the historic district although it is part of the neighborhood.Since the designation, several houses have been restored including one which was given a special award by the Historic Charleston Foundation for the quality of the work at 463 Huger St. In 2009, the Preservation Society of Charleston held its first outreach tour of historic houses and highlighted Hampton Park Terrace.
Gallery of Hampton Park Terrace houses
The Hampton Park Terrace National Register district includes historic structures on the following streets:- Ashley Ave.
- Congress St. and west of President St. )
- Elmwood Ave.
- Glenwood Ave.
- Hagood Ave.
- Huger St. and west of Ashley Ave. )
- Kenilworth Ave.
- Moultrie St.
- North Allan Park
- Parkwood Ave.
- President St. and north of Congress St. )
- Rutledge Ave.
- South Allan Park
- Sumter St.
- Sutherland Ave.
- Sutherland Ct.
- Wesson Ave.
Rating | Image | Address | Year | Form | Style | Comments |
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | ||||
Non-contributing | 1919 | Lateral-gable | Brick veneer added before district created; original windows torn out after district created | |||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | Twin to 4 Elmwood Ave. and 551 Huger St. | |||
Contributing | 1922 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | Mirror twin to 324 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | Near twin to 475 Huger St., 494 Huger St., and 625 Rutledge Ave. | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Foursquare variant | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Bungalow | Shown here in January 2007, the original, red brick exterior was painted in 2008: | |||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | Built by George Trescott; twin to 236 Congress St., 1 South Allan Park, 5 South Allan Park, 368 Ashley Ave., and 299 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | Built by George Trescott; twin to 232 Congress St., 1 South Allan Park, 5 South Allan Park, 368 Ashley Ave., and 299 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | ||||
Non-contributing | 1930 | Corner store | Harold's Cabin Grocery | |||
Non-contributing | 1910 | Charleston single house | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Lateral-gable | Craftsman influence | |||
Contributing | 1936 | Bungalow influence | Built for Marion H. Drews | |||
Contributing | 1931 | Other | Minimal traditional | |||
Contributing | 1930 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1931 | Other | Minimal traditional | Shown here in 2007 before its original windows were torn out: | ||
Contributing | 1925 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1926 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Lateral-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Front-gable | An example of a Sears catalog house known as "The Roanoke" | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Bungalow | ||||
Non-contributing | 2009 | Front-gable | The property was a vacant lot before the house was built. | |||
Contributing | 1915 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Bungalow influence | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Bungalow | Queen Anne influence | |||
Contributing | 1931 | Bungalow influence | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | The original one-story porch had a deck added in about 2010. | |||
Contributing | 1923 | Foursquare variant | ||||
Non-contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | Added brick veneer | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | Twin to 362 Ashley Ave. and 551 Huger St.; subsequent renovation reopened porch but removed original windows | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Bungalow | Twin of 17 Kenilworth Ave. and 341 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1914 | Bungalow | Before being restored in 2013, the house was covered in vinyl siding: | |||
Contributing | 1917 | Bungalow | Craftsman | |||
Contributing | 1917 | Front-gable | A second floor was added to the front porch in 2012. | |||
Contributing | 1915 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | Home of U.S. Representatives Thomas S. McMillan and Clara G. McMillan from 1917-1922 | |||
Non-contributing | 1916 | Lateral-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Lateral-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | Twin to 331 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1938 | Lateral-gable | Colonial Revival influence | |||
Non-contributing | 1922 | Bungalow | Twin to 78 Hagood Ave.; alterations and brick veneer added | |||
Contributing | 1922 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1913 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Front-gable with Queen Anne influence | ||||
Contributing | 1913 | Foursquare | Shown here in 2012 just before its vinyl siding was removed during a restoration: | |||
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare variant | ||||
Contributing | 1912 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1912 | Bungalow influence | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Lateral-gable | Prairie | Shown here in 2003, the house received an award from the Preservation Society of Charleston for its restoration in 2011: | ||
Contributing | 1923 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | Original windows removed during subsequent remodelling | |||
Non-contributing | 1917 | Cottage | ||||
Contributing | 1938 | Other | Tudor Revival | |||
Non-contributing | 1951 | Other | Ranch | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Lateral-gable | Near twin to 494 Huger St., 625 Rutledge Ave., and 182 Congress St. | |||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1937 | Lateral-gable | Colonial Revival | The house was designed by its first owners, the Werles of New Jersey, using Winnsboro granite. | ||
Contributing | 1920 | Other | Prairie | Mirror image twin to 6 Wesson Ave. | ||
Non-contributing | 1914-1917 | Freedman's cottage | The house was used as a commercial structure for most of the 20th century, including as period as a dance school. | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Bungalow | Craftsman | |||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | |||
Contributing | 1918 | Foursquare | Built by George T. Trescott; near twin to 475 Huger St., 625 Rutledge Ave., and 182 Congress St. | |||
Contributing | 1915 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | Near twin of 513 Huger St., 10 Kenilworth Ave., and 335 President St. | ||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | |||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | Childhood home of Akim Anastopoulo. The brick column in the photo marked an entrance to the neighborhood but was removed at an unknown date. | |||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | Home of Samuel Rittenberg from 1919-1932 | |||
Contributing | 1912 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | Near twin to 10 Kenilworth Ave. and 331 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1912 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | |||
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Lateral-gable | Prairie | Shown here in 2006, the unique, suspended roof over the front door was replaced with a much larger porch: | ||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1939 | Bungalow influence | ||||
Non-contributing | 1921 | Prairie | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1929 | Lateral-gable | Dutch Colonial | Aladdin house | ||
Contributing | 1922 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Bungalow | Mirrorimage twin of 565 Huger St. but with later front-porch enclosure | |||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | Twin of 362 Ashley Ave. and 4 Elmwood Ave. | |||
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Bungalow | Mirror-image twin of 550 Huger St. but covered in later brick-patterned siding | |||
Non-contributing | 1922 | Lateral-gable | Craftsman influence | Near twin of 330 President St. and 14 Kenilworth Ave. | ||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | Craftsman influence | Home of Mayor Thomas Stoney | ||
Non-contributing | 1920 | Lateral-gable | Brick veneer added | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Prairie | Prairie | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare variant | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare variant | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | Near twin of 497 Huger St., 513 Huger St., and 335 President St. | ||
Contributing | 1919 | Other | Bungalow influence | |||
Contributing | 1915 | Other | Bungalow influence | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Lateral-gable | Craftsman influence | Near twin to 330 President St. and 567 Huger St. | ||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Bungalow | Twin to 5 Elmwood Ave. and 341 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Lateral-gable | Prairie influence | |||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1927 | Foursquare | Craftsman influence | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Bungalow | Craftsman | |||
Contributing | 1937 | Lateral-gable | Colonial Revival | Designed by Stephen Thomas for Edwin Pearlstine | ||
Contributing | 1937 | Other | Colonial Revival | Built for Milton Pearlstine | ||
Non-contributing | 1955 | Church | Georgian | Designed by Harold Tatum | ||
Non-contributing | 1913 | Foursquare | Brick veneer added | |||
Contributing | 1935 | Bungalow | Colonial Revival | Designed by Stephen Thomas for Mr. Isadore Solomon | ||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | Twin to 362 President St.; original windows were torn out in 1997 | |||
Contributing | 1922 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1923 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1923 | Other | Prairie | Faculty House of The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina; home of U.S. Representatives Thomas S. McMillan and Clara G. McMillan | ||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | Shown here in 1913 before being restored: | |||
Contributing | 1937 | Bungalow influence | ||||
Non-contributing | 1950 | Ranch | Steel casement windows were removed on the south and west elevations following a fire. | |||
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | Built by George Trescott; original windows were torn out in 2012 remodeling | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1918 | Lateral-gable | Craftsman bungalow influence | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | Shown here in 1917 before a room was added above the front porch: | |||
Non-contributing | Other | |||||
Contributing | 1917 | Lateral-gable | Colonial Revival influence | |||
Contributing | 1931 | Lateral-gable | Spanish Colonial | Shown here in 2004 before a renovation removed the tile roof and the decorative metalwork on the front stoop: | ||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | A room built over what had been a one-story porch, shown here in 2006, led to the collapse of the addition and the porch in 2008. | |||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | Shown here in 2006, the house subsequently had its original windows torn out: | ||
Contributing | 1916 | Front-gable | Shown here before a 2010 restoration, its work was recognized with a 2012 Carolopolis Award: | |||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | |||
Contributing | 1917 | Front-gable | Shown here in 1922, the house has had its porch enclosed, vinyl siding added, and windows replaced: | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Lateral-gable | Tudor Revival | |||
Non-contributing | 1951 | Ranch | Designed by Augustus Constantine | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Lateral-gable | Craftsman influence | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | Queen Anne influence | |||
Non-contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Non-contributing | 1913 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Lateral-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | Shown here in August 2007, the house has since had its windows torn out, its eaves enclosed, and its porch columns changed: | |||
Contributing | 1921 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1925 | Bungalow influence | ||||
Contributing | 1910 | Freedman's cottage | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | Twin to 364 Ashley Ave.; built by George Trescott; shown here before a large addition to the north facade in 2010: | |||
Contributing | 1914 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1921 | Lateral-gable | Craftsman influence | Near twin to 567 Huger St. and 14 Kenilworth Ave. | ||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | Twin to 5 Glenwood Ave. | |||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | A middle porch support was added in 2012 and the corner columns were covered. | |||
Contributing | 1913 | Foursquare | Near twin of 513 Huger St. and 10 Kenilworth Ave. | |||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1918 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | Childhood home of Sen. Ernest F. Hollings | |||
Contributing | 1917 | Foursquare | Shown here in April 2004, the house has since had its original windows torn out, its front porch converted into a deck, and its brickwork repointed with cement: | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Bungalow | Twin to 5 Elmwood Ave. and 17 Kenilworth Ave. | |||
Contributing | 1928 | Lateral-gable | ||||
Non-contributing | 1914 | Other | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Foursquare | Twin to 151 Moultrie St. until 2001 work removed some original windows and altered porch column arrangement | |||
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1915 | Foursquare | Home of civil rights leader Septima Clark | |||
Contributing | 1921 | Foursquare | Built by F.J.H. Haesloop | |||
Contributing | 1914 | Foursquare variant | ||||
Contributing | 1917 | Front-gable | Home of Claudia Tharin, founder of Florence Crittendon Home of Charleston. Before the house was restored in 2013, it had been covered in vinyl siding: | |||
Contributing | 1922 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1922 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | Craftsman influence | |||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Foursquare | ||||
Contributing | 1924 | Bungalow | Original windows were later torn out. | |||
Contributing | 1919 | Foursquare | Near twin to 475 Huger St., 494 Huger St., and 182 Congress St.; the house's restoration in 2012 included removing vinyl siding and restoring original windows | |||
Non-contributing | 1990 | Commercial | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing | 1919 | Bungalow | ||||
Contributing | 1920 | Front-gable | Twin to 1 South Allan Park, 232 Congress St., 236 Congress St., 368 Ashley Ave., and 299 President St. | |||
Contributing | 1916 | Bungalow influence | ||||
Contributing | 1916 | Lateral-gable | ||||
Non-contributing | 1995 | Front-gable | ||||
Contributing |