X Xavier, St. Francis, Infirmary [73]
Y Yeamans Hall Club [88] Young Men’s Christian Association [78] Young Women’s Christian Association [79]
An Incomparable Stroll
1. Site of Granville Bastion, now Omar Temple of the Shrine. 2. The Battery (White Point Gardens). 3. Villa Margharita. 4. William Washington House. 5. Fort Sumter Hotel; site of Princess Louise’s Landing Stage. 6. Miles Brewton House. 7. William Bull House. 8. Lord William Campbell House. 9. Nathaniel Russell House. 10. First (Scotch) Presbyterian Church. 11. Horry (Branford) House. 12. South Carolina Hall. 13. Postoffice (park to the south). 14. County Court House (site of State House burned in 1788). 15. City Hall (former United States Bank). 16. St. Michael’s Episcopal Church. 17. Site of Lee’s Hotel (Mansion House). 18. Confederate Home (former Carolina Hotel). 19. Chamber of Commerce. 20. Site of Shepheard’s Tavern; birthplace of Masonry. 21. Huguenot Church. 22. Ruins of Planters’ Hotel, including site of First Theatre. 23. Pirate Houses. 24. St. Philip’s Episcopal Church. 25. Grave of John Caldwell Calhoun. 26. Nicholas Trott’s House. 27. Colonial Powder Magazine. 28. Circular Congregational Church. 29. Site of Institute Hall in which Secession was signed. 30. Gibbes Memorial Art Gallery. 31. Charleston Library Society. 32. St. John Hotel. 33. Unitarian Church. 34. St. John’s Lutheran Church. 35. Convent of Our Lady of Mercy. 36. Crafts Public School. 37. Cathedral of St. John the Baptist. 38. Formal garden of Irving K. Heyward. 39. Site of St. Andrew’s Hall in which Secession was adopted. 40. John Rutledge House. 41. The Izard Houses. 42. James Louis Petigru House. 43. Customs House. 44. Zig-Zag Alley. 45. Catholic Orphanage. 46. Site of St. Peter’s Episcopal Church. 47. The “Sword Gates.” 48. John Edwards House. 49. The Old Exchange. 50. Carolina Savings Bank. 51. South Carolina National Bank. 52. People’s State Bank. 53. Hibernian Hall. 54. Timrod Hotel. 55. Quaker Graveyard. 56. John Stuart House. 57. Fireproof Building.
Prints and Plants of Old Gardens, by Kate Doggett Boggs.
A book for those who would like to produce a border, or a fence, or a complete garden and want an old design. The drawings and illustrations were taken from rare prints and books difficult to find and expensive to buy. The author gathered her data from American and English gardens of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and early nineteenth centuries. The appendix contains a list of thousands of plants. The botanical names were traced and arrangement into groups made by Dr. and Mrs. Bayard Hammond of the Botanical Department of Johns Hopkins University. 10 × 13 inches. Drawings and illustrations. $5.00.
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