72 Anson Street (Kohne-Leslie House)

72 Anson Street

72 Anson Street

Name/Title

72 Anson Street (Kohne-Leslie House)

Entry/Object ID

ANSON.072.001

Scope and Content

Constructed 1846-47; restored and rehabilitated 1962, 1994. One of the larger houses in Ansonborough. Constructed by Eliza Neufville Kohne after she acquired the lot in 1846. An earlier 2-story wooden single house, ca. 1805, had burned in the fire of 1838, and Mrs. Kohne replaced it with a three-and-one-half story brick house of the side-hall, double-parlor plan. Her heirs sold the house in 1904 to Charles C. Leslie, one of Charleston's most prominent Black businessmen. The Leslies lived in the house for more than half a century. The original kitchen dependency remains at the rear as a freestanding structure and may have survived the fire of 1838. When the house was restored during the Ansonborough Project, a later wooden building on the lot to the south was removed and the garden was enlarged to its present size (Poston, Buildings of Charleston). Four files contain: documentation of the easements on the property; Part I Certification Application (National Register); annual inspection reports; requests for alterations; correspondence and other documentation related to the sale of the property; FOHG house history (1997); historical/research information; copy of HCF easement information card (TMS number, year of construction, significant resident(s), deed research, deed restrictions, measurements, and tax information); original Title to Real Estate conveying the property to HCF in 1959; data sheet for CharlestonWISE Impact Project (Sustainability Institute) that includes construction date, square footage, number of stories, building orientation, system materials/types, Sanborn Map research notes, and additions/alterations notes (Mariah Schwartz, 2011); first floor plan of "Rear House" (unattributed, undated); photocopies of plats (1804, 1819, 1834,1861, 1867, 1904); 1886 Earthquake Damage Assessment. Two easements were made on this property. The first in May 1, 1986 with an addendum in December 1986, and the second (interior easement) in 1992. This property was originally an HCF covenant property. See Easement Documentation Photo Files for easement donation photographs (Exh. B to Deed of Conservation Easement) and Covenant/Easement Inspection Photo Files for inspection photography.

Collection

Historic Charleston Foundation Property Records

Acquisition

Accession

ANSON.072.

Source or Donor

72 Anson Street (Kohne-Leslie House)

Acquisition Method

Collected by Staff

Lexicon

Search Terms

Anson Street, Ansonborough, Ansonborough Rehabilitation Project (ARP), Easement Property, Covenant Property, Loutrel Briggs garden, Historic buildings--South Carolina--Charleston, Historic gardens--South Carolina--Charleston

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Property File

Archive Details

Archive Size/Extent

2 Gift Folders 1 Management Folder 1 History/Miscellaneous Folder

Archive Notes

Finding Aids: Index to Property Files. Level of Description: Folder

Location

Location

Shelf

Property File Shelves

Room

Margaretta P. Childs Archives

Building

Missroon House

Category

Permanent

Date

February 7, 2023

Notes

PF Box 6

Relationships

Related Entries

Notes

2007.008.51, ANSON.072.002, ANSON.072.003a-b, ANSON.072.004a-b, ANSON.072.005, ANSON.072.006, ANSON.072.007a-b, ANSON.072.008a-b, ANSON.072.009a-b, ANSON.072.010a-b, ANSON.072.011a-l, ANSON.072.012, ANSON.072.013a-b, ANSON.072.014, ANSON.072.015, ANSON.072.016, ANSON.072.017, HUGO.002.069 Related Units of Description: See also "Ansonborough" document box, Preservation Topics shelves. See also HALS/Loutrel Briggs Garden Survey (2007.016.1). See also Easement Manager's working files for more information. Plat ANSON.GEN.008.

Related Publications

Notes

Buildings of Charleston (see Abstract), pg. 422-423

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Online Catalog

Label

Constructed 1846-47; restored and rehabilitated 1962, 1994. One of the larger houses in Ansonborough. Constructed by Eliza Neufville Kohne after she acquired the lot in 1846. An earlier 2-story wooden single house, ca. 1805, had burned in the fire of 1838, and Mrs. Kohne replaced it with a three-and-one-half story brick house of the side-hall, double-parlor plan. Her heirs sold the house in 1904 to Charles C. Leslie, one of Charleston's most prominent Black businessmen. The Leslies lived in the house for more than half a century. The original kitchen dependency remains at the rear as a freestanding structure and may have survived the fire of 1838. When the house was restored during the Ansonborough Project, a later wooden building on the lot to the south was removed and the garden was enlarged to its present size (Poston, Buildings of Charleston). Four files contain: documentation of the easements on the property; Part I Certification Application (National Register); annual inspection reports; requests for alterations; correspondence and other documentation related to the sale of the property; FOHG house history (1997); historical/research information; copy of HCF easement information card (TMS number, year of construction, significant resident(s), deed research, deed restrictions, measurements, and tax information); original Title to Real Estate conveying the property to HCF in 1959; data sheet for CharlestonWISE Impact Project (Sustainability Institute) that includes construction date, square footage, number of stories, building orientation, system materials/types, Sanborn Map research notes, and additions/alterations notes (Mariah Schwartz, 2011); first floor plan of "Rear House" (unattributed, undated); photocopies of plats (1804, 1819, 1834,1861, 1867, 1904); 1886 Earthquake Damage Assessment. Two easements were made on this property. The first in May 1, 1986 with an addendum in December 1986, and the second (interior easement) in 1992. This property was originally an HCF covenant property.

Created By

admin@catalogit.app

Create Date

June 16, 2005

Updated By

sferguson@historiccharleston.org

Update Date

May 26, 2023