6 Archdale Street (Unitarian Church)

Unitarian Church, 6 Archdale S

Unitarian Church, 6 Archdale S

Name/Title

6 Archdale Street (Unitarian Church)

Entry/Object ID

ARCHDALE.006.001

Scope and Content

Constructed 1772-87; remodeled 1852. Francis D. Lee, architect. Construction of the Unitarian Church was halted for the duration of the British occupation of Charleston during the American Revolution. Begun in 1772, it was finally dedicated in 1787 and was called the Second Independent Church. It was born out of the Independent Congregational Church at the White Meeting House. A Unitarian minister, Reverend Anthony Forster, was the first pastor of the newly chartered Second Independent Church in 1817, and his successor, Dr. Samuel Gilman, served from 1819-1858. His wife Caroline laid out the gardens on the south side of the church, which today, with many old varieties of plants, are intermixed with later gravestones in a portion of the cemetery and dominated by a Gothic monument to the Gilmans. The graveyard connects to King Street and then Meeting Street via the Gateway garden walk. The church was re-chartered as the first Unitarian church in the South in 1839 and was remodeled into its present perpendicular Gothic style in 1852. The architect Francis D. Lee designed a new tower on the west end and a chancel at the east end. A prevailing respect for the old structure encouraged the retention of elements from the original building, while Lee added loftier details to the edifice. Inspired by the Chapel of Henry VII at Westminster, Lee added the decorative fan vaulting of plaster which adorns the interior and also added buttresses to the building and changed the fenestration to reflect the Gothic style. The church suffered extensive damage during the earthquake of 1886; while the interior was repaired, surviving ornamentation on the tower was stripped away. (Poston, Buildings of Charleston.) Address is also noted as 8 Archdale Street. File contains FOH building history; newspaper articles (including DYKYC); history by Mary Maxine Larisey (1972); National Register Nomination Form; prospectus entitled "Built for the Age to Come: Restoration of Francis D. Lee's Unitarian Church" (undated); presentation "Unitarian Church Renovation" (by The Ways of Wood, 2010).

Collection

Historic Charleston Foundation Property Records

Acquisition

Accession

ARCHDALE.006.

Source or Donor

6 Archdale Street (Unitarian Church)

Acquisition Method

Collected by Staff

Lexicon

Search Terms

Archdale Street, National Register of Historic Places, Unitarian Church (Charleston, S.C.), Church buildings--South Carolina--Charleston

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Property File

Archive Details

Archive Size/Extent

1 File 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 8

Location

Container

PF Box 6

Shelf

Prop File Shelves, Property File Shelves

Room

Margaretta P. Childs Archives

Building

Missroon House

Category

Permanent

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Lee, Francis D.

Related Entries

Notes

2004.021.115, ARCHDALE.006.002, ARCHDALE.006.003, ARCHDALE.006.004, ARCHDALE.006.005, ARCHDALE.006.006, ARCHDALE.006.007, ARCHDALE.006.008, ARCHDALE.006.009

Related Publications

Notes

Buildings of Charleston (see Abstract), pg. 340-341 The old and the new: or, Discourses and proceedings at the dedication of the re-modelled Unitarian church in Charleston, S.C., on Sunday, April 2, 1954. Preceded by the farewell discourse delivered in the old church, on Sunday, April 4, 1852. With engravings of the former and present edifices by Samuel Gilman (available via GoogleBooks, see Multimedia Link)

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Online Catalog

Label

Constructed 1772-87; remodeled 1852. Francis D. Lee, architect. Construction of the Unitarian Church was halted for the duration of the British occupation of Charleston during the American Revolution. Begun in 1772, it was finally dedicated in 1787 and was called the Second Independent Church. It was born out of the Independent Congregational Church at the White Meeting House. A Unitarian minister, Reverend Anthony Forster, was the first pastor of the newly chartered Second Independent Church in 1817, and his successor, Dr. Samuel Gilman, served from 1819-1858. His wife Caroline laid out the gardens on the south side of the church, which today, with many old varieties of plants, are intermixed with later gravestones in a portion of the cemetery and dominated by a Gothic monument to the Gilmans. The graveyard connects to King Street and then Meeting Street via the Gateway garden walk. The church was re-chartered as the first Unitarian church in the South in 1839 and was remodeled into its present perpendicular Gothic style in 1852. The architect Francis D. Lee designed a new tower on the west end and a chancel at the east end. A prevailing respect for the old structure encouraged the retention of elements from the original building, while Lee added loftier details to the edifice. Inspired by the Chapel of Henry VII at Westminster, Lee added the decorative fan vaulting of plaster which adorns the interior and also added buttresses to the building and changed the fenestration to reflect the Gothic style. The church suffered extensive damage during the earthquake of 1886; while the interior was repaired, surviving ornamentation on the tower was stripped away (Poston, Buildings of Charleston). Address is also noted as 8 Archdale Street. File contains FOH building history; newspaper articles (including DYKYC); history by Mary Maxine Larisey (1972); National Register Nomination Form; prospectus entitled "Built for the Age to Come: Restoration of Francis D. Lee's Unitarian Church" (undated); presentation "Unitarian Church Renovation" (by The Ways of Wood, 2010).

Created By

admin@catalogit.app

Create Date

July 26, 2005

Updated By

sferguson@historiccharleston.org

Update Date

August 7, 2023