Wragg Street (a/k/a Aiken's Row a/k/a Wragg Square)

Aiken's Row (1961): Origsize: 3x4; Origformat: Print-Photographic; Resolution: 72 dpi
Aiken's Row (1961)

Origsize: 3x4; Origformat: Print-Photographic; Resolution: 72 dpi

Name/Title

Wragg Street (a/k/a Aiken's Row a/k/a Wragg Square)

Entry/Object ID

WRAGG.GEN.1

Scope and Content

Constructed 1845. Two of the seven identical rental houses built by William Aiken still survive at these addresses. Earlier generations referred to these dwellings as the "Seven Wages" because of the often-told story that the rent from each of these houses supported the main Aiken residence on a given day of the week. these two-story houses have double-tiered front piazzas with Tuscan columns. All the interior and exterior woodwork derives from simple Greek Revival prototypes found in pattern books. The interior floor plan follows the double house tradition, but pocket doors separate the two rooms on each side of the hall. In the antebellum period each property had its own kitchen with piazza and a separate stable, forming a forecourt at the rear of the houses. Two houses were demolished in the first expansion of Courtenay School, ca. 1940, while three more were removed for the new school building in 1957. (Poston, Buildings of Charleston.) File contains description of Wraggborough and house history of 2 Wragg and 4 Wragg from Information for Guides of Historic Charleston (1984); FOHG house history for 4 Wragg (1997); excerpt about Wraggsborough [sic] from "Charleston in the Age of the Pinckneys"; brief description of Wraggborough and photos of demolished Aiken's Row dwellings from "This is Charleston"; captioned newspaper photograph showing the houses that were to be demolished (ca. 1940); excerpts (with photos) from "Buildings of Charleston," "The Dwelling Houses of Charleston," "Charleston Come Hell or High Water," "Charleston Then and Now," and "The Early Architecture of Charleston"; dissertation "To Rent: The Antebellum Landscape of Aiken's Row" (Morgan, 2012).

Collection

Historic Charleston Foundation Property Records

Acquisition

Accession

WRAGG.GEN.

Source or Donor

Wragg Street (a/k/a Aiken's Row)

Acquisition Method

Collected by Staff

Lexicon

Search Terms

Wragg Square/Wragg Street/Aiken's Row, Mazyckborough and Wraggborough, Demolished buildings, lost buildings, Historic buildings--South Carolina--Charleston, Streets--South Carolina--Charleston, Lost architecture--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

Location

Container

PF Box 112

Shelf

Prop File Shelves, Property File Shelves

Room

Margaretta P. Childs Archives

Building

Missroon House

Category

Permanent

Location

Container

2

Shelf

Prop File Shelves, Property File Shelves

Room

Margaretta P. Childs Archives

Building

Missroon House

Category

Permanent

Relationships

Related Entries

Notes

2006.007.44, 2013.002.094, 2014.007.1, 2016.021.04, WRAGG.GEN.2a-b Related Units of Description: See also ELIZABETH.048.1.2, Folder 2: Related Property Deeds. Includes miscellaneous deeds from various years for Wragg Mall properties.

Related Publications

Notes

Buildings of Charleston (see Abstract), pg. 615

Created By

admin@catalogit.app

Create Date

February 19, 2014

Updated By

admin@catalogit.app

Update Date

February 16, 2023