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Nathaniel Russel House

The Russell Family African Americana at the Nathaniel Russell House


Allston Family Slavery in Charleston


The Sister of Charity of Our Lady of Mercy Show and Splendor: Celebrating a Wedding in 1809

Since 1808, visitors have admired the grand Federal townhouse of Charleston merchant Nathaniel Russell. Set amid spacious formal gardens, the Nathaniel Russell House is a National Historic Landmark and is widely recognized as one of America’s most important neoclassical dwellings. The graceful interior with elaborate plasterwork ornamentation, geometrically shaped rooms and a magnificent free-flying staircase are among the most exuberant ever created in early America.

Located in Downtown Charleston near High Battery, the house is furnished with period antiques and works of art that evoke the gracious lifestyle of the city’s merchant elite.

Today the Nathaniel Russell House interprets the lives of the Russell family, as well as the African American slaves and artisans who were responsible for maintaining one of the South’s grandest antebellum townhouses.

 

The Nathaniel Russell House is the southern-most point of Charleston's historic Museum Mile.


"...beyond all comparison,
the finest establishment
in Charleston."

-Henry Deas Lesesne 1857
 


LOCATION
Downtown at 51 Meeting Street, two blocks south of the "Four Corners of Law" (intersection of Broad and Meeting streets)

Click the map above for Driving Directions.


HOURS OF OPERATION
Monday - Saturday : 10 a.m. - 5 p.m
Sunday : 2 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Last tour begins at 4:30 p.m.


PURCHASE TICKETS
$10 or visit both the Nathaniel Russell House and the Aiken-Rhett House for $16. Tickets may be purchased at either site.

Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.


INFORMATION
Phone: (843) 724-8481
Email: vperry@historiccharleston.org