Hutchinson House (Edisto Island) | Photography Collection | Historic Charleston Foundation
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Photography Collection

Hutchinson House (Edisto Island)

Description

Photograph of the Hutchinson House on Edisto Island. Corner view of house, showing front facade and porch. Woman stands on front porch.

Written on back: "Original house. Please note zigzag trimming around porch and windows."

From SCDAH National Register Sites in South Carolina: "The Hutchinson House is the oldest identified house on Edisto Island associated with the black community after the Civil War. It was the residence of Henry Hutchinson, a mulatto who, according to a local tradition, built and operated the first cotton gin owned by a black on the island from ca. 1900 to ca. 1920. Hutchinson was born a slave in 1860, and was the son of James Hutchinson, a mulatto who made notable attempts both as a slave and as a freedman to improve conditions for blacks on Edisto Island. Henry Hutchinson is said to have built the house at the time of his marriage to Rosa Swinton in 1885, and resided here until his death in ca. 1940. The house is a rectangular, one-and-one half story residence featuring a side gable roof with bargeboards and three gabled dormers on the front slope of the roof. The weatherboard clad house rests on a raised, brick pier foundation and has shed and gable-roofed additions at the west and north elevations. The pedimented front porch dates from a later period. Listed in the National Register May 5, 1987." (See Media link.)

Item Details

Object ID: 2015.003.13
Creator: Unattributed
Date: ca. 1900
Subjects:
African American Women
African Americans--Dwellings--South Carolina--Edisto Island
Dwellings--South Carolina--Edisto Island