Nathaniel-Russell House Museum Tours & Tickets | Charleston, SC
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Hours & Info

Open daily from 10am – 5pm
with the last tour at 4:15.

Want to create your own visitor experience? Take our self-guided tour of the Nathaniel Russell House! We recommend you download the free app before your visit. Wi-Fi is available. Our free app includes a walking guide to Charleston with over 300 points of interest. Enjoy!

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The Spoils of the Atlantic Trade

The Nathaniel Russell House Museum offers a glimpse into the lives of the mercantile elite who flourished in the late Colonial and early Federal period, the artisans and craftspeople they hired to build and adorn their opulent homes, and the enslaved men and women whose forced labor made possible their lavish lifestyles.

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See inside the splendor of one of America’s most important neoclassical dwellings.

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For groups of 12 or more, please contact the house manager to reserve a tour. Discounts apply.

Visit both museums to experience two different preservation methods and save $6 on adult tickets by purchasing a combination ticket.

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The History of the Nathaniel Russell House

Nathaniel Russell arrived in Charleston from Bristol, Rhode Island in 1765 and, thanks to extensive contacts in his home colony, established himself as a successful merchant and slave trader. His 1789 marriage to Sarah Hopton Russell produced two daughters, Alicia and Sarah, and in 1808 the Russell family moved to their new townhome at 51 Meeting Street. Accompanying them were as many as eighteen enslaved people who toiled in the work yard, gardens, stable and kitchen. Russell spared little expense in the construction of his home, regarded as one of Charleston’s finest in its era with geometrically shaped rooms, elaborate plasterwork ornamentation and formal gardens. The defining architectural feature of the home is a three-story, cantilevered, flying staircase whose “…sweep is broad, treads are deep, and the rise perfectly proportioned and easy of ascent,” according to Nathaniel Russell’s great-granddaughter Alicia Hopton Middleton.

The home’s graceful, free-flying, three-story staircase is an architectural marvel with each cantilevered step supporting the one above and below it.

A National Historic Landmark, the house has been restored as nearly as possible to its 1808 appearance through the application of forensic analysis and cutting-edge conservation technology. Because restoration is an ongoing process, visitors have the opportunity to see and learn about the meticulous care, craft, and consideration that informs every detail. Historic Charleston Foundation’s most recent preservation initiative involves the kitchen house, an ancillary structure that included a kitchen, laundry, and living quarters for the enslaved. By uncovering the material history contained in that structure, the Foundation hopes to further illuminate the lives of the men, women, and children who lived and worked there.

Kitchen House Project

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Blog Posts

  • Winslow’s Word: January 2024

    Posted: January 24, 2024

    Last month, Historic Charleston announced a new strategic plan adopted by our Board of Trustees that involved a proposal to transition away from owning the Nathaniel Russell House. While we…

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  • UPDATE: Nathaniel Russell House Museum

    Posted: January 11, 2024

    Dear Friends and Supporters of Historic Charleston Foundation, Last month, Historic Charleston Foundation announced a new strategic plan adopted by our Board of Trustees.  A component of the plan involved…

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  • A Magical Evening: A Recap of the PreserVISIONist Soireé

    Posted: November 14, 2023

    On October 27th, the Foundation’s PreserVISIONist Membership Group danced the night away at the second annual PreserVISIONist Soireé! The Foundation was thrilled to welcome current and NEW PreserVISIONist members to the Nathaniel…

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Hours & Info

Open daily from 10am – 5pm
with the last tour at 4:15.

Want to create your own visitor experience? Take our self-guided tour of the Nathaniel Russell House! We recommend you download the free app before your visit. Wi-Fi is available. Our free app includes a walking guide to Charleston with over 300 points of interest. Enjoy!

Buy Tickets
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HCF on Instagram

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Upcoming Events

  • Two staff members standing in the stairwell of the Aiken-Rhett House Museum performing laser scanning
    BTS Preservation Tour of Aiken-Rhett House Museum
    May 23 @ 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm

    Justin Schwebler, Preservation Manager What is "preserved-as-found" and why is that preservation style utilized at the Aiken-Rhett House Museum? In honor of Preservation Month, we invite YOU to go behind-the-scenes of the Aiken-Rhett House Museum and focus on the specific preservation methods and techniques uniquely and expertly on display at this 1820s historic house museum. Go behind-the-scenes with the Foundation Preservation Manager, Justin Schwebler, to dive into what makes this property so unique in the preservation world with rare access to areas that are typically off limits to the public. This hauntingly beautiful home is the only one of its...

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  • BTS Preservation Tour of Nathaniel Russell House
    May 30 @ 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm

    Over the past year, the renewed love and passion for the Nathaniel Russell House was a reminder of how special this historic landmark is the world of historic preservation. Valerie Perry, House Museum Manager When was your last visit to the Nathaniel Russell House, and do you know what makes it so special? In honor of Preservation Month, we invite YOU to go behind-the-scenes of the Nathaniel Russell House and focus on the specific preservation methods and techniques uniquely and expertly on display at this 1808 historic house museum. House Museum Manager, Valerie Perry, will tap into her 20+ years...

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