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Laurel Hill Plantation (South Carolina)

Islands of Beaufort County, South CarolinaIslands of South CarolinaPlantations in South CarolinaSouth Carolina Sea IslandsTowns in Beaufort County, South Carolina
Coosaw Point entrance
Coosaw Point entrance

The Laurel Hill Plantation, also known as Laurel Hill Farm was a historic Southern plantation located on Lady's Island, Beaufort County, South Carolina. The area is now called Coosaw Point, a upscale community with clubhouse, pool, tennis courts, and dock. The area is known for its woodlands, parks, wetlands, and the Coosaw River.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Laurel Hill Plantation (South Carolina) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Laurel Hill Plantation (South Carolina)
Coosaw River Drive,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 32.483333333333 ° E -80.6 °
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Address

Coosaw River Drive

Coosaw River Drive

South Carolina, United States
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Coosaw Point entrance
Coosaw Point entrance
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Beaufort Historic District (Beaufort, South Carolina)
Beaufort Historic District (Beaufort, South Carolina)

Beaufort Historic District is a historic district in Beaufort, South Carolina. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1969, and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1973.The historic district is renowned for its impressive collection of antebellum architecture that reflect the Federal, neoclassical, and Greek revival styles that were popular during the interwar period, along with the widespread use of tabby. A variety of homes, gardens, commercial buildings, houses of worship and graveyards are featured in the district, with some sites open for public inspection. Continuous efforts at rehabilitation and conservation underline the community's commitment to maintaining the historic nature of the district, which has attracted much acclaim and garnered popularity from visitors and media outlets. The district's condition has been assessed several times since it was listed in 1969, and in 1998 the National Park Service proposed listing the district as "threatened" due to an ongoing gradual loss of historic integrity. Partly in reaction to this, the district's significance was broadened to include a distinctive historical element of post-Civil War history. The Port Royal Experiment, centered in Beaufort, involved a large-scale redistribution of land from large landowners to former African-American slaves in an effort to assimilate the freed slaves into a modern post-war society. This Reconstruction-era effort had a marked impact on Beaufort's built environment, and is still evident in the surviving buildings.