Browse Items (58 total)

staats_114.jpeg
Back of photograph: "7 Stoll's Alley After" Between 1700 and 1748, a small passageway off East Bay was established to connect with Church Street. Many informal documents state that small structures were constructed along the passageway, where harbor…

staats_113.jpeg
Back of photograph: "7 Stoll's Alley" 18 State Street, the Nathan Hart House, was owned for investment purposes by the same family from 1815-1905. The two-story masonry building reflects the changing uses and status of the neighborhood, housing at…

staats_109.jpeg
"""Turn of the century?""

staats_112c.jpeg
Negative film

staats_112.jpeg
Back of photograph: "(c) Henry P. Staats / State St. / Chas." 18 State Street, the Nathan Hart House, was owned for investment purposes by the same family from 1815-1905. The two-story masonry building reflects the changing uses and status of the…

staats_112b.jpeg
Negative film

staats_115.jpeg
Peter Trezevan'ts House, No. 9? Back of photpgraph: "7 & 9 Stoll's Alley" Between 1700 and 1748, a small passageway off East Bay was established to connect with Church Street. Many informal documents state that small structures were constructed along…

staats_115b.jpeg
Negative film

staats_116.jpeg
Back of photograph: "9 Stoll's Alley" This quaint brick paved passage was named for Justinus Stoll, a blacksmith, who is thought to have built his home at No. 7 Stoll's Alley, c. 1745. The street was a run down slum in 1927, and has been…

staats_076.jpeg
Back of photograph: "(c) Henry P. Staats / 54 Meeting St." 54 Meeting Street was constructed in the early nineteenth century by Timothy Ford, a well-to-do lawyer from New Jersey. Upon graduating from Princeton, Ford moved to Charleston to work with…
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