Sunday, October 18, 2020

Restoring Charleston: Bonus Material

The Whetsell Bridal Cabin

    In the summer of 2016, we rehabbed the Appleby House and the Bridal Cabin, filming both projects for television. Until this week, I had no idea of the link between these two properties on opposite sides of St. George, South Carolina.

The Appleby House
    After the Appleby House was condemned by building officials, the descendants donated it to the local historical society, and this group sold it to me. The Queen Anne was built at the turn of the century to replace the family home beside Appleby's Methodist Church, a home which was lost to fire in the late 1800's. This Appleby property was the mustering site for Company C of the 24th Regiment of SC Volunteers in the war between the states, when St. George was known as "George's Station." M.T., A.C., and Adam Appleby were members of Co. C and the church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

Annie Leila's
    The Whetsell land was vacant and overgrown when I spotted it during the winter of 2016. At over nine acres, it contained two houses, perfect since the TV producers had asked me to buy three pig's ears, and I already had a ratified contract for Appleby. I researched the property at the county's deeds office and began working to connect with the owner(s). As it turned out, the person who owned the tract had inherited it from someone who had also acquired it through probate. The owner lived in the Upstate; they had no affinity for the property and were happy to sell it to me. After I took ownership in the spring of 2016, I began to learn the history of the property and the family that had owned it for over a century. Mamie and John M. Whetsell Sr. built the Bridal Cabin for their son John Jr. and his fiancĂ© Annie Leila Parler when they got married just before World War II. Then when the elder Whetsells passed on, Junior and Annie lived in the main house for the rest of their lives, using the small cottage as a guest house or rental. Their last house is my current project; Annie Leila's

J.M.Whetsell Sr. plat

    This week, I discovered a really old plat of a property that John Whetsell Sr. bought in 1903. The two hundred and fifty acre parcel was on the Edisto River. Along with the Edisto, there is a path through the property labeled Charleston Road. This property was owned by 24th Reg. Capt. A.C. Appleby, and Mr. Whetsell bought it after reaching an accord with A.S. Appleby.    

    Even though this document is handwritten, I can make it all out, save one word:  The above represents a tract of land containing two hundred and fifty acres and is part of what is known as the A.C. Appleby land laid out and measured by request of A.S. Appleby, lines S40.11 + S50E taken from a plat-made by W.C. Griffith dated Nov. 7, 1873 and has such marked ___ bearings and boundaries as are shown in above plat surveyed July 22, 1903. By Jno. L. Gavin Surveyor + C.E.

    Restoring Charleston started with the Appleby House and ended with the Whetsell's Bridal Cabin. Even though both projects were finished years back, it was still very cool to find this plat that connects these two prominent St. George Families.  

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