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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Drayton_HallDrayton Hall - Wikipedia

    Drayton Hall is an 18th-century plantation house located on the Ashley River about 15 miles (24 km) northwest of Charleston, South Carolina, and directly across the Ashley River from North Charleston, west of the Ashley in the Lowcountry.

  2. Drayton Hall, 18th-century estate in the Charleston, South Carolina Lowcountry, is vital to our understanding of early American history. Voted the Best Place to See by Condé Nast Traveler. Visit

  3. Founded in 1738, Drayton Hall is the nations earliest example of fully executed Palladian architecture and the oldest preserved plantation house in America still open to the public. Because of our preservation philosophy, all imperfections and changes over time have survived to the present.

  4. For more than 250 years, Drayton Hall has stood witness to the American South. Among the best and most complete examples of Southern colonial life open to the public today, the property holds a vital educational responsibility.

  5. Drayton Hall is the nation’s finest and earliest example of fully executed Palladian architecture and its double portico is acclaimed as the first of its kind in the world.

  6. Apr 9, 2024 · Drayton Hall was the center of John Draytons extensive indigo and rice planting venture. Not only is it one of the finest examples of Georgian Palladian architecture in America, it is the only surviving colonial plantation house on the Ashley River.

  7. Drayton Hall in Charleston explores the lives of enslaved people and plantation owners in 18th century South Carolina through tours of the remarkably preserved colonial plantation house.

  8. Built by John Drayton just north of Charle ston in 1738, Drayton Hall is one of the finest examples of Georgian-Palladian architecture. It's a beautiful home worth a visit for its South Carolina history.

  9. Thanks to research conducted by scholars across disciplines, we can understand how Drayton Halls creators and inhabitants lived their lives and shaped the Atlantic World. 1738-1779 1784-1820 1866-1960

  10. May 17, 2016 · As the seat of vast plantation holdings in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Drayton Hall was the home of scores of African Americans who lived and worked there as slaves and later as free men, including the Bowens family, whose ancestors probably arrived as slaves from Barbados with the Draytons. < 1 minutes to read. (Charleston County ...

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