Ad
related to: Hanover House Clemson, SCHouse For Rent. View price, phone, address, and more. Now available S8 & Low Income housing in your county. As low as $300 per month. Rent now!
- Application Available Now
Check Opening Affordable & S8
Housing Waiting List. View...
- Property Tax Lookup
Get your property assessment and
tax data with our database
- Application Available Now
Search results
Historic Hanover House: Over 300 years of history. Hanover House, built in 1716 for French Huguenot Paul de St. Julien in Berkeley County, S.C. likely by enslaved African laborers, was primarily a rice plantation named by the St. Julien family to honor ed George I, Elector of Hanover, for his assistance to French Huguenots in fleeing France ...
- Restoration of Hanover House
Hanover House and Clemson University: 1941 and Beyond. A...
- The African American Experience
The African American Experience at Hanover House. The...
- Resources
Hanover House; Resources. Publications. Hanover House...
- Hanover House Exhibit Displays
Hanover House on the Move. View the Full Display. Hanover...
- Schedule a Tour
Visit the Hanover House Group Tour Reservation Form to...
- Restoration of Hanover House
Hanover House is a colonial house built by a French Huguenot family in 1714–1716, on the upper Cooper River in present-day Berkeley County of the South Carolina Low Country. The house is also known as the St. Julien-Ravenel House after its early owners.
People also ask
Why was Hanover House moved to Clemson University?
Why was Hanover House built?
Where is Hanover South Carolina now?
Does Hanover House close if SCBG has an unscheduled closing?
On June 7, 1962, Hanover was officially opened by the Colonial Dames as a museum, culminating a nearly decade-long process of acquiring a diverse collection of period pieces as well as reproductions, such as the elaborately sewn crewel work curtains designed by Susan Lewis Brown.
The Hanover House houses the Historic French Colonial Museum, and is located at the South Carolina Botanical Garden. It was built circa 1716 for French Huguenot Paul de St. Julien in Berkeley County, South Carolina.