Charleston’s largest private home and house museum, with exquisite gardens and a vast collection of fine and decorative arts. An unequaled, Tiffany decorated, Gilded Age gem.
The Calhoun Mansion in Charleston is considered one of the most important pieces of Victorian architecture on the Eastern Seaboard. Wealthy Charleston merchant.
A Guide to Visiting the Calhoun Mansion It doesn’t matter whether you are a fan of architecture or not – a visit to the Calhoun Mansion is sure to take your breath away.
54 reviews of Calhoun Mansion "I think it's important to be clear that this is not a house tour that provides an accurate representation of living in the 1900s. Rooms are not set up so you can see how people lived then.
Almost a century before it was built, the ground on which George Walton Williams would build his home was hallowed in the tradition of optimistic patriotism. 14-16 Meeting Street in downtown Charleston was originally part of the Lowndes House plot owned by Governor Charles Pinckney, who hosted George Washington three times in 1791.
Charleston’s largest private home and house museum, with exquisite gardens and a vast collection of fine and decorative arts. An unequaled, Tiffany decorated, Gilded Age gem.
The Calhoun Mansion in Charleston is considered one of the most important pieces of Victorian architecture on the Eastern Seaboard. Wealthy Charleston merchant.
A Guide to Visiting the Calhoun Mansion It doesn’t matter whether you are a fan of architecture or not – a visit to the Calhoun Mansion is sure to take your breath away.
54 reviews of Calhoun Mansion "I think it's important to be clear that this is not a house tour that provides an accurate representation of living in the 1900s. Rooms are not set up so you can see how people lived then.
Almost a century before it was built, the ground on which George Walton Williams would build his home was hallowed in the tradition of optimistic patriotism. 14-16 Meeting Street in downtown Charleston was originally part of the Lowndes House plot owned by Governor Charles Pinckney, who hosted George Washington three times in 1791.