Trisha Shetty (Editor)

James Nicholson House (Charleston, South Carolina)

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Built
  
c. 1816

Architectural style
  
Regency

Added to NRHP
  
30 August 1974

Architect
  
possibly William Jay

NRHP Reference #
  
74001832

James Nicholson House (Charleston, South Carolina)

Location
  
172 Rutledge Ave., Charleston, South Carolina

The James Nicholson House is a notable early 19th-century residence in Charleston, South Carolina which has housed the Ashley Hall school since 1909. The house was built ca. 1816 for Patrick Duncan. The architect for the house is not known, but authorities cite William Jay as its possible designer; he worked in Charleston and Savannah between 1817 and 1822. James Nicholson owned the property from 1829 to 1838 when James R. Pringle bought it; after Pringle's death, his family sold it in 1845 Secretary of the Confederate Treasury George Trenholm. From 1877 to 1909, it was the home of Charles Otto Witte's family.

The Classical Revival building is stuccoed brick. The main two floors are above a high, rusticated basement. The portico is supported by four giant-order Ionic columns with Renaissance capitals. The pediment has a three-part Gothic window. Originally open (as seen in the 1876 photograph to the left), the arches of the basement have been enclosed with windows.

The house was listed in the National Register August 30, 1974.

References

James Nicholson House (Charleston, South Carolina) Wikipedia