Bailey's Store

Bailey's Store

With These Hands Gallery, occupying Bailey's Store; 2013 photo
Location 1442 Highway 174, Edisto Island, South Carolina
Coordinates 32°33′36.32″N 80°16′46.6″W / 32.5600889°N 80.279611°W / 32.5600889; -80.279611Coordinates: 32°33′36.32″N 80°16′46.6″W / 32.5600889°N 80.279611°W / 32.5600889; -80.279611
Built 1820
NRHP Reference # 86003204[1]
Added to NRHP Nov. 28, 1986

Bailey’s Store is one of the last nineteenth century commercial structures on Edisto Island, Charleston County, South Carolina. Bailey's Store was likely built earlier than 1825 on Edingsville Beach, a popular seaside resort, before it was moved to its present location about 1870 following the abandonment of Edingsville Beach. Because all of the remaining structures at Edingsville Beach were swept into the Atlantic ocean in the hurricane of 1893, Bailey's Store is the only survivor of that community. The building was moved in two parts to Store Creek. It was reassembled there for use as a gin house already on that location.

Bailey’s Store is a two-story building with weatherboard cladding and side gables. When Highway 174 was moved in about 1940, Bailey's Store was turned 180 degrees. The Edisto Island Post Office was located at Bailey's Store for many years in an addition on the south side. The addition has since been removed. A hipped roof runs above the front door from the western elevation. The three windows on the first floor and five on the second are asymmetrically placed. There is a one-story, hipped roof addition on the back of the building.[2]

The interior of the house was substantially renovated in the 1980s.[3]

The building was listed in the National Register November 28, 1986.

References

  1. National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. "Bailey's Store, Charleston County (jct. of S.C. Hwy. 174 & Point of Pines Rd., Edisto Island)". National Register Properties in South Carolina. South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Retrieved Dec 8, 2012.
  3. Dora DeVera (July 11, 1993). "Accidental find is now a jewel". Charleston Post & Courier. p. G1. Retrieved Dec 8, 2012.


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