Hampton Plantation Forest
by Norma Brandsberg
Title
Hampton Plantation Forest
Artist
Norma Brandsberg
Medium
Photograph - Photograph
Description
Our destination was Hampton Plantation, an old antibellum rice plantation. On the way to the stately home we passes by this forest loaded with grasses lit by the late afternoon sun. They almost looked iridescent unusual in the middle of a forest I thought. Located north of Charleston in South Carolina, Hampton Plantation State Historic Site is home to the remote, final remnants of a colonial-era rice plantation. The plantation now serves as an interpretive site for the system of slavery and rice cultivation in the region from the colonial period through the end of the Civil War. The property also tells the story of the freed people who made their homes in the Santee Delta region for generations after emancipation. Pictured here is Hampton Creek, where flat bottomed boats used poles to transport the rice to markets. This photograph taken in February still manages to have a lot of color. Also available in black and white infrared.
The original core of the house was built in 1735 by Noe Serre, a French Huguenot refugee, and was a central-hall two-story structure. The property was acquired in 1757 by Daniel Horry, who greatly expanded the building, adding a two-story ballroom on one side, and a master bedroom suite on the other. In order to ensure symmetry of appearance, Horry had false shuttered windows placed on the front walls of these additions. The front portico is the last major alteration made to the building. The Horrys, along with later owners from the Pinckney and Rutledge families, were all from politically and economically prominent South Carolina families.
Visitors can explore the mansion to learn how it was constructed and changed over time from the early 18th century. The kitchen building and the unearthed foundation of one of the slave dwellings show the disparity between the lifestyles of the planters and the enslaved.
The plantation grounds include walking trails through pine forest, views of Wambaw Creek, and the remains of rice fields that once stretched as far as the eye could see. Hampton inspired the works of South Carolina’s first poet laureate, Archibald Rutledge—the last private owner of the house, who lived there until 1969. The site is a National Historic Landmark.
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Uploaded
March 1st, 2022
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