Six colored photographs of the outbuilding at No. 48 Bull Street: Top left (north section); Top middle (middle section); Top right (south section); Bottom left (side elevation of north section); Bottom middle (middle section); Bottom right (middle and south section). The six photographs are attached to a white paper. There is a white border surrounding all six photographs. The paper is labeled "views of rear bldg. 48 Bull St." The outbuilding consists of horizontal exterior clapboard paneling and a red tin roof. There are large window openings on the second story and large garage doors on the first story.
Two colored photographs of No. 32 Bull Street: Top (front facade/north elevation facing Bull Street); Bottom (west elevation facing Pitt Street). The two photographs are taped to a beige paper with two holes punched through the top. The paper is labeled "App. No. 825-12-14" and “32 Bull Street.” The structure is a two-and-a-half-story Queen Anne style structure. The photograph shows a red gable roof with a turret visible on the southeastern corner of the structure. There is a porch on the corner of the first floor of the north and west elevations. The exterior consists of white horizontal paneling. There is a black hand drawn arrow on the bottom image pointing to the side of the turret. The marking is labeled as “Behind turret.” The photograph also shows a tree in front of the porch on the southeastern corner of the structure.
Colored polaroid photograph of the southwestern corner of No. 56 Bull Street. The photograph shows the exterior with white horizontal paneling and green columns and framed openings. There are handmade black marks on the photograph. The marks line the exterior wall where the wall intersects with the ceiling of the piazza. There is an "X" over the outdoor regulator and a circle drawn just outside the house with the label "Weather Head." There is a tree in the top right corner of the photograph, blocking some of the house from view.
Colored polaroid photograph of No. 62 Bull Street. There is a hole punched through the top right corner of the photograph. The structure is a two-and-a-half-story raised Charleston Single style structure with a two-story piazza. The structure has a pitched gable roof with dormer windows. The entryway into the piazza is covered by a pediment and columns on the sides. The horizontal exterior paneling is blue. There is a truck parked on the left blocking the view of the first floor piazza.
Colored polaroid photograph of No. 58 Bull Street. The photograph shows a close up of the back of the structure with a porch on the first story and black metal stairs leading to the second story. Thick black marks and thin blue marks have been made on the photograph. The hand-drawn black marks show a circle above the windows and a line leading down to a rectangle with two dots in the center. The hand-drawn blue marks show lines circling and crossing out the black marks. There are also blue marks around the first floor window on the left.
Three black and white photographs of No. 43 Bull Street: Top (open area to the right of the structure); Middle (front gate from the sidewalk); Bottom (metal work in front yard). The three photographs are attached to a beige sheet of paper with two holes punched through the top of the paper and the top photograph. There is a white border around each of the photographs. The photographs each have a number on the bottom right corner of their border, labeling them from top to bottom as "1," "2," and "3." There is a handwritten note that identifies the board as "#795-10-10."
Three colored polaroid photographs of No. 62 Bull Street: Top (front facade/north elevation facing Bull Street); Middle (corner of north and east elevations); Bottom (corner of south and west elevations). The photographs are attached to a beige paper with two holes punched through the top. There are handwritten labels for each photograph that have been attached beneath each polaroid identifying the photograph.
Colored polaroid photograph of No. 58 Bull Street. The photograph shows a close up of the back of the structure with a porch and clothing drying outside. The word "Exisiting" was handwritten and an arrow was drawn on the photograph in black ink. The arrow is pointing at an object on the wall. There are four small holes on the top of the photograph.
Black and white photograph of a parking lot in Charleston, South Carolina. There is a white border around the photograph with two holes punched through the left side of the photograph. The photograph shows four cars in the parking lot. There are structures on both the left and right side of the photograph. There are trees and foliage behind the parking lot in the center of the photograph.
Two colored photographs of No. 8 George Street: Top (corner of front facade/north elevation and east elevation); Bottom (corner of front facade/north elevation and west elevation). There is a white border surrounding each of the photographs. The photographs are taped to a beige sheet of paper that has been hand cut. There are two holes punched through the top of the paper. The paper is labeled "8 George Street Storm Window Application" and lists the date, "March 15, 1982." The structure at No. 8 George Street is a two-and-a-half story Federal style structure. The pitched roof has three dormer windows projecting from the front facade that are symmetrical with the front of the structure. The first and second stories have five symmetrical openings. The front door on the first story is in the very center of the structure. There is a pediment above the front entryway. There are brick stairs leading to the platform that accesses the front door. The side elevation shows a symmetrical structure under the pitched roof. There is more to the structure that projects behind the structure that breaks that symmetry from a side angle.