House on site affected by the construction of the Crosstown. Address: 190 Spring Street. Surveyor notations on back of photo: "Dkt.: 10.524. Property owner: E.H. Heidman, Est. Tract: 18. Station: 24± Lt. (Spring Street). Date: Oct. 13, 1964. Portion in R/W to be removed." [See collection description for explanation of surveyor notations.]
House on site affected by the construction of the Crosstown. Address: 22 Wescott Street. Surveyor notations on back of photo: "Dkt.: 10.524. Property owner: Ida J. Gantt. Tract: 10. Station: 61+20 Lt. Date: Oct. 13, 1964." [See collection description for explanation of surveyor notations.]
Letter writer, a possible family member of the recipient, writes to J. Drayton Grimke Jr. about deer hunting with "Halliday" and the 500 acres of land in his own possession. Letter includes addressed envelope.
Letter from James B. Edwards, Governor of South Carolina, to Septima P. Clark regardin the Advocacy Committee of the South Carolina Development Disabilities Council.
Correspondence from Courtney Siceloff of the Commission on Civil Rights to J. Arthur Brown regarding a meeting with the South Carolina Advisory Committee.
Correspondence from John H. Ball, Chief of Police, to J. Arthur Brown, Committee and Better Racial Assurance, regarding Detective Corporal Eugene Frazier.
Letter to Jane L. Raisin from her husband, Jacob S. Raisin, regarding his travels abroad. The letter, sent from Jerusalem, describes Raisin's joy in receiving letters from home, his first days in Jerusalem, visiting The Wall and other historic and religious places around the city, meeting other rabbis and "Miss Szold," and being home sooner than expected.
A handwritten, two-page letter from Emma Alston to her husband, Charles, in which she describes life at their new farm in Greenville. She recounts the food and supplies that they have bought and requests that Charles brings various objects from their plantations.
Two colored photographs of No. 17 Charlotte Street: Top left (structure located at the corner of Charlotte Street and Alexander Street); Bottom right (corner of front facade/south elevation and east elevation). The photographs are taped to a beige sheet of paper with two holes punched through the top. The photograph of No. 17 Charlotte Street is labeled "17 Charlotte St." The photograph of the neighboring structure is labeled "Corner of Charlotte and Alexander." The structure at No. 17 Charlotte Street is a two-and-a-half story Charleston Single style structure with a two story piazza. The exterior of the structure consists of white horizontal paneling with a pitched roof. The first story exterior of the facade includes a bay window with a sloped roof. The entryway leading onto the piazza is covered by a curved covering above the door. There is a transom above the entryway door and below the covering.