Page 235 of the City Engineer's Plat Book with four plats. Plat 1 features a proposed right-of-way through Chicora Park, and shows a state road, Clements Avenue, Pine Avenue, and a label reading "U. S. Navy Yard." Plat 2 shows land located near the intersection of Grove Street and Rutledge Avenue, with one plot labeled "Trustees of the Endowment Fund of the Charleston Library Society." Plat 3 shows lots, structures, and marshland located on and near the Ashley River, north of Congress Street. the fourth plat is a pencil-sketched map showing land located near the intersection of Rutledge Avenue and Grove Street.
The 1880-1930 Year Book Index for the City of Charleston is an alphabetical list of subject and name entries pointing to the individual City of Charleston Year Books published between 1880 and 1930. The bound volume includes two separate indexes. The first is a published 1880 to 1901 index compiled by George H. Holmes of the Charleston Bar Association and printed locally by Lucas-Richardson Lithograph and Printing Company. The 1900 to 1930 index was compiled by Joseph C. Barbot, Clerk of Council. The Barbot index was never published and appears in typewritten manuscript form with handwritten corrections and editions.
A report from the mayor, city council, and various governmental departments of Charleston, South Carolina for the year 1902. The 1902 Year Book opens with an address from Charleston City's mayor, J. Adger Smyth, followed by reports from various departments.
The College of Charleston Magazine is a monthly publication released by the College of Charleston's Chrestomathic Society during the academic year. This volume is comprised of the bound together publications from the months of October 1902-June 1903.
This album is comprised of photographs of Gertrude Sanford Legendre and other members of her family, including her grandfather, Stephen Sanford, her mother, Ethel Sanford, her siblings, Stephen and Sarah Jane Sanford, her husband, Sidney Legendre, and her brother-in-law, Morris Legendre.
Transaction number 9 of the Huguenot Society of South Carolina offers valuable information on the members of the society, president addresses, genealogy, and history of the society.