5" X 7" image with caption at bottom, front: 'General Marion's Oak, Ingleside.' On envelope found with glass negative: 'Genl Marion's Tree, Ingleside, S.C.'
3 1/4" X 4 1/4" image of White Hall plantation, showing a one-story house (or large outbuilding) with pitched roof. Front porch has columns that run the length.
5" X 7" image of an oak tree on Comingtee Plantation. A person - possibly a woman - stands beneath it. From list found with glass negatives: '15 Coming Tee.'
4 3/4" X 6 3/4" image of Pine Grove Plantation. The main house has a portico with a porch and wooden railing that extends on either side. The stairway with wide concrete banisters ascends to the porch. The house is partially obscured by a large oak tree.
8" X 5" image with "The Wedge - Santee River. Mr. Lucas - Planter. Photo 1908 by M.B. Paine' handwritten on reverse. Photograph shows a side view of the front steps and porch. An unidentified woman is standing at the top of the steps.
8" X 10" image with caption at bottom, front: 'The Wedge, South Santee, built 1826.' Two men and a small child (boy?) are standing on the front porch. There are four other men in the front yard.
5" X 7" image of a large moss-draped oak tree in a field near a split rail fence. From list found with the glass negatives: '18 Coming Tee Robintation Tree -- a Ghost Tree.' Excerpt from Institute for Southern Studies, Vol.12. Winter 1965: "While on Comingtee names, there is the usual Ball ghost here, this one with the unusual name of the "Robintation Tree." It is a tree which the Negroes claim to be haunted and upon which they bestowed the name, but why "Robintation" no one seems to know. A picture of this tree appears in the illustrated article on Comingtee by Mrs. White and Mrs. Rose." An additional part of the legend is that there is an Indian chief buried at the foot of the tree. As long as the tree remains untouched, no serious harm would befall whoever lived on the property.