Page 104 of the City Engineer's Plat Book with one plat. The plat shows lots located between Moultrie Street and Cunnington Street. It also shows Lemon Street, Lee Street, Price Street, and Magnolia Street. It also shows a plat labelled "Artilery Society" and another plat labelled "Magnolia Cemetery."
Page 141 of the City Engineer's Plat Book with four plats. Plat 1 features a lot and structures located between Lynch Steet and the Ashley River, near Broad Street. It also shows Comings Creek, a pond, and a lot labelled "Clark & Steinmeyer." Plat 2 shows lots and structures located near the intersection of College Street and Calhoun Street. Plat 3 shows a lot and structures in "the City of Charleston in Ward No. 9." Plat 4 shows lots on and near Society Street, between Meeting Street and King Street.
Page 46 of the City Engineer's Plat Book with five plats. Plat 1 shows lots on Butler Street, between Russell Street and Meeting Street. Plat 2 shows marshland and lots located near Huger Street and "Congress alias Pinckney Street." Plat 3 shows lots located near the intersection of "Rutledge formerly Congress Street" and Huger Street, and also shows Moultrie Street, Pinckney Street, and Legare Street. Plat 4 shows land near the intersection of King Street and Queen Street and several buildings. Plat 5 shows lots between "Hunter now Line" Street, and "Elliot St. now Spring St.," and also shows Rutledge Avenue and Boigard Street.
Page 6 of the City Engineer's Plat Book with three plats. Plat 1 shows a lot on the Ashley River. Plat 2 shows lots on Friend Street located between Broad Street and Tradd Street. Plat 3 features lots on King Street and includes a lot labeled "Orphan House Lot."
Map of the city of New York as it was in the years 1742-1744, including the first Mill Street Synagogue of Congregation Shearith Israel. Lithograph by George Hayward after an original drawing by David Grim. Published in D. T. Valentine's Manual of the corporation of the city of New York for 1854.
The Robert F.W. Allston Account Book, 1853-1855, records the numerous payments, receipts, debts and purchases and yearly crop information for Chicora Wood, Waverly and Nightingale Hall Plantations. Also included in the book are sections on births, deaths and marriages for enslaved people, writing down the first name of the men and women who married.
The 1854 Samuel Wilson journal is a Miller's Planters & Merchants Almanac repurposed as a journal. The journal contains handwritten meterological observations, weekly reports of yellow fever deaths, mortality tables, deaths of slaves including murder, notes on family matters, fires, hurriances and other events that took place in Charleston in the year 1854.
Plat of 202 acres in St. James Goose Creek belonging to James Headright. Details include trees on the property line and the names of neighboring property owners. Names associated with this plat are James Headright.