The Huguenot Society of South Carolina's Transactions include articles about the organization's financial records, member memorials, and Huguenot genealogy and history.
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 1914-April 1915.
The Allston-Pringle Plantation Account Book is a bound volume recorded by Adele Petigru Allston and later her daughter, Elizabeth Waities Allston Pringle, for White House, Chicora Wood, and Greenfield Plantation. The book records the financial accounts for the male and female laborers on the properties and documents their expenses and wages in 1867. The end pages of the book, appearing upside down, were used by Elizabeth W.A. Pringle to record daily entries of the tasks performed by laborers in 1913-1914. Also found inside the volume is a loose sheet of paper listing Adele P. Allston's expenses in 1873.
A story entitled “The Innocents at Home and the Furniture Fiend Abroad” written under her pen name, Patience Pennington, and intended to be the first in a series of “Peaceville Happenings.”
A report from the mayor, city council, and various governmental departments of Charleston, South Carolina for the year 1914. The Year Book opens with an address from the mayor, John P. Grace, followed by reports from various departments.
A black and white photograph of the Charleston Chamber of Commerce corn exhibit at the arcade mall in Columbia, South Carolina. The exhibit took place during the National Corn Show which was being held in Dallas, TX on February 10-24, 1914. A pennant reading, 'Charleston, SC' can be seen hanging in one of the windows among other patriotic decorations. Two men, W. McLeod Frampton and L.H. Mixson are in the photograph by the exhibit.
A typed and signed letter from [illegible] Devereux to the Board of Commissioners' attorney, E. J. Blank, regarding a proposed settling of bills and taxes between himself and the Board.
Black-and-white print with a scaled drawing of the façade of the Alte Synagoge (Old Synagogue) in Essen, as seen from Alfredistrasse. From Die neue Synagoge in Essen a.d. Ruhr, published Berlin: Ernst Wasmuth A.G.