MYSTERY PHOTO: Livers and gizzards

You can pretty much guarantee that this building wouldn’t be found outside of the South.  This one is in South Carolina, but where?  Send your best guess to editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  And don’t forget to include your name and the town in which you live.  And if you’ve got a clever mystery photo for our readers, send it to the same address (Try to stump us!)

Our previous Mystery Photo

Last week’s mystery, “Rear view,” was provided by longtime reader Don Clark of Hartsville.  It shows the 1890s-era St. James-Santee Episcopal Church in McClellanville.  

Among those who identified the church were Jay Altman of Columbia; Bill Segars of Hartsville; Allan Peel of San Antonio, Texas; George Graf of Palmyra, Va.; Jim McMahon of Charleston; Chris Brooks and Jeri Oates, both of Mount Pleasant; Lasonya Blake of McClellanville; Marnie Huger of Richmond, Va.; Annie Smiley of Adams Run; and Sandra McWethy

Segars said the chapel of ease was a “40’X60′ Carpenter Gothic style building built by Paul B. Lucas in 1890 for a cost of $560.  Alexander Hume Lucas designed the building, which is covered with hand drawn black cypress shingles.”

Peel shared, “According to an article in the SC Picture Project here … ‘it was the sixth church built within the St. James-Santee Parish and became the primary church after the Civil War, when rice plantations along the Santee, which depended upon slave labor, were abandoned and former planters moved to more central locations such as McClellanville.’”

  • Send us a mystery:  If you have a photo that you believe will stump readers, send it along (but make sure to tell us what it is because it may stump us too!)   Send it along to  editor@charlestoncurrents.com.
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