South Carolina Department of Archives and History
National Register Properties in South Carolina

Charleston's French Quarter District, Charleston County (Charleston)
S1081771006051 S1081771006052 S1081771006053 S1081771006054 S1081771006055
31 State St. Henry Seedorf
Tenements
32-34 State St.
Vigilant Fire
Company Building
33 State St.
Arnoldus Venning
House
35 State St.
36 State St.
S1081771006056 S1081771006057 S1081771006058 S1081771006059 S1081771006060
37 State St. 38 State St. John George
Mayer House
39 State St.
Vigilant Fire
Insurance Company
41 State St.
William Pritchard
Dove House
42 State St.
S1081771006061 S1081771006062 S1081771006063        
44 State St. 46A State St. 46B-C State St.

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(Lodge Alley) The French Quarter District is located in an area of the old walled city of Charleston where the French Huguenots once had warehouses and dwellings. Early Charleston merchants used the warehouses for their ships at the docks off East Bay Street. One of the oldest streets in Charleston, Lodge Alley is a visual example of Charleston’s Old World ties, exemplifying the definition of an ally as a city street but not a main thoroughfare. Lodge Alley still has a seaport look. Brick warehouses of Flemish and American bond bound each side of the ten-foot wide passage. The alley is paved in Belgian blocks - a local term for a brick shaped block of granite. The ten-foot width of Lodge Alley compares favorably with many of Charleston’s principal streets of the early 18th century, now impossibly narrow by modern standards. Lodge Alley also illustrates Charleston’s distinction as one of the cradles of Freemasonry in America. The alley takes its name from the Masonic Lodge situated on its course about midway from East Bay Street. This site was acquired as early as 1773, making it one of the oldest Masonic Lodges in the country. As part of the old walled city of Charleston, Lodge Alley and the French Quarter District are in an area which reflects not only three centuries of South Carolina history, but also three centuries important to the course of American history. Listed in the National Register September 19, 1973.

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