A walk in an old, historic neighborhood where time stands still in Daydreaming on the Porch

  • July 6, 2022, 9:26 p.m.
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  • Public

There are fields of dreams and also “neighborhoods of dreams,” places real and remembered where the golden age of childhood plays out in endless summers. And after that the passages of life for the individuals and families who live there for any length of time. For neighborhoods are the focal points of entire towns and cities and suburbs. And old neighborhoods are the most interesting of all.

There is such a historic neighborhood, called Hampton Park Terrace, not far from where I live and adjacent to Hampton Park, which has a long and fascinating history of its own. It was the site of a plantation in the late 18th century, a horse racing tract, a Union prisoner of war camp during the Civil War, and the location of the 1901 South Carolina Interstate and East Indian Exposition, a World’s Fair style year-long event. 

The park contains an abundance of live oaks as well as other old oak trees and gardens full of flowers year-round. I like to walk in the park and take pictures, and sometimes I’ll walk in the adjacent neighborhood and photograph houses, objects and scenes that interest me and stir my imagination.

The area was developed starting in the early 20th century. In doing some research on this neighborhood, I came across a fascinating article by a local historic preservationist entitled, Hampton Park Terrace: Charleston City’s Beautiful Neighborhood.

In it she wrote this: *…By 1915, almost half of the 251 lots had sold, and nearly 200 houses had been built by 1922. The neighborhood was located on the streetcar route, allowing residents to easily commute to work, and real estate ads boasted, “no more desirable location for a home could be imagined-close to the river, away from the noise and bustle of the city, on the Rutledge avenue [trolley] car line and close to the King street car line, bordering Hampton Park, beautiful now and to be doubly beautiful when plans now being worked out are completed, within sight of the Ashley River with its fresh salt breezes, and the whole area high and dry, sixteen feet above low water mark.”

Houses are situated on large lots along tree lined streets, and come in a range of plans and styles from Four-square Arts and Crafts, to late Queen Anne Victorian, bungalows to Colonial Revival, and even a few diminutive Freedman’s cottages along Huger Street…*

It’s so nice to step back in time while walking in this neighborhood and imagine what it was like living there in the days when you could take a trolly car downtown to visit the F.W. Woolworth dime store or buy a new pair of shoes at Kerrison’s Department Store. All gone now, but I remember visiting those stores in the 1960s and Woolworth’s before it closed in the mid-90s.

In summer, the pink, purple and white blossoms of numerous crape myrtle trees add bright colors to the summer streetscapes. In Spring there are azaleas, and in winter camellias.

There’s a settled, peaceful feeling about this old neighborhood. I get the same feeling when I drive through historic small towns in the South. There are the Main Streets and downtowns to explore briefly, then, if time permits, a drive in the historic residential districts surrounding the downtown, often full of old Victorian and Queen Anne style houses, much as you can see today in Hampton park Terrace, plus an eclectic mix of other styles.

The suburbs can’t compete with these enduring old neighborhoods, full of history with many touches of Americana. Through the lens of nostalgia, it seems like these historic neighborhoods in small towns and larger cities embody a more innocent age. Compared to the present, this may be true to some extent. Regardless, one can always imagine it to be so.

Hampton Park Terrace Neighborhood, Charleston, SC

https://www.flickr.com/gp/camas/3h2fBw


Jinn July 06, 2022

Gorgeous neighborhood !

Oswego Jinn ⋅ July 06, 2022

Oh, I love to look at all the old houses and dream I lived in one of them! 😊

Jinn Oswego ⋅ July 07, 2022

You did live in a very nice one !

Oswego Jinn ⋅ July 07, 2022

I did indeed. And in a very historic neighborhood. Mom’s house was designed by my brother and built in 1995, so it is actually a new house in an old section of town. And it had to look like an old historic house on the exterior to be approved. 😊

Jinn Oswego ⋅ July 07, 2022

Wow, it looked far older than that . It is lovely .

music & dogs & wine July 06, 2022

Ahhh love your pics, as always. You are so fortunate to have grown up in that area, so much history, and so beautiful!

Over here, I grew up in Orange County, CA. Not too much history here. Very few "old" homes. My boss actually lives in a house built in 1912. That's about as old as it gets here. There is about a 4 block square of "old houses" in Anaheim. Same with Orange, and Santa Ana, where they do have some old Victorians from the late 1800's, but they are far and few between. And it's a "ghetto" area nobody really wants to live in.

The house I live in now was built in 1965 and that is ancient for this area. Pretty much everything in my neck of the wood was built late 1980's, and predominately early 1990's.

There isn't a lot of beauty here. I envy you!

Oswego music & dogs & wine ⋅ July 07, 2022

California is much newer, but there must be more Victorian era homes? I am spoiled with all the very old houses in Charleston. I was walking in the historic district recently and noticed one house dated from 1730, and that’s not unusual.

I’m glad you enjoyed the pictures. I can walk for blocks and blocks if I want and find so many old houses and gardens.

music & dogs & wine Oswego ⋅ July 07, 2022

I think Northern California has MUCH more history than OC. My friend who lives in San Francisco lived in a building built in 1908, after the fire. It was a beautiful apartment! Lots of Victorians up there, but of course, most are after the fire, so not much older than that.

I think there are homes spotted around in OC and Riverside County that held up to all the reconstruction. Los Angeles County definitely has some older homes. But they aren't VERY old. Like 1920's mansions have survived. And those are more Spanish or Craftsman style homes.

There is an actual house "museum" in LA. I recall being about 10 years old, driving down the freeway with my dad and seeing these houses. I asked what they were and he said they were going to be destroyed but somebody moved them there so they could be preserved and people could visit them.

https://heritagesquare.org/

I went once, but we didn't get there at the right time, we caught the tail end of a tour. They let us join and we just got to see the inside of one house. I really loved how all the houses looked though, I took a lot of nice pictures.

There are probably some nice houses in San Diego County. But really, I think the only ones that survived everything are the super expensive mansions that I could only dream of living in.

California sucks for nice old houses. Not a lot to choose from, and if you want one, you need to be SUPER rich.

Deleted user July 07, 2022

I can imagine how you enjoy that walk!
So good that historic sites are often protected and preserved. Unfortunately it also happens that thoughtless city authorities decide to replace old buildings and places with new ones because restoration costs too much. Such a shame that also valuable nature often disappears in this way.
Thanks for sharing this and for the beautiful pictures!

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