Pyszka, K., Fulmer, N., Hay, M. and McNabb, K. (2013). ...a small but convenient house of brick': a tale of the St Paul's parsonage house, Hollywood, South Carolina. Church Archaeology 15. Vol 15, pp. 47-54. https://doi.org/10.5284/1081955. Cite this via datacite

Title
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Title:
...a small but convenient house of brick': a tale of the St Paul's parsonage house, Hollywood, South Carolina
Issue
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Issue:
Church Archaeology 15
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Series:
Church Archaeology
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Volume:
15
Page Start/End
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Page Start/End:
47 - 54
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Downloads:
churarch015_047-054_pyszka.pdf (2 MB) : Download
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ADS, CC-BY 4.0 or CC-BY 4.0 NC.
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence icon
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International Licence
DOI
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.5284/1081955
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Journal
Abstract
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Abstract:
In 1707 ‘a small but convenient House of Brick’ (SPG, St Paul’s Vestry to SPG Secretary, January 20, 1715) was built and made ready for the newly arrived missionary of St Paul’s parish. In late July of 1715 it was burned during the Yamasee Indian War and never rebuilt. Other than that, very little was known from the historical records about this parsonage or others from this early Colonial period in the Carolinas. Early 18th-century structures in South Carolina are rare, and parsonages even more rare. This parsonage site is the only known early 18th-century Anglican parsonage location in the state. Therefore, the site offers insight into two aspects of early South Carolina history that have been under researched – early 18th-century architecture and the lives of the early Anglican missionaries. Here, using multiple lines of evidence, we will provide architectural interpretations, as well as present data supporting the hypothesis that the structure we have located archaeologically is indeed the St Paul’s parsonage.
Author
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Author:
Kimberly Pyszka
Nathan Fulmer
Maureen Hay
Kalen McNabb
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
2013
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ADS Archive (ADS Archive)
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Created Date
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30 Sep 2020