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Washington Monument
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Theater
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St. Phillips
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Mills Vault
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Charleston:
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Charleston: Young-Motte House, 1770, Greek Revival pedimented gable and tripartite window are later Greek Revival alterations
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Charleston: Young-Johnson House, 1770, three-story brick dwelling
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Charleston: Wilson-Sottile House, 1891, most exuberant Queen Anne in city
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Charleston: William Mason Smith House, 1821, Regency-style by William Jay with three different types of piazza columns
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Charleston: Willaim Vanderhorst House, 1740, one of earliest single houses with same entrance for 250+ years
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Charleston: White Point Gardens
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Charleston: White Point Gardens, public space since 1837, live oaks planted 1863, Moultrie statue erected 2007
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Charleston: Washington Park, 1818,
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Charleston: Villa Margherita, 1895, early Beaux Arts around Neoclassical
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Charleston: USS Yorktown, the "Fighting Lady" sunk the largest battleship in World War II
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Charleston: US Post Office, 1896, Renaissance Revival with SC grey granite features rusticated quoins
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Charleston: US Custom House, 1870, all marble, laced with Corinthian columns
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Charleston: Unitarian Church, 1787 with major additions
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Charleston: Union Insurance Company Building, 1819, Tuscan pilasters and belt coursing on one of city's earliest office buildings
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Charleston: Tradd Street, earhtquake bolts show houses built before 1888
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Charleston: Tradd Street, 1770
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Charleston: Thomas Rose House, 1735, early merchant house
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Charleston: Thomas Heyward House, 1803, detailed brickwork in quoins and window headers
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Charleston: The Battery, "Confederate Defenders of Charleston" by Hermon Atkins MacNeil
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Charleston: Sword Gate at 32 Legare
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Charleston: Stevens-Lather House, 1843 with 1870 makeover
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Charleston: State Bank of South Carolina, 1853, Renaissance Revival brownstone
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Charleston: State Bank of South Carolina Building, dissimilar lion-headed keystones above each first floor window
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Charleston: St. Philip's Episcopal Church, steeple added ten years after 1838 opening by E.B. White
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Charleston: St. Philip's Episcopal Church, 1838, third building for oldest congregation in SC, Tuscan porticos on three sides