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

Hobcaw Barony, Georgetown County (U.S. Hwy. 17, Georgetown vicinity)
S1081772203601 S1081772203602 S1081772203603 S1081772203604 S1081772203605
Hobcaw House
Facade
Hobcaw House
Right Oblique
Hobcaw House
Rear Elevation
Hobcaw House
Complex
Playhouse
Hobcaw House
Complex
Kennel
S1081772203606 S1081772203607 S1081772203608 S1081772203609 S1081772203610
Hobcaw House
Complex
Superintendent's
House
Hobcaw House
Complex
Smokehouse
Hobcaw House
Complex
Hobcaw Gate
Bellefield House
Facade
Bellefield House
Right Rear Oblique
S1081772203611 S1081772203612 S1081772203613 S1081772203614 S1081772203615
Bellefield House
Interior
Sunroom
Bellefield House
Garage Complex
Garage
Bellefield House
Stable Complex
Stable
Bellefield House
Stable Complex
Kennel
Vereen House
Facade

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(Bellefield Plantation) Hobcaw Barony is a 15,680-acre tract that includes buildings, structures, landscape features and sites associated with the continuing use of the land from ca. 1730 until 1943. Individual components, such as buildings, roadways, cemeteries, canals and embankments, reflect the use of the property over time. They illustrate the evolution of lower Waccamaw Neck from the development of rice plantations, through the antebellum period of concentrated rice cultivation, to the post-Civil War conversion of former plantations to winter resorts where natural and cultural landscapes were conserved for duckhunting and entertainment. Hobcaw House was built in 1930, and retains a high degree of integrity of design, materials, and workmanship throughout. Its architecture is a good example of the popular Colonial Revival influence that was supplanting the rustic style of earlier hunting club lodges. The house was designed by the Columbia firm Lafaye and Lafaye. Designs of buildings and landscaping at the Hobcaw House and the Bellefield House complexes are typical of properties that were constructed or reused by hunting plantation owners for themselves and their employees. The entire site includes 42 contributing buildings, 53 contributing sites, and 25 contributing structures. Numerous outbuildings include such examples as various barns, pumphouses, various sheds, cottages, slave settlements/cabins, and a church. The source of the name lies in the 1718 royal grant to John, Lord Carteret, a “barony” of 12, 000 acres on the southern portion of Waccamaw Neck, called Hobcaw Point. Between 1766 and 1767 the property was surveyed, divided, and sold as several parcels. Listed in the National Register November 2, 1994.

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