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

Old Shandon Historic District, Richland County (Columbia)
S1081774013021 S1081774013022 S1081774013023 S1081774013024 S1081774013025
814 Woodrow St. 822-824 Woodrow St. 900-904 Woodrow St. 908 Woodrow St. 912 Woodrow St.
S1081774013026 S1081774013027 S1081774013028 S1081774013029 S1081774013030
2710 Preston St. 2714 Preston St. 2715 Preston St. 2719 Preston St. 2726 Preston St.
S1081774013031 S1081774013032      
2727 Preston St. 2733 Preston St.

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The Old Shandon Historic District is historically significant as the first planned suburban community of Columbia. The houses, institutions, and businesses built in Shandon between the 1890s and the 1950s reflected the growing suburban landscape of the white middle class as it responded to changes in transportation, social issues, and increasing population and commercial development encroachment. Robert W. Shand, a prominent local attorney, formed the Columbia Land and Investment Company in 1889. The following year the company bought 305 acres east of Columbia for $24,000. Formerly rural farmland and woods owned earlier in the 1800s by Robert Start, a Revolutionary War soldier and early nineteenth century mayor of Columbia, this land was to be the first phase of the new town of Shandon, envisioned as an enclave from the busy life of the city as well as a resort and amusement center. The wide streets and generous lots of the area created a park-like setting that was intended to attract professional workers and their families from the urban center. Access to the offices and businesses of the city was provided by the extension of the city’s trolley line into the district. The district is a collection of fifty-one primarily residential properties, forty-two of which are contributing properties. Three buildings in the district are utilized for religious purposes. Representative architectural styles include Queen Anne, Bungalow, Craftsman, Colonial Revival, and Neo-Classical. Listed in the National Register September 2, 2003.

Most National Register properties are privately owned and are not open to the public. The privacy of owners should be respected. Not all properties retain the same integrity as when originally documented and listed in the National Register due to changes and modifications over time.

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