The Lost Architecture: June 2020 Edition

The answer is 33 Hayne Street. Dating from the 1850s, this building four-stories with terra cotta windows and cornice ornaments that became popular in Charleston in the years prior to the Civil War. The ground level had a true iron front, possibly a post-war addition, and the engaged columns with Corinthian capitals, the consistent bracketed entablature flanked by the faces of maidens, were a true reflection of the period. It served a variety of purposes over the years: O'Neill & Sons Boots and Shoes, Thompson-Miller Hardware Company, the facilities for the Geer Drug Company, Corvette's Refrigeration Company, Charleston Lithographing Co, and the Startles Club. It was also vacant for several years at a time. The building survived hurricane Hugo in 1989 but was torn down in 1990. (“Building Shows Victorian Influence,” News & Courier, 1969; “33 Hayne Street,” Ronald Ramsey, 1990.)