Ralph Izard House

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The Ralph Izard is a pre-Revolutionary house at 110 Broad St., Charleston, South Carolina.{{cite news | title=Do You Know Your Charleston? | work=Charleston News & Courier | date=June 26, 1978 | author=Stockton, Robert}} Although the house is known as the Ralph Izard House, it was likely built by a former owner, William Harvey. The house was listed in the will of Izard of September 1757, but Izard had only acquired the parcel three months before his death.{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/dwellinghousesc00smitgoog | quote=dwelling houses of charleston. | title=The Dwelling Houses of Charleston, South Carolina | publisher=J.B. Lippincott Company | author=Smith, Daniel Elliott Huger | year=1917 | pages=249–250}}

In 1837, the house was sold to Joel Roberts Poinsett and Mary Poinsett. They held the house for more than twenty years before selling it to Judge Mitchell King, a municipal judge and trustee for the College of Charleston. Among his descendants who occupied the house was George D. Bryan, a mayor of Charleston.

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References

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Category:Houses in Charleston, South Carolina

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