Robert Mills Manor
{{short description|Historic house in South Carolina, United States}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}
{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Robert Mills Manor
| nrhp_type =
| image = 75 Beaufain.jpg
| caption = The housing units at 75 Beaufain St. were built partly of brick salvaged from demolished buildings on the site.
| location = Bounded by Queen, Smith, and Logan Sts.; including Cromwell Alley, Wilson St., and portions of Franklin St., Charleston, South Carolina
| coordinates = {{coord|32|46|40|N|79|56|15|W|display=inline,title}}
| locmapin = South Carolina#USA
| area =
| built = 1939
| architecture =
| added = September 2021
| refnum = 100006991
}}
The Robert Mills Manor is housing complex located in Harleston Village in Charleston, South Carolina that is included on the National Register.
History
Plans for a new housing complex began in May 1935 when the Public Works Administration decided to allocate $1.5 million to Charleston to clear slums and redevelop the land with new housing.{{cite news |title=$1,500,000 Given City to Improve Slum Conditions |work=News and Courier |date=May 29, 1935 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=1 |language=English}} The affordable rent was to pay off the cost of the project over 40 years.
{{multiple image
| align = left
| total_width = 400
| footer = Three houses were retained for architectural merit.
| image1 =59 Beaufain.jpg
| caption1 = 59 Beaufain St.
| image2 = 63 Beaufain.jpg
| caption2 = 63 Beaufain St.
| image3 = 1 Wilson.jpg
| caption3 = 1 Wilson St.
}}
The area included in the project was densely filled with dilapidated wooden houses with a few brick houses but also several large public buildings. At first, the city's new Charleston Housing Authority planned to demolish the old Medical College, the Old Charleston Jail, and the Jenkins Orphanage (which operated out of the old Marine Hospital).{{cite news |title=Jail, Orphanage to Be Razed |work=News and Courier |date=January 20, 1938 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=14 |language=English}} In January 1938, a third set of plans were submitted by city officials which would have demolished the Old Charleston Jail (except for the wall around the yard), would have used the ruins of the old Medical College (at the northeast corner of Franklin and Queen Sts.) as a recreation building, and would have converted the old Marine Hospital into apartments.{{cite news |title=3d Housing Plan Is Reported Now |work=News and Courier |date=January 21, 1938 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=12 |language=English}}
At a meeting on September 15, 1938, the project was named in honor of Robert Mills, the South Carolina architect for several notable public buildings including the Marine Hospital and part of the Old City Jail.{{cite news |title=Area Extended in Beaufain St. |publisher=News and Courier |date=September 17, 1938 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=12 |language=English}}
Bids for the demolition of about seventy houses were opened in October 1938.{{cite news |title=Bids to Demolish 70 Houses Asked |work=News and Courier |date=September 29, 1938 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=14 |language=English}} The new buildings were designed by Housing Architects Associated. The only houses that were spared for architectural merit were 59 and 63 Beaufain St. and 1 Franklin St. (also known as 34 Magazine St.).{{cite news |title=Scene of Extension of Mills Manor Housing Development |work=Evening Post |date=November 26, 1940 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=1 |language=English}}{{cite news |title=3 Houses Standing in Housing Area |work=News and Courier |date=September 5, 1940 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=14 |language=English}}
File:Robert Mills Manor - Sanborn clip 1902.tif
Samuel Lapham VI was the principal architect for the project and considered it a good example of Charleston style.{{cite news |title=City Will Have Share in Funds |publisher=News and Courier |date=February 12, 1939 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=1 |language=English}} On February 8, 1938, a building permit for $432,032 was issued for the new construction.{{cite news |title=Housing Permit Issued |work=News and Courier |date=February 9, 1939 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=5 |language=English}} A groundbreaking ceremony was held on February 11, 1939, at which Nathan Straus, administrator of the United States Housing Authority, spoke.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Dorsey were the first occupants of the new development when they moved into 105-H Logan St. on October 16, 1939.{{cite news |title=Mills Manor Gets Tenants |work=Evening Post |date=October 16, 1939 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=2A |language=English}}
The project was planned as a Whites-only housing complex.{{cite news |title=2 Sites Approved for Negro Homes |work=News and Courier |date=October 15, 1938 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=12 |language=English}} In 1964, the National Urban League appealed to President Lyndon Johnson to desegregate Charleston's public housing on the basis of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.{{cite news |title=Appeal Is Filed on Segregated Housing in City |work=News and Courier |date=August 7, 1964 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=2B |language=English}}
Architecture
The original plans called for six two-story buildings with six apartments each and six eight-apartment buildings on the north side of Cromwell Alley. The project was extended between Pitt and Logan Sts. on the south side of Beaufain St. Four more eight-apartment buildings were to be built along Magazine St. between Wilson and Logan Sts. All of the buildings were to be of unpainted brick, using brick salvaged from the demolitions of existing buildings on the site.
The Preservation Society of Charleston opposed plans to alter the high brick wall that surrounded the Old Jail.{{cite news |title=Authority Asked to Spare Wall |work=News and Courier |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=13 |language=English |date=January 8, 1939}} The Charleston Housing Authority rejected the request and decided to substantially lower the height of the wall to allow more light into the yard of the Old Jail.{{cite news |title=Wall to Be Cut to Admit Light |work=News and Courier |date=January 17, 1939 |location=Charleston, South Carolina |page=10 |language=English}}
{{Commons category|Robert Mills Manor}}
References
{{reflist}}
{{National Register of Historic Places in South Carolina}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mills, Robert, Manor}}
Category:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in South Carolina
Category:National Register of Historic Places in Charleston, South Carolina