Pritchard, Paul, Shipyard

National Register Listing
Street Address:
Address Restricted (Charleston County)
Alternate Name:
State Shipyard; Rose's Shipyard; Begbie & Manson's Shipyard

NRHP Nomination

Record Number:
S10817710084
Description and Narrative:
(State Shipyard; Rose’s Shipyard; Begbie & Manson’s Shipyard) This unspoiled site is one of the first shipyards in South Carolina. It was granted to George Dearsley, a Lord Proprietor’s deputy, and was in operation as early as 1702, or earlier. The shipyard, under Dearsley’s ownership and operation, is the only pinpointed site of an attack made during the French and Spanish invasion of 1706, for in that year the invaders burned two of his ships and his warehouse. The shipyard passed through several owners before coming into the hands of the outstanding shipbuilders John Rose and James Steward. In 1778 Paul Pritchard acquired the shipyard just in time for it to be sold to the commissioners of the South Carolina Navy later that same year. It is therefore the site of South Carolina’s only state shipyard, having been acquired to convert merchant ships into men of war during the Revolution. After the Revolution, it was sold back to Pritchard who with his son operated it until 1831. The shipyard was sold for debt in 1831 and never operated again. Listed in the National Register September 17, 1974.
Period of Significance:
1778;17th century;18th century;19th century
Level of Significance:
National
Area of Significance:
Archeology: Historic - Non-Aboriginal;Commerce;Military
National Register Determination:
listed
Date of Certification:
September 17 1974