Inscription
On December 9, 1773, the first Chamber of Commerce in the City of Charleston was organized on Broad Street at Mrs. Swallow's Inn. John Savage was its first President. After the Revolution and six months after Charleston was incorporated, the Chamber was reorganized. Of the postwar presidents, Alexander Gillon and John Lewis Gervais each served for a year, Edward Darrell for a number of years.
The Charleston Chamber of Commerce was organized in 1773 in a tavern near the eastern end of Broad Street. For many years after the Civil War, the Chamber occupied the Riggs Building, formerly at East Bay and Broad. It was later located on Meeting Street, and from 1916 to 1966, it occupied the Old Bank Building at 50 Broad Street.
Its present home is the old West Point Rice Mill, built in 1861. Erected by Governor Robert Gibbes Chapter Colonial Dames XVII Century, 1970
Location
Sources
More markers in Charleston
Battle of Lenud’s Ferry
Here, on May 6, 1780, Col. A. M. White was routed by Tarleton with the loss of 2 officers and 36 men killed and wounded and 7 officers...
Mepkin Plantation
Home of Henry Laurens, born in Charleston in 1724, died at Mepkin in 1792.
Biggin Church Ruins*
Moncks Corner, SC
(Front) These ruins are all that remains of Biggin Church, built soon after the American Revolution as the parish church of St. John’s...
Quenby Bridge
Huger, SC
At this bridge, on July 17, 1781, British forces under Col. Coates, who was retreating from Moncks Corner, encountered pursuing Americans...
Pompion Hill Chapel
Huger, SC
One quarter mile north, the first Church of England edifice outside Charleston was erected of cypress in 1703, largely through the...
