Inscription
(Front) The Bank of Hampton, built in 1892, was the first bank organized in Hampton and an important part of the rapid growth and development of the county seat from the 1890s to the mid-1920s. It was designed by Vincent Joseph Fontaine, a French-born architect who moved to S.C. after the Civil War.
This two-story building, with its raised brickwork, segmental arches, and stepped parapet, is a good example of the Italianate influence in commercial buildings of the period. (Reverse) This building housed the Bank of Hampton on the first floor and law offices on the second floor for more than thirty years.
Though the bank closed in 1926, the second floor housed law offices into the 1960s. The building was donated to the Town of Hampton in 1987, and a town museum opened here in 1989. Now home of the Hampton Museum & Visitors’ Center, it was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2001. Erected by the Hampton Museum & Visitors’ Center, 2010
Location
Sources
More markers in Hampton
Hampton County
Hampton, SC
Established February 18, 1878, once a part of Beaufort District.
Town of Brunson
Brunson, SC
On November 7, 1872, a post office was established in this community, named for William E. Brunson, Sr., who donated the site.
Miles Mcsweeney Home Site
Hampton, SC
On this site stood the home of Miles Benjamin McSweeney (1854-1909), first governor of South Carolina from Hampton County.
Lawtonville Church [first Marker]
Estill, SC
This Baptist Church, constituted in March 1775, was first situated on Pipe Creek in upper St. Peter's Parish near the Savannah River.
Morrison Academy
Just W Of Estill, SC
In old Lawtonville Community, across from this site, was the first Morrison Academy, a oneroom elementary and college preparatory school.
