Peachtree Plantation


  • Vicinity: N of McClellanville, near South Santee River
  • Travel Genus: Sight
  • Sight Category: Site

Located in the St James Santee Parish along the South Santee River, Peachtree Plantation stands as a ruin. Peachtree Plantation was once a two-story dwelling owned by the Lynch family, prominent rice planters and politicians in colonial South Carolina. Constructed between 1760 and 1762, Peachtree Plantation is a piano-noble style, Georgian Palladian house, with a raised English basement. Despite its current physical state, the house would have been one of the finest plantation dwellings in the South Carolina Lowcountry. The Peachtree tract was initially used as an indigo plantation soon converted to rice when the demand for indigo waned. The tract is particularly significant as the site where rice production was revolutionized with the invention of the water-powered rice mill. The house was built for Thomas Lynch Sr., a prominent wealthy planter and politician. The Lynch family was rewarded a tract of land in the Carolina Colony by King George II when they converted to the Church of England from Roman Catholicism. Lynch gifted the house to his son, Thomas Lynch Jr. for his wedding in 1772. Both of the Lynch men played an active role in the events preceding the American Revolution. Thomas Lynch Jr. was the second youngest signer of the Declaration of Independence at twenty-six years of age. Although the house lies in ruins, as result of a fire in 1840 and weathering multiple storms and neglect, substantial physical evidence remains that sheds light on the appearance and architectural significance of the structure. - US Library of Congress


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Timeline

Y/M/D Person Association Description Composition Food Event
Y/M/D Person Association Description Composition Food Event
1760/00/00 The Peachtree tract is initially used as an indigo plantation will be converted to rice when the demand for indigo wanes.
1762/00/00 Thomas Lynch Sr Home The main house at Peachtree Plantation is built, 1760-1762. Located in the St James Santee Parish along the South Santee River, it about a 10 hour by horse and carriage to Charles Town.
1772/00/00 Thomas Lynch Jr Thomas Lynch Sr gifts the Peachtree Plantation in St James Santee Parish Thomas Lynch Jr on the occasion of his marriage.
1787/00/00 Jonathan Lucas Jr Inventor John Bowman hires Jonathan Lucas to build a water mill for pounding rice at Peachtree Plantation. As the first water powered rice mill in the world, it will revolutionized rice production. Rice
1835/00/00 Stephen D Doar Owner John Bowman Lynch leases Peachtree to Stephen D Doar. Doar will not want to live in the main, but erect his own on the Peafield tract.
1840/00/00 The piano-noble style, Georgian Palladian, two-story house at Peachtree Plantation is destroyed in a fire. Ruined walls remain.

Data »

Particulars for Peachtree Plantation:
Area of Significance Agriculture
Organic compound Indigo
Area of Significance Invention
Criteria Person
Owner Private
Disposition Ruin
Sight Category Site




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