Adamagan
Ancient centre of Aleuts. Around 1 100 BC – 100 AD there lived up to 1000 people. There were built more than 250 subterranean houses and numerous storage pits.
Fig Island shell rings
A group of shell rings – ring-shaped shell middens that are up to 6 meters high. The largest ring has a diameter of some 40 m. These mounds were made some 4400 – 3600 years ago. This might be the most complex system of shell rings in North America.
Hampton Plantation
Historic plantation house that was built in 1735-1790 (or 1791). This wooden house is designed in the Georgian style.
Millford Plantation
Magnificent plantation house in the Greek Revival style. It was constructed in 1839-1841 by the Manning family, one of the largest slaveholders of the period.
Beaufort Historic District
In this town have been preserved several neighborhoods with numerous magnificent homes and gardens from the 19th century.
Brookgreen Gardens
The first formal sculpture garden in the USA, developed by the famed sculptor Anna Hyatt Huntington in the 1930ies.
Drayton Hall
The oldest unrestored plantation house in the United States. It was built sometime around 1738 in the Palladian style. Now it serves as a museum of plantations.
Aiken-Rhett House
Historical city house that was built in 1820 by the merchant John Robinson, one of the best-preserved townhouse complexes in the United States. It contains also the historical slave quarters. Now here is a museum.
Avenue of Oaks, Boone Hall
Outstanding avenue of enormous oaks. Avenue is more than one kilometer long and leads towards one of the oldest plantations in the United States – Boone Hall. Planting of the avenue was completed in 1843.
Boone Hall Plantation and Gardens
One of the oldest existing plantations in the United States, founded in 1681. The stately plantation house was built in 1935-1936 in a Colonial Revival style. Stories about ghostly apparitions around the kiln of the plantation. A famous feature of the park is Avenue of Oaks – more than one kilometer long, gorgeous avenue of moss-covered oaks.