試す - 無料

The House That Hutchinson Built

Veranda

|

July - August 2023

How a GRASSROOTS EFFORT to save a South Carolina freedman's home laid bare the BEAUTY AND RESILIENCE of its family legacy

- JOE SUGARMAN

The House That Hutchinson Built

IN THE LATE 1930s, when Emily Hutchinson Meggett was a young girl growing up on South Carolina's Edisto Island, she would often walk the three-quarters of a mile from her family's house to her granduncle Henry Hutchinson's property. There, she and her siblings and cousins would play hopscotch or hide-and-seek.

Sometimes they'd pull a vine off a tree and use it as a jump rope. The adults, including Henry's wife, Rosa, would sit on the house's big wraparound porch, laughing and talking. The kids weren't allowed to partake in the adults' conversation, recalled Meggett, who passed away in April. "Parents back then, they didn't talk so much in the presence of children," she said. "You couldn't sit in their company. When company comes, you better be scarce."

From that porch, the Hutchinsons could survey their 10 acres of land and the marsh beyond. They raised chickens and hogs and grew fruit and nut trees near the house, but they relied mainly on sea island cotton for their income. On an adjacent plot, Henry, who had been born into slavery in 1860, operated one of the first Black-owned cotton gins on the island. He prospered by selling the refined product to markets in Charleston, about 45 miles to the northeast, until a boll weevil infestation in the 1920s decimated the island's crop.

Around 1885, Henry had built the Folk Victorian-style house using his own hands, with help from family members. The house was said to be a wedding gift for Henry's bride, Rosa Swinton.

Veranda からのその他のストーリー

Veranda

Veranda

Her Wildest DREAM

On England's windswept Isle of Wight, gardener Louise Ness creates a naturalist's haven alive with flora, fauna, and magical twilight vistas.

time to read

3 mins

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

SAN JUAN'S Rum Diary

A journey into the Puerto Rican capital's buzzy cocktail scene flows through a 19th-century rum producer, Spanish sherry barrels, and locals committed to blending heritage with innovation.

time to read

4 mins

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

Can red ever be chic in a bedroom?

NEVER too hot in all the wrong ways!

time to read

2 mins

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

DIAMONDS After Dark

Shake out the opera gloves: A sweep of new jewels set in white gold and platinum signals a return to evening etiquette for the coveted gems.

time to read

1 min

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

Late BLOOMERS

Landscape designer Zachary J. Westall conjures four verdant displays with flowers that revel in the moonlight.

time to read

1 mins

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

GLOW & Behold

From lustrous gilding to ocean-blue glazes, classical forms to wild silhouettes, the latest artisan light fixtures shine as veritable works of art.

time to read

2 mins

November - December 2025

Veranda

Golden Hours

ABOUT A YEAR AGO, design brand strategist Sean Yashar wrote an essay for his Sub-stack newsletter lamenting the disappearance of evening photography—images of atmospherically lit rooms—from design magazines like this one. There are several explanations for this, including a pivot away from the more glamorous, even disco-influenced aesthetic of the 1970s and '80s to a flatter, shadowless decorative point of view and, of course, the transformational evolution from analog to digital technology. Regardless of design preferences or technological advancements, our lives at home unfold across a wide range of light conditions, from dusk to dawn, with many of our domestic moments occurring after dark. It seemed a lost opportunity not to tell the stories of those “narrative-rich hours,” as Yashar called them, in VERANDA.

time to read

1 min

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

Terms of Enlightment

For the first column of his exclusive new series for VERANDA, designer MARKHAM ROBERTS bristles under the glare of modern lighting, calling for a return to softnessand simplicity-at home.

time to read

4 mins

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

BROADENING the HORIZON

A downtown doyenne trades her Charleston penthouse for a modernist glass home that floats above the Lowcountry marsh with a refreshing new perspective.

time to read

4 mins

November - December 2025

Veranda

Veranda

WRITTEN in the STARS

In New York, Michael S.Smith and Andrew Oyen build a new narrative for a 19th-century town house—with a little help from the cosmos.

time to read

4 mins

November - December 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size