Saturday, August 20, 2016

North Charleston Living - Find Real Estate For sale ?





Real Estate Pros - Profile - Tabitha Trite - Agent

                            When choosing a Realtor, Tabitha Trite of Double -T- Realty group,
 in Summerville SC will help you through the entire buying process when finding a home for sale or
 help you with the professional standards you expect in a REALTOR to sell your home!!
Choose the right Real Estate Agent or Real Estate Broker in your area with HarmonHomes.com's
 Find a Pro. Realtors are the professionals to help you through the entire home buying or
 selling process.










Find Homes in NORTH CHARLESTON

Tabitha Trite, CNE, NAR,

    

Listing Specialist
843-480-5310
843-277-6683 
( 843-277-MOVE )
 843-480-5310





496 Bramson Court #200
Mt.Pleasant, SC 29464

Experience

As an agent who's an expert in this local area, I bring a wealth of knowledge and expertise about buying and selling real estate here. It's not the same everywhere, so you need someone you can trust for up-to-date information. I am eager to serve you. Here are some of the things I can do for you:
Find Your Next Home
You need someone who knows this area inside and out! I can work with you to find the right home at the right price for you, including all the neighborhood amenities that matter - not to mention the essential criteria you have for your ideal home
Sell a Home
When it's time to move, you need someone who will advertise your home, show to prospective buyers, negotiate the purchase contract, arrange financing, oversee the inspections, handle all necessary paperwork and supervise the closing. I can take care of everything you need, from start to close.
Consult on Home Selling Tactics
Oftentimes buyers don't visualize living in your home the way you do. I can make your home attractive to its ideal audience - which can help you get top dollar. Things like staging the home, making repairs or minor improvements, or even simply painting the walls can be the difference between a home resting on the market and one that's sold fast.

North Charleston Living

What It's Like to Live in Charleston

Get to know the sophisticated Southern city and find out why locals are proud to call the historic area home.
Charleston, South Carolina, is a hard city to leave. With its historical architecture, mild temperatures, amazing restaurants and sophisticated culture, it's no surprise that people come from all over the world to purchase a little slice of Southern charm and live the Charleston lifestyle.
Ned Brown, a Washington, D.C., native, found that out a few years ago when he visited the area. Recently, he bought a home on the peninsula on lower King Street. "I wanted a place as a respite from winter...somewhere exciting and elegant," said Ned. “The people in Charleston are interesting and doing great things, and there's a great sense of history."
Charleston, also known as the Holy City, prides itself on a rich American history. It was the site of the original Order of Secession singing and where Citadel Cadets fired the first shots of the Civil War.

What It's Like to Live in Charleston

Get to know the sophisticated Southern city and find out why locals are proud to call the historic area home.

Charleston, South Carolina, is a hard city to leave. With its historical architecture, mild temperatures, amazing restaurants and sophisticated culture, it's no surprise that people come from all over the world to purchase a little slice of Southern charm and live the Charleston lifestyle.
Ned Brown, a Washington, D.C., native, found that out a few years ago when he visited the area. Recently, he bought a home on the peninsula on lower King Street. "I wanted a place as a respite from winter...somewhere exciting and elegant," said Ned. “The people in Charleston are interesting and doing great things, and there's a great sense of history."

          Charleston, also known as the Holy City, prides itself on a rich American history. It was the site of the original Order of Secession singing and where Citadel Cadets fired the first shots of the Civil War.
The Holy City. There are hundreds of churches in the Charleston area, and the church steeples are prominent on the city's skyline. These church structures have also played a part in the city's long and rich history.
"Steeples were used as lighthouses, and the church bells and iron gates were melted down for cannons to aid the Confederacy,” said Fr. Gregory Wilson, rector at the Catholic Cathedral of St. John the Baptist. "The spires were actually used during the bombardment of the city to site cannons, and the story goes that St. Michael's steeple was even painted black at one time to make it difficult to see at night."

Charleston Tea Plantation

The Charleston Tea Plantation

Welcome to the Charleston Tea Plantation!  For tea lovers, we promise a once in a lifetime experience.  
We're the only tea plantation in North America* where you can see hundreds 
of thousands of tea bushes stretching out acre after acre for almost as
 far as the eye can see.  There is no admission charge. The only charge 
you will incur is a small one for the trolley tour.

The Bigelow family, William Barclay Hall and the staff of the plantation stand ready to
bring you the tea experience of your life.  We're located on picturesque 
Wadmalaw Island 
in the heart of the lowcountry just a few miles south of the historic city of Charleston.

In addition to our many acres of tea plants, we offer a very educational tour of our tea factory
 You get to walk the entire length of our tea production building where you can see all the 
equipment it takes to make tea.  Large TV screens along the glassed in 
gallery describe the entire process.  As mentioned, we also offer a 45 minute trolley ride
which makes a stop at our state of the art greenhouse.  Last but not least is our gift shop,
 stocked with more tea related items than you can possibly imagine.  
Last year some sixty five thousand people from all over the world came to visit us.  
We'd love to have you be one of them this coming year.

*There are many hundreds of tea plantations in the world.  
With the exception of the Charleston Tea Plantation, they're all located in 
Asia, Africa and South America, 
many thousands of miles from our shores.

North Charleston Living - Plantations

Plantations of North Charleston: 

From the 17th century until the Civil Warplantations cultivated commodity crops, such as rice and indigo. Some of the plantations located in what is now North Charleston were:


French Botanical Garden historical marker, located off Aviation Avenue
  • Archdale Hall Plantation – dating from 1680, Archdale Hall was located on the Ashley River. By 1783, it had grown to almost 3,000 acres (12 km2). Its primary crops were indigo and rice. The plantation was the longest family-owned plantation in South Carolina. It has since been redeveloped into the Archdale subdivision. (Archdale subdivision is not in corporate city limits of, but is surrounded by North Charleston)
  • Camp Plantation – dating from 1705, Camp Plantation covered around 1,000 acres (4.0 km2).
  • Elms Plantation – dating from 1682, Elms Plantation was founded by Ralph Izard. Its principal crop was rice. It covered nearly 4,350 acres (17.6 km2), stretching across parts of what are now the cities of Goose Creek and North Charleston. Charleston Southern University is located on part of the original plantation lands.
  • French Botanical Garden – established between 1786 and 1796, this small plantation/garden area of 111 acres (0.45 km2) was owned and maintained by the French botanist AndrĂ© Michaux. It was closed by Michaux's son in 1803. The garden was located near what is today the Charleston International Airport, and the parkway connecting Dorchester Road with International Boulevard is named in his honor.
  •                  Marshlands, Mons Repos and Retreat plantations – the Retreat Plantation dates from 1672 and the Marshlands Plantation dates from 1682. Mons Repos was developed around 1798. The land from all three plantations was acquired by the federal government for development of the Charleston Naval Base and Charleston Naval Shipyard. TheMarshlands Plantation's main house has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places, To preserve the house, it was moved to Fort Sumter Drive on James Island.
  • Oak Grove Plantation – dating from 1680, Oak Grove originally covered 960 acres (3.9 km2) along the Cooper River. By 1750, its owners had expanded the plantation to about 1,127 acres (4.56 km2).
  • Tranquil Hill Plantation – started in 1683, Tranquil Hill was originally known as White Hall Plantation, a name it would keep until 1773. Its principal crop was rice. It encompassed about 526 acres (2.13 km2). Since the late 20th century, it was redeveloped as the Whitehall residential subdivision.[10] 
  • Windsor Hill Plantation – established in 1701, Windsor Hill was an inland rice plantation that covered nearly 1,348 acres (5.46 km2); parts of the cities of Goose Creek and North Charleston now occupy some of this area.[11] General William Moultrie, victor at the Battle of Sullivan's Island in 1776 and governor from 1785–87 and 1792–94, was originally buried here. His remains were exhumed and reburied at Fort Moultrie on Sullivan's Island in 1977.[12] The Windsor Hill Plantation subdivision was developed on a portion of the eponymous plantation's property.
The large plantations were subdivided into smaller farms in the late 19th century as the urban population began moving northward. Due to the large labor forces of enslaved African Americans who worked these properties, the population of Charleston County in 1870 was 73 percent black; they were mostly freedmen. After the Civil War, phosphatefertilizer plants were developed, with extensive strip mining occurring between the Ashley River and Broad Path (Meeting Street Road). The main route for transportation of these phosphates eventually became known as Ashley Phosphate Road.

North Charleston Living - History

                 History Of North Charleston ;      
Prior to the 1600’s: 
The wilderness surrounded by various rivers that flow in and around the Lowcountry was inhabited by Tidewater Indians for thousands of years before Europeans arrived.  All were skilled hunters and thrived on the bounty of the land and waters.  Native Americans used the Broad Path, which followed the Ashley River, to trade with neighboring tribes.
1600’s:  Some Native American tribes provided assistance to English colonists as they searched the area to build settlements. Tribes including the Wando, Etiwan, Kiawah, and Sewee helped the English defend against Spanish raids.  The Stono and Kussoe tribes were known to threaten early settlers with attacks.  Homesteads and farms were established along the banks of the Ashley River and throughout the area.
1700’s:  Over 60 plantations were established between the Ashley and Cooper Rivers, such as Accabee, Archdale, Belmont, Elms, Windsor, Marshlands, Oak Grove, White Hall, Turnbull and others.   Great botanical and horticultural progress was made by Eliza Lucas Pinkney with the production of silk and indigo; Phillipe Noisette with the development of the internationally famous Noisette rose; and by Andre Michaux, the father of American Horticulture, who established a botanical garden (near what is now Aviation Ave.) and introduced new plants to the area such as camellias and mimosas. 
During the American Revolution (1775-1783):  The Broad Path became known as the Road to Dorchester (now Dorchester Road), used by British troops as the main road from their British Fort Dorchester to Charles Towne.  The Quarter House Inn, on that path, was established as a British garrison.                
1800’s:  Earliest railroad track lines were laid from Charleston to the North Area, near what is now Rivers Avenue.  Farming and lumbering were vital in the early 1800’s and the mining of phosphate for use in fertilizer created an economic boom after the Civil War.  Liberty Hill, the oldest neighborhood in the North Area, was established by freedmen who purchased land in and built homes and farms for their families circa 1864. In 1898, two plantations along the Cooper River were purchased to create Chicora Park, designed by the Olmstead Brothers, as a day destination for wealthy Charlestonians. 
The E.P. Burton Lumber Co. operated on 5,000 acres in the 1890s between the Charleston Naval Base and Goose Creek.  As the area was cleared and lumber cut.  Burton sold the land.  By 1912, portions of the tract had been sold to Oakdene Cotton Compress, Texaco, and the Read Phosphate Co.
1900-1972:  Chicora Park was purchased by the Navy and the Charleston Naval Yard was established in 1901.  The Shipyard boasted the largest pier and dry dock on the East Coast used for shipbuilding and repair prior to World War I.  The Naval Shipyard and Naval Base expanded even more during World War II and remained active until it was closed in January 1996.  For almost 100 years, the Naval Yard bolstered the economy and the development of North Charleston as a new city, drawn on planning principals of the progressive era.
Charleston Mayor R. Goodwyn Rhett headed a group of investors who organized the North Charleston Corp. and the Filbin Corp.  After they had purchased the Burton tract, WB Marquis of Olmsted Brothers Engineering Co. designed the proposed town.  In 1914, the North Charleston Development Corp was organized to construct houses for the area.  The first residents moved there in the same year.  It was about this time that the term “North Charleston” evolved.
By 1925, the North Charleston Corp and the Filbin Corp. had been reorganized as Charleston Farms.  It was absorbed by the North Charleston Co. in this year.
Following the financial panic of 1929, Joseph Franc bought control of the holding company.  He also bought an additional 44 acres of the tract, including Park Circle.
By 1930 there were only 2,000 residents in the north area and the nation was in a depression.  However, West Virginia Pulp and Paper Co. moved into the area creating many jobs and residential population increased.
A Public Service District was formed in 1934 to serve the area with street lights, water, sewerage, garbage disposal, and fire protection. Also in 1934 the federal Public Works Administration completed a community center and gymnasium at the North Charleston High School.
The population then was more than 4,000.  It rapidly grew in 1940 as World War II loomed ahead.  In 1942, the population jumped to more than 18,000 as the Navy Yard increased its personnel and the Army brought its Port of Embarkation there.  The military bases in North Charleston have brought prosperity to the area in both World Wars and the Korean and Vietnam conflicts.
After World War II was over, many servicemen continue to live and work in North Charleston enabling the industrial community to keep up its production.
The area of North Charleston sought to become a city as early as the 1940s.  Casper Padgett led one of the first incorporation attempts about 36 years ago.  The effort failed when the voters disclosed their opposition to the concept eight to one.
In the late 1950s, Arthur H. Burton led another group that hoped to rekindle interest in incorporation.  However, Burton met a major stumbling block in the SC State Constitution.  The constitution required voters approve a new city, and the North Area didn’t have that.
A constitutional amendment was required that would allow cities to incorporate with a majority of voters who go to the pools.  This amendment was finally granted in 1972.
North Charleston in 1961 tried again to incorporate and, in anticipation, even elected a mayor, F. C. Ott.  However the positive response was not enough.
The third effort for incorporation, in 1969, was headed by Rep. Robert W. Turner, the unopposed candidate for mayor of the new city.
It was after this unsuccessful attempt that John E. Bourne took up the struggle in 1971.
Bourne reduced the area voting for incorporation to four precincts where incorporation interest was high and where votes generally turned out to the pools.  The incorporators knew that if they could incorporate a smaller area they could then stat on annexation procedures for th rest of the North Area.  This effort made North Charleston a city.
1972:  The City of North Charleston was established as the 9th largest city in South Carolina on June 12, 1972 with John E. Bourne, Jr. as the first mayor.  By December, North Charleston became the 4th largest city in SC after annexing the Naval Base, Air Force Base, and the Charleston International Airport. Within one year the city population had increased from 22,000 to 53,000. 
1972-1982:  By July 3, 1975 the city became the 3rd largest city in the state.  On June 12, 1982 North Charleston had grown by 250 percent.  It had $15 million in capital investments; $1.95 million invested in parks and recreation facilities, and $2.28 million in economic development. 
1982-1996:  The City celebrated the opening of Northwoods Mall in 1986, this major retail shopping center helped to promote North Charleston as a state leader in retail sales. 
September 21, 1989 Hurricane Hugo hit, causing over $2.8 billion in damage to the South Carolina Lowcountry.  The physical and economic impact was devastating.
Bobby Kinard was elected as the second mayor of North Charleston in 1991.  Ken McClure assumed duties as interim mayor after Mayor Kinard’s resignation in 1994. 
In 1993, the C-17 Globemaster III aircraft squadron was established at the Charleston Air Force Base, providing military support across the world.
The North Charleston Coliseum opened in 1993 and the South Carolina Stingrays Hockey Team of the ECHL began to call North Charleston their home.
Mayor R. Keith Summey was elected in 1994 as the third mayor of North Charleston.  He has been re-elected during each election since 1994 and is now serving his fourth full term as mayor.
The Charleston Naval Base and Shipyard officially closed in 1996, ending an almost 100 year history as the largest employer of civilian workers in South Carolina.  Approximately $1.4 billion dollars of annual expenditures were lost due to the closure.
1996-present:  Hundreds of acres of land that made up the Charleston Naval Base and Shipyard reverted to the City of North Charleston after the base closure.  Private industry and businesses began to enter into leasing agreements for warehouses and office spaces.  
The North Charleston Performing Arts Center and the Charleston Area Convention Center opened in 1999.
The 400-acre Center Pointe development began in the early 2000’s and now includes Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club, Tanger Outlet Mall and other surrounding retail stores and nationally known restaurants.
The Noisette Community Plan was initiated in 2004 and promoted the revitalization efforts of North Charleston.  Political and community leaders, businesses, and area residents began to embrace the emphasis and promotion of preservation, sustainability, recreation, education, health care, cultural growth, providing a pleasant social atmosphere, and attracting new technical and environmental jobs.
North Charleston’s Riverfront Park was officially opened to the public on July 4, 2005, establishing a beautiful access to the vistas along the Cooper River with a large outdoor performance venue and picnic areas.  Later a fishing pier, boardwalk, and Naval Base Memorial site were added. North Charleston continues to lead South Carolina in retail sales, exceeding $6 billion dollars each year. 
Boeing Aircraft announced in 2009 that North Charleston would become the new home of the 787 Dreamliner Aircraft assembly and delivery prep center, providing thousands of new jobs in a world-wide market. North Charleston offers the largest number of hotel accommodations in the area, many new 4-star hotels are being added yearly to fill the need of visitors.