The Shell Builders: Tabby Architecture of Beaufort, South Carolina, and the Sea Islands

$34.99

The Shell Builders: Tabby Architecture of Beaufort, South Carolina, and the Sea Islands

By: Brooker, Colin (Author)

2020 | Hardcover

9781643360713 / 164336071X

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Beaufort, South Carolina, is well known for its historical architecture, but perhaps none is quite as remarkable as those edifices formed by tabby, sometimes called coastal concrete, comprising a mixture of lime, sand, water, and oyster shells. Tabby itself has a storied history stretching back to Iberian, Caribbean, Spanish American, and even African roots–brought to the United States by adventurers, merchants, military engineers, planters, and the enslaved.

Tabby has been preserved most abundantly in the Beaufort area and its outlying islands, (and along the Sea Islands all the way to Florida as well) with Fort Frederick in 1734 having the earliest example of a diverse group of structures, which included town houses, seawalls, planters’ homes, barns, agricultural buildings, and slave quarters. Tabby’s insulating properties are excellent protection from long, hot, humid, and sometimes deadly summers; and on the islands, particularly, wealthy plantation owners built grand houses for themselves and improved dwellings for enslaved workers that after two hundred-plus years still stand today.

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