Middleton Place
Middleton Place is a National Historic Landmark comprising America's oldest landscaped gardens, established in 1741, and the former rice plantation headquarters of the Middleton family, situated along the Ashley River in Charleston County, South Carolina.[1][2]
The property originated from land brought by Mary Williams as dowry upon her 1741 marriage to Henry Middleton, who developed the terraced gardens in the European style during the 1740s and expanded rice cultivation reliant on enslaved labor across thousands of acres.[2]
Generations of the Middleton family resided there, including Henry Middleton, president of the First Continental Congress, and his son Arthur Middleton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence; the plantation endured British occupation during the Revolutionary War and suffered devastation in 1865 when Union troops burned the main house and north flanker, leaving only ruins of the former and a rebuilt south flanker now serving as a house museum.[2][3]
Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1972 and transferred to the nonprofit Middleton Place Foundation in 1974 for preservation, the 110-acre site today features guided tours of the gardens, stableyards with demonstrations of 18th-century plantation activities, and efforts to document histories of both the Middleton family and the over 2,800 enslaved individuals who labored there from 1738 to 1865.[4][2]