- St. Andrew's Hall
St. Andrew's Hall, was a public building in Charleston,
South Carolina , on Broad Street. The hall served as headquarters for theSt. Andrew's Society of Charleston. It was also an important part of the social life of upper-class Charlestonians. It was used for balls, banquets, concerts, and meetings of organizations like the South Carolina Jockey Club and theSt. Cecilia Society . The hall could also be used for lodging, and both PresidentJames Monroe and GeneralMarquis de Lafayette stayed there.On
19 December 1860 , delegates from South Carolina met at St. Andrew's Hall to discuss possiblesecession from theUnited States . The following day, they met there again and voted 169 to 0 to secede. South Carolina delegates later ratified theConfederate Constitution there on3 April 1861 . South Carolina was the first state to seceed from the Union.The St. Andrew's Hall was destroyed during a Charleston fire on 11 and
12 December 1861 .References
* Calore, Paul. (2002). "Naval Campaigns of the Civil War". Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.
* Edgar, Walter (1998). "South Carolina: A History". Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
* McInnis, Maurie D. (2005). "Politics of Taste in Antebellum Charleston". University of North Carolina Press.
* Moise, Warren (2003). "Rebellion in the Temple of Justice: The Federal and State Courts in South Carolina During the War Between the States". Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse, Inc.
* Sketch of The St. Andrew's Hall is from the South Carolina Historical Society in Charleston on Chalmers Street
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