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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Susan_Pringle_Frost
rdf:type
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Susan Pringle Frost
rdfs:comment
Susan Pringle Frost (January 21, 1873 – October 6, 1960) was the organizer and first president of the Preservation Society of Charleston. She was a leader in the suffrage movement in Charleston, South Carolina and an important proponent of the preservation of Charleston's historic buildings. Susan Pringle Frost was born in 1873 to Francis LeJau Frost and Rebecca Brewton Pringle in the Miles Brewton House, a house which her family had owned since 1765. Frost died at the Miles Brewton House on October 6, 1960 and was added to the South Carolina Hall of Fame in 2015.
foaf:name
Susan Pringle Frost
dbp:name
Susan Pringle Frost
foaf:depiction
n16:57_Broad.jpg
dbo:birthPlace
dbr:Miles_Brewton_House
dbo:deathPlace
dbr:Miles_Brewton_House
dbp:deathPlace
Miles Brewton House, 27 King Street, Charleston, South Carolina
dbo:deathDate
1960-10-06
dbp:birthPlace
Miles Brewton House, 27 King Street, Charleston, South Carolina
dbo:birthDate
1873-01-21
dcterms:subject
dbc:American_suffragists dbc:Historical_preservationists dbc:People_from_Charleston,_South_Carolina dbc:1960_deaths dbc:1873_births
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dbc:American_suffragists dbc:People_from_Charleston,_South_Carolina dbc:Historical_preservationists dbc:1960_deaths dbr:Rainbow_Row dbr:Miles_Brewton_House dbr:Joseph_Manigault_House dbr:Preservation_Society_of_Charleston dbc:1873_births n18:57_Broad.JPG
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n16:57_Broad.jpg?width=300
dbp:birthDate
1873-01-21
dbp:birthName
Susan Pringle Frost
dbp:children
None
dbp:deathDate
1960-10-06
dbp:occupation
historic preservationist, real estate agent
dbp:spouse
None
dbo:abstract
Susan Pringle Frost (January 21, 1873 – October 6, 1960) was the organizer and first president of the Preservation Society of Charleston. She was a leader in the suffrage movement in Charleston, South Carolina and an important proponent of the preservation of Charleston's historic buildings. Susan Pringle Frost was born in 1873 to Francis LeJau Frost and Rebecca Brewton Pringle in the Miles Brewton House, a house which her family had owned since 1765. When her family's plantations and her father's fertilizer business declined, Frost returned to Charleston from school in North Carolina and began taking stenography classes so she could help support her family. In 1901, Frost started working as the secretary for Bradford Gilbert, the architect for the 1901–1902 South Carolina Interstate and West Indian Exposition in Charleston, South Carolina. She began working in real estate in 1909 while she was a court reporter, and she opened her own real estate office in 1920. In 1913, she formed the Equal Suffrage League in Charleston and also joined the National Women's Party. The Joseph Manigault House on Meeting Street was threatened with demolition for a gas station. In response, on April 21, 1920, Frost convened the first meeting with 31 others of the Society for the Preservation of Old Dwellings. That organization became the Preservation Society of Charleston. Frost combined both her interest in real estate and preservation when she bought many historic buildings in Charleston, restored them, and then resold them. She was especially involved in the area near East Bay Street and Tradd Street; her decision to paint a house a pastel color after restoring it was a precedent for other restorations of houses that are today known as Rainbow Row. Frost died at the Miles Brewton House on October 6, 1960 and was added to the South Carolina Hall of Fame in 2015.
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dbo:birthName
Susan Pringle Frost
dbo:birthYear
1873-01-01
dbo:deathYear
1960-01-01
dbo:occupation
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