Knowledge

Charleston Terminal Company

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passed an act "to authorize cities having a population of fifty thousand inhabitants or more to acquire, purchase, establish, improve, maintain, and operate the port utilities of such cities." A month later, the Charleston City Council denied the Charleston Terminal Company's formal request for a
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The condition of the Charleston wharves became a key issue in the Charleston mayoral race of 1919. Candidate John Grace argued that the franchise of the Charleston Terminal Company should not be renewed and the city should take over the administration of the waterfront. Incumbent Mayor Tristan T.
43:. The railroads held an agreement with the Charleston Terminal Company in which they would turn over traffic and pay for such services in order to provide the Charleston Terminal Company with an additional source of revenue to pay the interest on its bonds and not fall behind financially. 69:
The city of Charleston proceeded to purchase the dock facilities from the Charleston Terminal Company for $ 1.5 million. In a special election on November 8, 1921, Charlestonians voted in favor of the issuance of $ 2.5 million in municipal bonds in order to pay for the purchase of the port
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The Charleston Terminal Company was created after the East Shore Terminal Company went into foreclosure in July 1903 and its tracks, wharves and waterfront buildings in Charleston were purchased. It was co-owned by the
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By the early 1900s, the majority of viable dock properties in Charleston, including railway tracks, equipment and wharves, was run by the Charleston Terminal Company. However, more and more railroads were looking to
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Within the next 18 months, the Charleston Terminal Company also acquired waterfront property and terminals that had belonged to the South Carolina Terminal Company.
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After his inauguration, Grace immediately began transferring the responsibility of the port facilities to the city of Charleston. In March 1920, the
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Ports of the United States: Report on Terminal Facilities, Commerce, Port Charges, and Administration at Sixty-eight Selected Ports
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Records of the Port Utilities Commission, 1921–1943, The Charleston Archive, Charleston County Public Library, Kathleen Gray, 2009
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Hyde argued that the franchise should be renewed, but under certain stipulations. Grace went on to win the general election.
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Commerce, United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic; Jones, Grosvenor Monro (1916).
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The Charleston Terminal Company traced its history back to the
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was a transportation company that operated along the
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Index

Charleston, South Carolina
East Shore Terminal Company
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Southern Railway
Savannah, Georgia
South Carolina General Assembly





Records of the Port Utilities Commission, 1921–1943, The Charleston Archive, Charleston County Public Library, Kathleen Gray, 2009


The Railway Age, Volume 38, 1904, page 538
Ports of the United States: Report on Terminal Facilities, Commerce, Port Charges, and Administration at Sixty-eight Selected Ports
162
Categories
Defunct South Carolina railroads
Railway companies established in 1903
Railway companies disestablished in 1921
Ports and harbors of South Carolina
Transportation in Charleston, South Carolina
American companies disestablished in 1921
1903 establishments in South Carolina
1921 disestablishments in South Carolina

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