Wilkinson-Boineau House
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Adams Run, South Carolina
Wilkinson-Boineau House | |
Wilkinson-Boineau House | |
| Location | 5185 South Carolina Highway 174, Adams Run, South Carolina |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 32°43′10″N 80°20′57″W / 32.71944°N 80.34917°W |
| Architectural style | Greek Revival |
| NRHP reference No. | 98001644[1] |
The Wilkinson-Boineau House is a significant example of an early 19th-century Greek Revival residence with minor 20th-century alterations. William Wilkinson, a planter, established a village, Wilkinsonville, about 1830 that bears his name, and the house was the first one built.
Milton Carroll Boineau brought the land in the 1920s. In the 1930s, the family built a one-story addition on the back and removed part of the central hall. The house is on tall brick piers. The original part was a two-story central hall house. A hip-roofed porch along the entire front is accessed by a brick staircase. The house has square edge weatherboarding and a tall lateral gable roof.[2]
The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places January 21, 1999.[3]