LOCATION:
The Meeting Street Inn can be found
on Meeting Street which runs right through the historic downtown area of Charleston,
between cross streets Market and Cumberland. The inn's prime location gives you
the chance to park your car in the lot across the street for a fee and never have
to drive again for the length of your stay. From The Meeting Street Inn's location,
one can walk to any place of interest and shop 'til you drop in the downtown stores.
This location also gives you the chance to park your car in the lot across the
street for a fee and never have to drive again for the length of your stay.
Address:
173 Meeting Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29401.
800-842-8022 * 843-723-1882
DESCRIPTION:
The
Meeting Street Inn is a three story, hardwood floored, 56 room bed and breakfast
inn, located in an 1870 renovated building. This building was built in the traditional
Charleston single house style, which is "distinguished by it's single room
width with the house set at right angles to the street."
The guest
rooms are described as romantic and charming, being filled with "southern
decor" and furnished with early period antiques, such as having canopy rice
beds, oriental rugs. In the old section of the inn, the rooms have 12 foot ceilings
and "huge beautiful windows."
Some of the rooms have porches or
balconies. Each room at The Meeting Street Inn opens onto the sunny
piazza overlooking the lush courtyard,
which is a lovely place to relax. The inn's garden is beautiful, with climbing
floral vines and a fountain.

HISTORY:
Because this real estate is
right in the center of town, the buildings built here were for public or commercial
use. In 1837, the Charleston Theatre opened, which took up the space of 4 normal
lots. Unfortunately, Charleston Theatre burned to the ground in 1861. As the land
was valuable, the owner divided the land parcel where the theatre stood and divided
it into 4 lots, and sold 2 lots to recent German immigrant, Adolph Tiefenthal,
who had come to America just the year before. Adolph had to not only wait until
after the Civil War was over, but he had to save the money needed before he could
hire D.A.J. Sullivan in 1874 to build for him a three-storied brick building,
complete with running water!.
A saloon, restaurant and a wholesale dealership
in German beer and Rhine wines were the commercial businesses housed on the first
floor, from which Adolph made his living to support his family; his wife and three
daughters, who lived above the businesses on the second and third floors. Unfortunately,
Adolph only lived 4 more years and died in 1878. His wife married again and she
became the saloon keeper. In 1886, they leased the retail space on the first floor
to the Atlantic Brewing and Ice Company.
Around the turn of the century,
a George Hormickel took over the lease and opened the very upscale Salvory Club
and Restaurant, which catered to the well-to do in Charleston Society. To accommodate
the hoop skirted women, George installed the extra large doors on the side entrance
to the lobby.
In 1903, Adolph's descendants sold the property to William
J. O'Hagan who ran a fashionable boutique, "Genuine Antique" for 38
years. From 1942 until 1980, a variety of commercial enterprises which offered
products from Auto Parts to bicycle rentals made this building their place of
business. By 1980, this building was in need of TLC, so it was "renovated,
enlarged, and transformed" into a new popular commercial enterprise, The
Meeting Street Inn, which offered charming guest accommodations located on all
three floors.
Unfortunately the parent company which owned The Meeting
Street Inn hit an iceberg and failed financially. Though the inn continued to
operate anyway, the very old building was starting to need more work done. The
topper was Hurricane Hugo which damaged the building in 1989, resulting in the
building being in a state of needing major repair. The Meeting Street Inn became
a real fixer upper opportunity!
Thankfully, an accomplished Innkeeper, Frances
F. (Franki) Limehouse, who loves to fix up old homes / buildings and make them
viable once more, bought The Meeting Street Inn, did the extensive renovations
and restoration needed for The Meeting Street Inn to open up for business once
more!
HISTORY OF MANIFESTATIONS:
The
original owner of this structure and his family lived in the rooms currently found
in the back of this Meeting Street Inn, in its older section. Rooms 303 and 107
seem to belong to entities who more or less share their rooms with the living.
MANIFESTATIONS:
Large
entity of someone who has claimed a room as its own (Probably a male, but
could be a very large woman)
In room 303, the entity who resides
here has on occasion wanted the room to itself and has locked the door from the
inside, and could push as hard as a 250 lb living person. When the door was opened
by use of the master key, a tremendous force kept the door to the room shut. When
the living ran to break the door in, it flew open with no resistance. No one alive
was found in the room after a careful inspection!
A female
entity likes room 107, and lets the guests who say here know of her presence in
small and big ways, though she is courteous and willing to share her space.
One
startled couple who were sitting in bed reported that a female entity appeared
at the foot of their bed. From the waist up she looked like a normal living person,
but from the waist down it was see through to a point but faded to nothing where
her knees and feet should be. She simply floated to the door, opened it and left
the room, as to let the couple have the room for the night.
STILL
HAUNTED?
Yes indeed!
Two entities from the
original Tiefenthal family are believed to be still in residence, as the rooms
they haunt were used as the original family living space. Perhaps the male entity
could be Adolf Tiefenthal, who after all the work he did to get his dream building
built, he died only after 4 years in business, way before he was probably ready
to do so. The female entity could be any of the Tiefenthal women.