Daufuskie Island offers a rich cultural experience and is on the National Register of Historic Places. Many of its structures no longer exist, but there are many buildings that are centuries old and still stand and have a great significance in Lowcountry history.
1. Brother and Sisters Oyster Union Society Building

From the turn of the 20th century until pollution in the Savannah River ruined the oyster beds in the 1950s, the primary economy of the Island was harvesting and shucking oysters. The oyster workers established the Oyster Union Society, a benevolent and burial society that held meetings and social events—often enhanced by moonshine or homemade wine—in this 1893 building. The building was restored by the Daufuskie Island Historical Foundation in 2012.
2. Mt. Carmel Baptist Church No. 2 and Billie Burn Museum

Built on the north end, Church No. 1 was destroyed by a hurricane in 1940. At that time, the declining population caused the church to close. In 2001, the Daufuskie Island Historical Foundation bought the property, restored the building and opened the Billie Burn Museum, named after the longtime Island resident, author and Island historian.
3. First Union African Baptist Church

This church is the oldest building on the Island, and dates back to 1881. Fire destroyed it in 1884. Reconstruction started in 1885, on the grounds of Mary Field Plantation (a former cotton plantation). John Stoddard owned the structure. He divided the plantation into 12-acre lots and sold them to freed slaves for the purpose of building a church and cemetery. The church still holds regular services.
4. Mary Fields School

The two-room building served the Island’s black children in the 1930s. Scrap material made the desks. Integration started 1962 after the last white child graduated from the historic White School House. It was immortalized by Pat Conroy in “The Water is Wide.” Closed in 1997, it has been renovated and is now used for church and civic activities.
5. Sarah Grant Home
Sarah bought this home in 1910 from Fuller Fripp and had it moved to its current location for a total cost of $40. Grant was the Island midwife and her husband was the Island undertaker. When he passed in 1962, she took his place. The saying goes “Granny bring ‘em an’ she take ‘em away.” The Daufuskie Island Historical Foundation later restored it.
6. The White School
The White School House, built in 1913 by the Beaufort County Board of Education educated white children who lived on Daufuskie Island. A teacher came no matter what. The school closed when the last white child graduated in 1962. Since then, the White School House passes as the fire department headquarters, an Island library and thrift shop. Currently, the White School House is home to the Daufuskie Island Historical Foundation’s archives.
7. Silvery Dew Winery

An iconic building, Silver Dew Winery dates back to 1883. First constructed as a “wick house,” it stored oil, wicks and lamps for nearby Bloody Point Lighthouse. Its conversion in the mid 1990s made it into a winery by Arthur “Papy” Burn. Papy made wine from grapes, scuppernong, pears, and elderberries in the shed until its closure in 1959. Recently the historic Silver Dew Winery and Bloody Point Lighthouse were purchased, and are now open to the public.
8. Frances Jones Home

The core of this vintage Gullah home is believed to have been built in the late 1860s by freemen who moved to the Island after the Civil War. Over the years, the home added rooms. It became the residence of beloved Frances Jones, teacher of the African-American children on the Island from 1939 to 1969. Lamed from a childhood accident, she, alone, still managed to teach as many as 96 children in the morning and afternoon sessions. The building was restored in 2014 by the Palmetto Trust for Historic Preservation.
9. Tabby Ruins
Tabby is a building material made from a mixture of ground oyster shells, sand and water. Many slave quarters were constructed of wood and have long since disintegrated, but remnants of structures made from tabby can be seen to this day, especially at Haig Point.
Photos Courtesy of Michael Hrizuk & Daufuskie Island Historical Foundation