John Rutledge, one of the fifty-five signers of the U.S.
Constitution, built his home in 1763. Now exquisitely
restored, it is one of only fifteen homes belonging to those
signers to survive - and the only one to now accommodate
overnight guests. History records that George Washington
called here in 1791 and entry in his diary shows a breakfast
with Mrs. Rutledge.
A loving rejuvenation has restored the beautiful details of
the home's 18th and 19th century architecture: the
elaborately carved Italian marble fireplaces, the original
plaster moldings, the inlaid floors and the graceful
ironwork.
The John Rutledge House Inn? offers nineteen guest rooms
within a complex of three buildings. One may choose between
the elegance of rooms and spacious suites in the original
grand residence or the charm and seclusion of rooms in the
Inn's two carriage houses. Antiques and historically
accurate reproductions give each room its own warmth and
distinction.
Guests may leave cars parked on-site for their entire stay
because the best of this beautiful port city is just beyond
the doors of the John Rutledge House Inn?. The city's finest
restaurants, theatres, shops, Charleston Place, and the
Market are all within a few minutes? walk. The gracious
antebellum residential area "South of Broad" begins directly
opposite the Inn.
A stay in this elegant antebellum home offers the
opportunity to experience history as well as the warm
hospitality for which the South is justly famous.