The home belonged to lawyer, politician, and judge Lemuel Boozer (1809-1870).
It has a low-pitch gable roof and a tall basement of brick piers.
Although Boozer was a slave owner, he did not support the Confederacy and helped Union soldiers escape from POW Camps.
[3] Boozer also started a school on the rear of this property for freed slaves after the end of the Civil War.
This article about a property in Lexington County, South Carolina on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.