St. Stephen's Episcopal Church (ca. 1835) was organized as a "free church", one in which parishioners were not charged rent for their pews. Before the current church was built at 67 Anson Street, it had been housed some four blocks south on Guignard Street (the Guignard Street building was burned in the fire of 1835).
Just around the corner from St. Stephen's current location is the house on George Street where Daniel Cobia (1811-1837) lived and which, upon his death, became the property of Major William Laval. Daniel Cobia, born in Charleston, returned to the city in 1833 after completing his seminary training in New York and "immediately took charge of St. Stephen's Chapel, where the seats were free, and the congregation small and made up of the humbler classes."
Today St. Stephen's is noted less for the humbler classes it attracts than for being the least likely congregation in the State of South Carolina to leave the Episcopal Church in opposition to the ordination of gay priests.
Just around the corner from St. Stephen's current location is the house on George Street where Daniel Cobia (1811-1837) lived and which, upon his death, became the property of Major William Laval. Daniel Cobia, born in Charleston, returned to the city in 1833 after completing his seminary training in New York and "immediately took charge of St. Stephen's Chapel, where the seats were free, and the congregation small and made up of the humbler classes."
Today St. Stephen's is noted less for the humbler classes it attracts than for being the least likely congregation in the State of South Carolina to leave the Episcopal Church in opposition to the ordination of gay priests.