BULL STREET
Bull Street, along with other Harleston Village streets, was once considered to be out in the country before the city's expansions north and west. Also, like many of the streets in Harleston Village, Bull Street was named a prominent Revolutionary-era figure, though South Carolina's native lieutenant governor William Bull Jr. was a Loyalist. Bull Jr. made peace with the Indians in 1761, ending the French and Indian War in South Carolina.
Bull was one of three royally appointed lieutenant governors during the royal period (1738-1755) and was known as "a man of great integrity and erudition." His father, William Bull Sr., was also a royal lieutenant governor, though perhaps he is best remembered for coming across participants of the Stono Slave Rebellion in 1739, the largest slave uprising in the American colonies prior to the American Revolution. Rushing into the city he sounded the alarm, probably saving many white lives.
As Bull Street developed after the Revolution, it became home to intellectuals associated with the College of Charleton, as well as free artisans of color.
