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  2. SC’s foreclosure rate one of highest in US. Here’s how it has ...

    www.aol.com/sc-foreclosure-rate-one-highest...

    In March 2024, ATTOM, a real estate data company owned by the private equity firm Lovell Minnick Partners, reported that South Carolina had the fifth most foreclosures of any state, a 51% increase ...

  3. Citadel Mall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citadel_Mall

    The mall opened in 1981 as a project of National Mall developer Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs of Cleveland, Ohio. Citadel Mall is located at the intersection of Sam Rittenberg Boulevard (S.C. Highway 7) and Savannah Highway (U.S. Highway 17) at the junction of Interstate 526 in the heavily commercialized West Ashley suburb of Charleston, South Carolina.

  4. The Real Estate Pros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Real_Estate_Pros

    In June 2007, The Real Deal was renamed The Real Estate Pros. At a fundraiser event in Charleston, Richard C. Davis, who heads Team Trademark, said he "intends to document the lodge’s rehabilitation as part of the real estate company’s reality series, due to air on TLC in April". The show had a five-year hiatus.

  5. Columbia Place - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbia_Place

    For a period of time the mall was leased and managed by Spinoso Real Estate Group of North Syracuse, New York after being lost by owner CBL & Associates Properties in a foreclosure action. CBL & Associates Properties also lost their former Citadel Mall property in Charleston, South Carolina in 2013 after foreclosure.

  6. Richard C. Davis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_C._Davis

    Real Estate Richard C. Davis (born August 23, 1963) is the founder , president and CEO of Trademark Properties, which he founded in 1990, in Charleston, South Carolina , U.S.A. He and his company specialize in Real Estate.

  7. Old Slave Mart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Slave_Mart

    In addition to enslaved people, the market sold real estate and stock. [4] Slave auctions at Ryan's Mart were advertised in broadsheets throughout the 1850s, some appearing as far away as Galveston, Texas. When U.S. Army forces occupied Charleston beginning in February 1865, the people Ryan's Mart still enslaved were freed. [5]