Charleston Time Machine
En podcast af Nic Butler, Ph.D.
300 Episoder
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Episode 100: Abraham the Unstoppable, Part 1 | Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 8.2.2019 -
Episode 99: Commemorating the Africanness of Charleston’s History | Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 1.2.2019 -
Episode 98: The Earliest Fortifications at Oyster Point | Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 25.1.2019 -
Episode 97: The Story Behind Ropemaker’s Lane | Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 18.1.2019 -
Episode 96: Charleston: The Palmetto City
Udgivet: 11.1.2019 -
Episode 95: Antebellum Charleston’s Most Vulnerable: Foundlings at the Akin Hospital
Udgivet: 4.1.2019 -
Episode 94: The Golden Christmas of 1852 - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 21.12.2018 -
Episode 93: The Pirate Executions of 1718
Udgivet: 7.12.2018 -
Episode 92: The Charleston Pirate Trials of 1718 (Part 2) - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 30.11.2018 -
Episode 91: The Pirate Hunting Expeditions of 1718 - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 23.11.2018 -
Episode 90: The Tail Of Washington's Horse | Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 9.11.2018 -
Episode 89: Keeping Time in Charleston’s Past - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 1.11.2018 -
Episode 88: Buried Alive in Early Charleston - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 26.10.2018 -
Episode 87: The Akin Foundling Hospital Building - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 17.10.2018 -
Episode 86: The Forgotten Akin Family of Charleston - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 11.10.2018 -
Episode 85: Nearly 1,000 Cargos: Legacy of Importing Africans to Charleston
Udgivet: 4.10.2018 -
Episode 84: Under False Colors: Politics of Gender Expression in Post-Civil War Charleston
Udgivet: 27.9.2018 -
Episode 83: The Heads of the Two Toms in 1745 - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 21.9.2018 -
Episode 82: Murder at Four Holes Swamp in 1744 - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 7.9.2018 -
Episode 81: Squeezing Charleston Neck, from 1783 to the Present - Charleston Time Machine
Udgivet: 29.8.2018
Dr. Nic Butler, historian at the Charleston County Public Library, explores the less familiar corners of local history with stories that invite audiences to reflect on the enduring presence of the past in the Lowcountry of South Carolina.