Charleston Time Machine
En podcast af Nic Butler, Ph.D. - Fredage
Kategorier:
290 Episoder
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Episode 210: Charleston’s Half-Moon Battery, 1694–1768
Udgivet: 13.8.2021 -
Episode 209: Maroons, Picnics, Parades, and Porgy
Udgivet: 23.7.2021 -
Episode 208: South Carolina’s First Public Lending Library in 1698
Udgivet: 17.7.2021 -
Episode 207: The Star-Spangled Spirit of Charleston
Udgivet: 2.7.2021 -
Episode 206: The Moving Memorials to Elizabeth Jackson
Udgivet: 26.6.2021 -
Episode 205: The Public Life of Charleston’s Market Hall
Udgivet: 18.6.2021 -
Episode 204: Charleston’s Daily Bread: Regulating Retail Loaves from 1750 to 1858
Udgivet: 11.6.2021 -
Episode 203: Parishes, Districts, and Counties in Early South Carolina
Udgivet: 4.6.2021 -
Episode 202: Passenger Trains between Charleston and Summerville, from the Best Friend to BRT
Udgivet: 21.5.2021 -
Episode 201: The Forgotten Dead: Charleston’s Public Cemeteries, 1794–2021
Udgivet: 7.5.2021 -
Episode 200: The Forgotten Dead: Charleston's Public Cemeteries, 1672–1794
Udgivet: 1.5.2021 -
Episode 199: The Telegraph: Charleston’s First Information Superhighway
Udgivet: 23.4.2021 -
Episode 198: Captain Thomas Hayward’s Poetic Description of 1769 Charles Town
Udgivet: 16.4.2021 -
Episode 197: Granville Bastion and the Unfinished Fort of 1697
Udgivet: 9.4.2021 -
Episode 196: Charleston County’s Mobile Library Service, 1931–2021
Udgivet: 3.4.2021 -
Episode 195: The Bowling Green: Recreational Space in Colonial Charleston
Udgivet: 26.3.2021 -
Episode 194: The Fall of Charles Shinner, Irish Chief Justice of South Carolina
Udgivet: 19.3.2021 -
Episode 193: The Rise of Charles Shinner, Irish Chief Justice of South Carolina
Udgivet: 12.3.2021 -
Episode 192: Freedom Won and Lost: The Story of Catherine in Antebellum Charleston, Part 2
Udgivet: 26.2.2021 -
Episode 191: Freedom Won and Lost: The Story of Catherine in Antebellum Charleston, Part 1
Udgivet: 20.2.2021
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.