Charleston Time Machine
En podcast af Nic Butler, Ph.D. - Fredage
Kategorier:
290 Episoder
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Episdoe 190: Doctor Caesar and His Antidote for Poison in 1750
Udgivet: 12.2.2021 -
Episode 189: 'An Undeniable Possession of Talent': James Henry Conyers of Charleston
Udgivet: 5.2.2021 -
Episode 188: The State Flag of South Carolina: A Banner of Hope and Resilience
Udgivet: 29.1.2021 -
Episode 187: Street Auctions and Slave Marts in Antebellum Charleston
Udgivet: 22.1.2021 -
Episode 186: George Anson and Charles Codner: Gambling for Real Estate in 1735?
Udgivet: 15.1.2021 -
Episode 185: The Other New Years: Regnal, Civil, and Personal
Udgivet: 8.1.2021 -
Episode 184: The Christmas Treasure of 1744
Udgivet: 18.12.2020 -
Episode 183: The Destruction and Renewal of Charleston’s Street Trees, 1837–1865
Udgivet: 11.12.2020 -
Episode 182: Street Trees in Early Charleston: Fountains of Air and Shade
Udgivet: 4.12.2020 -
Episode 181: Planning Charleston’s First “Fortress,” 1695–1696
Udgivet: 20.11.2020 -
Episode 180: The Genesis of East Bay Street: Charleston’s First Wharf, 1680–1696
Udgivet: 13.11.2020 -
Episode 179: Charleston’s Contested Election of 1868
Udgivet: 6.11.2020 -
Episode 178: The Decline of Voting Suppression in South Carolina, 1900–1965
Udgivet: 30.10.2020 -
Episode 177: The Rise of Voter Suppression in South Carolina, 1865–1896
Udgivet: 23.10.2020 -
Episode 176: South Carolina’s War Against Beasts of Prey, 1693–1790
Udgivet: 8.10.2020 -
Episode 175: Recall Their Names: The Personal Identity of Enslaved South Carolinians
Udgivet: 2.10.2020 -
Episode 174: Nicholas Trott’s Forgotten Charleston Residence
Udgivet: 25.9.2020 -
Episode 173: The Myth of “Trott’s Cottage”
Udgivet: 18.9.2020 -
Episode 172: The Advent of Black Suffrage in South Carolina
Udgivet: 11.9.2020 -
Episode 171: A Trashy History of Charleston’s Dumps and Incinerators
Udgivet: 4.9.2020
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.