Charleston Time Machine
En podkast av Nic Butler, Ph.D.
300 Episoder
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Episode 260: Anson's Landing to Gadsden’s Wharf: A Brief History
Publisert: 30.6.2023 -
Episode 259: Charleston's Third Ice Age: The Big Chill
Publisert: 16.6.2023 -
Episode 258: Sullivan's Island: Property of the Crown and State, 1663–1953
Publisert: 2.6.2023 -
Episode 257: William Ah Sang and the Chinese Question of 1869
Publisert: 19.5.2023 -
Episode 256: The Hard: Colonial Charleston's Forgotten Maritime Center
Publisert: 5.5.2023 -
Episode 255: The Genesis of North Charleston's Oldest and Newest Library
Publisert: 21.4.2023 -
Episode 254: Charleston's First Market and Place of Public Humiliation
Publisert: 7.4.2023 -
Episode 253: Blanche Petit Barbot: A Musical Life in Charleston
Publisert: 24.3.2023 -
Episode 252: Florence O'Sullivan: South Carolina's Irish Enigma
Publisert: 10.3.2023 -
Episode 251: Margaret Daniel: Enterprising Free Woman of Color
Publisert: 24.2.2023 -
Episode 250: Charleston's First Black Detectives, 1869–1886
Publisert: 10.2.2023 -
Episode 249: Searching For The Curtain Wall of Charleston’s Colonial Waterfront
Publisert: 27.1.2023 -
Episode 248: Savannah Highway: The Private Roots of a Public Thoroughfare
Publisert: 13.1.2023 -
Episode 247: The Ghost of Christmas Past: Joy and Fear during the Era of Slavery
Publisert: 16.12.2022 -
Episode 246: Park Circle: Vestige of the Original North Charleston Concept
Publisert: 2.12.2022 -
Episode 245: The Grand Model: John Culpeper's 1672 Plan for Charles Town
Publisert: 18.11.2022 -
Episode 244: Planning Charleston in 1672: The Etiwan Removal
Publisert: 4.11.2022 -
Episode 243: Ghost Island: Desecration on the Ashley
Publisert: 21.10.2022 -
Episode 242: Hispanic Prisoners in Charleston during La Guerra del Asiento
Publisert: 7.10.2022 -
Episode 241: The Mermaid and the Hornet in the Hurricane of 1752
Publisert: 23.9.2022
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.
