A brief history of the Lowcountry's longest-running regatta
In 1917, the United States entered World War I, and almost immediately things began to change around Charleston Harbor.
Despite the danger and boatloads of trouble that storms have unleashed upon the Holy City in the past, locals try not...
On July 4, 1976, the United States had one heck of a birthday, and South Carolina didn’t miss the party
Since azaleas were introduced to Magnolia Plantation and Gardens, their springtime explosion has given way to boundless...
On August 21, incoming freshmen at College of Charleston will pass under the arch of Porter’s Lodge (pictured here...
The image was taken by Morton Brailsford Paine, a local photographer during the ’30s and ’40s, and the young girl...
In 1705, Englishman James Child established a ferry service on his property named Strawberry Bluff
A glimpse at a bustling, early 20th-century Charleston
A brief history of Hampton Park’s Sunken Gardens