Charleston Time Machine
Ein Podcast von Nic Butler, Ph.D.
300 Folgen
-
Episode 200: The Forgotten Dead: Charleston's Public Cemeteries, 1672–1794
Vom: 1.5.2021 -
Episode 199: The Telegraph: Charleston’s First Information Superhighway
Vom: 23.4.2021 -
Episode 198: Captain Thomas Hayward’s Poetic Description of 1769 Charles Town
Vom: 16.4.2021 -
Episode 197: Granville Bastion and the Unfinished Fort of 1697
Vom: 9.4.2021 -
Episode 196: Charleston County’s Mobile Library Service, 1931–2021
Vom: 3.4.2021 -
Episode 195: The Bowling Green: Recreational Space in Colonial Charleston
Vom: 26.3.2021 -
Episode 194: The Fall of Charles Shinner, Irish Chief Justice of South Carolina
Vom: 19.3.2021 -
Episode 193: The Rise of Charles Shinner, Irish Chief Justice of South Carolina
Vom: 12.3.2021 -
Episode 192: Freedom Won and Lost: The Story of Catherine in Antebellum Charleston, Part 2
Vom: 26.2.2021 -
Episode 191: Freedom Won and Lost: The Story of Catherine in Antebellum Charleston, Part 1
Vom: 20.2.2021 -
Episdoe 190: Doctor Caesar and His Antidote for Poison in 1750
Vom: 12.2.2021 -
Episode 189: 'An Undeniable Possession of Talent': James Henry Conyers of Charleston
Vom: 5.2.2021 -
Episode 188: The State Flag of South Carolina: A Banner of Hope and Resilience
Vom: 29.1.2021 -
Episode 187: Street Auctions and Slave Marts in Antebellum Charleston
Vom: 22.1.2021 -
Episode 186: George Anson and Charles Codner: Gambling for Real Estate in 1735?
Vom: 15.1.2021 -
Episode 185: The Other New Years: Regnal, Civil, and Personal
Vom: 8.1.2021 -
Episode 184: The Christmas Treasure of 1744
Vom: 18.12.2020 -
Episode 183: The Destruction and Renewal of Charleston’s Street Trees, 1837–1865
Vom: 11.12.2020 -
Episode 182: Street Trees in Early Charleston: Fountains of Air and Shade
Vom: 4.12.2020 -
Episode 181: Planning Charleston’s First “Fortress,” 1695–1696
Vom: 20.11.2020
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.
