In the city’s own shipyard, five seized German boats were converted to vessels for the US fleet, and construction began on 18 new ships and the area’s first destroyer, the USS Tillman. It was only ...
“I have a one meeting rule,” Steve Palmer says. “I’ll always take a meeting, because you just never know.” One meeting is how the founder of the Charleston-based Indigo Road Hospitality Group ended up ...
2. Henry’s Cheese Spread Many decades ago, long before Charleston’s restaurant scene exploded, a big night out involved Henry’s on Market Street, where white-jacketed waiters swooped in with trays of ...
In 1977, Michael Bennett was working his way through the College of Charleston as a carpenter’s assistant, helping to renovate buildings the school had acquired nearby. The buildings were cheap and ...
This Thanksgiving, take a cue from five chefs’ flavorful sides—heavy on the veg—and serve some soon-to-be new traditions for your family’s feast ...
St. James-Santee Episcopal Church at Wambaw today; (inset) in April 1923, Charleston Museum director Laura Bragg arranged a tour of the historic site for participants in the American Association of ...
The front courtyard of Bernard and Judy Cornwell’s Tradd Street home is charmingly inviting. Cheerful pansies abound, boxwoods are gently manicured, and above them, two window boxes are chock-full of ...
Recipes Featured - The city magazine for Charleston, South Carolina, since 1975, Charleston is the authority on living well in the Lowcountry, embodying the beauty, style, and sophistication of our ...
Vestiges of the American Revolution are everywhere in Charleston, from the grand residences of avid patriots such as Miles Brewton and Thomas Heyward Jr. to sites like Fort Johnson, Fort Moultrie, and ...
Editor’s Note: This feature was at the printer before Charleston and its islands and beaches were closed to any nonessential business. Although now, from the very uncertain and sometimes frightening ...
Blazing studio lights compounded the late summer heat as a tangle of wires and a film crew transformed the sanctuary of Circular Congregational Church into a TV studio. A diverse crowd squeezed into ...
It’s never easy to stand up against the conventions of one’s time and one’s city. While the Grimké sisters had to leave Charleston to follow their feminist and abolitionist leanings, one woman who ...