Charleston Time Machine
A podcast by Nic Butler, Ph.D. - Fridays
Categories:
290 Episodes
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Episode 290: Charleston’s Suburban Racecourse and Slave Auction Site
Published: 9/6/2024 -
Episode 289: Policing Rural Charleston, from Colonial Posse to County Sheriff
Published: 8/16/2024 -
Episode 288: Charleston's Forgotten First Orphan House, 1790–94
Published: 8/2/2024 -
Episode 287: Colleton Square: Prelude to Market Street
Published: 7/19/2024 -
Episode 286: The Charleston Gunpowder Plot of 1731, Part 2
Published: 6/28/2024 -
Episode 285: The Charleston Gunpowder Plot of 1731, Part 1
Published: 6/21/2024 -
Episode 284: Drama at the Court Room in 1735: Charleston’s First Theater
Published: 6/7/2024 -
Episode 283: A Hawaiian Band in Charleston, 1901–2
Published: 5/24/2024 -
Episode 282: Union Pier: Mobility Nexus through the Centuries
Published: 5/10/2024 -
Episode 281: Surf Bathing at Sullivan's Island In the 19th Century
Published: 4/26/2024 -
Episode 280: Cash and Credit in South Carolina before the U.S. Dollar
Published: 4/12/2024 -
Episode 279: Phebe Fletcher: A ‘Magdalene’ in Revolutionary Charleston
Published: 3/29/2024 -
Episode 278: Thomas Francis Meagher, Irish Patriot, in Charleston
Published: 3/15/2024 -
Episode 277: The Shaw Community Center: A Living Memorial to Civil Rights Progress
Published: 3/1/2024 -
Episode 276: Segregation and Desegregation at the Charleston County Public Library, 1930–1965
Published: 2/16/2024 -
Episode 275: John L. Dart, Champion of Education
Published: 2/2/2024 -
Episode 274: The Beef Market under Charleston's City Hall
Published: 1/19/2024 -
Episode 273: The First Football Match in Charleston, Christmas Eve 1892
Published: 12/15/2023 -
Episode 272: Watson's Garden: The Horticultural Roots of Courier Square
Published: 12/1/2023 -
Episode 271: Free Indians In Amity with the State: A Legal Legacy
Published: 11/17/2023
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.