Charleston Time Machine
A podcast by Nic Butler, Ph.D.
300 Episodio
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Episode 220: The First People of the South Carolina Lowcountry
Pubblicato: 19/11/2021 -
Episode 219: Wielding the Sword of State in Early South Carolina
Pubblicato: 05/11/2021 -
Episode 218: Reviving Apparently Dead Bodies in 1790s Charleston
Pubblicato: 29/10/2021 -
Episode 217: Educating Antebellum Tradesmen: The Charleston Apprentices’ Library Society
Pubblicato: 22/10/2021 -
Episode 216: Anglo-Spanish Hostility in Early South Carolina, 1670–1748
Pubblicato: 01/10/2021 -
Episode 215: The Roots of Spain’s Claim to South Carolina, 1513–1670
Pubblicato: 24/09/2021 -
Episode 214: Murder and Manhunt in 1820: Albro’s Flight from Slavery, Part 3
Pubblicato: 10/09/2021 -
Episode 213: Murder and Manhunt in 1820: Albro’s Flight from Slavery, Part 2
Pubblicato: 03/09/2021 -
Episode 212: Murder and Manhunt in 1820: Albro’s Flight from Slavery, Part 1
Pubblicato: 27/08/2021 -
Episode 211: Escaping Slavery: Resistance on the Run
Pubblicato: 20/08/2021 -
Episode 210: Charleston’s Half-Moon Battery, 1694–1768
Pubblicato: 13/08/2021 -
Episode 209: Maroons, Picnics, Parades, and Porgy
Pubblicato: 23/07/2021 -
Episode 208: South Carolina’s First Public Lending Library in 1698
Pubblicato: 17/07/2021 -
Episode 207: The Star-Spangled Spirit of Charleston
Pubblicato: 02/07/2021 -
Episode 206: The Moving Memorials to Elizabeth Jackson
Pubblicato: 26/06/2021 -
Episode 205: The Public Life of Charleston’s Market Hall
Pubblicato: 18/06/2021 -
Episode 204: Charleston’s Daily Bread: Regulating Retail Loaves from 1750 to 1858
Pubblicato: 11/06/2021 -
Episode 203: Parishes, Districts, and Counties in Early South Carolina
Pubblicato: 04/06/2021 -
Episode 202: Passenger Trains between Charleston and Summerville, from the Best Friend to BRT
Pubblicato: 21/05/2021 -
Episode 201: The Forgotten Dead: Charleston’s Public Cemeteries, 1794–2021
Pubblicato: 07/05/2021
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.
