Sunday, July 24, 2016
Charleston's Old Walled City Tours: Charleston Ghost Stories: The Vigilant Guardian Ch...
Charleston's Old Walled City Tours: Charleston Ghost Stories: The Vigilant Guardian Ch...: This is my own true story. The Vigilant Guardian Church -or- "Haint Misbehavin" This is my own true story, a st...
Charleston Ghost Stories: The Vigilant Guardian Church
This is my own true story.
The Vigilant Guardian Church
-or-
"Haint Misbehavin"
This is my own true story, a story that took place on a beautiful spring day two years ago. I helped a friend make it to day surgery at Mt Pleasant Hospital. For this West Ashley guy I felt half way to Georgetown. So me and my bud Jamie decided to venture out for a few hours and headed to McClellanville, a sleepy fishing village 30 miles north of Charleston. I hadn't been there in 20 years, so sightseeing was on the agenda.
Not really knowing the town I first went through a section that was on the street grid but there were few houses. You could see that at one time there were more residences, probably lost to Hugo in 1989. Mostly just woods, coming around the corner was a noble Carpenters Gothic style church with cedar shingles situated prominently on a corner.
I recall no signage. So beautiful, yet so lonely, we had to investigate.
Stepping up on the porch I peeked in the abandoned sanctuary. It struck me that, quite a while back, this construction site was abandoned. Whoever left it never came back to retrieve tools and ladders and tarps. It was all very odd.
Leaving the porch we walked around to the large graveyard. The cement monuments with conch decorations clued me in the it was an African American graveyard. I had to muse, where are the descendants of these dead? Where have they gone?. We circled the church and as we were walking to the car on the road we sighted a rusty folding chair laying flat. Jamie, being the curious sort, pulled it back. I saw a brick cylinder with fast food trash. There might have been a valve down there. Jamie saw a sepulchre, brick compartments.* I told him to put the chair back so nobody would step in the hole.As he put it back and started to walk he said
"HEY! Something just grabbed my leg!"
Well, my input on that was if you knew Jamie like I do, you never know what he might say next.We got in the car and continued the grand tour. Maybe four minutes out he says to me
"Its gone, it let go. That thing in the graveyard."
He could see I wasn't getting it. He points down and says "Feel my leg!"
I will never forget that moment. Through the denim his thigh was plainly cold, an unnatural cold that made me recoil. My first thought was "dead meat".
So remember, dear reader , should you seek out the old cedar church in McClellanville, remember to tread lightly on that hallowed ground.A vigilant guardian that tolerates no disturbance, the hain't will getcha!
* We had this discussion much later.
Charleston Old Walled City Tours offers Ghost Tours each evening at 8 PM. Go to www.walledcitytours.com for details
Charleston Old Walled City Tours offers Ghost Tours each evening at 8 PM. Go to www.walledcitytours.com for details
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Charleston Walking Tours: Beat the Heat - A Guide to Charleston in the Summertime for Yankees and Scandinavians
Charleston Walking Tours have been my passion and my forte for many years. I am a member of that
hardy breed that goes out all year long, so I know a few things about summer weather. Summertime weather in Charleston gets
hot. It also gets humid. The combination can lead to dizziness and heat
exhaustion. Every summer I am amazed to see Scandinavian visitors and the Dutch
walking in full sunlight when the heat index is hitting 110. They LOVE it.
Coming from a cold land, they relish the warmth. They spend their summers with
the windows open.
But for most
Americans in the southeast and west, air conditioning is a way of life. Yes,
the South has finally won the War with a new weapon, air conditioning. So we
are least prepared to spend time outside in the heat of the day. So as you tour
our fair city, or attend that family reunion in July or that Gay Pride
Celebration in August, here are a few tips to keep you on your feet.
Rule Number
1: HYDRATE HYDRATE HYDRATE. Drink plenty of water. Don’t be afraid to pour it
over your head.
Rule Number 2:
Dress For Success. Wear light colors in fabrics such as cotton, linen or
seersucker. Wearing a T-shirt beneath will absorb sweat and form a cooling
insulation.It also eliminates sweaty shirts and pit stains.
Rule Number 3:
Use Cooling Strategies.
Freeze water
and take it out in the morning and wrap it in a heavy handkerchief or a
high quality paper napkin. The cool
condensation creates a refreshing brow wipe. It will also cool you down to wipe
the cool napkin across the back of the neck.
Never rush
in the heat. Plan accordingly.
Stay on the
shady side of the street. Walk in the
direction of the breeze when it gets you there.
Rule number
4: Proper Planning Prevents Puny Performance. Charleston is the perfect city to
see on foot. When the sun is baking the sidewalk, take a tour that has you
finished up by 12:30. Charleston Old Walled City Tours offers 10 AM Walk 7 days
a week.(Visit our website at http://www.walledcitytours.com/tours/charleston-walking-tours.html).This allows time for lunch before the real heat sets in between 2 and
5 o’clock. Mid afternoon is a great time to visit the cool and quiet of the
Charleston Museum. It’s also a great time to get on the water and tour the
harbor, Fort Sumter or even an eco tour! If we are lucky this year, and a
tropical pattern sets in , the intense heat and humidity of the midafternoon
gives way to a thunderstorm that drops the temperature and cleanses the air.
Afternoons like these are perfect for walks before dinner. After dinner, walk
south towards the Battery and see the grand mansions lit up along the way. Check out the night vendors at the City
Market.
Rule number
5: Protect your skin. Wear sunscreen. Wear a hat, not a baseball cap. They
leave the nape of your neck exposed.
Charleston
Old Walled City Tours offers public and private tours on foot or by car.
For
information on things to see and do in Charleston go to
Monday, June 13, 2016
Charleston Walking Tours - National Park Service Centennial Celebrations
All across the nation, the National Park Service is celebrating its Centennial Year with special events at its parks nationwide. In Charleston, SC we have three National Park sites including Fort Sumter National Monument, Fort Moultrie, and Charles Pinckney National Historic Site.
The Battle of Fort Sumter on April 12 1861 was the first battle of the War Between the States. Fort Moultrie was built for the War of 1812 but sits on the site of an earlier wooden fort. That fort, Fort Sullivan, was the primary defense for a city under attack by the British on June 28,1776. Against apparently insurmountable odds, the Patriots won the day. The Battle of Fort Sullivan was the first victory in the Revolutionary War against a British attack by land and sea. The Charles Pinckney Historic site is the country seat of Charles Pinckney. A signer of the US Constitution, 25 clauses in the Constitution are uniquely attributable to Pinckney, more than any other signer.
As a Centennial Celebration Event, authors have been invited to present and sign their books that have NPS or park related themes. Offered from the public auditorium at Fort Moultrie, this NPS Centennial event will connect with new audiences for the park and create Find Your Park experiences. On 23rd 2016, CL Bragg will present his book Crescent Moon Over Carolina. March 25th author Grahame Long will present Stolen Charleston: The Spoils of War. June 25th, Danny Bernstein will present the book Forests, Alligators, Battlefields: My Journey through the National Parks of the South. And finally on September 24th 2016, we will learn about the book For Brotherhood and Duty: The Civil War History of the West Point Class of 1862 by Brian McEnany. This event is offered in conjunction with the Fourth Saturday Musket firings in January, March, June and September. For details on National Park Service events in your neighborhood, go to findyourpark.com/find
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Charleston Christmas Walking Tour -Celebrate the Season!
What was Christmas in Charleston like....
In 1860? Five days after South Carolina seceded from the Union?
In 1886? Four months after the Great Earthquake?
In 1929? Two months after the Black Friday Stock Market Crash?
Hear about these events while we tour the streets of Charleston made even more beautiful by Christmas decorations! Visit churches decked out for the Season!
In 1860? Five days after South Carolina seceded from the Union?
In 1886? Four months after the Great Earthquake?
In 1929? Two months after the Black Friday Stock Market Crash?
Hear about these events while we tour the streets of Charleston made even more beautiful by Christmas decorations! Visit churches decked out for the Season!
City Christmas Tree at Marion Square |
2 PM DAILY (except Christmas)
Call for reservations 843 343 4851
Tours depart in front of the Liberty Center at 151 Meeting Street
Friday, December 4, 2015
Charleston Tours - Christmas in Charleston 1860
Christmas in Charleston is a special time of year! In a city
where old traditions persist, it is a city of Holiday gatherings, festoons and
greenery, old china and Grandma’s pound cake. Celebrations have evolved through
the Years. Christmas trees were a novelty in the 1850s, and Christmas Pie
(today we know it as “Mince Meat Pie” was on every table. I am putting together a Special Christmas in
Charleston Tour, so I want to make everyone aware of Christmas 1860 at the
Edmondston Alston House.
Tonight, the
Edmondston Alston House is presenting a candle light reenactment of Christmas
1860. If you have never attended it is a powerful event. Assisted by the
Washington Light Infantry in period garb, you’ll never forget it. For that
reason, I have compiled a picture of Christmas 1860 in Charleston as reported
in the newspapers.
Keep in mind that only five days earlier, on December 20,
1860, the very document that removed South Carolina from the Union, the
Ordinance of Secession, had been signed on Meeting Street. Society was in an
upheaval. There had already been a shock in the financial markets., yet this
did not stop the Christmas revelry as reported in the Charleston Courier
But Charlestonians, convinced that their cause was right and
that the Federal government would never
challenge, joined their enthusiasm for Secession with their Yuletide
festivities. Over at the South Carolina Institute Hall there has been a move to
rename it Secession Hall. The Charleston Daily Courier announces a big event to celebrate the Holidays:
“at Secession Hall, the George Christie Troupe
(The Christie Minstrels?) would be present to dedicate it, under that name, with a new and original “Secession
Polka”, composed by one of them, and dedicated to the “Palmetto Minute Men of
Charleston”. The hall is rich and promising in other good things, and the past
triumphs of the Troupe leave no doubt of the success of this Christmas Eve
entertainment”. Charleston Daily Courier 12/22/1860
For many, Christmas was like any year. Reverend Porter went
about feeding and gifting poor children as was his vocation, the holy man that
he was. The German Church sponsored a Christmas Tree Display. The New England
Society attended their Annual Forefathers Day Feast, which celebrated the
landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock. The Charleston Mercury announced:
“The 42nd Anniversary of the New
England Society was celebrated on Saturday evening at the Mills House. The
banquet spread was in the usual excellent style of MSSRS Nickerson and Purcell,
but it was noticed that attendance was not so large as in former years.” Charleston
Mercury 12/12/1860
Since they were from New England, a part of the country that
was late to adopt Christmas as a holiday, it is curious to see that they had a
feast not unlike Thanksgiving so close to Christmas. Celebrated on December 22,
the menu for 1859 showed 60 items on the buffet (!), including East River
Oysters from Manhattan. It is sobering to note that the Banquet was cancelled
the following year and instead, $1000 was donated to the Cause.
At home there was an assured sense of normalcy. The Mercury
reports:
” Santa Claus bore as heavy
a load of of choice gifts down the chimneys of our houses last
night…..his assistants tottering under burdens of brown paper…full of noisy
painted things., but the thought of the joy they would occasion at the spring
of the Yule converted the shame to an
honor and made the burden light. “
There was an apparent shame in carrying a huge bundle of
gifts, (unless you were Santa , of course!)
Christmas Day, with all those gifts
to unwrap, was a joyous day for children. The sun rose on a dreary day, foggy
and damp. But the spirits of the children were hardly dampened by the weather. For
the young it was all about presents, firecrackers and deviltry. Reports the
Mercury;
“Young Charleston was
not so easily to be deprived of the privileges and enjoyment of the Festival…muddy
youngsters escaped from the parental roof…to revel in the Christmas fun and
Christmas fog. Within doors there was the usual frolic and enjoyment, and the
fact that they were no longer people of the United States did not diminish a
whit of the zest with which relished their turkeys and demolished their plum
puddings and mince pies. We venture to predict that next Christmas they will
eat them with even keener enjoyment.”Charleston Mercury 12/27/1860
The Mercury also gives a post-game assessment of Christmas
1860:
“It was feared by many that the Christmas that
dawned today would be comparatively dull and silent, that there would be few
Christmas trees the stockings almost
empty and the Yule fire would burn with a weaker flame. We rejoiced in the dispersion of all these ill
apprehensions.
Apparently, Black Friday is nothing new, as indicated from
the same article:
“So crowded were our
favorite toy stores that it was difficulty that one was waited upon….some
favorite marts were thronged to the doors .It was impossible to elbow a passage
through the living ranks. Charleston Courier 12/27/1860”
Anxiety over Secession was overshadowed by a confident belief that their Cause, Secession and
Independence, was the right thing, and that their future was secured. No sons
had been lost, no farms burned, no evacuations ordered. It was the last such
Christmas.
Friday, November 13, 2015
Charleston Tours and That Crescent on the State Flag –What’s That All About?
When visitors
tour Charleston, there is always an interest in our beautiful South Carolina state
flag. On my Charleston walking tours, I always point out the flag and use it as
a teaching tool.
Its Palmetto
tree and crescent moon look like a designer logo welcoming visitors to
beautiful sandy beaches and nights with dreamy Carolina moons. Visitors love learning
that palmetto logs were purposely used to erect a harbor defense during the
Revolutionary War. Dubbed Fort Sullivan, our Patriots won the day on June
28,1776 because the palmetto log walls absorbed the powerful onslaught of the
British navy. The cannon balls were absorbed or deflected by the spongy wood
which held through the battle. This gave the Patriots, under command of Major William
Moultrie, the decisive edge needed to
repulse the enemy. This victory was the first decisive victory in the
Revolutionary War of an American force over
a British land and sea force. At a time when the War was at a standstill
in the north, victory at Charles Towne was huge. The battle standard that flew
over the fort was a deep blue field with a crescent in the top left corner, and
the word Liberty splayed boldly across the center.
The Moultrie Flag |
For this
reason , the palmetto tree emerged as the symbol of liberty in South Carolina. In 1832 South Carolina first attempted to
leave the Union, an event called the Nullification Crisis. Caroline Gilman,
wife of the Unitarian minister and a noted author, wrote a friend in
Philadelphia that Palmetto trees were being planted up and down the streets! The state flag continues Moultrie’s theme of
the blue background and the crescent, but replaced the “Liberty” with the
Palmetto tree. Adopted in 1860, the flag has remained essentially the same over
time
But the
crescent is a constant. Chosen by William Moultrie for his battle standard,
there is an old story that goes with it. The fanciful story goes that Moultrie was
challenged to a duel as a young man, and the choice of weapons was swords.
Prepared for battle, Moultrie wore a gorget plate that literally saved his neck
when his opponent went to slice off his head. Forever his lucky charm, he
placed the gorget on his flag.
A gorget is a
metal plate worn around the neck as a
defensive armor piece. It is designed to
deflect sword blows to the neck and shoulder. Never manipulated by hand or used
to attack an enemy, its purpose comes into play only when the enemy has bested
you to the point of having an opening to take your head. One might think that
William Moultrie would play down this scenario if such were the case. No, I
modestly put forth that the crescent has
a different meaning.
After all, the
crescent was adopted by no less than five South Carolina Patriot militia units
in 1775 well before the Battle of Fort Moultrie and the Moultrie flag.
Moultrie’s use of the crescent joined his unit with others that had previously
chosen it as the Revolution ramped up.
What made
the crescent so special to rally the troops? Some might claim that Moultrie was
so popular and famous that his symbol carried over. But this symbol was adopted
before Moultrie by other militias. Was Moultrie that famous by 1775? Colonial
militias units often designed their flags with elements of English heraldry
including shields, broad axes, bundled arrows and the mace. Armored helmets and
eagles also figure prominently. They depict offensive weapons or chivalric symbols of
bravery and aggression. These were largely abandoned by Patriot militia and Continental
Army units. Yet the crescent is unique to our flag and unique to our state.
Many assert
that the crescent symbolizes a gorget. Webster defines the gorget as
1
: a piece of armor protecting the
throat
2
a : an ornamental collar
b : a part of a wimple
covering the throat and shoulders
c : a specially colored
patch on the throat
Gorget as body armor |
This
illustration of a medieval gorget in no way resembles the crescent found on
the state flag. It is a a piece of body armor worn by knights of old,
appropriate for a jousting tournament. The crescent does resemble the necklace/
ornamental collar worn by George Washington as part of a formal dress uniform. Here
we see George Washington depicted
wearing a gorget.
Washington in formal dress uniform after French and Indian War |
So I ask the
question, why was this crescent symbol chosen to rally the troops? Flags are
designed to rally the troops to acts of bravery and patriotism. Spears and arrows, of course, but a necklace???? Why the gorget?
I put forth
the idea that the gorget as we know it is a symbol from English Heraldry. It is
the symbol of the second sons. The probable explanation why we find George
Washington sporting the gorget is that his grandfather, Lawrence Washington,
was the first of his family to settle in Virginia. He was the second son of
Lawrence Washington, an Anglican vicar.
In English
Heraldry, the symbol of the Second Sons is the Crescent. Adopted at the time of
the Crusades, the eldest son stayed home and oversaw his holdings while the
Second Sons ventured to Palestine seeking glory and treasure. They brought back
the Islamic Crescent as their proud symbol. A simple Google search for “English
Heraldry second sons” immediately brings up the gorget as worn by George
Washington . http://www.rarebooks.nd.edu/digital/heraldry/cadency.html
Similarly,
many early settlers to South Carolina were second and third sons. The Law of
Primogenitor left entire estates to the eldest sons. Younger siblings might
practice law, enter the military or engage in trade. For those who loved the
land, their destiny would be planting. Huge fortunes were made in one
generation off tobacco in Virginia and sugar cane in the West Indies. It was
possible for a young adventurer with a passion for planting to establish
himself in the New World as landed gentry with an estate sometimes equal or
greater than that of his elder brother. Generous land grants attracted second
sons to Carolina.
It is the
same symbol used by South Carolina militias by 1775 and later adopted by
Moultrie. So we can put this argument to
rest. South Carolina was settled by second sons who prospered, fought and died
while establishing their legacy in the
rich lands of Carolina. Their symbol displays prominently on our flag along
with the symbol of South Carolina Liberty, the Palmetto tree.
She’s a grand old flag!
Charleston Old Walled City Tours offers guided tours daily and by appointment. Check out our webpage at www.walledcitytours.com or call us at 843 343 4851.
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