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Journo | Storyteller | I make digital things that don’t exist | “They even broke into my safe” | VEEP S5 Cast Member
Another great story about Charleston's history from Nic Butler:
The Beef Market under Charleston's City Hall https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/the-beef-market-under-charlestons-city-hall #chsnews
The Beef Market under Charleston's City Hall

Charleston County Public Library
Another great story about Charleston's history from Nic Butler:
The First Football Match in Charleston, Christmas Eve 1892 https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/first-football-match-charleston-christmas-eve-1892 #chsnews
The First Football Match in Charleston, Christmas Eve 1892

Who won the title of state football champs in Charleston in 1892? Hear the details and antique play-by-play action in the next episode of Charleston Time Machine.

Charleston County Public Library
Another great story about Charleston's history from Nic Butler:
The First Football Match in Charleston, Christmas Eve 1892 https://www.ccpl.org/news/first-football-match-charleston-christmas-eve-1892 #chsnews
The First Football Match in Charleston, Christmas Eve 1892

Who won the title of state football champs in Charleston in 1892? Hear the details and antique play-by-play action in the next episode of Charleston Time Machine.

Charleston County Public Library
Another great story about Charleston's history from Nic Butler:
Watson's Garden: The Horticultural Roots of Courier Square https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/watsons-garden-the-horticultural-roots-of-courier-square #chsnews
Watson's Garden: The Horticultural Roots of Courier Square

What kinds of plants were cultivated in South Carolina’s first commercial nursery? Learn all the details in the next episode of Charleston Time Machine.

Charleston County Public Library
Another great story about Charleston's history from Nic Butler:
Free Indians In Amity with the State: A Legal Legacy https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/free-indians-in-amity-with-the-state-a-legal-legacy #chsnews
Free Indians In Amity with the State: A Legal Legacy

Native American ancestry provided a measure of legal immunity to mixed-race people in antebellum South Carolina. Check out the latest episode of Charleston Time Machine to hear examples of their legal victories.

Charleston County Public Library
Another great story about Charleston's history from Nic Butler:
The Native American Land Cessions of 1684 https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/native-american-land-cessions-1684 #chsnews
The Native American Land Cessions of 1684

In the late winter of 1684, representatives of eight Native American tribes in the Lowcountry of South Carolina surrendered their traditional homelands to English colonists. A series of documents ostensibly signed on a single day that February ceded Indigenous rights to millions of acres between the rivers Stono and Savannah, ranging from the Atlantic Ocean to the Appalachian

Charleston County Public Library
Another great story about Charleston's history from Nic Butler:
The Ghosts of Petit Versailles https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/the-ghosts-of-petit-versailles #chsnews
The Ghosts of Petit Versailles

A forgotten colonial house in suburban Charleston links the haunting stories of two women who died prematurely. Learn the tragic details in the next episode of Charleston Time Machine.

Charleston County Public Library
Brick Pond Park to Chick-fil-A: North Augusta is seeing more sustainable development

“Big changes are happening in our water quality. We may not feel it on an individual basis, but if we look at it holistically the whole community is now getting

Post and Courier
Two years after approved, work begins on Fairfield Inn hotel in downtown Spartanburg

Site work began in October for a new Marriott-owned hotel in downtown Spartanburg on St. John Street. Construction on the new Fairfield Inn and Suites is scheduled to be completed

Post and Courier
Ghost towns left out of SC's population boom. Small rural towns are fading away.

Two South Carolina towns have so few residents that they will likely be dissolved.

Post and Courier