Category Archives: South Carolina
United States Customs House in Charleston
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Overlooking Bay Street and the harbor, construction of the Customs House in Charleston began in 1853, but progress was slow as the land it was built upon was in essence a swamp, and required extensive work just to lay a foundation, which was completed in 1855. But then came the Civil War and construction was halted until 1870, and in fact, the incomplete structure was damaged by shelling during the war.
The cruciform shaped building, built on a Roman Corinthian concept, is monumental in scale, stretch 259 feet on its east-west axis and 152 feet on its north-south. Marble is liberally used through, including office fireplaces. Today the building remains as it was intended, a U.S. Customs House. The United State Custom House is located at 200 East Bay St., at the foot of Market St. It is not open to the public.
Beach at Sullivan’s Island at Sunrise
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Sullivan’s Island, near Charleston, South Carolina was named for a lighthouse keeper, Captain Florence O’Sulivan, an Irish immigrant from Kinsale in the mid 17th century. It served a more nefarious purpose as the largest slave point in North America. It’s estimated that almost half of the African-American’s in the United States have ancestors who passed through Sullivan’s Island, making it a sort of Ellis Island of the slave trade. Today, the only monument to this unholy past is a small bench, dedicated in 2008.
In the American revolution, Colonial forces held the island against an attack by Cornwallis, who would later go down to a humiliating defeat at Yorktown, due in no small part to the spongy nature of the palmetto trees of which the force was built, which had an uncanny knack for repelling cannonballs. Also in military history, the Hunley – the first submarine to ever sink an enemy ship was lost off the island.











