Archive for December, 2018

Pictured above is a hand-colored 1863 image (Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper) of the Emancipation Day celebration on Jan. 1, 1863, under a grove of oaks outside Camp Saxton along the Beaufort River.  Columbia filmmaker and Charleston native Bud Ferillo, who provided the engraved image, tells us that celebration of the first Emancipation Day was the largest in the South of freedmen when sine 3,000 people attended.  Today, the location is home to Naval Hospital Beaufort.

FOCUS: Morris Brown AME to host special Watch Night today at noon

By Herb Frazier  |  Today at noon, the Charleston community will gather at Morris Brown AME Church to celebrate a moment in history when enslaved people anticipated freedom.

This special event at Morris Brown will be an homage to services first held on Dec. 31, 1862. At that time, the enslaved met in praise houses and churches to await the end of slavery with the Emancipation Proclamation on Jan. 1, 1863.

Those first freedom’s eve services in 1862 have become an annual celebration called Watch Night held on New Year’s Eve in black churches across America. While many congregations, like Morris Brown, have held this service its original purpose had been lost in time. Last year, the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Commission began an effort to preserve and sustain this cherished tradition.

by · 12/31/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
BRACK: There are so many things I don’t understand

BRACK: There are so many things I don’t understand

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  It’s a season for lists and I’ve been keeping a list of things that I just don’t understand — and probably never will.  Yes, it’s a different way to start off a new year, but if I accept I never will understand these things, then maybe I won’t worry about them and life will become even better.

So, without lots of fanfare, here is a hodge-podge of 11 kinds of mush that do uncurl in my brain:

by · 12/31/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
GOOD NEWS: USS Charleston to be commissioned March 2

GOOD NEWS: USS Charleston to be commissioned March 2

Staff reports  | The Columbus Street Terminal in Charleston will host a March 2 commissioning of the new USS Charleston (LCS 18), an Independence-class littoral combat ship built in Mobile, Ala.

The $440 million ship is a state-of-the-art trimaran designed to go into shallow waters that other ships can’t.  Awarded in December 2010, the ship was named by then-Navy Secretary Ray Mabus in January 2015 with Charlotte Riley, wife of former Mayor Joe Riley, serving as the ship’s sponsor.  Launched in September 2017, the 418-foot ship with a speed of 44 knots (50.6 mph) was delivered in August 2018.  It will be homeported in San Diego, Calif.

by · 12/31/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
MYSTERY:  Is it a castle?

MYSTERY:  Is it a castle?

This part of the South Carolina building above looks like a castle.  But is it? Send your guess to:  editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  And don’t forget to include your name and the town in which you live.

Our previous Mystery Photo

Our Dec. 17 mystery, “A Lowcountry building decked out for the holidays,” was a gift from longtime sleuth Bill Segars Hartsville.  He sent us a picture of the Fishers of Men Total Man Deliverance Ministry church in downtown Walterboro.

by · 12/31/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos
12/31: Watch Night at noon; Cauliflower and more: USS Charleston

12/31: Watch Night at noon; Cauliflower and more: USS Charleston

IN THIS ISSUE  | Dec. 31, 2018

FOCUS: Morris Brown AME to host special Watch Night today at noon
COMMENTARY, Brack: There are so many things I don’t understand
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:  Magnolia Plantation and Gardens
GOOD NEWS:  USS Charleston to be commissioned March 2
FEEDBACK: Do you have any opinions? Send them to us
MYSTERY PHOTO:  Is it a castle?
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Columbia College
CALENDAR: Restaurant Week is around the corner

by · 12/31/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
FOCUS:  Dining With Friends returns to the Lowcountry in 2019

FOCUS:  Dining With Friends returns to the Lowcountry in 2019

By Jason Kirk, special to Charleston Currents  |  Dining With Friends is back, and party hosts all over Charleston couldn’t be more excited. On Jan. 19, 2019, hundreds of people around the greater Charleston community will host dinner parties in their homes, churches or workplaces as part of a massive fundraising effort to support the work of Palmetto Community Care.

Party hosts and their guests will then gather together for a Grand Finale celebration with drinks, desserts and dancing at Memminger Auditorium.

The great thing about this event is it’s a low-stress commitment for party hosts. They don’t have to worry about “asking their friends for money” – the invitations provided will do all the work.

by · 12/17/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
BRACK: Pay our teachers better

BRACK: Pay our teachers better

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  This should be a no-brainer for state legislators:  If you want to have better teachers, you have to provide a better salary.

South Carolina has been failing its teachers, students and parents for years.  Over the last eight years, the General Assembly has steered $4 billion less to public education than state law requires.  If you want to know why we keep showing up at the bottom, trying to get education on the cheap is the biggest reason of all.

by · 12/17/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
PHOTO ESSAY: Christmas vacation … in Vienna

PHOTO ESSAY: Christmas vacation … in Vienna

Charleston resident Cynthia Bledsoe sent along these great photos after jetting recently to Vienna to experience the sights, sounds and tastes of the holiday season.  We hope you’ll enjoy them as much as we did – and that you have a happy yuletide.

by · 12/17/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Photo Essay, Photos
GOOD NEWS: Share your legislative priorities in new reader survey

GOOD NEWS: Share your legislative priorities in new reader survey

Staff reports  |  Our sister publication, Statehouse Report, on Friday highlighted what lawmakers want to do in the 2019 legislative session in this news story.  But we’d like to give you a chance to sound off about your priorities.

Therefore, we encourage you to take a 10-question survey to share your thoughts on the state’s challenges and priorities. 

by · 12/17/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
MYSTERY:  A Lowcountry building decked out for the holidays

MYSTERY:  A Lowcountry building decked out for the holidays

This week’s mystery comes to us from a loyal reader who said the building almost screams Christmas – even without the wreathes on the front of the building.  Hint: It’s in the greater Lowcountry area and we expect it might be a tough one.  Send your guess to:  editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  And don’t forget to include your name and the town in which you live.

Our previous Mystery Photo: Our Dec. 10 mystery, “Clues in photo might give away where it is,” had enough clues to get a lot of correct guesses from alert readers.  They knew the photo showed the Charleston Maritime Center along the bank of the Cooper River near the S.C. Aquarium.

by · 12/17/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos