Post Tagged with: "Magnolia Plantation"

MYSTERY PHOTO: Epic fail

MYSTERY PHOTO: Epic fail

This may be tough: Here’s an old church somewhere in the Lowcountry.  Where?  Send your best guess to editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  And don’t forget to include your name and the town in which you live.

Our previous Mystery Photo: Last week’s mystery, “Natural mystery,” showed a close-up of an azalea flower, which Columbia resident Jay Altman told us usually has five stamens per lobe and five lobes in a flower.

by · 04/05/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos
NEW for 11/23: Act of resistance; State should act; Cook-off results

NEW for 11/23: Act of resistance; State should act; Cook-off results

IN THIS EDITION
TODAY’S FOCUS: The act of resistance embedded in a mysterious Magnolia Gardens photo
COMMENTARY, Brack: S.C. should take virus more seriously and act
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Titan Termite & Pest Control
NEWS BRIEFS:  Annual chili cook-off raises big money to help animals
FEEDBACK: Send us your thoughts
MYSTERY PHOTO: Building with history
CALENDAR: Photographs, paintings on December display in North Charleston 

by · 11/23/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
FOCUS: Interest in Slavery to Freedom Tour spikes at Magnolia 

FOCUS: Interest in Slavery to Freedom Tour spikes at Magnolia 

By Herb Frazier, special to Charleston Currents  |  With rapid-fire questions, Georgia nurse Leonza Hudson wanted to know where the enslaved people at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens attended church and cook and were the children taught to read.

He and his wife, pediatrician Tamara New-Hudson, directed their questions to Joseph McGill as he led the couple and eight others through four former slave dwellings open daily during Magnolia’s Slavery to Freedom Tour.

The African-American couple, who lives in Decater, Ga., said they were drawn to Charleston for its history. A Google search steered them specifically to Magnolia for a lesson on slavery. They said slavery was not taught in the all-white schools he attended in Michigan and at her school in Maine.

by · 09/21/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
NEW for 9/21: Magnolia tour spikes; Parasite ad; Trolls; Big ship

NEW for 9/21: Magnolia tour spikes; Parasite ad; Trolls; Big ship

IN THIS ISSUE:
TODAY’S FOCUS:  Interest in Slavery to Freedom Tour spikes at Magnolia 
COMMENTARY, Brack: Parasite ad may backfire to help Graham
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Morris Financial Concepts, Inc.
NEWS BRIEFS:  How to spot a troll, thanks to Clemson
FEEDBACK: Send us your thoughts
MYSTERY PHOTO: Dog day afternoon
CALENDAR:  Green auction is under way, live event is Saturday
NEW BOOK: New history book is now in local stores

by · 09/21/2020 · 1 comment · Full issue
Photos courtesy Magnolia Plantation and Gardens.

FOCUS: Staff craftsmen to fix Magnolia’s iconic white bridge

Staff reports  |  It will be another two months before visitors can walk over the iconic white bridge at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens.  It will take that long for skilled staff craftsmen to fix it after a tree fell on it last week.

“It was a maple tree at the water’s edge and obviously it was bad on the inside,” said attraction director Tom Johnson.  “With all of this rain and stuff, it kind of half uprooted and fell on our bridge.”

The tree had not been on the staff’s radar screen as being a potential problem so it was a pretty big surprise when it fell, Johnson said.

Fortunately, most of the damage was superficial.  The much-photographed bridge, built back in the 1840s, remains structurally sound.  

“We pulled the decking off and found the main structure is solid,” he said.  “It’s made of 1-foot-by-1-foot cypress posts driven 16-feet down into the ground.  Can you imagine that — 16 feet that far back?  There’s been some extra bracing done since Hurricane Hugo” 31 years ago.

Johnson said his team had planned to restore the bridge prior to last week’s damage because some of the railing had loosened.

by · 07/13/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
NEW for 7/13: Magnolia repairs bridge; Innovation report; Palmetto Poem

NEW for 7/13: Magnolia repairs bridge; Innovation report; Palmetto Poem

IN THIS ISSUE
TODAY’S FOCUS: Staff craftsmen to fix Magnolia’s iconic white bridge
COMMENTARY, Brack: Beware of an October surprise from pandemic 
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: SCIWAY
PALMETTO POEM, Mungin:  Jim Crow
NEWS BRIEFS:  Trident Literacy Association gets major grant 
FEEDBACK: Send us your thoughts
MYSTERY PHOTO: Some kind of construction going on
CALENDAR:   Hendrix to talk about new book on 6 p.m. Thursday Zoom call
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Charles Townes with an “s”

by · 07/13/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
FOCUS: Tubman book featured in Magnolia’s Children Garden

FOCUS: Tubman book featured in Magnolia’s Children Garden

By Herb Frazier  | In honor of Black History Month, Tri-County First Steps has placed in the Children’s Garden at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens the book “Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom,” by Carole Boston Weatherford and illustrated by Kadir Nelson.

This book is a tribute to Tubman’s strength, humility, and ability to navigate nature and the outdoors. It is the perfect book for children 5- to 8-years old. Scan a QR code on the book’s cover to hear an interactive storytelling session narrative by Dorchester County First Steps Director Crystal Campbell.

Parents can listen to the story using their cellphones to enjoy Campbell’s lyrical story that brings the full radiance of Tubman’s life. Pages of the book have been placed on 16 story boards along a winding path in the garden.

by · 02/17/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
2/17, full issue: From Harriet Tubman to the presidential primary

2/17, full issue: From Harriet Tubman to the presidential primary

IN THIS EDITION
TODAY’S FOCUS: Tubman book featured in Magnolia’s Children Garden
COMMENTARY, Brack: Welcome to South Carolina
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: SCIWAY
NEWS BRIEFS:  State to have largest surplus in history
PALMETTO POEM, Platt: Dresden’s Frauenkirche weeps for Notre-Dame de Paris
FEEDBACK:  Teachers need more
MYSTERY PHOTO: Tranquil setting
CALENDAR: Knotts, Ragusa to talk Feb. 23 about Democratic primary

by · 02/17/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
PHOTO FOCUS: “Lights of Magnolia” explodes with color, thrills, sounds

PHOTO FOCUS: “Lights of Magnolia” explodes with color, thrills, sounds

By Rob Byko, contributing photographer  | Approaching Magnolia Plantation at night through the gates along a winding drive, you can tell you’re in for a treat. Over the treetops and through the underbrush, you see your first glimpse of the brilliant lights in colors too numerous to mention. 

Entering the festival grounds, the evening explodes in color and sound. The lights’ reflections wash over joyful faces of patrons walking the garden paths. The light dances along ponds and through the eyes of children who seem lost in the fantasy.

An easy walking trail guides you first along a fairy tale of characters, followed by flowers and fauna taller than your head.  Then you meet huge butterflies and ladybugs, pandas and peacocks. Turn a corner and you find a kaleidoscope from the animal kingdom featuring playful lions, stoic zebras and tigers so vivid they seem real. 

Finally, the tour returns to fantasy, placing you face-to-face with a 200-foot-long dragon whose majestic head soars more than 45 feet in the air. …

by · 12/02/2019 · 1 comment · Focus, Good news, Photo Essay
12/2, full issue: Lights of Magnolia; Press freedom; Lots of events

12/2, full issue: Lights of Magnolia; Press freedom; Lots of events

IN THIS EDITION
PHOTO FOCUS:  “Lights of Magnolia” explodes with color, thrills, sounds
COMMENTARY: Free press needed now more than ever
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: SCIWAY
GOOD NEWS: 33 schools take part in Giant Greeting Card Competition
FEEDBACK:  Send us your thoughts
MYSTERY PHOTO: Lowcountry dawn
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA:  Charles Cotesworth Pinckney
CALENDAR:  Homegrown Holiday Bazaar set for Dec. 7 on Johns Island

by · 12/02/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue