Post Tagged with: "Sam Spence"

Photo by Jackson Bailes.

FOCUS: Peaceful protest followed by looting, clean-up and curfew

Staff reports  |  Saturday brought a pretty peaceful protest of up to 1,000 people marching through the streets of downtown Charleston.  But as night fell, looters ransacked stores and eateries already suffering from weeks of closure due to the novel coronavirus.  

Police fired tear gas to disperse a crowd as rioters, generally thought to be a different set of people from protesters, threw bricks, rocks and furniture through windows along King Street, particularly causing damage north of Calhoun Street. By 10 p.m., a countywide curfew was in effect.

Just before midnight, Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg released the following statement:  “The murder of George Floyd has rightly caused outrage here and across the country. And while we as Charlestonians strongly support all of the good men and women who are peacefully and lawfully protesting that terrible crime, we cannot and will not condone acts of violence and vandalism in our city. …

by · 06/01/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Photo Essay, Photos
NEW for 6/1: On protests, Bobby Kennedy, free parking

NEW for 6/1: On protests, Bobby Kennedy, free parking

IN THIS EDITION
TODAY’S FOCUS: Peaceful protest followed by looting, clean-up and curfew
COMMENTARY, Brack: Return home and say a prayer for the country
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: SCIWAY
NEWS BRIEFS:  Free parking downtown after 6 p.m.
FEEDBACK: Yep, put on the mask
MYSTERY PHOTO: Pipes and stuff
CALENDAR:  Charleston Museum reopens
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Granby

by · 06/01/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
Along the Ashley River at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens, outside Charleston, S.C.

GOOD NEWS: History Fair to return July 7 to Magnolia Gardens

Staff reports  |  Want to explore local history and meet the people who promote and preserve it? If so, come to the 6thannual History Fair on July 7 at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens.

The free fair is features well-known organizations in education, religion, social services, the arts and tourism, including the planned International African American Museum at Gadsden’s Wharf where nearly 40 percent of the captured West Africans brought to Charleston first stepped on American soil.

by · 06/17/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs