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Showing posts with label Charleston Photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charleston Photos. Show all posts

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Middleton Place Plantation - Part 1

Middleton Place Plantation House
(ALL the photos in these series are NOT for sale!)


View from the gate down to the Ashley river


A beautiful garden complex with ponds and the Ashley river in the back, very pretty in springtime for sure!


Pretty garden sculptures in nice surroundings


Majestic old oak trees are standing allover Middleton Place



Middleton Place (65 acres)

is a historic plantation with gardens located along the Ashley River at 4300 Ashley River Road, Charleston, South Carolina.

The plantation was established in 1741 by Henry Middleton, President of the First Continental Congress, and was home to generations of the family including Henry's son, Arthur Middleton, a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence; Arthur Middleton's son, Henry Middleton, Governor of South Carolina and U.S. Minister to Russia; and his son in turn, Williams Middleton, who signed the Ordinance of Secession.

The original main house was three stories tall, built of brick in Jacobean-style and flanked by two story wings. The north wing contained a library and ballroom, while the south wing was used as a guest house.

New records show that Middleton Place imported water buffalo from Constantinople in the late 1700s. These records show that these water buffalo were the first in the United States.

In 1865, near the end of the Civil War, the plantation was burned and looted by Union troops in retaliation for the owner's signing of the Ordinance of Secession. The soldiers killed and ate five of the water buffalo and stole six. These six later showed up in Central Park Zoo. Only the south building survived (built 1755), which is now the Middleton Place House Museum. Its gardens were further damaged by the great Charleston earthquake of 1886, and lay neglected until inherited by J. J. Pringle Smith in 1916, who then began their restoration. In 1941, on the garden's bicentennial, the Garden Club of America presented it with the Bulkley Medal "in commemoration of Two Hundred Years of enduring Beauty."

It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1971.[1][3]

In 1974 Smith's heirs donated the plantation to the non-profit Middleton Place Foundation.[citation needed]

Today the plantation's house museum contains a collection of Middleton family furniture, paintings, books, and documents dating from the 1740s through the 1880s. The formal gardens consist of symmetric landscaped terraces, allées, ponds, and garden rooms. The International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) has named them one of six American gardens of international importance.[citation needed]

The property is listed at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History.[4]

In the Mel Gibson movie The Patriot, General Cornwallis is shown having a banquet at Middleton Place.[citation needed]

Arthur Middleton was born at the house, and is buried there.

10 miles southeast of Summerville on South Carolina Rt. 61. / 12.5 miles northwest of Charleston on Rt. 61. It is open daily; an admission fee is charged.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Postcards from Charleston #2

Carriage tours on Kings Street


Flowers, flowers everywhere...


Sight through the fence


Light and shadows - and colorful houses


And peaceful places with inviting benches, this all is Charleston!



Well, we are happy again. The storm is over, moved up North and was not that bad at all, nothing close to that what they were predicting. We got a lot of rain and almost no wind or gusts and here where I'm living it felt like no storm at all, just rain and nothing else.

Coming from Key West I know now how to handle Hurricanes and evacuations and just now I'm crossing my fingers for my friends down there, who HAVE to evacuate from "Ike" coming pretty soon over the island.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Fort Multrie on Sullivan's Island

Cannons and the Fort


By the entrance to the Fort Multrie Museum


Looking up to the sky


Palmetto tree, the (ugly) lighthouse and the Fort


Fort Sumter is so close, you can almost throw a stone across



Fort Moultrie is the name of a series of forts on Sullivan's Island, South Carolina, built to protect the city of Charleston, South Carolina. The first fort, built of palmetto logs, inspired the flag and nickname (Palmetto State) of South Carolina.



History
The fort was unnamed and not yet complete when Admiral Sir Peter Parker and nine British warships attacked it on June 28, 1776, near the beginning of the American Revolutionary War.The soft palmetto logs did not crack under bombardment but rather absorbed the shot; there were even reports of cannon balls actually bouncing off of the walls of the structure. In any case, Charleston was saved from capture, and the fort was named for the commander in the battle, William Moultrie, and the locals, to this day celebrate 'Carolina Day' to commemorate the bravery of the defenders of the fort, the 2nd South Carolina Regiment. The fort was eventually captured by the British in the siege of Charleston. (See the southern theater in the article titled American Revolution for more information).





Saturday, August 30, 2008

Postcards from Charleston

The world famous Rainbow Row in down town


Impressive thunder clouds


Colorful Oleander flowers on Battery Street


Beautiful architecture on Kings Street


Colorful Rainbow Row

I have so many pictures left from all the beautiful places and corners in Charleston and I will show you them in small series like this.
I hope you'll enjoy and have a great weekend!





My NEW CALENDARS 2009 are available now!
For Charleston fans, my CHARLESTON - CALENDAR 2009
For Key West fans, my KEY WEST - CALENDAR 2009
For Florida fans, my FLORIDA - CALENDAR 2009
For Flower fans, my FLOWER - CALENDAR 2009
You will love it!

Friday, July 18, 2008

On a Cloudy and Windy Day Like This....

Pretty clouds make a nice back ground


Charleston seen from James Island


Container ship docks in the harbor


Private boat docks going out to the water


The wind was blowing me almost away :-)


A very small but pretty beach


A close up with my long lens of the Ravanel bridge - it looks like the bridge is just around the corner, right?


It was a pretty afternoon yesterday, the wind was blowing like crazy and the clouds were fantastic in the sky. I like to feel the wind on my skin and to smell the salty water, watching people at the beach and capturing some great moments in time. I have more pictures tomorrow about this small spot out somewhere on Johns Island in Charleston, so stay tuned! :-)

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Fort Johnson, Charleston SC

View from Fort Johnson to the Ravanel bridge


That's Fort Sumter far back on the horizon
(click in the photo to see it bigger)


As history tells: this was the spot where the civil war started with a cannon shot over to Fort Sumter
(click in the photo to read the text)



Today a circa 1820s brick powder magazine and a section Confederate earthworks are some of the surviving elements of the fort


I'm not sure, but I think this is one of the research boats from the Marine Research Institute located around Fort Johnson.


Fort Johnson

What is left of Fort Johnson? Built in the early 1700s, the fort was expanded and improved during the French and Indian War, American Revolution, and War of 1812. During this same time the fort was damaged was hurricanes and storms. By the time of the Civil War only a few structures remained and Confederate forces built earthworks on the site. Today a circa 1820s brick powder magazine and a section Confederate earthworks are some of the surviving elements of the fort.

For you who are interested in Charlestons history, please read more here about Fort Johnson

and here too:
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/marine/mrri/ftjohnson.html

Monday, July 14, 2008

In the Streets of Charleston, SC

A small lane down at the Rainbow Raw


House front across of the Rainbow Raw with pretty flowers - the lantern is burning already


Cobble stone street and brick houses - this scene has a very European look for me


These big white flower trees are blooming everywhere over town
(also in other very strong and gorgeous red colors)



Nice house front close down by the water


That's my apartment - I wish to have..... :-)


Last sunbeam on the house front



I love it very much to stroll the streets and all the small lanes of Charleston - and it's beautiful the most in the beginning warm evening lights.

Sorry, but I don't know the names of all these houses or streets - I'm enjoying more the details and the atmosphere of the moment. And when my camera clicks and I know, that I captured a nice scene in a good picture, that's what makes me happy.

That''s all what I need.... stay tuned, there will be more to come!

Monday, June 16, 2008

Charlestons Beautyful Architecture








Why am I not living in these gorgeous houses at South Battery in Charleston?

Well, I guess I have to work much harder from now on to earn the money it needs to pay the mortgage on these beautiful preferred living spaces.....! :-)

Thursday, April 17, 2008

A Down Town Stroll

The Custom House


The glass facade of the Art Institute of Charleston


First Presbyterian Church, founded in 1731


Nathaniel Russel House (1808) at Meeting Street, a property of
Historic Charleston Foundation



James Simmons House, founded at 1760 at 37 Meeting Street
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