An ode to the city I’ve called home for many years

It’s hard for me to believe now, but for 25 years I had daily access to Charleston’s intoxicatingly charming and fascinating historic district. The former family homestead where my mother lived is in the heart of the district, and for 22 of those 25 years, I worked in the historic district. So naturally, having a great love of history and architecture, and being mindful that my ancestors lived in this very old city by the sea founded in 1670, I have spent a lot of time walking the streets, marveling that except for cars, it seems like a perfect time capsule, so fervently safeguarded and preserved are the many hundreds of 18th and 19th century houses and buildings.

Unfortunately, two years after my mother died, my siblings and I had to sell the house, a painful but necessary undertaking, and one which was delayed by the pandemic. Because of that, I spent an extra two years by myself in that gracious home full of memories that has been honored with a major preservation award and which, along with the gardens, was for years on one of the city’s major home and garden tours, tours, ours being in the Fall.

I was so proud of that house, and we loved showing it to guests on the annual tours until my mother’s health declined to the point where we could no longer do it. She loved being a part of the tours.

It’s now been exactly two months since the house was sold, and five months since I moved into my new apartment. This year has been quite a transition, and one that has been both sad, and yet also hopeful and exciting as I started over in another area of the city, which I like a lot.

It’s very true, however, I got spoiled all those years being right in the middle of old Charleston and it’s many amenities. There’s always something to do, or some place to visit in this city.

In fact, one of the reasons I decided to write this ode to Charleston is because of my latest photo walk two days ago, and reading the news that Travel & Leisure Magazine’s annual reader’s poll named Charleston the best U.S. city to visit for the 10th year on a row, ahead of places like New Orleans, San Francisco and New York.

It makes me feel proud that visitors find so much to like about this place. As I wandered down some of my favorite historic streets taking photos once again, as I have countless times before, I looked at the sights almost as if I had never seen them before. That’s the amazing thing — Charleston’s old streets, houses and multitude of gardens are so beautiful and timelessly elegant, you can’t quite believe it’s all real in this frenetic and scary 21st century we’re living through, beset by global warming, war, and the pandemic.

Charleston is filled with more than three centuries of history, much of the early history darkened by the city and surrounding area’s role in slavery and the Civil War. It used to be that the dark legacy of the past was ignored or glossed over when tourists came to to see and learn about the past here. Not any more. In the past two decades there’s been an enormous effort to open the floodgates and let it all come out. This has been a good thing. The beauty
of the historic district, and the numerous area plantations whose elaborate gardens we enjoy so much today, came with a heavy price in human suffering. I try to always be mindful of this when I am visiting historic sites, and all of us who live here, and whose families came to this vital seaport city centuries ago, are better for the changed times and new openness.

Fortunately, I now live only a ten minute drive to the historic district and the parks, gardens and streets I came to know do well. I’m grateful that I can come across the Ashley River any time I want, and appreciate the beauty I was for so many years surrounded by.

A Walk in the Historic District, August 9, 2022

https://www.flickr.com/gp/camas/304651Lc94

Some recent news articles about Charleston’s popularity as a tourist destination.

The 15 Best Cities in the United States

https://www.travelandleisure.com/worlds-best/best-cities-in-the-united-states-2022

https://www.travelandleisure.com/trip-ideas/best-united-states-city-charleston-south-carolina

Our former home and gardens in Charleston’s historic district

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August 12, 2022

I love this. I have lots of family in the general area of Charleston, so I grew up visiting there frequently. I’ve never gotten tired of being a tourist there, and still take my family there on vacations.

August 13, 2022

@queenofegypt That’s so interesting.  It’s a quite varied metro area, as you know.  Downtown Charleston is only a small part of it, but it’s a world apart from the surrounding cities and suburbs.  There are local landmarks and points of interest that I never tire of visiting, especially the beautiful and historic Charles Towne Landing State Historic Site, which is near where I live and where I am a frequent visitor.

August 12, 2022

My hometown is so small if you blink you will miss it.  There is a school and three churches, a place to eat seafood and a couple of gas stations.  It’s a very small town.  Charleston sound and looks beautiful.  I can’t imagine living that close to such a beautiful place.

I enjoyed reading the articles, especially the second one that talked about specific places there.

August 13, 2022

@happyathome  No stoplight in your town?  Lol.  Sounds more like a community than an incorporated town.  That near-country life has many virtues.  The main one for me would be being away from the endless traffic here in Charleston.  My apartment is well off the main highway and is very quiet, however, so I’m content. ☺️

August 13, 2022

@oswego Nope, no stoplight lol

August 12, 2022

Makes me want to visit!

August 12, 2022

Charleston looks like such a charming place, and those houses are so well-kept. You can tell that people take pride in their surroundings.

August 13, 2022

@startingover_1 Oh, they do.  Charleston has some of the first and strictest preservation laws in the country, and a very strict Board of Architectural Review, which has to approve every new construction and renovation.

August 13, 2022

Hard to part with that…but new beginnings are exciting if you let them be.

August 14, 2022

@icarusknew I am doing just that.  I miss the old place very much, but am content in my new home.

I hope you are well.  Apparently we retired in the same year.  I’m fully enjoying it now.  The freedom is like nothing else I’ve ever experienced.

Any plans to start up your diary again?