Charleston Time Machine
Un pódcast de Nic Butler, Ph.D.
300 Episodo
-  Episode 160: The Horn Work: Marion Square’s Tabby FortressPublicado: 29/5/2020
-  Episode 159: Hucksters’ Paradise: Mobile Food in Urban Charleston, Part 2Publicado: 22/5/2020
-  Episode 158: Hucksters’ Paradise: Mobile Food in Urban Charleston, Part 1Publicado: 15/5/2020
-  Episode 157: Dining and Drinking in Charleston Before the Food and Beverage IndustryPublicado: 7/5/2020
-  Episode 156: A Moderate Trot through the History of Street SpeedPublicado: 1/5/2020
-  Episode 155: Hemp Cultivation in Early South CarolinaPublicado: 24/4/2020
-  Episode 154: Charleston at 350: The Legacy of Founding DecisionsPublicado: 17/4/2020
-  Episdoe 153: Quarantine in Charleston Harbor, 1698–1949Publicado: 9/4/2020
-  Episode 152: The Scandalous Black Dance of 1795, Part 2Publicado: 3/4/2020
-  Episode 151: The Scandalous Black Dance of 1795, Part 1Publicado: 27/3/2020
-  Episode 150: Pandemic and Panic: Influenza in 1918 CharlestonPublicado: 19/3/2020
-  Episode 149: Yamboo: An Enslaved Muslim in Early South CarolinaPublicado: 13/3/2020
-  Episode 148: His Majesty’s Warships in Charleston HarborPublicado: 6/3/2020
-  Episode 147: Self-Purchase: The Price of Freedom from SlaveryPublicado: 28/2/2020
-  Episode 146: Private Manumission: An Intimate Path to FreedomPublicado: 21/2/2020
-  Episode 145: Public Manumission: A Reward for Remarkable ServicePublicado: 14/2/2020
-  Episdoe 144: Defining Charleston’s Free People of ColorPublicado: 7/2/2020
-  Episode 143: The Carolina Coffee House of LondonPublicado: 30/1/2020
-  Episode 142: The Myth of the Holy CityPublicado: 24/1/2020
-  Episode 141: The South Carolina Revolution of 1719, Part 2Publicado: 17/1/2020
Dr. Nic Butler, historian at the Charleston County Public Library, explores the less familiar corners of local history with stories that invite audiences to reflect on the enduring presence of the past in the Lowcountry of South Carolina.
