South Carolina - Cultural Destinations
- By Smithsonian.com
- Smithsonian.com, November 08, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Old Edgefield Pottery
This museum and studio in Edgefield tell the story of the alkaline glazed, traditional pottery made in the area by African-Americans in the 1800s as they had done in their native land. The most famous, Dave the Potter, sometimes inscribed his work with a poem. See examples of his pottery, original Edgefield pottery dating to the 1820s and reproductions in the museum. Also watch the resident potter give demonstrations of the craft.
Old Slave Mart Museum
Possibly the only known building used as a slave auction gallery in South Carolina still in existence, the Old Slave Mart in Charleston was once part of a complex of buildings known as Ryan's Mart. The complex had a brick-wall enclosed yard, a four-story building that contained a "barracoon" or slave jail, a kitchen and a dead house or morgue. Slave auctions ended here in Nov. 1863.
(South Carolina) Artisans Center
Declared the "The Official Folk Art and Craft Center for South Carolina" by the state legislature, this Walterboro center offers juried folk art and crafts for sale to the general public. Representing the work of over 200 of the state's finest artists, from blown and formed glass, sweetgrass baskets, furniture, carvings, pottery, jewelry, quilts, tatting, whimsical folk art, metalwork and much more.
(South Carolina) Cotton Museum
This Bishopville museum preserves the history of South Carolina's cotton culture. See an original plantation spinner, a 130-year-old loom, a three-foot tall boll weevil, original tools and more. Interactive exhibits and amusing stories in an authentic setting allow you to experience a way of life long gone yet very much a part of the present.
(South Carolina) State Museum
Experience South Carolina in all its beauty and diversity. Climb aboard the "Best Friend of Charleston" train. Stroll along a boardwalk at the beach diorama. Learn how a South Carolinian invented the laser. Enjoy the spacious Lipscomb Art Gallery. This interactive "people's museum" offers exhibits and programs in art, history, natural history, science and technology. Hands-on exhibits are featured throughout its four-story 1890s building, which housed the world's first all-electric textile mill.
The Citadel Archives and Museum
Located on the Citadel's Charleston campus, the Archives and Museum is the repository for all the historic materials relating to the Citadel, from its founding in 1842 to present day.
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Comments (1)
I know that my great great great grandmother, Phyllis, would be proud of the legacy she left behind. Well, at the time, she didn't know it was a legacy. Phyllis was an African woman who was captured and sold into slavery and the rest is History. Please see my website (A Family of a Living History): www.sweetgrassgullah.com
Posted by Nakia Wugfall on July 27,2012 | 10:19 PM