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Glimpses of Charleston

A local's eye view

In 1838 this imposing brick house on Laurens Street (c.1818) had its basement loaded with kegs of gunpowder in case the fire of 1838 spread in its direction. The thought was that they would blow up the house to help stop the spread of the fire. Fortunately, for the house, the fire never reached it and they never had to ignite the kegs. 

No Boom

In 1838 this imposing brick house on Laurens Street (c.1818) had its basement loaded with kegs of gunpowder in case the fire of 1838 spread in its direction. The thought was that they would blow up the house to help stop the spread of the fire. Fortunately, for the house, the fire never reached it and they never had to ignite the kegs.

Ask a Local

What’s the deal with the City Market? Were slaves sold there or not?

asks John H., from Seattle, Washington… The City Market is what was called the “Slaves’ Market,” not the “Slaves Market.”  That apostrophe makes all the difference in the world. While a shocking number of humans were sold into slavery in Charleston (a very dark period in the City’s history), they were not sold at what […]

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Copyright © 2025, David R. AvRutick. All rights reserved.