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Myths and Historic Homes of Charleston

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Real Estate Agent with The Agent Owned Realty Co.

 

Charleston SC Realtor Bryan Thompson wanted to highlight readers on some myths and facts of Charleston. 

Rewriting History: After nearly three decades, Charleston updates its notes for tour guides

 

BY ROBERT BEHRE
Monday, December 12, 2011

The bible for Charleston's tourism industry has just been rethought, rewritten and is now on sale.

No one expects it to become a best-seller. For starters, its title is long and not very catchy: "The City of Charleston Tour Guide Training Manual."

But for the curators of Charleston's history, the new book represents an achievement more than three years in the making, one that will play a vital role in educating those who educate others about the city's past.

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Several tour groups converged on Washington Park last week, including Old Charleston Walking Tours, hosted by Denny Stiles, who regales sisters Sherry Burr from San Jose (left) and Rickee Arntz of Portland with historical tales of the city.

Katherine Saunders, the Historic Charleston Foundation's associate preservation director, helped pull the 492-page volume together. Her first job here was as a tour guide, and she kept that experience in mind.

"Giving a good tour, there's an art to it. You have to educate and entertain, so we wanted to make sure people knew the true and interesting stories," she said.

"We didn't want to put people to sleep. Accuracy was the first consideration, but we did want to make it readable and enjoyable so people can pass along the excitement we have at the foundation for all this stuff."

A History of Tour Guide History

Perhaps no other city regulates tourism more strictly than Charleston, and part of its rules require all professional tour guides to be licensed.

Elizabeth Young received the first license in 1952, and by the 1970s, there were some notes that the city circulated to help others studying to pass the test.

Robert Stockton, a former newspaper reporter and adjunct history professor at the College of Charleston, pulled together a large bound volume for tour guides in the mid-1980s.

Want a copy?

"The City of Charleston Tour Guide Training Manual" went on sale last week and can be purchased only at the city's Tourism Management offices at 32 Ann St. The spiral-bound volume sells for $45, though people may buy it on a compact disc for only $15.

The city has been interested in updating the work for years and finally put the project out for bids three years ago, said Clerk of Council Vanessa Turner Maybank, who also oversees the city's Tourism Management division.

The Historic Charleston Foundation won the contract with a bid of $20,000, but Saunders said that sum did not cover its costs.

"We look at this as a gift to the city," she said. "It's an advocacy project."

Aside from the $20,000 the city spent to have the manual rewritten, the tab to print the first 100 copies came to $3,300 -- or $33 a book.

Maybank said the city might never recoup its cost, but making money is not the point.

Myth busters

The new city tour guide training manual contains blurbs that correct some widely held misconceptions about Charleston history, such as:

The Charleston single housedid not evolve because of a tax on the frontage of the property. There was no such tax.

The term Chevaux-de-Frisedoes not mean "hair standing on end." The French term literally means "Frisian Horse" and describes spiky ironwork used for security reasons.

Rainbow Row was not painted its present colors to help illiterate Colonial shoppers know which store sold what. The paint scheme dates from the 1930s.

The color "Charleston Green"did not originate from homeowners trying to save money during lean times. The origin is not known, but it is believed to date from the changing tastes of about a century ago.

Charleston's Board of Architectural Review does not dictate paint colors (though it may reject a property owner's proposed paint scheme). The city also does not have a palette of "approved" colors.

Fire markers on downtown homes weren't handed out by insurance companies so only their brigades could be called to put out a fire on that property. All city fire brigades were volunteers until the city began a paid fire department in 1882.

The City Market was never used for the sale of slaves. Instead, it was a food and provisions market.

"When people come to Charleston, they want their guides to be extremely knowledgeable about the city," she said.

What's inside

The new guide has much of Stockton's material, including an extensive street-by-street section that highlights the history of about 1,000 houses, churches and other significant buildings.

But the first half of the guide includes dozens of short essays that cover many aspects of the city's history, from immigrants to points of interest in the harbor to Gullah-Geechie culture and more.

Another section explains the city's architecture and its preservation movement, complete with an illustrated summary of its architectural styles and an essay on historic paint colors, including "Haint Blue" and "Charleston Green."

Denny Stiles of Old Charleston Walking Tours helped write a few chapters and also reviewed the work as a member of the city's Tourism Management Commission.

"It's more information than any guide is ever going to absorb, but it's just a useful reference tool for the city," he said.

To help prevent guides from becoming overwhelmed, palmetto symbols mark properties that might appear on the tour guide's 200-question test.

Saunders said 45 authors worked on the guide, about 40 more than who contributed to the 1984 version.

The other changes are that the guide is now in a digital format that will allow for more frequent minor updates -- and it is much more richly illustrated, with hundreds of photographs and maps.

Saunders noted that much has changed since 1984. Just around the Four Corners of Law, the Hollings Judicial Annex has opened; the historic courthouse and City Hall have undergone major renovations; the Meyers Peace House was moved from Courthouse Square to Broad Street; a new county judicial center opened on Broad Street; and the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist has a new steeple.

Those who pulled the new guide together agreed that their greatest challenge was not so much compiling what's in the guide but deciding what to leave out.

"This book could have been 1,000 pages long," Maybank said.

"One of the challenges for me was knowing when we needed to stop," Saunders added. "I didn't want to intimidate a whole new generation of guides. We wanted it to be something they find enjoyable and educational at the same time."

Charleston SC Realtor and Spartanburg Native Bryan Thompson is happy to share more details and myths of the lowcountry, and, in particular, historic homes and families once held there. Charleston SC is a great city and with interest rates this low, now is a great time to buy a home in our wonderful city. Says Charleston SC Realtor Bryan Thompson, "This is America's most important in tact historic city with some amazing historic homes". Charleston SC Realtor Bryan Thompson also strongly reccomends Jonathon Poston's fine book "The Buildings of Charleston" for a wonderful view and history of Charlestons finest homes. For more details on real estate and the city of Charleston, please visit Charleston SC Realtor Bryan Thompson at  www.bryanthompsonrealestate.com

 

 

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