Sullivan's Island Branch Library. Caption on back: "Some of the 13 'graduates' and their friends at the closing exercises of the County library's summer reading game at the Sullivan's Island branch library, Charleston, S.C. Aug. 27, '57. Charleston County Library."
View of steamship on water, taken from porch of house on Sullivans Island. Includes ladies and gentlemen on the beach. Page 13, Photo 1 of collection. 3.5" x 3.5" B/W photograph.
Oil painting by Lt. William Elliott depicts the abortive attack on Fort Moultrie during the American Revolution. Plate on painting reads: "Charlestowne South Carolina. The abortive attack of Fort Moultrie 26th June, 1776, by a British naval force under Commodore Sir Peter Parker consisting of HMS's Bristol, Active, Experiment, Solebay, Actaeon, Syren, Sphinx, and bomb vessel Thunder. Lt. Wm. Elliott RN, Fl 1784-1792, Hon. Exhibitor at the Royal Academy."
Carolus Drayton more commonly known as Charles Drayton I (1743-1820). Concerns day-to-day management of Drayton plantations, (particularly Drayton Hall and Jehossee), focusing on crops, livestock, labor, and the movement of these between estates.
This interview with Brent Heffron focuses on two major topics, one being the idyllic nature of growing up on Sullivan’s Island during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, and the other being the long history of the family home known as Waveland. Heffron details the way the house looked and the summers that were spent there. He tells many of his father’s memories passed down through the family, such as the outdoor rainwater shower, the two-holer outhouse, the Atlantic Beach Hotel that existed then, and the ferries that served the island. Heffron notes such figures as Henry, the vegetable man, and the iceman, both of whom made regular deliveries. He relates summer activities such as crabbing, swimming, exploring the old forts, and riding horses on the beach. He describes the few businesses that existed during that time. The interviewee goes on to detail the total devastation of the family home by Hurricane Hugo and the efforts to restore it.
A postcard of Oceola's [sic] gravestone at the enterence of Fort Moultrie. The grave reads, "Patriot and Warrior Died at Fort Moultrie January 30th, 1838." The back of the postcard notes that it was "Made in Germany no. 1938."
A postcard of Fort Moultrie near the Charleston Harbor on Sullivan's Island. The back of the postcard reads, "This fort is built on the site of the palmetto log and sand bag fort which repulsed the British fleet on June 28, 1776."