Showing posts with label Chalmers St.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chalmers St.. Show all posts

30 July 2017

Charleston Quotes

Chalmers St., Charleston, SC    
Charleston is one of the best built, handsomest,
and most agreeable cities that I have ever seen.” 
Marquis de Lafayette

11 July 2017

Chalmers St.

Pink House, Charleston, SC    
I frequently pass this darling home on Chalmers St. that is often described as the oldest home on the peninsula but rarely find it without a car parked right in front of it. No car blocking the view and crepe myrtle trees in bloom - my lucky day!

A short walk down the street I always stop to admire my initials in the author Josephine Pinckney's home. JP! How considerate.




06 July 2016

Oldest House in Charleston

17 Chalmers St., Charleston, SC 
I often walk by the Pink House on Chalmers St. hoping to catch it without a car parked in front.
The July 4th traffic was lighter than usual and I got lucky. I was torn about moving
the blue trash barrel down the street but nudged it far enough to possibly crop out. 

While I have your attention here is a fun video of Stephen Colbert and Sturgill Simpson 

Stay cool kids! Luckily I walked over 8,000 steps at work today so a light evening
stroll this evening should take care of it.  

18 August 2015

Sunny pictures for a rainy day

Pink House, Chalmers St., Charleston, SC   
It has poured rain in Charleston today flooding the usual downtown streets and making me relieved that I don't have to check the tide charts before driving home anymore. It was a real mess. Let's make up for it with some sunny and glorious Charleston pictures. I grabbed these shots on a recent weekend walk.

School is back in session, streets flooded, traffic a mess. We are on a roll.

We had a celebration at work today as we received the news that our hospital had earned designation as a Magnet hospital for the second time. I am very proud of my co-workers. Bon Secours St. Francis Hospital in Charleston is one of two hospitals in South Carolina with that designation. Hip, hip, hooray!


26 August 2014

Move the darn car out of my picture

Pink House, Chalmers St., Charleston, S.C.

Okay, I'll say it out loud - we all want to take pictures of the little pink house on Chalmers St. and we want YOU to quit parking your car in front of it. The last thing I'd like Mayor Riley to rule on before and if he leaves the Mayor's office after his record breaking forty year term would be to put up a "No Parking" sign in front of the quaint cottage. I wouldn't even mind a sign restricting parking to vintage or cute car parking that would be an asset to a photo.
The distinctive little pink building at 17 Chalmers Street is said to be the oldest standing tavern building in the South. Built within the walled city of Charles Towne in the mid 1690s by John Breton, this oldest stone house in the city was constructed of 'Bermuda stone'. The West Indian coral stone had a natural pink cast, so the building was known as the Pink House from the beginning. Tradition holds that the Bermuda stone was brought in ships as ballast, as the cobblestones on Chalmers Street were, but it is more likely that it was cut in Bermuda and imported as a building material. The stone is soft enough to be cut into blocks and then when exposed to weather, it gradually hardens and becomes stronger. Its elasticity was proved in the great earthquake on 1886 when nearby brick structures suffered damage. The tiled roof is original terra cotta tile of an ancient vintage. The curved shape of the tiles was said to be formed over the workmen's thighs. The Pink House also was one of the few buildings in Charleston to survive 1989's Hurricane Hugo virutally unscathed.

In the building's early days, as a 'groggerie' and coffee house for sailors visiting the port from all over the world, this area was a red light district called Mulatto Alley and the street was lined with many small houses, most of which were bordellos. The Pink House was not a fashionable bistro for Charleston gentry, but rather a simple tavern, where the seamen found their 'three Ws'......whiskey, wenches, and wittles. Around 1800 the area was cleaned up after many citizens petitioned the City Council. Thomas Elfe, the famous furniture maker, wrote a letter complaining about the noisy parties at night.