Showing posts with label Pink House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pink House. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

In Charleston, the Truth Lies Somewhere Between the Cooper Sunrise and the Ashley Sunset

Charleston's antiquity runs as deep as its harbor waters and its tales are as tall as the steeple of St. Phillips on Church Street. As one of the oldest cities in America, it is a place where reality and legend walk the same streets declaring a timeless story about the lives of its progeny and their hallowed structures. A place where fact and fiction have been skillfully blurred to the delight of those who come to bask in its charm and grace. This article is about some things you will hear on a horse-drawn carriage ride or walking tour that simply is not likely to be true.

Over the course of 300 years, the Pink House has proven itself resilient. It survived over thirty hurricanes, two major earthquakes, two wars, and multiple catastrophic fires. It has a must-see courtyard designed by Loutrel Briggs and a picture-perfect view of St. Philip's steeple through a window.

Like many old Charleston landmarks, it has acquired a ghost story or two. The apparition sighted and from time to time photographed, is that of a female figure wandering and pacing back and forth as though waiting for something or perhaps someone. Some believe the sightings are the spirit of one of the women who once worked at the property during its tavern and bordello days, and others believe it to be the ghost of the female pirate Anne Bonny. According to the narrative, she resided on the third floor and ran a popular business on the floors below. There are several variants to the story of Anne Bonny. The following tale is the most popular.

Born in Ireland, the red-headed Anne is believed to be the illegitimate daughter of attorney William Cormac and his housekeeper. To escape the backlash the sordid situation created, Cormac left Ireland with his mistress and his daughter. They sailed to Charleston.

Anne was a handful for sure and had a fiery temper. While married to James Bonny, a small-time pirate and informant, she became involved with Calico Jack Rackam. To avoid a beating by her husband because of her affair, she ran away with Rackam and joined his pirate crew on a ship they stole in New Providence called the William.

Mural at Pirate Cove Playground, Folly Beach
In 1720, Jonathan Barnet attacked Rackam's ship and took him prisoner with Bonny, Mary Read, and the rest of the crew. The punishment for piracy in the 18th century was execution by hanging. One by one, her friends perished, including Calico Jack, but Bonny and her close friend, Mary Read, pleaded they were both pregnant. The court spared Bonny and Read from hanging like the others. She began to serve her prison sentence and gave birth, but there is no record of Bonny's release, execution, or death. This has fed speculation as to her fate.

After everything has been searched and said, a Post and Courier article, The true and false stories of Anne Bonny, pirate woman of the Caribbean, summed up Anne Bonny's story this way, "Nearly three centuries after Anne Bonny's trial, we know that a woman named Anne Bonny was alive in the early 1700s, that some people called her Ann Fulford and Bonn, that she lived in the Bahamas for a time and joined a pirate crew."

"We don’t know whether she ever lived in Charleston, who her parents were, whether she married a man named James Bonny, her true role aboard the pirate sloop, what her relationships were with Jack Rackam and Mary Read, and whether she ever was released from the Jamaican prison." Often times, the legend becomes larger than life. In Charleston, the truth lies somewhere between the Cooper sunrise and the Ashley sunset.


This is true of one of Charleston's oldest townhouses located at 143 and 145 Church Street. It was built by Huguenot merchant Alexander Peronneau as a double tenement around 1740, likely after Charleston's great fire of 1740. The material used in its construction was Bermuda stone placed on a brick foundation. Bermuda stone was widely used in the construction of early Charleston. The city's old fortification wall was made from Bermuda stone, as was the 1769 seawall, which was probably destroyed in the 1800s by a hurricane.

In the late eighteenth century, the double tenement was owned by craftsman and planter Paul Smiser. Next, Mrs. Goodwyn Rhett took possession of the property. In 1928, Mrs. Rhett restored the home to a single residence with Thomas Pinckney's help, a local African-American builder. Outbuildings located behind the primary residence were constructed using salvaged brick from the former Shepheard's Tavern on Broad Street, also called The Corner Tavern, which was demolished in the same year.


It is believed, after the restoration of the house, rumors began to circulate claiming pirates lived there in its early days and used an underground tunnel system located in its basement that was connected to the waterfront of the Battery. The rumors stated the tunnels were the primary means of smuggling and escaping by the pirate visitors. During extensive renovations and the redirection of Charleston's sewage systems in the 1930s, the tunnel was filled with sand, as the story tells.

One rumor claims Blackbeard's legendary cache of gold is buried somewhere within the tunnel or in the basement of the house, which remains highly suspect because facts lean toward the presumption Blackbeard never set foot on the Charleston peninsula. As to the assumption pirates stayed there, Charleston's pirate days had ended by 1720. Although, sailors could have stayed at the tenement. However, search as you may, no legitimate evidence has been found to support such claims.

It is hard to say with any surety who visited the double tenement at 143 and 145 Church Street and what happened there. The name Pirate House became attached to the address due to the undocumented stories. Despite contrary facts, it will forever be known as the Pirate House, and the rumor will prevail with those who choose to believe. And to those who choose otherwise, in Charleston, even the truth is legendary. The house at 37 Meeting Street has similar stories.


The single house is an architectural style found almost exclusively in Charleston. The design is responsible for much of the city's unique charm. The floor layout was perfect for the narrow street-facing lots originally laid out in Charleston in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.

The single house is only one room wide and two rooms deep on each of its levels with a central hall between them. They were purposely built with the piazzas facing south or west to get the cooling, prevailing breezes from the sea. It runs the length of the house with a public door facing the street at one end. Visitors would enter the home through this street entrance and traverse the porch to the home's centralized private door. Entertaining was done on the second floor, further from the dust and noise of the street.


While walking or riding the historic streets of the city, a tour guide might tell you single houses were a reaction to the city taxing street frontage, but truth be told, it had more to do with the efficient use of limited real estate in the confines of a peninsula. A Charleston County Public Library article entitled The Charleston Single states, "Early Charlestonians developed the single house as an ingenious solution to the various demands of their unique urban landscape: a house that provided privacy, ventilation, fire protection, and social status within the confines of a tightly restrictive public space."

Friday, May 4, 2012

Charleston's Pirate Past-Colorful History Telling And Family Fun

Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow
Who doesn't remember the unforgettable Seinfeld episode where Jerry unwittingly agreed to wear the puffy shirt. "I don't want to look like a pirate," he lamented. Jerry apparently was not impressed by the fact pirates have become quite fashionable in recent times thanks to the infamous attraction at Disney called "Pirates of the Caribbean", the ride that inspired the creation of the character movie fans and pirate lovers have come to know as Captain Jack Sparrow. Pirate popularity borders on that of cultural icons. There is even a day set aside since 1995 called "International Talk Like a Pirate Day" commemorated on September 19. So, what was it about pirates, speaking of the ones from the Golden Age of Piracy and not the modern version, that makes them appealing enough for people to be willing to fork over $11 to sit and watch two hours of piratical hijinks?

If one is to believe the movie version of pirates, such as what Disney presents, one would envision an individual where a healthy, personal hygiene appears to be lacking as well as an upstanding vocabulary and daily change of wardrobe. Existing in a state of a rum induced coma would have been a common repose along with swinging from ropes with sabres clenched in their rotting teeth pillaging and plundering seaside towns and ocean going vessels as their frowned upon preoccupation. All these apparent characteristics are not what you would exactly call desirable or inspiring, if you are to believe the movies. Actually, the shreads of known reality and imagined myth have been inseparably intertwined by bookwriters and storytellers when it comes to the real pirate life.
   
Still, I think what appeals to the masses on the subject of pirates is the socially unfettered freedom they represented. The pirate lived outside of the social contraints others were bound by either religiously or politically. A freedom to do what you pleased, go where you pleased, and do it when you pleased is appealing to the modern person who rises every morning to an alarm clock and answers to an institution he or she depends upon for economical survival. In reality though, a pirates life was anything but glamorous. Life on the high seas was rigorous and dangerous. Only a few names attained greatness, but their endings were ignominious.

Charleston was no stranger to pirates and piracy. Famous names like Stede Bonnet, Blackbeard, and Calico Jack are recalled and stories recounted in its historic tours and even though the list is male dominated, a few women had made their claim to fame in the annals of pirate legends, Anne Bonny and Mary Read to name a couple. So, the following facts to my knowledge are true because "Dead men tell no lies."
Guard House at Half Moon Battery where Bonnet's crew was imprisoned now the Old Exchange 
Stede Bonnet, also called "the gentleman pirate", figured prominantly in Charleston's pirate past partly because of his association with Blackbeard, but mainly due to the fact he met his demise in 1718 dangling from a rope at White Point Gardens overlooking Charleston Harbor on the end of E. Bay Street. His captor, William Rhett, also had a Charleston connection. In the early days, when Charleston was called Charles Town, Rhett purchased a sugar plantation on Hassel Street where he built a house that was completed in 1716. It still stands today as a tourist attraction. Sullivan's Island was also a part of the Bonnet story. Shortly after his capture by Rhett, Bonnet escaped custody and hid on the island where he was recaptured for the last time.
Blackbeard (Edward Teach)

Blackbeard's real name was Edward Teach. Of all the famous pirates, his legend is the most remembered in Charleston. Blackbeard, in 1718, blockaded the harbor with his fleet and plundered any ship making an attempt to enter its port, thus cutting off any supplies coming into Charleston. He held the entire town hostage with this action and had only one demand, medicines. If the town didn't meet his demands, the captives he took from the pillaged ships would have their heads cut off and the ships burned. Blackbeard sent Mr. Marks and two other pirates to retrieve the medicines. When the entourage didn't return, Blackbeard moved his ships into port and threatened to burn the town. It seemed the two pirates did what pirates do, drank and got drunk. A reporting messenger also claimed Mr. Mark's boat capsized on the way into town, adding to the delay. Finally, they returned with the medicines and Blackbeard honorably held to his side of the bargain by releasing the ships and hostages minus anything of value, including their clothing. After all, he was a pirate. In time, Blackbeard had his head separated from his body and his crew taken in irons to meet their fate.

Pirates have walked the streets of Charleston and drank in its taverns, creating tall tales blended with a mixture of truth and myth. A good example is the Pirate House with its Pirate Courtyard on Church Street next to St. Phillips Church Cemetery. Legend tells it was a boarding house for pirates. There is even another story linked to Blackbeard where it was rumored the top of his skull was sent back to Charleston to be fashioned into a drinking cup. The Pink House on Chalmers Street, once a tavern, was also a likely drinking hole. "Drink up me harties, drink up." You can learn all about the fascinating piratical history at the various tours in Charleston. Check out Charleston Pirate Tours and Tour Charleston.
Pink House on Chalmers Street

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Charleston's Festival of Houses And Gardens-See the History, Touch The History

I have one overwhelming impulse. Well, one that I will readily admit to and believe to be quite innocent, but at times can be distracting. Upon entering an establishment for the first time, I irresistably begin to check out its distintive architecture and the craftmanship employed in its creation. This impulse is driven by many years of exposure to the contruction trades and time spent as a finish trim carpenter on the Isle of Palms and Mt. Pleasant. Couple this with a passion for working with everything that grows green and explodes into an array of colors and you have the required ingredients of an individual who would be the perfect candidate for Charleston's yearly Festival of Houses and Gardens. The festival has been a yearly event, now in its 65th year.

Charleston's landmarks and beautiful homes are collectively some of the more obvious reasons why visitors and residents are drawn to this number one destination in the country known for its historic charisma. A walk through the Holy City gives you a glimpse into a past you otherwise could only read about in books or see in old photographs and well preserved art. Charleston contains an unbelievable amount of history. A history you can personally touch and visually experience. A history that goes all the way back to the early days of tall ships and horse drawn carriages. So, here are a few reasons visitors and residents are drawn to this charming Southern city by the Atlantic Ocean.

Pink House
The oldest standing tavern building in the South can be found at 17 Chalmers Street in the French Quarter, an area that was originally within the walled part of old Charles Towne. The old tavern was built in the mid 1690's. It was constructed from Bermuda stone, a West Indian coral stone with a natural pink cast to it. Thus, it became known as the Pink House. Another unique feature of the tavern is the tiled roof made from terra cotta tile of an ancient vintage. The little tavern has been extremely versatile surviving both an earthquake and hurricane virtually unscathed while buildings around it crumbled. In its inception, the groggerie served seamen whiskey, wenches, and wittles. Today, it is an art gallery.

The oldest estate garden in the Western Hemisphere is just outside Charleston at famed Magnolia Plantation and Gardens. The plantation hosts a number of spectacular horticultural treasures. Some sections are more than 325 years old, making them the oldest unrestored gardens in America. The original main house, which was built before the Revolutionary War, still remains.
terra cotta tiled roof

Down the road from Magnolia Place is Drayton Hall, the oldest preserved plantation house open to the public in the country. The house was built between 1738 and 1742 and considered one of the finest examples of Georgian-Palladian architecture in the United States. Drayton Hall will be host to this years Festival Plantation Picnic on Friday, April 6 and  Sunday, April 15, 4:30-7 p.m. You can purchase tickets here.

The William Rett House located on Hasell Street just off Meeting was finished in 1716. It is considered the oldest house in Charleston and part of the old sugar plantation acquired by William Rett. It has been restored and is now privately owned. The buildings on the plantation surround a beautiful, formal, English garden featuring a beautiful pond. There is a gate house and a carriage house that can be rented. William Rett is best known for his capture of the infamous Stede Bonnet, the  "gentleman pirate", but the more notorious Blackbeard eluded his capture.

The Calhoun Mansion, built in 1876, is the largest residence in Charleston and considered one of the greatest antebellum homes on the eastern seaboard. Some of its more striking features are a stairwell that reaches to a 75 foot domed ceiling and a music room with a 45 foot covered glass skylight. It also boast some beautiful gardens.
Calhoun Mansion

The Festival of Houses and Gardens, March 22 to April 21, offers guests a rare opportunity to wander the private residential interiors and gardens of more than one hundred distinctive and historic downtown homes. Scheduled house tours will take you into areas like Ansonborough, the peninsula's first neighborhood established in 1745. Although much of Ansonborough was destroyed by a fire in 1838, it was rebuilt with houses owned by some of Charleston's oldest family names. The House and Garden tours will feature 7 to 10 properties each day in one of 11 different neighborhoods. Purchase tickets here.

Other events are The Glorious Garden tours, Morning History Walks, and Luncheon Lecture Series. If you like pirate stories, don't miss the "The Notorious Exploits of Three Female Pirates" lecture at the James Missroon House at 40 East Bay Street Monday, April 9. Purchase tickets here. Concerts, wine tasting, and harbor cruises are also a part of the festival.

On top of all this, the festival takes place during Charleston's spring peak blooming season. Native varieties flowering include dogwood, redbud, and fringe trees, as well as azalea, yellow jessamine, and bignonia. Come and join the culture and fun that makes Charleston number one.