Steph C.
Yelp
I visited Charleston for the first time for my friend Maka E.'s bachelorette party over Memorial Day weekend. I didn't know much about the city, and was glad we started our trip off with an educational Saturday morning tour with Charleston Sole.
Our tour guide Brian was knowledgeable and friendly, and he did a great job taking us through the streets of the city. I don't know Charleston well enough to describe our route with any confidence, but we must've done some kind of sensible loop. We covered a lot of ground, anyway, and ended up close to where we started. It was a nice little workout, at least for a couch potato like me, and some of it in some real southern heat. Every minute was worthwhile.
Charleston is an old, storied place, and was once one of the largest cities in the US, after Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. I'm not an American history buff, but I definitely wanted to learn a thing or two before leaving town, and this was an efficient way to do it. We visited a lot of cool sites--notably, we spent some time inside the beautiful St. Michael's Church and the Nathaniel Russell House garden, which featured a cool horizontally swinging bench called a joggling board. We also used the bathrooms in the State Capitol, and walked down the waterfront, ending at the lovely Rainbow Row. Brian talked the entire time, filling us in on interesting history, pointing out various buildings and other sites of note.
This was my first time taking any kind of formal tour in the South (not counting the Coca Cola Museum in Atlanta), and it was interesting to see the way our tour guide dealt with the shameful history of slavery. (We later took a tour at McLeod Plantation, so I now have two data points here.) I was glad to see that Brian didn't shy away from the subject. The tour included a stop at the Old Slave Mart Museum, a place where human beings were sold for money, and Brian even noted that the end of slavery was not that long ago, a historical truth that many seem loath to acknowledge. (For obvious reasons, he didn't comment on the present political climate, but it's real easy to connect the dots between slavery and, say, mass incarceration, or our current president launching his political career by questioning the qualifications of our first black president.)
If you're visiting Charleston, I'd highly recommend booking a tour with Charleston Sole, particularly if you're only in town for a few days. It was a great introduction to the city, and I was glad we got some knowledge early on in our trip.