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Charleston
 
Recommended Tours

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Charleston provides many ways to experience the city through tours of the town and surrounding areas both on land and water.

Tour Companies

The company The Original Charleston Walks provides a series of different tours for a myriad of tastes. It includes its basic, The original Charleston Walk, which shows you the old and the new as you stroll through Charleston’s history from its days as a young colony, through the American Revolution and Civil War. Charleston works to preserve its past as one can see when they visit the city’s oldest church, the harbor, Fort Sumter, John C. Calhoun’s grave and more. Charleston has endured much and its tenaciousness and longevity is apparent.

Charleston's Pirates & Buccaneers, subtitled “The War Against The Pirates,” will take you back in time to the earliest decades of the 18th century, when the still-adolescent Charleston not only faced the specter of war with the Native Americans on the land, but also from fierce scavengers on the sea. The excursion introduces the tourist to Blackbeard, Captain Kidd and Anne Bonny as you rediscover The Walled City, Pirate Tavern and buried treasure.

In December of 1860, Charleston was the site where South Carolina became the first state to secede from the Union. Four months later, Charleston again became a focal point when it witnessed the fall of Fort Sumter in its Harbor in the first battle of The Civil War. In 1863, Charleston hosted the Confederate and Union armies as aggression escalated. The Civil War Walk relives the siege of Charleston. The tour takes about two hours.

The Ghosts & Legends Walk is the first year-round ghost tour of Charleston’s Historic District. You can learn about the Gullah Boo Hag or the ghost in City Hall. This 90-minute tour is one of Charleston’s most popular walking tours. Or head to Bulldog Tours for another spooky tour. The Bulldog Tours has exclusive access to several infamous sites, including touring a graveyard and a haunted jail.

Charleston was instrumental in the American Revolution. The Patriots of Charleston will show you places and introduce people who helped win America’s independence including the Old Exchange Building & Provost Dungeon and “The Swamp Fox,” who was fictionalized by Mel Gibson in The Patriot.

The Historic Homes Walk takes a slow saunter through Charleston’s Historic District where you can see some of the most beautiful homes in the south. You can enjoy Charleston’s character through its flora and eighteenth century buildings. Along they way you will see the Heyward-Washington House, Edmonston-Alston House and many others.

Charleston was known as the Home of African Slavery yet had the largest Free-Black population by the start of The Civil War. On the Slavery and Freedom Walk, learn about the Charleston black experience as slaves and as a free people. You will learn about Slave Traders, Catfish Row, Slave Revolts and more.

Jack Thomson's Civil War Walking Tour of Charleston combines 188 photographs with actual locations to take the traveler into the past and resurrect the Charleston of the 1860s. You will see the town through the eyes of Confederate Soldier Gus Smythe, whose preserved letters give a first hand account of the siege on the evacuated town in 1864. The tour is swift, but informative as each location is brought into historical context with descriptions of the events they hosted.

Classic Carriage Tours provides one-hour day and twilight tours through the city. Evening tours are available by appointment. Private, group and special occasion tours are also available. The carriages are pulled by award winning Percheron Draft Horses, extending a 300-year-old tradition.

Taylored Tours of Charleston offers four motorized tours of Charleston and one that moves out into Savannah: The General History Tour is a 75-minute, fast-paced tour of the city and covers 110 points of interest including City Market, the Dock Street Theatre, Charleston Battery and the Old Citadel. This is a very popular tour for the general tourist. On the Plantation Tour, you will get round-trip transportation to either Middleton Place or Magnolia Plantation and Gardens. It includes tours of a Low-Country estate and a guided tour of a plantation house museum. During the General History/House Museum Tour, you can see some of Charleston’s finest homes. This covers 90 minutes of general history and a 30-minute tour of the Edmonston-Alston House, Heyward-Washington House, Nathaniel Russell House or the Aiken-Rhett House depending on which tour you take. The Savannah Tour will take guests a few hours away to the city of Savannah, Georgia. The tour lasts the whole day, and includes a stop in historic Beaufort, SC, and an hour and a half of free time. Finally, the Special Interest Tour of Charleston takes 90 minutes and can be tailored to specific sites. This is great excursion for history buffs.

Plantation Tours

Gabriel Manigault studied architecture and designed the Joseph Manigualt House for his brother Joseph. Built in 1803, this estate almost failed to survive the onslaught of surrounding development to be enjoyed. The Charleston Museum maintains the home.

Drayton Hall is the oldest preserved plantation in the United States still open to the public. The house, relatively unchanged in over 250 years, sits on 630 acres and has seen seven generations of family ownership.

Boone Hall Plantation is known in the region as the most photographed plantation in America. It has been the backdrop for Hollywood many times including the acclaimed television mini-series North and South.

Middleton Place is home to the oldest landscaped gardens in America, and once housed Arthur Middleton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

Tourists will want to spend a long time at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens, which was build in 1676. A wide variety of activities are offered on the grounds. Aside from the plantation house itself, you can also tour the vast grounds via the Nature Train or Nature Boat. You can also tour the Audubon Swamp Garden, not to mention the all various gardens that you will be free to explore on your own.

On The Water

Fort Sumter Tours offers tours from the deck of the Spirit of Carolina. During the Charleston Harbor Tour, you will see the city through a 90-minute tour of the Battery, Cooper River Bridges, Charleston Waterfront Park, Fort Moultrie National Monument and more. Also offered is the Spirit of Carolina Dinner Cruise, in which you will be served a gourmet dinner while listening to live music and cruising the harbor.

Alongside several vessels, the Yorktown is the main attraction of Patriots Point Naval & Maritime Museum. A keystone of America’s role in the Pacific during World War II, the aircraft carrier is a wonderful exhibit of the good and bad fortunes of life on the sea during wartime.
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