Amid live oak trees covered in Spanish moss, Where the gravestones speak with the drama of Edgar Allan Poe, who residents say was inspired by a local legend to write "Annabelle Lee."
One of the first English settlements in North America, Charleston had pirates and battles and a boycott of tea.
Laws preserving buildings more than 75 years old, makes it an interesting place for architecture.
Residents were taxed on their homes' frontage, back in the day.
A plantation house sits in ruins, testifying to Gen. Sherman's "northern aggression" at the end of the Civil War.
On the grounds, a simple but beautiful slave chapel has been recreated.
And there was wildlife, there, too (though I didn't see any alligators).
Nearby, in Hollywood, I saw some cool antiques.
And a beautiful sky.
And now North Charleston has got something from the Seattle area, too.
My cousin Vicki Doyle shows the headline.