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The Huguenot Church, also called the French Huguenot Church or the French Protestant Church, is a Gothic Revival church located at 136 Church Street in Charleston, South Carolina. From our April South Carolina trip. Designed by Edward Brickell White and dedicated in 1845.
Remembering our visit to Charleston a year ago. Definitely one of my favorite cities!
Charleston, SC
Happy Window Wednesday!
Another favorite place to visit!
Processed with Midjourney, Photoshop, and Topaz.
All rights reserved. You may NOT download or use this image without my written permission.
Lovely and intricate light green wrought iron staircase railing at the Market Place in Charleston, South Carolina
Falling 37', the waterfall is called Ohio's Little Niagara. Both falls having the same rock strata. The water comes from a spring several miles to the east. Beautiful 216 acre well maintained park with 4 miles of hiking trails.
While visiting Charleston SC this summer I came across cobblestone streets and alley ways in the old French quarter. This image fascinated many when I first posted it so I decided to mirror is and re-post.
Just me playing...
The ambient light from Charleston, the docks and the bridge put on quite the show with the cloud cover...
So we are now half way through the trip and we have reached Charleston. The furthest south we will go. Wow. What a fabulous place. We were here for two nights. It was lovely. Lots to like.
One of the many beautiful windows and window flower boxes to be seen on the streets of Charleston, South Carolina.
One of the two male lions from the Charleston pride brothers coalition taken in 2017.
Unfortunately he died at the end of last year but he had a very distinctive broken tooth as a result of a giraffe kick which dangled from the side of his mouth for the rest of his life.
Sabi Sands
Greater Kruger National Park
Mpumalanga
South Africa
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Built in 1948-1949, this Art Moderne-style building was designed by Meanor, Greife, and Daley to house the Stone and Thomas Department Store. The building features a buff brick exterior, glass block ribbon windows on the principal facades, metal-frame windows on the side and rear facades, a large metal blade sign on the Lee Street facade, a modified first floor facade, and a curved facade at the principal corner of the building. The building is a contributing structure in the Downtown Charleston Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2006.
we went to see the angel oak a 500 year old oak tree near charleston but the day we went to see it the park its located in was closed and i could not get a good photo but this beautiful church was near it.
Originally constructed in 1887, the William Enston Home, located on King Street in the North-Central neighborhood of Charleston, South Carolina, is a rare example of the Romanesque style in the city. Built to serve the financially insecure elderly of Charleston, the complex featured 24 cottages arranged on a grid of streets around a Memorial Chapel in the center, with a small recreation hall, stone gateway, and maintenance shed also being located on the grounds. In 2006, the complex was extended to its original intended size with several additional cottages that mimic some features of the originals in the Postmodern style. Today, the complex serves as affordable housing, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.