Eating & Drinking Through Charleston, SC | Beach Trip 2018 Part 4
Charleston, SC is definitely one of our favorite cities to visit. Tons of history and good food! This was a day of eating! We met up with Rob’s parents and dined our way through town, hitting some of Charleston's best restaurants.
For more info on the places we visited see the links below:
The Griffon:
Pearlz Oyster Bar:
Husk:
Poogan’s Porch:
Hank’s Seafood Restaurant:
I'm Hal, a Pittsburgh 20-something. My husband and I love to have fun and travel. We started this channel as a way to share our adventures with friends and family. Sometimes we do Disney stuff, but there's also lots to explore around Pittsburgh! Subscribe to my channel and never miss a video!
Best Bars Pubs & hangout places in Charleston, United States
Welcome to Charleston, United States Food and Drinks Guide. This is MUST WATCH video if you are looking for the best wine and dine spots in Charleston. We have sorted our top picks for Pubs / Bars and places to hang out in Charleston for you after reviews received by our users and our in house Travel Specialists.
Don't forget to subscribe our channel to view more travel videos. Click on Bell ICON to get the notified whenever we upload a new video.
List of Best Bars and Pubs in Charleston
Stars Rooftop & Grill Room
Pearlz Oyster Bar
TBonz Gill & Grill
Bay Street Biergarten
Blind Tiger Pub
Husk
Kudu Coffee and Craft Beer
Tommy Condon's Restaurant
The Griffon
Prohibition
Please note :
- The background images shown in the video is for beatification purpose only, these images are NOT the actual pics of the place mentioned in the video.
- We and our channel DO NOT support drinking Alcohol in any way, This video has been made on request of our users / subscribers.
- Drinking Alcohol is injurious to Health.
Be Safe.
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Meet 2015 Mrs. South Carolina America Ronnetta Griffin
We are joined in studio by 2015 Mrs. South Carolina Ronnetta Hatcher Griffin and her glam squad to tell us about her journey to the crown and her message for women. mrssouthcarolinaamerica.com
Charleston South Carolina Apologizes For Slavery
Charleston, South Carolina, where nearly half of all enslaved Africans stepped foot in the United States for the first time, has apologized for its role in slavery.
In a 7-5 vote, the Charleston City Council on Tuesday approved a resolution that denounces slavery, calls for more tolerance in the future and proposes the creation of an office for racial reconciliation.
During antebellum America, Charleston was a crucial part of the slave trade. Nearly 40 percent of enslaved people brought into the country passed through Charleston before they were sold, according to the resolution. Charleston “flourished in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries from a robust economy, made possible by the labor of enslaved people,” the resolution said.
The passage was preceded by two hours of heated debate.
Council member Perry Waring, who voted against the resolution, said he did not think that the resolution addressed the city’s current economic issues.
“We need to work on the economic side of things so our community can go forth together in harmony and financially,” Waring said.
Council member Harry Griffin echoed Waring’s calls to focus on relevant modern issues and said that his constituents did not feel the need to apologize for something they did not partake in.
“What’s going to make our ancestors more proud? This piece of paper or fixing flooding on Huger Street?” Griffin said.
Although the resolution says it supports fair wages and racial equality in all of the city’s businesses and organizations, it does not include specific measures to achieve those goals.
Dot Scott, the president of the Charleston NAACP, said that the resolution was a “long overdue gesture,” but now the city must deal with real problems that minorities face today.
“I do think it’s meaningful, but I don’t think it’s a fix-all,” Scott told HuffPost. “Everything we’re dealing with — education, employment, housing, interacting with law enforcement, even health care — there’s much to be done.”
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Container Cargo & Cranes at Ports America Baltimore
This video takes you inside the container cargo industry at Ports America Baltimore. The people who perform the work explain the process and take you up on the giant crane.
Griffin Eye Center
Griffin Eye Center hosted over 30 optometrists from North and South Carolina at the Griffin Eye Center, Myrtles Beach, South Carolina location on Friday, January 17, 2019. Attendees heard about the newest advances in eye surgery and treatments for eye disease during the first annual continuing education program.
Griffin Eye Center, ophthalmic surgeon, Neil B. Griffin, M.D., opened the continuing education program with an update on pre-operative assessment and management of cataract surgery. He also presented on the topics: Anterior Segment, Cornea and Refractive Surgery.
Neil B. Griffin, M.D. specializes in cataract, LASIK and corneal surgery. Dr. Griffin is a pioneer in endokeratoplasty, a new type of corneal transplantation technique. He has presented study results and his technique to surgeons in both the United States and abroad. As an Ophthalmologist leader in the field he continues to instruct corneal surgeons on the latest advancements.
Dr. Griffin was one of the first in the country to use the FDA approved Zepto™ Capsulotomy System which provides lens capsulotomy during cataract surgery. He is also the first in South Carolina to offer the latest advancement in laser vision technology with SMILE. In 2016 he was named one of the Top Cataract Surgeons by Precision Eye Services.
Patients have traveled from across the nation to receive state-of-the-art treatments provided by Dr. Neil Griffin. Griffin Eye Center provides eye care services including, laser vision correction, cataract surgery, corneal surgery and external eye diseases. Griffin Eye Center has also been recognized as a center of excellence for dry eye treatment.
Griffin Eye Center has two convenient locations in Myrtle Beach and Murrells Inlet, South Carolina. For additional information, visit our website griffineyecenter.com or 843-449-6414.
Low Country Militia at Steel Griffin Convoy Part 1
LCM during Operation Steel Griffin Convoy in Irmo, SC May 26, 2012
51st Bn. SC Light Foot Militia- Area Of Operations (AO)
Understanding Our AO
DIADORA/Spinx Gray Griffin Memorial Tournament: Furman 2 Memphis 2
Furman Men's Soccer win the DIADORA/Spinx Gray Griffin Memorial Tournament with a 2:2 draw. The Paladins won their first game 4-2 over UNCW and were able to rally back in this game after trailing Memphis for an hour.
Furman dedicated this tournament to Gray Griffin (1984-2002), who was a freshmen defender when he was tragically killed in a car accident. Gray was the U-17 National Team's captain and a stalwart fixture for the U-20s at the time. He played 12 games for the Paladins notching 2 assists and 1 goal. Furman sought to play for his memory.
Furman University is a private, coeducational, liberal arts college in Greenville, South Carolina, United States. Furman is one of the oldest institutions in South Carolina. Founded in 1826, Furman enrolls approximately 2,800 undergraduate and 525 graduate students on its 750-acre campus.
Charleston South Carolina Apologizes For Slavery
Charleston, South Carolina, where nearly half of all enslaved Africans stepped foot in the United States for the first time, has apologized for its role in slavery.
In a 7-5 vote, the Charleston City Council on Tuesday approved a resolution that denounces slavery, calls for more tolerance in the future and proposes the creation of an office for racial reconciliation.
During antebellum America, Charleston was a crucial part of the slave trade. Nearly 40 percent of enslaved people brought into the country passed through Charleston before they were sold, according to the resolution. Charleston “flourished in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries from a robust economy, made possible by the labor of enslaved people,” the resolution said.
The passage was preceded by two hours of heated debate.
Council member Perry Waring, who voted against the resolution, said he did not think that the resolution addressed the city’s current economic issues.
“We need to work on the economic side of things so our community can go forth together in harmony and financially,” Waring said.
Council member Harry Griffin echoed Waring’s calls to focus on relevant modern issues and said that his constituents did not feel the need to apologize for something they did not partake in.
“What’s going to make our ancestors more proud? This piece of paper or fixing flooding on Huger Street?” Griffin said.
Although the resolution says it supports fair wages and racial equality in all of the city’s businesses and organizations, it does not include specific measures to achieve those goals.
Dot Scott, the president of the Charleston NAACP, said that the resolution was a “long overdue gesture,” but now the city must deal with real problems that minorities face today.
“I do think it’s meaningful, but I don’t think it’s a fix-all,” Scott told HuffPost. “Everything we’re dealing with — education, employment, housing, interacting with law enforcement, even health care — there’s much to be done.”
Join #FOWLERNATION!!
Become a Patron!
3 Steps To Join #FowlerNation!
1. Subscribe To The Fowler Show:
2. 'Like' The Richard Fowler Show on Facebook
3. 'Follow' Us on Twitter
These Patrons make the Fowler Show possible ($20+ monthly donation on Patreon.com/FowlerShow) & we couldn't do it without them!
Truthservers.com
Are you a fan of The Fowler Show? Become a Patron & help support independent media! Learn more here:
Want to help out but don't have any money to donate? Donate your account & help us get our stories out on social media. Learn more here:
If you liked this clip, share it with your friends and hit that like button!
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@fowlershow
@richardafowler
Senator Pinckney's Funeral
Tis that old ship of zion
Understanding the Eclipse - Sumter, SC
In preparation for our Total Eclipse Watch Party on August 21, 2017, we took a few minutes to sit down with retired engineer and local astrophotographer Hap Griffin to talk about the eclipse, what to expect and how to safely view it.
Join us on August 21, 2017 from 12-4pm at Dillon Park in Sumter, SC for food, fun and music as we celebrate the Total Eclipse! We will be giving away free eclipse viewing glasses while supplies last.
Visit SumterTotalEclipse.com for more information or find us on Facebook @SumterSC.
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Music Provided by BenSound.com
View Hap's work at
Rare Photographs of the American Civil War: Part 2
Part 1:
Confederate troops and civilians in Fort Sumter, Charleston, South Carolina, 1861:
War announced in Court House Square, Ann Arbor, Michigan:
Unitarian minister Thomas Starr King giving a pro-Union speech in San Francisco, California:
Confederate home guard encampment, Pensacola, Florida, 1861: New York State Military Museum
Police officers protecting a pro-secessionist newspaper from a pro-Union mob, San Francisco:
Steam engine of the Mohican-class sloop-of-war USS Kearsarge, 1861:
Confederate Charleston Zouave Cadets guarding Union POWs in Castle Pinckney, Charleston, 1861:
Union soldier Larkin Goldsmith Mead holding a Thanksgiving turkey in Camp Griffin in Langley, Virginia:
Thaddeus Lowe and the Union Army Balloon Corps posing with the Intrepid balloon in Gaines' Mill, Virginia, 1862:
Confederate POWs escorted by Union cavalry during a prisoner exchange at Cox's Landing, Virginia:
Color guard of the Union 7th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment armed with Henry repeating rifles:
Union Marines at the Navy Yard, Washington, D.C., 1864:
Union troops at Franklin's Crossing before the Second Battle of Fredericksburg, 1863:
A train derailed by Confederate cavalry in Virginia:
10th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment, National Guard Zouaves:
Union cavalrymen of the 2nd Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry Regiment:
Union soldier undergoing barrel punishment:
Portrait of General William Tecumseh Sherman and his son, 1865:
Confederate POWs taking an oath of allegiance to the United States at the Rock Island Prison Barracks, a Union prison camp in Illinois:
Greenville, SC l Downtown
With so many top-rated restaurants, a thriving art community, and events that bring people in from all over, Greenville is the new destination place...yeah, THAT Greenville! ;)
**ABOUT ME**
Hey! I’m Becka Rae, a digital nomad.
I am currently traveling as much of the US as I can while working remotely.
This is my way of making the most out of life and I want to encourage you to do the same by exploring your world and being your own boss!
Please subscribe to follow my adventures and get tips on working for yourself!
**PLAN A TRIP**
For more info:
visitgreenvillesc.com/
youtube.com/channel/UCaSgXL-GhblrNilYY4uaZqw
Hotels:
Hyatt Place -
Aloft -
The Westin Poinsett -
Restaurants:
Basil -
Caviar and Bananas -
Sticky Fingers -
The Nose Dive -
Grill Marks -
The Lazy Goat -
Ice Cream:
Marble Slab -
Luna Rosa (also a restaurant) -
Spill the Beans (also a coffee shop) -
Coffee Shops:
Methodical Coffee -
Coffee Underground (also a restaurant) -
Retail:
O.P. Taylor's -
Mast General Store -
Dress Up -
Greenville Army & Navy Store -
Places / Landmarks:
Noma Square -
One City Plaza -
Art Crossing -
TD Stage -
Wyche Pavilion -
Liberty Bridge -
Falls Park on the Reedy -
West End Historic District -
Old Cigar Warehouse -
Fluor Field -
Theatre / Art:
The Comedy Zone -
The Peace Center -
Art Crossing -
Jared Emerson -
Shakespeare in the Park -
Things To Do / Events:
Saturday Market -
Mice on Main -
The Greenville Drive -
Main Street Fridays -
Statues:
Joel Poinsett -
il Porcellino Statue -
Shoeless Jo Jackson -
Additional Attractions: (I would’ve loved to include these additional places, but I decided to stick with what was within a close walking distance of Main St. for this video.)
Swamp Rabbit Trail -
Greenville Zoo -
Bon Secours Wellness Arena -
*This video was shot over several different days.
47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment's Story: The Birth of a New Regiment
This video outlines the lead up to the founding and first months of military service of the history-making 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry during the American Civil War. The only regiment from the Keystone State to fight in the Union's 1864 Red River Campaign across Louisiana, the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry was founded on August 5, 1861 by order of Governor Andrew Gregg Curtin, Pennsylvania's Civil War-era governor, who appointed Tilghman H. Good as colonel and placed him in charge of the new regiment. The 47th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry subsequently went on to serve for the duration of the war and during the early days of the Reconstruction era, finally mustering out at Charleston, South Carolina on Christmas Day in 1865.
The first in a series of videos planned to educate viewers about this regiment's history-making journey, 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment's Story: The Birth of a Regiment covers the regiment's activities during the first year of the American Civil War (from the time of President Abraham Lincoln's calls for volunteer soldiers to preserve America's Union following the December 1860 secession of multiple southern states from the United States of America and mid-April 1861 fall of Fort Sumter to Confederate States Army troops, to this regiment's founding on August 5, 1861, to this regiment's defense of America's capital, Washington, DC, from Camp Kalorama in Georgetown and Camp Griffin in Virginia from late September 1861 through early January 1862).
The Citadel !!!!!!
This is a tour of the citadel great day
Wakkos 50 states and capitals
Crazy Robert btw Baton Rouge Louisiana inidianapolis Indiana Columbus is the capitol of Ohio there’s Montgomery Alabama south of helena Montana then there’s Denver Colorado WEST of Boies Idaho Texas has Austin then we go north To Massachusetts Boston and albany New York Tallahassee Florida and Washington DC Santa Fe New Mexico Nashville Tennessee Elvis used to hang out there a lot you know. Trenton in New Jersey north of Jefferson Missouri you’ve got Richmond in Virginia South Dakota has Pierre harrisburgs in Pennsylvania and Augusta’s up in Maine and here is Providence
Rhode lsland next to Dover Delaware concord New Hampshire just a quick jaunt to Montpelier witch is up in Vermont Hartford in Connecticut so pretty in the fall and kansas has Topeka Minnesota has St. Paul. Juneau’s in alaska and there Lincoln in Nebraska and it’s Raleigh out in North Carolina and then there’s Madison Wisconsin and Olympia in Washington Phoenix Arizona and Lansing Michigan here’s Honolulu Hawaii a joy Jackson Mississippi Springfield lllinois South Carolina with Columbia down the way and Annapolis in Maryland on Chesapeake bay they have wonderful clam chowder. Cheyenne is in Wyoming and perhaps you make your home in Salt Lake City out in Utah where the buffalo roam Atlanta down in Georgia and there’s Bismarck North Dakota and you can live in Frankfort in your old Kentucky home Salem in Oregon Little Rock in Arkansas LOWA GOT DES MOINES SACRAMENTO CALIFORNIA OKLAHOMA and it’s city Charleston West Virginia and Nevada Carson city those are all the capitals there are
2017 solar eclipse captivates America
Carrie Trochim, 34, on left, and colleague, Kirsten Polley, 26 test out eclipse glasses on the University of Colorado's Boulder campus on Aug. 15, 2017. They were among the last customers to snap up glasses from the bookstore before it ran out of its stock of 10,000 pairs.
Eclipse glasses are displayed for sale on Aug. 14, 2017 at a Roth's Markets grocery store in Salem, Ore.
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown speaks in Salem, Ore., on Aug. 15, 2017 about the coming eclipse that will cross Oregon on Aug. 21, 2017.
Griffin Moore makes solar eclipse related shirts at her Griffin's Studio on Aug. 16, 2017, in Hopkinsville, Ky. Hopkinsville, in Western Kentucky, is located near the point of greatest totality for the Aug. 21 eclipse. The eclipse will cut a path of totality 70 miles wide across the United States from Salem, Oregon to Charleston, South Carolina.
Arlon 'A.J.' Casey Jones and his wife Peg Hays, owners of the Casey Jones Distillery, hold bottles of Total Eclipse Moonshine which they distilled with the still behind them to commemorate the upcoming solar eclipse on Aug. 16, 2017 in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. The distillery, which is located two miles from the point of greatest totality for the Aug. 21 eclipse, expects to host as many as 3,500 people who plan to view the eclipse from their grounds just outside of Hopkinsville.
An eclipse countdown clock sits among a display of Total Eclipse Moonshine.
Agnes Busch, 90, the former owner of the 1976 GMC recreational vehicle that was converted into the Mobile Earth & Space Observatory, watches as people tour the mobile observatory outside the MESO office in Colorado Springs, Colo. on Aug. 15, 2017. A team from the Pikes Peak Observatory will drive it to Nebraska to participate in the Citizen CATE project that will document the solar eclipse on Monday.
Dave Dardis owner of the Rainmaker art studio, shop, and gardens in Makanda, Ill. talks about the 'Solar Eclipse Pendants' he created on July 19, 2017. Makanda will get two minutes, 40.2 seconds of darkness during the total solar eclipse on Aug. 21, more than anywhere else in the United States.
Riley Martin stands on a desk holding a cell phone with a light on it to mimic the sun as Lindsey Davis, left, Rebecca McPherson, right, and Preston Davis, demonstrate how they plan to observe the coming solar eclipse in Spencer, Ind. on Aug. 11, 2017. Students have made models of the solar system to demonstrate what happens during an eclipse, putting a miniature moon between a tiny Earth and model sun.
Astronomer Forrest Hamilton shows off one of the telescopes that he will take with him when he travels to see the total solar eclipse in Walton, Ind. The telescope includes a spot to place an iPhone to record video of the eclipse.
A worker at Ace Hardware fans out eclipse glasses for sale at the store in Spring City, Tenn on Aug. 11, 2017. Thousands are expected to flock to the small Rhea County town, which is home to about 2000 residents, to view the solar eclipse.
Ilaeka Villa, who owns the nearby Grandview Mountain Cottages and Glamor Camping venue, leaves Hassler's Drugs in Spring City, Tenn on Aug. 11, 2017. Villa said that the cottages on their property were fully booked more than a year and a half ago for the upcoming solar eclipse.
Kenyon Kilby, Doyle Daniels, Jason Yuhas and Nathan Reed, from left, with Spring City Public Works install additional power outlets in the Spring City Nature Park in preparation for the upcoming eclipse, in Spring City, Tenn on Aug. 11, 2017.
Amateur astronomer Mike Conley practices with the telescope he will use to document the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse, at his home in Salem, Ore on Aug. 3, 2017. Conley is part of a project led by the National Solar Observatory to have dozens of citizen-scientists posted across the U.S. photograph the celestial event in an effort to create a live movie of its path that will help scientists learn more about the sun's corona.
An 8-foot balloon carrying a camera rises into the sky during a test launch at the University of Hartford in West Hartford, Conn on Aug. 9, 2017. A team from the University of Bridgeport and the University of Hartford conducted the test as part a project that will send cameras into the stratosphere to photograph the solar eclipse.
An advertisement for a central Oregon festival built around the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse sits alongside a busy road leading into Madras, Ore on June 13, 2017,
Dale Savage Law Firm | Charleston, South Carolina Criminal Defense Lawyer
Welcome to the Dale Savage Law Firm, Located in historic Charleston, South Carolina. My practice is dedicated to criminal defense throughout South Carolina, it's what I do and I do it well. If you have any questions regarding your case please feel free to call me at (843) 530-7813.
The Dale Savage Law Firm - Defending good people in tough times.
I only do criminal defense and DUI defense. The three core pillars of the firm are:
1. Protect you (Stand between you and the police/prosecutors);
2. Educate you (make the system work for you not against);
3. Get you the best possible result.
If you are facing criminal charges, we need to talk. The easiest way to do that is call me at (843) 530-7813 or email me at dale@dalesavage.com.
Want to know more about criminal defense? Click on these links:
Criminal defense -
DUI defense -
Drug charges -
The Dale Savage Law Firm was created with one goal - to help you when you are facing some of the biggest challenges of your life. Here you'll find information on DUI defense, drug charges (marijuana, cocaine, crack, meth), domestic violence, gun crimes and everything in between.
Historic Homes Charleston
Join our community of porch lovers on Facebook at and Twitter at Enjoy this drive on East Bay Street in Charleston SC. See the famous Rainbow Row - a group of historical homes painted in pastel colors.