Wealthy residents from big cities across the US are uprooting their lives to start over in Scottsdale, Arizona.
07.04.2024 - 04:01 / forbes.com
If you amble down Legare (pronounced Luh-gree) Street, one of the prettiest streets in Charleston’s South of Broad, you pass filigree ironwork gates and secret gardens, antebellum mansions and live oaks. Then suddenly, in front of one of the mansions, there’s a large stone half circle on the street.
“Can you guess what that is,” asks Bill Harris, founder, co-owner and extremely knowledgeable private guide of Oyster Point Tours which specializes in detailed, authentic walking tours around the city. I ask whether it relates to the cotton or rice trade, the industries that led to the fortunes of many of the former residents of this street. A mark of a secret society? An industrial accident? “Think of a woman wearing a voluminous hoop skirt climbing into a carriage,” Harris says. “She can’t get into it from the street but she can if she stands on this stone, half of a grinding wheel.” In that moment, one image makes history come alive; it’s easy to imagine the personalities, the social life, the day to day activities of this street and with it, of this beguiling city.
Charleston has long been admired as the belle of the south, with street upon cobblestone street lined with those terraced, colorful mansions and flowering trees. The history, of course, is more complicated than that. When you stand on the Battery and look across Charleston harbor, you can see Fort Sumter, the attack on which started the Civil War. Looking out through the windows of the impressive International African American Museum which opened last year and describes the African diaspora in extensive detail, you see Gadsden’s Wharf where an estimated 40% of African captives entered this country as slaves. In 2018, the Charleston City Council passed a resolution acknowledging and apologizing for its slavery role.
On a lighter note, even the city’s very proper image may not be as true as it seems. “Charleston is a drinking town with a history problem,” according to a guide I overheard walking his guests past the multicolored houses of Rainbow Row. It may not be as obvious about it as a well known party town like New Orleans, which it reportedly exceeds in alcohol consumption, but residents clearly like to have a good time and the lively bar and restaurant scene reflects it.
Among the best of many options: The Citrus Club atop the Dewberry Hotel combines cocktails with rooftop views of the city; the subterranean Bar Vauté below Brasserie La Banque has more of a speakeasy feel; Proof, street level on King Street, specializes in high end craft cocktails with a large list for wines by the glass. Other popular bars also feature top notch food such as Xiao Bao Biscuit located in a former gas station with a pan-Asian menu and 39 Rue de Jean, a
Wealthy residents from big cities across the US are uprooting their lives to start over in Scottsdale, Arizona.
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