Premier Lowcountry Magazine Issue #5
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SPRING 2016 PREMIER
LOWCOUNTRYSPRING 2016
TheVenacular ArchitectureBluffton vs. Hilton Head
A Tribute
PATCONROY
SouthernExposurewith our favorite “weather girl”
Annelore Harrell
Our Homes and Community Deserve the Best!
PREMIER SPRING 2016
SPRING 2016 PREMIER
PREMIER SPRING 2016
features
12 ACTIVITIESShannon Tanner: Lowcountry
Lovable
18 LOCATIONA Largely Untold History of
the Lowcountry
SERIES Part 2
contents
26 EXTRASouthern Exposure
32 PEOPLEPat Conroy ... A Tribute
38 CHARITYThe Literacy Center
44 ARCHITECTUREArchitectural Q&A
Part 1 Bluffton
46 WINE & DINEAn Unlikely Story Of
An International Wine
Competition on
Hilton Head Island
32
26 12
4
SPRING 2016 PREMIER
departments
contents
24 BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT: MAMEEM AND
MAUDIE
25 BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT: CALIBER HOME
LOANS
31 BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT: DANIELLA
SQUICQUERO, REALTOR®
48 CALENDAR OF EVENTS
1838
48
5
4,5 TABLE OF CONTENTS
8 PUBLISHER’S LETTER
10 CONTRIBUTORS
PREMIER SPRING 2016
SPRING 2016
PUBLISHER
Premier Lowcountry Magazine, LLC
Mylene Owens
EDITOR
Tamela Maxim
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Jeff Gerber
Annelore Harrell
Tamela Maxim
Glen McCaskey
CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS
Tamela Maxim
Glen McCaskey
Mylene Owens
SALES
Mylene Owens
GRAPHIC DESIGN
Barbara Bricker of Small Miracles
Premier Lowcountry Magazine, LLCP.O. Box 3480Hilton Head Island, SC 29928Phone: (843) 415-5143www.premierlowcountry.com
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6
SPRING 2016 PREMIER 7
PREMIER SPRING 20168
publisher’s noteMYLENE OWENS
I hope that reading this issue of Premier Lowcountry inspires you to find your passion. Let me stop and explain what I mean by finding your passion. My passion for the South Carolina Lowcountry runs deep. As owner and publisher of this magazine, my lowcountry roots began back in the early days of Hilton Head, when everything was a bit simpler; everyone knew everyone and crime was so low that a lot of us didn’t even know where the keys to the house or the car were. I was born on April 9, 1984 at Beaufort Regional Hospital. Most of my childhood was spent in Bluffton and Hilton Head in homes located on some of the small, dirt roads that are now paved and lined with fancy landscaping and luxury homes and offices. I remember walking the side line of the woods in the direction of a dirt road that all of the children were scared to walk down. The rumor was that an old man who lived in the woods down that road liked to kidnap little children. Looking back now, I realize it was an urban legend created by moms and dads to keep us out of any trouble we might find in the woods, not because there really was an old geezer waiting to grab us, and it worked. So, instead of going down the scary dirt road, we used to ride our bikes and play on the swings until the street lights came on and then we knew it was time to get our “you-know-whats” home. Now, when I drive that same no-longer-dirt road called Leg O Mutton, in the direction of Indigo Run from Marshland Road, the pavement is smooth under my tires and there are three-story homes in Victoria Square where the scary woods used to be. The scenery sure is a lot different now. It’s not really a good or a bad kind of different, it’s just that there are some things about what it was like twenty-three years ago when I was nine that I’m nostalgic about from time to time. When I was twelve, Bluffton didn’t have a single stoplight, just a four-way stop in the center of town. I remember when there
were only two gas stations – Nickelpumpers and Messex. I don’t think very many of us realized just how developed Bluffton was going to be. Now when I drive up and down Highway 278 (which also used to be a dirt road) and I see all the development that has grown up on either side, it’s still a little overwhelming when compared to what it was like only a few decades ago when Ulmers and Crosbys were still picking tomatoes where houses are now; everyone bought their groceries at Scott’s Meats and there was almost never a line at the post office except at Christmas. I can also remember when there was only one place to shop unless you wanted to drive 26 miles to Savannah. The Hilton Head Factory Outlet stores were built in Bluffton in the 90s and the area grew so much that it attracted Mr. Tanger who bought the shopping center in 2005. Like most people who have lived here all their lives, we have a love/hate relationship with growth, but isn’t that understandable? I’d be less than honest if I told you that I don’t wish that some things had never changed, but we take the good with the not-so-perfect and make the best of it. Hilton Head will always seem a little glamourous to me even though it’s my first home. People from other places just assumed that everyone on Hilton Head was rich, but along with the Hilton Head workforce who lived (and still do) up to a couple of hours away and came by bus to work in restaurants, hotels and such, there were also many like my family who lived in low-rent areas on Hilton Head. My single mom did what she could to provide the best for us; money was usually pretty tight. So, what about passion? I believe that the Lowcountry has its own very special beauty and all of us: newcomers and those who’ve been here all their lives, whether on Hilton Head, in Bluffton, Beaufort, Okatie or Sun City – we are a great community and we’re proud to call the Lowcountry home. Our goal at Premier Lowcountry magazine is to bring
the best in content and advertising to you – whether you are thinking about having your HVAC system replaced or repaired (because we all love that humidity in our homes), need your teeth cleaned or replaced, want that spring clean shine on your windows, have the desire to show up the neighbors with fabulous landscaping or just want to know about the shops that are geared towards what you want and need – we want you to have the faith that Premier will showcase all of the very best that the Lowcountry has to offer – the premier businesses that belong in the premier magazine. As for the content we provide – it’s written for you from the heart. Every writer has their own unique background and desire to bring exciting and interesting content to you and they show that passion with every word they write. I hope the excitement and enthusiasm they weave into their writing is something you will enjoy and look forward to every quarter when the magazine comes out in January, April, July and November.Please continue to let us know what you like best and what you’d like us to share with you in the future. Wishing you a wonderful Springtime and may the gnats and chiggers (“redbugs”) never touch you,
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GLENMcCASKEY
Glen McCaskey has been
deeply involved in the
evolution of Hilton Head
since he and wife Ginny
moved to the island
in 1970. He was vice
president of Sea Pines for
the years the company
became internationally
acclaimed for its ventures
in the Caribbean and
Southeast USA. Today he
owns Community Visions,
LLC and has consulted
throughout this country
and in Mexico, Eastern
Europe and Southern
Africa. He and Ginny have
been married 42-years
and have been blessed
with two children and two
grandchildren.
TAMELAMAXIM
Tamela Maxim is the
author and illustrator
of Nellie Jelly and the
Jelly Well, a book for
children. She was born in
Savannah, Georgia and as
an Army brat spent her
growing up years living in
Georgia, North Carolina,
Virginia, Hawaii and 10
years in Germany, where
she attended both the
University of Maryland in
Munich and the University
of Stuttgart. She returned
to the United States in
1976, living in Bluffton
and attending Armstrong
in Savannah, where she
received her Bachelor
of Science degree in
Elementary Education
with a double minor in
German and Art. She lives
on Myrtle Island with her
husband Nicholas and
their german shepherd.
ANNELORE HARRELL
Born and raised in Savannah,
Georgia, Annelore Harrell,
nee Stelljes, spent summers
at her parents’ cottage on
Myrtle Island. She married
George William Harrell, Jr., a
regular Army JAG officer in
1953, had five children and
traveled from post to post
for the next thirty years. A
real estate broker by trade,
active in several civic and
community organizations,
she is a graduate of
Leadership, Bluffton,
Hilton Head and South
Carolina. She has appeared
in numerous theatrical
productions, hosted a weekly
cable television program and
currently writes a column
SOMETIMES for Bluffton
Today. Living in a river house,
she proclaims is ‘Not old
enough to be historic and not
new enough to be energy
efficient,’ is just exactly
where she wants to be.
contributors
JEFFGERBER
Nicknamed the “Wine
Bubba,” while at the Aqua
Grille & Lounge, Jeff Gerber
is the Director of the Hilton
Head Wine & Food Festival.
He has run several wine
programs since 2005 at CQs,
Aqua Grille and Bomboras.
When someone asks for the
sommelier, he usually refers
to himself as the Certified
Specialist of Wine. He has
been taking wine seriously,
serving as a wine judge for
almost twenty years, but
tries not to take himself too
seriously – after all, he lives in
the Lowcountry.
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PREMIER SPRING 201612
Shannon Tanner will be
wearing his trademark beanie hat
when his Family Show returns to
Shelter Cove Harbour on Hilton
Head for the 28th season of
HarbourFest. The first shows will
be on Saturday and Sunday, May
28th and 29th and will continue
nightly Monday-Friday for the
rest of the summer through
September 4th. Shows are from
7:00-8:00 pm and 8:30-9:30 pm,
which is a change from last year
because it was still too doggone
HOT at 6:30!
The Parrot Palooza Sunset
Celebration Show with Shannon
Tanner and the Oyster Reefers
band is in its 3rd season (also
at Shelter Cove) and will be on
Thursday nights from June 16th
– August 18th. Fireworks are
every Tuesday at dusk from June
14th – August 16th and instead of
Tuesday, July 5th – fireworks will
be a day early on Monday the 4th.
Shannon Tanner:
Lowcountry Lovable!
SPRING 2016 PREMIER 13
activitiesTAMELA MAXIM
There is always plenty of parking
and it’s FREE!
And, ahoy there matey!
Shannon Tanner’s Most Excellent
Pirate Expedition sets sail every
Wednesday and Friday morning
from June 1st until September 2nd.
The mermaid knows where to find
the key to the treasure chest and
the ever elusive Ghost Dolphin
will help locate Stinky Slimy Slim,
that horrible excuse for a man
who stole the treasure! WARNING:
Capn’ Tanner’s super scary (NOT)
expeditions involve fun “battles”
with swords (nerf) and cannons
(large water guns) and we’re
pretty sure that someone will be
forced to walk the plank!
Of course my favorite part is
finding the treasure --- lots of gold
(chocolate) coins! YUM!
Tickets can be purchased at
the Shelter Cove show or ordered
online at www.shannontanner.
com. If you think you have enough
guts to be a pirate – buy some
tickets and go to the Shelter Cove
Gazebo at 8:30 am where you will
be provided with a nerf sword,
pirate doo-rag, eyepatch and
pirate tattoo.
Kids 3-14 $25, Adults $30,
Pirates under the age of 2 are
FREE.
The boat leaves at 9:00 am
and returns at 10:30. Strollers
can be taken on board and boats
have two bathrooms and plenty
of shade, but dress for warm
weather and listen to your mother
if she tells you to wear sunscreen!
We weren’t surprised that the
Pirate Expedition received the
2015 TripAdvisor Award of
Excellence!
Shannon also performs during
the cool, cold and colder months
in Colorado and is currently
playing at the Powder 8 in
Beaver Creek where my husband
Nicholas and son Nicky enjoyed
the foot-
stompin’-hand-clappin’
performance last month. Nicholas
and I also enjoyed the show when
we were there in December and
noticed that although everyone
(including us) was on the tired
side of exhausted at the end
of a long ski/ride day, Shannon
was a crowd-pleasin’-audience-
participation kind of performer
and the response was energetic,
enthusiastic and woo-hoo kind
of fun. There were funny jokes
and stories in between songs
and southern style call-outs to
the audience, many of whom he
knew by name and more than a
few who have been coming to his
show for decades.
Unlike the family shows on
Hilton Head, there are no beanie
hats or kiddie songs and along
with his large repertoire of covers
from rock to country, some of
PREMIER SPRING 201614
the best are his originals – one
of which he wrote for Toby
Keith who just happened to
be incognito in the audience
one night when he made the
announcement. Toby was
touched – loved the song and
now “Big Dog Daddy” himself
shows up from time to time and
joins Shannon onstage.
So what is it about him that is
wonderful and why do we love
him so much?
He was born and raised in
Ridgeland, SC, where he married
his kindergarten sweetheart
Kendall, who is the Executive
Director for the Jasper County
Chamber and holds down the
family fort while her husband is
away. They have two children,
a son: Taylor (27) and daughter
Hailey (18). Taylor works for the
Greenery on Hilton Head and
Hailey is a pre-med student at
Clemson with a 4.0 GPA. Taylor
says his sister has the brains and
he got the brawn. And, yes, Taylor
was named after James Taylor.
When JT was told about his
namesake, he laughed and said
that he thinks naming kids after
him simply shows a lack of good
judgment by the parents.
Are Shannon and Kendall’s
children musically gifted?
Yes! Hailey plays piano, Taylor
plays guitar and they both
sing, although Taylor has to be
coaxed to be on stage. I found
Taylor singing Garth Brooks, “The
Dance,” and Hailey singing a sweet
duet with her dad, “Marry Me,” by
Train on youtube.
How did Shannon get his start in
music?
Shannon started playing drums
when he was 12, and guitar at 14.
By 16 he was playing full-time at
Pelican Point and Crazy Crab on
Hilton Head 6 nights a week. He
was working on his step-father’s
shrimp boat and they tied up at
Hudson’s and he started out by
playing songs from the boat. The
manager offered him $40 a day
if he’d promise to come back
every day and keep the customers
happy during the long wait for
a table. $40 plus tips – that was
SPRING 2016 PREMIER 15
PREMIER SPRING 201616
a LOT of money back then. He
was hooked! Shrimping was hot,
sweaty work; music was fun and
the money was great.
After high school, he tried
college, but didn’t really like
it and on impulse, he decided
to go to Vail, where one of his
first stops was at a Mexican
restaurant for lunch. He played
a couple of songs and snagged
a gig for $50 a night. Just a
few hours later, he met a girl
from his hometown Ridgeland,
population 3,500. She gave him
a ski pass and told him she was
looking for someone to share
the rent. In less than 3 hours he
had a job, a place to stay and
a ticket to ride! When he came
back to Hilton Head a few years
later he landed the job with
Greenwood Development playing
at Shelter Cove and has been
going back and forth between
Colorado and South Carolina
ever since. Eventually he also
added performances at The
Cloister in Sea Island, Georgia
and in Palm Springs, California,
making memories for locals and
vacationers.
What are his influences and
passions?
I asked Shannon about his
favorite music. He said he likes
to stay current, but artists like
James Taylor, Glenn Fry and the
music of the 70s and 80s have
had the biggest impact on him.
Glenn’s death really grieved him;
he told me that hardly a day has
gone by when he didn’t sing
something by the Eagles; that
Glenn’s music has always been
especially meaningful for him.
When asked about what
charities he supports, he told me
a positive role model. He was
head coach of the JV football
team at Thomas Heyward
Academy in Ridgeland and told
me that he counts investing in
the lives of those young men
as one of the most rewarding
times of his life. His team had
one undefeated season out
of six years, but if you ask
Coach Tanner, ALL of them
were winning seasons. About
200 young men still come up
and address him as “Coach,”
and when he gets phone calls,
sometimes in the middle of
the night, he considers it an
honor that they look to him for
answers to their life questions, no
matter when they call.
His son Taylor also has the
sports “gene” and rushed for
1,411 yards and 21 touchdowns
in his senior year (2007), then
played in the NCAA Division II
at North Greenville University
where he scored 5 rushing
touchdowns in 11 games and
finished 3rd on the team with 510
all-purpose yards. Now, besides
work at the Greenery, Taylor
is also a collegiate level sports
coach, training young men and
women of all ages to improve
their fitness and sport-specific
performance. Best way to reach
Taylor: tsmalphrus@gmail.com
And the big news from Taylor is
that Shannon and Kendall will be
grandparents soon!
Shan Tan, the Guitar Man, Capn’
Shan, the Pirate, and Granddaddy
Shan, the Family Man – whatever
you call him, he’s our kind of
Lowcountry!
that bringing smiles and laughter
to children with life-threatening
illnesses during his 12 years with
the Make a Wish Foundation
was wonderful, (www.worldwish.
org) and that he and his
family continue to sponsor
children through Compassion
International, taking sponsorship
very seriously – getting to know
each child personally as he/she
grows up. (www.compassion.
com).
What else does he care
about?
He makes people happy for
a living and is grateful for being
given so many opportunities to
have a career where he gets to
make a positive difference in the
world. He’s a man of strong faith,
and told me that he relies on that
beacon of guiding light from God
for inspiration.
But what makes Shannon
happy besides God, family, music
and helping others? He loves,
loves, LOVES football! But, not
just the game. As a coach, he
was given the opportunity to be
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PREMIER SPRING 201618
locationGLEN McCASKEY
A Largely Untold History of the
Lowcountry
The more windows the more
light! Our first look at the past of
the Lowcountry, in the last issue
of Premier Lowcountry, was full of
fascinating disclosures, but it also
came packed with more mystery
than a Tom Clancy novel. The
reason is that the further back
we go, there is just so much we
don’t know. There are just too few
windows shedding light on those
times.
Archaeology, scientific
information about flora, fauna,
ocean levels and to some degree
customs, folk tales and traditions,
— those are the windows we
look through before the arrival of
recorded history, before written
or even pictorial documentation
of the lives and times of our
forbearers on these shores.
This second in a series of
glimpses into the intriguing history
of the Lowcountry will move from
the poorly illumined era of history
into that which is surprisingly well-
lit, but for reasons of language,
international prerogatives and
economics, is just now having the
curtains shading the light thrown
back. Our last installment plunged
back 12,000 years, when the
shoreline of the Atlantic Ocean
was still 50 or so miles east of the
Harbour Town lighthouse. In this
chapter, we start where the ocean
is today, but still before when the
stories of our history were being
committed to writing. It is not
because it was before writing. It
was because writing had not yet
arrived. And it will arrive in this
second installment, aboard ships.
Fill the Valleys, Flood the Creeks
Recorded history would not
start here until the valleys had
been filled by the encroaching
ocean where prehistoric people
would hunt mammoths and had
turned them into what mankind
has since named Port Royal, St.
Helena and Calibogue Sounds.
Fresh water creeks became tidal
rivers now revered as the May,
Colleton and Beaufort. But once
that happened, even before
there were prehistoric people
living here full-time, a visitors’
pattern of supposedly “primitive
peoples” started to emerge in
this Lowcountry, a pattern which
oddly preceded that of the
sophisticates of 2016.
Calling those indigenous people
groups who built the mysterious
Indian shell rings here, “tourists,”
SPRING 2016 PREMIER
A Largely Untold History of the Lowcountry
SERIES Part 2 of 4
19
PREMIER SPRING 201620
would be a stretch, but their
annual seasonal ritual of relocating
to these sea island and lowcountry
shores with their canoes, hunting
gear, investment in short term
lodging and displaying a voracious
appetite for seafood . . . well, call
them what you like! {To read
more about the prehistoric story
of the Lowcountry in the last issue
of Premier Lowcountry, find it
online at www.premierlowcountry.
com)
Archaeology suggests that full-
time Native American populations
didn’t join the alligators here until
around the start of what has been
designated, The Mississippian
Period of pre-history, a.d. 1100
to a.d. 1600. During this span of
500-years, Native-Americans
making the several days travel
inland were experiencing major
changes in what we might call
cultural, political, religious and
even military institutions. What
once were small and isolated
family group,s increasingly
became part of larger tribes and
nations for the sake of mutual
security and provision. But along
the coast, the old extended
family-sized tribal patterns seem
to have largely remained. Even
so, as we frequently say in our
own day, “The world was getting
smaller.”
The Sudden End of Things
Prehistoric
While “tribal nations” were
becoming the new normal, the
still small lowcountry tribes
lived on the outer edges of all
the progress, sometimes having
informal distant affiliations with
the distant bigger tribes. But
an unexpected cataclysmic
event would explode into these
emerging trends and bring in
a whole new level of shrinking
“worldness” to the native life of
the coastal islands. It caused
a rapid relocation from the
mysterious fog of pre-history, into
the realm of documented history,
and European styled at that!
This completely unexpected
event was triggered by an “out
of the box” Genoese (Italy) sea
captain who obtained funding
from Spain’s royalty to search
for the long sought back door to
China and the Far East. Touting
a much ridiculed proposal of
sailing west to find it, instead of
east, it was part of a Holy Grail
magnitude search of 15th century
global powers to find a shorter
route to the riches of the Far East.
It was something like JFK’s all-in,
high risk race to the moon in the
middle of the 1900s. Similarly, the
Spanish bought into the low-odds,
expensive exploit because of the
unparalleled economic upside.
So, in 1492, Christopher
Columbus sailed out of Spain in
one life-boat sized and two larger
vessels. After the famous voyage,
they landed in Hispaniola where
Columbus sent a party ashore
to determine the location of the
Chinese emperor. The vision may
SPRING 2016 PREMIER 21
have had a problem or two, but
it brought history into contact
with what had been prehistory
for a very long time. Amazingly,
this Spanish sponsored business
endeavor would very quickly
have a direct impact on the
Lowcountry.
Columbus’ sponsors lost
no time in capitalizing on their
1492 investment. Within four
years, they had planted San
Salvador, Hispaniola, as the first
permanent European community
in this hemisphere. They had
dispatched exploration parties to
the Bahamas, the Caribbean and
to Cuba, Mexico and Peru. Florida
was discovered in 1512 and the
history era of the South Carolina
story would not be far behind.
Giants in the Lowcountry
Even though the “Moon
Mission” of that day did not
land on the right orb, the results
were monumental, including
documented insights into Native
Americans at the end of the
Mississippian Period. Just 24 years
after the Columbus landing, the
Spanish would be exclaiming
about the enormous tides of the
Lowcountry, while they were there
looking for gold, silver and giants,
especially giants.
A sugar planter on Hispaniola,
Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon, sent out
an exploration northward up the
coast of Florida/North America
to locate additional laborers for
his rapidly expanding sugar cane
business. The original indigenous
work force, the Arawak tribes,
had suffered catastrophic losses
due to European diseases. The
expedition apparently landed
somewhere between Tybee and
Edisto Islands and returned with
reports of a “Land of Giants,” a
land brimming not with gold and
silver, but with large, strong men
(compared to the diminutive
Arawak), men who could literally
do the heavy lifting on Hispaniola.
A second expedition was soon
dispatched, headed by Francisco
Cordillo, to bring back a load
of “alien” workers. These early
people-traffickers found the Land
of the Giants was actually named,
the “Land of Chicora,” the tribal
name for a host of small but united
tribal families. Cordillo deceptively
lured 60 natives on board and
returned with them to Hispaniola.
It was not a good beginning for
Spanish-Lowcountry relations.
The Westerlies Strategic Value
But Spain soon determined
the Lowcountry was vital to their
explosive Americas initiative for
far more important reasons than
being a source of worker giants. It
was vital because of the Atlantic
Westerlies. These were the West
to East winds that were the return-
to-Europe power source for the
same shipping that had previously
taken the trade winds to the new
world, blowing east to west. Before
catching the Westerlies, the great
Spanish sailing ships sailed north
to Cuba, from Mexico and Peru,
to restock for the long crossing
to Spain. Then they caught the
Gulf Stream North until hitting the
Westerlies, off the Lowcountry
coast, that took them to Cadiz.
The strategic value of the
Lowcountry was that whoever
controlled it, could create a
strategic settlement and port from
which they could safely protect
shipping on the Westerlies trade
route. Of course, conversely, it
could be effectively used as a
nearby home base for privateers,
which were increasingly pirating
the Spanish shipments of looted
treasures returning to Spain.
PREMIER SPRING 201622
France, England and Scotland were
the main sources of privateers:
government sanctioned pirates.
Starting as early as 1526, the
Spanish spent several decades
attempting to plant a settlement
in the area of today’s Port Royal
Sound. The Spanish had named
it the Harbor of Santa Elena,
Santa Elena being today’s Parris
Island (yes, the Marines). None of
these early attempts succeeded,
primarily due to failures of the
Spanish bureaucracy. In the
Spanish culture of that day, key
government jobs were determined
by lineage and influence, with
almost no consideration of ability
or accomplishment. Probably the
most glaring example of this was
when a very specific and urgent
command from the King to plant
a settlement at Santa Elena was
carried out on the Gulf Coast of
Florida by mistake, not even on the
Atlantic Ocean or remotely near
the Port Royal site.
A Bold French Initiative
Meanwhile, the French were
giving Spain some serious
competition in La Florida. Being
aware of Spanish reasons to
establish a military post at Santa
Elena, Gaspar Coligny, Admiral of
France and leader of the protestant
French Huguenot faction at the
French court, took the initiative to
establish a colony. In 1562, Captain
Jean Ribaut, arrived at Santa Elena
with two ships and 150 men.
They claimed Santa Elena Island
and the Lowcountry for France and
built a fort and barracks on today’s
Parris Island and proceeded to
befriend the native inhabitants,
learning how to cope with the local
semi-tropical climate and preparing
450th Anniversary of the Founding of Santa Elena
Celebrated in the LowcountryApril 15-30, 2016
Americans normally relate to the 1607 founding of the Colony of Virginia at Jamestown, Virginia as the actual beginning of the United States. It was indeed the first permanent colony established. Plymouth Coligny in Massachusetts was settled later, in 1620 and was abandoned in 1691. But here in the Lowcountry of South Carolina, the Spanish followed a short-lived French settlement of a year or so on Santa Elena Island in the middle of the 16th Century, 1566. Santa Elena, now Parris Island, home to the United States Marines since 1915, actually became the first capital of the Spanish Provence of La Florida, which spanned the entire east coast of the present United States. The story of Santa Elena will be told in the next issue of Premier Lowcountry. The community peaked at around 500 residents, including men, women, children, farmers and military troops until the Spanish relocated the capital to St. Augustine to be closer to their strategic forces at Havana, Cuba and to avoid a growing English naval presence in the area. The month of April will begin with a regatta for the Jean Ribault and Pedro Menendez Cups, hosted in Port Royal Sound by Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club. Then on April 15, scholars from around the United States will confer on Beaufort to provide a day-long Scholars Conference supported by Beaufort County at The Arts Center of Beaufort. Finally, at the end of the month, on April 30, the ribbon will be cut, the public will enjoy the inaugural exhibit, and a BBQ festival and celebration will be held at the corner of Bladen and North Streets.
Mark your Calendars for these headline events APRIL 15: Scholars Conference at The Arts Center at USCBFor more information: http://santa-elena.org/the-santa-elena-conference/ APRIL 20: Replica Flagship of Pedro Menendez sails into Port Royal Sound
This floating destination will dock in Port Royal (Beaufort) for 10 days. Menendez settled an outpost at St. Augustine in 1565 and he was the first Spanish Governor of La Florida. APRIL 30: Grand Opening of the Santa Elena History Center and Inaugural Exhibit11:00 am Ribbon-Cutting12:00 pm BBQ festival with music, food and fun
To learn more about the new Santa Elena History Center, visit http://santa-elena.org, and for the Exploring Joara Foundation, visit www.ExploringJoara.org
to defend against well-armed
Spanish corsairs full of angry
Spaniards. The French renamed
the sound “Port Royal,” for it was a
magnificent body of water worthy
of royalty.
Given the months long crossing
of the Atlantic, it took the French
a half year to even learn of the
French initiative and more than
another year before a Spanish
response could be coordinated.
But during that year and a half,
things went badly for the French
settlement. They had not suffered
any Spanish attacks but they
weren’t needed.
The failure of France to resupply
the base, due to a civil war back
home, and some movie caliber
intrigue with England involving an
English plot to hijack the Spanish
gold operations, left the 28 men at
their Charlesfort outpost on Santa
Elena out of supplies. Also having
come to the end of the helpful
neighborliness of local Indians and
midst a mutiny, the surviving 25
Frenchmen somehow managed
to build a ship without any
shipbuilders. It consisted of local
wood, was corked with Spanish
Moss, and was tied together
with grape vine; the men’s shirts
were turned into sails and they
set out for an Atlantic crossing in
April 1563 without a navigator or
navigational equipment.
Somehow, even after some
cannibalism on the crossing, most
of them actually made it home, but
kept the forts abandonment secret
from the Spanish. In June of 1864,
a Spanish expedition arrived at
Santa Elena prepared to wrest it
from the interlopers, but found it
long abandoned, save for a single
Frenchman who wouldn’t join the
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Atlantic crossing seeing the long
chances for success.
Next Issue: In the next issue of
Premier Lowcountry, we will pick
up the intriguing history of the
Lowcountry by returning to this
abandoned French outpost on
today’s Parris Island and tell the
story of how it became the capitol
of Spain’s La Florida, a new world
European Provence that ran from the
Florida Keys to the Canadian border.
This settlement well preceded the
1607 Jamestown. Virginia English
Colony and had a population of 500
men, women and children. The full
story of both the French and Spanish
settlements on today’s Parris Island
are just now being fully understood,
many of the historical Spanish
documents only recently being
translated into English.
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business
SPOTLIGHT:
Mameem and Maudie Our store is named after our great grandmother Mameem and great aunt Maudie, who lived in Columbia, South Carolina. Our father, Dr. Ben Gilham nicknamed his grandmother Mameem and it stuck, so that’s what everybody called her. Our parents built a home on Hilton Head in 1965, which they still own, and Mameem loaned them the money to build it. Mameem and Maudie loved visiting our family at the beach on Hilton Head, especially Maudie. She would be out on the beach bright and early every day. It was always an adventure when they came to visit and we also enjoyed going to Columbia to stay with them overnight. Mameem was a fantastic cook! Creamed corn, butterbeans, fried chicken, and homemade biscuits was one of our favorite dinners. She also made delicious thumbprint
cookies which made us popular with the neighborhood kids. Mameem liked to play cards and taught us many a card game. Oh the memories! Maudie fixed us ice cream with warm chocolate syrup and Oreos and when we were in Columbia she took us to the Five and Dime and let us buy office supplies and afterwards we would come back to their house and sit on the screen porch and play store and office. Mameem was 99 years young when she died and Maudie was in her early 80s. Their home on Devine Street in Columbia is now a Realty company. We hope you will visit us at Mameem and Maudie in Old Town Bluffton where our goal is to provide a heartwarming atmosphere reminiscent of the good old days when life was a little slower and people took the time to make fond memories for the future. We’d love to have you drop in for a visit!
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businessSPOTLIGHT:
Premier Lowcountry’s Realtor Daniella Squicquero of Charter One Realty is our Premier Lowcountry realtor and I decided to find out a little more about her so I could share it with you. She is from a large family and most of them still live in her original hometown of Pittsburgh. She lives with her husband Dr. Adam Squicquero of Howard Family Dental and their three dogs. She and Adam became friends over the internet discussing their favorite philosophers. Friendship turned quickly to dating and the decision to get married was made within weeks, although they waited four years for the ceremony since they were both still in college. They had an intimate ceremony in a beautiful courtyard at a Bed & Breakfast in her hometown. She made all of the desserts (she once considered becoming a pastry chef). Adam’s father officiated, they wrote their own vows and they even made their own wedding bands. Now, they are living happily ever after and their blended families, including the in-laws and siblings are all close friends. I wanted to know what she loves (besides Adam): Cars, especially if they are black, fast and fairly exotic. Her brain is mathematically and scientifically wired. She can take almost anything apart and put it back together again – even a car, given the chance. There is a special place in her heart for animals and she belongs to three adorable rescue dogs (she showed me the photos). If a creature needs extra love – she’s first in line to give. Fashion is her super power, and, yes, she’s done some modeling. She is fascinated with wine, especially if it’s a full-bodied, dark red with hints of earth, leather and tobacco, but of course, it depends on the food that goes with it. First chance she gets – she’s going to become a sommelier. She loves politics, physics (especially astrophysics), music, most of the sciences and she’s also a literature fiend. If you are hungry for something that looks beautiful and tastes delicious, I don’t know if it’s true, but I heard that Martha is jealous. And, she LOVES the South Carolina Lowcountry. She told me that this is the first place she’s ever lived (and, she’s lived in a LOT of places) where it really feels like home. She likes our climate (of course), but she also said, “My love for this area goes far deeper than a sunny day. I love the way the air smells, the
variety of outdoor activity options like hiking, camping, sailing, paddling and fishing.” Lowcountry architecture and history are also high on her list of things she likes. The list of what she doesn’t like is pretty short – just one item – she misses mountains. But, as she told me, “that’s hardly a reason not to live here!” She doesn’t even complain about heat, humidity or gnats and mosquitoes. She knew paradise when she got here and now, as a realtor for Charter One Realty, as it says in her advertisement - she gets to live the LC every day. And, the mountains really aren’t that far away. Daniella has a diverse background, partly because she likes variety, but also because she’s so doggone smart that if she takes an
interest in something, it doesn’t take long before she’s done the research, taken the classes or done the DIY version, gotten the diploma or the t-shirt and signed up for something new. In other words, despite the large number of things she is expert in – she’s not a dabbler who knows a little about a lot. She’s one of those amazing people who know a lot about a lot. She’s also the Director of Business Development at the Greater Bluffton Chamber of Commerce which means that she is available to assist chamber members. Research and relationship building are two of her strengths so helping members determine the why, what and how of growing their businesses makes her a terrific asset to that organization. Daniella is a strong believer in giving back to the community and her compassionate outreach was recognized when she was honored with the 2015 Realtor Service Award for her first year in that industry, plus she received the Top Networker award for the last quarter of 2015 from her BNI (Business Networking International) chapter. The philosophy of BNI, which is “Givers Gain” fits Daniella perfectly. Also, no surprise that she was chosen as Membership Chair on the Board of Bluffton Rotary. As for real estate – Daniella prides herself on offering a full-service, start-to-finish approach. The personal attention she provides to each client makes the buying and selling process the best that it can be because she is dedicated to taking all of her skills and knowledge, plus the advantage of working with state-of-the-art technology to make sure that everyone ends up with their little slice of that heaven that we call the Lowcountry.
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extraANNELORE HARRELL
26
If air conditioning had been
available in the 1940s, it’s just
possible we would not have come
looking in Bluffton for a place on
the Maye River, where life moved
at a more placid pace and more
importantly, was cooler than in
Savannah’s debilitating summer
heat.
Today, in our lowcountry
summer life, air conditioning is
taken for granted. Setting the
thermostat is a matter of choice.
Want it comfortable at night for
sleeping? There’s a program for
that. Going away for the weekend
and don’t want the unit working
at full blast for an empty house?
There’s a program for that.
Years ago, somehow we
managed home temperatures
in the summer. Not by the
mechanical means of today,
the lovely central cooling that
flows through our homes and
keeps tempers at an even keel
on the most miserable dog days
of summer, but we managed
by old-fashioned tried and true
adjustments.
We had practical means of
combating heat.
A perfect example of southern
Southern Exposure
defense against the extreme
temperatures of July and August
is the Church of the Cross on
Calhoun Street in Bluffton. When
the church vestry in the early
1800s advertised in a Charleston,
SC newspaper for someone to
design and build a church ‘up off
the ground on brick to seat 500
and not cost over $5,000,’ they
didn’t mention they wanted the
design to have cross ventilation
or a southern exposure. That was
understood. The church they built
so long ago, sits lengthwise on
the bluff overlooking the Maye
River. For each window in the
main body of this gothic design,
there is a matching window on
the opposite wall so that when
the windows were thrown open
to the meekest of breezes coming
off the river, the air would flow
straight through.
This was a summer church,
meant for summer people who
had come to Bluffton from inland
where the temperatures hovered
at least ten degrees hotter and
from Savannah whose busy
streets and brick buildings threw
off heat even after the sun had
long set.
Fortunately, the church has
been blessed with a central air
conditioning system so that the
methods of cooling 19th century
style are now only a matter of
historical interest to the active
year-round congregation of today.
But, in the ‘40s, we bent our
lives to the heat. We walked
slower. We talked slower. We
closed windows and pulled down
shades on the east side of the
house in the morning and reversed
the order in the afternoon to cheat
the sun’s blasting heat. Only in
the cool of an evening or after a
cleansing thunderstorm were all
the windows opened. In Savannah,
during summer months, stores
closed at 1 PM on Wednesday
and Saturday afternoons, except
for the first Saturday of the
month. Only a few restaurants
and Gottlieb’s Bakery were open
on Sundays. After church, we
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took time off to rest, to take to
the river, the ocean, the beach, to
relax and concentrate on staying
cool. The hours between one and
three when it was simply too hot
to move around were lazier than
most. If you were lucky, as soon
as school was out for summer
vacation, you managed to leave
the city. Some families escaped
the heat in the mountains of North
Carolina, but most stayed near
home. The men wanted to be
able to drive into the city in the
mornings and return in the evening
to share the relative coolness of
their summer cottage. Tybee Island
became popular because it was
only 18 miles from Savannah, an
easy commute. The ocean breezes
even on the hottest of days were a
delight as refugees from the heat
sat on the wide porches with their
ubiquitous swings and rocking
chairs, never far from the rustle
of palm trees and soft murmur of
incoming breakers.
Some of our friends bought
property south of Savannah,
down at Pine Harbor, Shellmans’
and Yellow Bluff, where tannin
tainted the rivers the color of
coffee. Cousin Henry, an avid
fisherman, went to South Carolina
and bought a riverfront lot down
the road from Camp St Mary’s
where the Okatie River meets the
Colleton.
We tried them all.
None compared to Bluffton.
We wanted a place of our own
and trying to find something in
those war years of the early 1940s
was difficult, to say the least. Gas
was rationed, but as soon as we
collected enough coupons, we
were off every chance we got.
Surely, there was a place for us so
we would no longer be dependent
on the kindness of friends or worry
about the dubious summer rental
market. Houses for sale were out of
the question. With the war effort,
every available space was occupied.
We looked for land.
And we had special needs.
Mama couldn’t swim. She never
had, and she had no intention of
ever learning. Not for her, the old-
fashioned breast stroke Cousin
Eunice favored, moving lady-like
through the water, hair tucked into a
rubber bathing cap, strap fastened
firmly under her chin, a protection
that would keep her once a week
shampoo and set completely dry,
but left her with zig zag ridges
around the edge of her face.
Swimming was not a talent
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Mama aspired to. We would need
a place with a beach.
Not on the ocean, mind you.
She didn’t care a thing about
being near the ocean. She wanted
a nice quiet river, a gentle river.
No swift currents or big fish. She
did like to catch crab and until
Mama was in her 80s, she rowed
our bateau for Daddy to throw a
shrimp net. She never left to go on
the river without her life preserver
cushion or forgot to remind us to
take ours.
Daddy, on the other hand, was
a typical Aquarian. Loved the
water, in it, on or near it, any kind
of water, fresh or salt.
He did insist on the land being
high ground. His father had told
him to always buy land that sat
high and he was most positive
about not buying any land that
looked as though it might be
susceptible to flooding.
Their last consideration was
that they wanted their property
to face south. They knew of the
prevailing breezes from the ocean
and again in those days of no
air conditioning, this was most
important no matter how much
cross ventilation you designed.
We found a real estate broker
in Bluffton - Mrs. Colcock, who
knew everything and everybody
and would be most surprised
to learn that she was wrong
about anything. She led us all over
God’s earth. She simply could not
understand us. She showed us a
lot that faced south with a beach
and on deep water. She showed it
to us at high tide. When we went
back later at low tide to check
what we suspected, what we
saw was an expanse of mud for a
beach and not a speck of water
to be found. Then, there were the
lots she showed us where the
channel ran close and swift to a
high bluff, a bargain at ten dollars
a front foot, $600 for a 60-foot
lot. There was no beach at all and
the property faced due west, sure
to be sweltering in the afternoons
when the sun began to set.
It was most discouraging.
Finally, one afternoon, she drove
us over a rickety wooden bridge
onto Myrtle Island. The half sand,
half crushed oyster shell excuse
for a road ended in a circle at the
tip of the island. We parked the
car and walked to the edge of the
bluff. There was no road here, only
an overgrown path where cars
had beaten down the underbrush,
evidence of what we later found to
be a frequently used lovers’ lane.
‘Except for the end of this
island, which is $4,000, there is
only one lot available for sale,’ said
Mrs. Colcock.
When Mama heard $4,000, I
thought she was going to pass
out. Our custom built three-
bedroom brick house in Savannah
SPRING 2016 PREMIER 29
had cost $6,300 and
Daddy had just happily
paid off the FHA
loan. Mama wasn’t
too excited about this
property anyway. There
was only one house at
this end of the island
and it wasn’t close.
There was no electricity.
There was no water.
We’d have to dig a
well. You couldn’t even
really tell one end of
the property from the
other.
But, Daddy
persevered. He loved it.
The lot was reasonable,
priced under $2,000
and had 200 front
feet on the river. Mrs.
Colcock forgot to mention the lot
was pie shaped and went to almost
nothing at the back.
You couldn’t see much. The lot
was completely wooded, a tangle
of vines. What we did see was a
beautiful beach, yellow sand, wide
and slanting carefully to a slow
moving river, green and clear in the
winter cold.
Mama would have no trouble
sitting on that beach. And there
was a high bluff. A fact that really
pleased Daddy.
We ignored the fact that the
property faced almost due north.
We bought that lot.
And we finally found our own on
the River Maye.
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peopleTAMELA MAXIM
Photography courtesy of Pat Conroy’s family and friends
SPRING 2016 PREMIER
On March 5th 2016 I woke up out of a deep sleep and looked at my phone to see what time it was – 2:00 am. Wide awake and feeling as though something was wrong, I unlocked the phone and the first thing I saw was the Island Packet report that Pat Conroy had died. March 4th, I thought to myself – didn’t Jerry Jenkins just post on Facebook yesterday about how the date is the only one on the calendar that is also a sentence? “March forth.” As sad as I felt at the loss of our “Prince of Tides,” I smiled at the relevance of his leaving us on a date that seemed so perfect – so military – so literary – so Pat. I never got the chance to meet Pat Conroy. I’ve been around his sweet sister Kathy a few times
and I spent an evening bantering with his father at a party, but my chance to meet Pat slipped away just a few weeks ago. One of my writing assignments for this magazine was to interview Pat. My deadline was December 15th. I asked his sister Kathy to help and she assured me that she’d relayed the message and that hopefully he’d call me soon. Of course, Pat’s illness was a secret, so I didn’t know that he wasn’t ever going to be able to meet me or do an interview until I looked at my phone in the wee hours of the night on the 5th. When it was obvious that I wasn’t going to make the Winter issue deadline, I asked Jerry Jenkins if he could help. He was also on deadline, but told me
that if I would send him some questions, he’d be honored to answer them. Whew! Not only did I score a terrific interview, but I also found out that Pat is Jerry’s favorite southern author. My next deadline was March 15th and I had been holding out hope for that interview with Pat. After adjusting to the sad news of his death, I decided to work on writing a tribute to his life, his great heart, his tremendous love for the underdog, his fabulous writing and to ask a few people if they would share something about him or something they had written for him. Like many people, I responded to Pat’s last Facebook post and sent him a Get Well card. I decorated it with dried flowers
Pat ConroyA TRIBUTE
PREMIER SPRING 201634
and sent him a little shamrock for St. Patrick’s Day, plus I wrote a limerick that I hoped would cheer him up. I hope he read it. It was silly, but that was the idea. I sent his address to my friends and asked them to write. I asked Jerry Jenkins to send me a copy of what he wrote so that I
could share it with you. Shannon Tanner posted a lovely poem in his honor, which I also thought you would appreciate, especially since it touches on the one thing that a lot of Pat’s readers have in common – we feel as though we knew him - he was so transparent and vulnerable in his writing that even though we never met, he seemed like a close friend. Ellen
Malphrus was close to Pat, so I was glad that even though she is grieving the loss of her mentor and good friend, she was willing to contribute – and, what she wrote is beautiful and touching. So here goes. I’ll start with a story that my sister-in-law shared in October and then my silly
rhyme, followed by tributes from Ellen, Jerry and Shannon. I hope that you enjoy allowing us to share what Pat meant to us. A lot of people have a Pat story. This is mine: My sister-in-law Cappi worked with Pat on the South Carolina Aquarium project in Charleston and they became friends. My mother used to be a Real Estate broker and drove Pat around the lowcountry back in the 80s. Be patient, and I’ll explain why those two sentences go
together. Our family camps on Hunting Island every October. Cappi came to the campsite late because she wanted to get a copy of Ellen Malphrus’s book, Untying the Moon signed by both Ellen and Pat. There was a long, LONG line of people waiting to get books signed at the Heyward House that day. When Cappi got to the end of the line (2 hours later) she handed
over 3 books – one for herself, one for her mother-in-law and one for me. The conversation went something like this: “Please sign this one to Annelore.” Pat – “Do you mean THE Annelore?” Cappi: (big smile) “Yes, THE Annelore.” Pat then told her that my mother had shown him a photograph of me with my sisters Anne and Melanie back in the 80s and that he had declared that he wanted to marry all three of us and hoped that my mother didn’t object to polygamy! I’ve told that story more than a few times and I thought I might get to laugh about it one day with Pat. My husband Nicholas and Pat could share recipes and moan about how unfair it is that God made martinis taste so good and yet be so bad for you. Sandra could tell me what a hopeless flirt her husband is and how I’m not that special because he says that kind of thing to all the girls. Pat’s brother Tim told me to “always write with risk and passion.” Great advice and his big brother would approve. I have fretted over every word I’ve written and yet I keep doing it. Maybe we really do get to know ourselves better by spilling words and being vulnerable.
Tamela Maxim – Limerick for PatThere once was a writer named PatWho wrote about thisWhile he wrote about thatAnd, when he was doneHaving more fun than funHe laughed, ‘til he criedAnd, that’s that.
Ellen Malphrus – Her Friendship with PatFriendships with Dickey and Conroy James Dickey was a literary
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father figure to me. He taught me about writing and humanity, and that you can’t be fully engaged in a life of the mind unless you also get your hands dirty. He taught me in the classroom and during our walks through the Horseshoe (across campus). During visits at his home or mine, in conversations under the canopy of trees. Pat Conroy was also Dickey’s student. After he published The Water Is Wide, he commuted to Columbia (where Dickey was Poet-in-Residence at USC) to sit in on Dickey’s class. Some years later, Dickey was my Graduate Director for my MFA in Creative Writing and was Co-Director of my Ph.D. dissertation. He went on ahead before I completed that degree. When Conroy and I became friends, in Maine of all places, we immediately began singing the praises of Big Jim Dickey – and haven’t really shut up since. He calls me his sister-in-Dickey. After Pat read some of my work, he began gently encouraging me to complete the manuscript that became Untying the Moon. As I dawdled, his nudges turned to nags – then full blown pestering. Thank heavens for it, or the book might still be draft work.
Pat’s Influence “I’m a trooper, Malphrus.” That’s what Pat Conroy said to me when he loaded up to leave Shaver’s bookstore in Savannah after our book signing in December – the one that turned out to be his last. Just the day before, he and I had given a presentation and signed books for the Women’s Association of Hilton Head Island (WAHHI) – nearly 500 women (plus Pat and my husband Andy)! He was weary and not exactly feeling his best, and I was giving him a sisterly “talking to” about
pushing himself too hard. That’s when he said it: “Don’t worry about me – I’m a trooper, Malphrus.” And so he was, in many ways. Very many ways. Pat Conroy’s generosity of spirit is also something that has impacted so many of us. At that last book signing, for instance, the very last book signing of Pat Conroy’s life, he wasn’t even signing his own books. He was signing the foreword he wrote for my novel Untying the Moon. And he was there for my book launch in October – a beautiful moss draped, blue skied garden party at the Heyward House in Bluffton. Hundreds of people showed up, and surely not just for Ellen Malphrus. They showed up because my friend and mentor was at my side. This is the gesture of a generous writer, the gesture of a generous man. He was always an advocate for other writers, especially writers who could use a leg up. Those of us who are published by Story River Books, for which Pat was the Editor-at-Large, have been especially blessed by his support. Pat also taught me, and many others, about being true to yourself and true your writing – to write from your gut and from your heart – and the devil be
damned.
The Aftermath of Pat Conroy I have been privileged to so many perspectives of Pat Conroy – the author, the husband, the brother, the father, the son, the friend, the mentor – and I see beauty in all of them. Was Pat
Conroy perfect? Oh, how his eyes would roll at such a suggestion. Of course he wasn’t perfect. His life wasn’t perfect. But one of the many lessons Pat taught us is this – perfect is not normal, and normal isn’t perfect. Hurt is normal. Hard knocks are normal. But letting the human spirit soar higher than human foibles, allowing love to overpower pain, these are choices
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we can make – the right choices. One of the wonderful things that happened in the last months of Pat Conroy’s life is that we were able to host “Pat Conroy at 70: A Literary Festival Celebrating South Carolina’s Prince of Tides” at USCB. Hundreds of participants – local folks and folks from, literally, all across the US and beyond – gathered to talk about, tease about, and pay homage to Pat Conroy. There were scholars and writers, artists and actors, editors and agents, friends and family. For three days this circle drew closer and closer so that by the end of the festival everyone was “kinfolk.” Everyone was family. Pat, who had characteristically dreaded all the attention, was touched to the core. He knew the love we all feel for him, and we got to express that love while he was alive and well. And the call for a continued Pat Conroy Literary Festival has been heard. We’ll gather again this October, and Pat will be there in spirit, this I can assure you. The week before “Conroy at 70,” Pat and I sat down for a filmed interview. One of the things we talked about was what he has tried to do with his life and with his work. As he was closing his comments he said to me, “It’s the voyage out that is important.” Pat is on a different voyage now, but the vessel that he has built – not only with his words, which would keep that vessel afloat forever – is not just built with his writing. That vessel is built with his generosity of spirit, with his kindness, with his compassion, with his insistence to stick up for little guy, his insistence to try to help heal those who are hurt. It is also built with the love
he has for his beloved wife (the author Cassandra King) and his children and grandchildren, his sisters and brothers, his friends and his readers. It’s a vessel sturdy enough to last through the ages. The ripple behind it will fan from his beloved Lowcountry rivers out to sea, and we will feel the beauty of that wake each time the tide rolls out and in again.
Jerry B. Jenkins – Get Well letter to PatDear Mr. Conroy: I’ll be thinking of you as you face this battle. We have not met, but we have in common the best audio reader in the history of the sport, the late Frank Muller. His performance of The Prince of Tides introduced me to both his and your work. So captivated was I with your respective masterpieces that I personally tracked him down and insisted that my publisher hire him to read my novel—Left Behind. They made me pay the difference between what they usually paid and what the reader of Pat Conroy (and Stephen King and Anne Rice and John Grisham, et al) charged—until my series went on to sell more than 60 million copies. I was so obnoxious about The Prince of Tides that—knowing it would be impossible to meet you—I badgered Frank into letting me come to his home and listen as he read my book. I was honored to become his friend. How unspeakable was his loss to the artistic community. In My Reading Life you mention masters who forced you to merely surrender and confess, “I’ll never write like this,” which is how I feel
about you (and on the nonfiction side, Rick Bragg). I know you have no illusions about the difficulty of slogging your way through the writing of a novel while engaging in the fight of your life. But as you do, be encouraged that besides your myriad waiting fans are countless writers like me who long ago were forced to surrender to your mastery, and to whom you continue to shine as a beacon of excellence—the epitome of a lover of the language and its ineffable power. With respect and all best wishes,
Shannon Tanner – Poem for Pat Deeply saddened at the passing of Pat Conroy His eloquent style of “painting with words,” my beloved Lowcountry will forever be etched in my soul ... So long old pal ... “My wound is geography. It is also my anchorage, my port of call.” PAT CONROY
I know not what binds my soul so completely to you ... An inexplicable bond has woven us together as sure as the net man ties ...Your tides cease not…They flood and ebb in perfect rhythm ... And as sure as the moon beckons them to the sea There is an intrinsic yearning that it bare in me And it calls though I wander ... Come home … Come home … Take flight … your spirit free …And though my sails, wind doth not find … Drifting aimless... My bearings naught...I am drawn back to your creeks and marshes … Your compass true … My soul renewed …
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Literacy is more than just read-ing, writing and numeracy. In Beau-fort County it is also about shaping the lives of families! LITERACY: Using printed and written information to function in society, to achieve one’s goals, and to develop one’s knowledge and potential. NAAL (National Assess-ment of Adult Literacy) The name has changed a few times, but The Literacy Center, which was registered 43 years ago in the state of South Carolina as a non-profit organization is dedicated to providing literacy classes for members of our local community who cannot read, write or spell English and to help them develop basic life skills necessary to become purposeful, participating and successful members of our community. Those who transition from illiteracy to literacy are not just more functional --- they are happier,
sometimes tears-flowing-down-their-faces kind of happy. In a world where the Kardashians get more attention than nuclear proliferation, we need to re-prioritize. The Literacy Center is about changing lives and turning the tide of helplessness towards a more functional, knowledgeable and critical thinking society. This January, a terrific new program for families was launched. But, before I tell you about their latest endeavor, I’d like you, dear reader, to pause and decide whether or not you’d like to volunteer. I promise to spell out some opportunities that I hope you won’t be able to resist. No, you don’t really need to pause, but I hope that by slowing you down by a few microseconds, you won’t be too quick to reject that little voice that is prompting you to put on your hero hat and volunteer your time, talent or money.
A Little History: In the early ‘70s some Beaufort County locals and a few Catholic nuns decided that something should be done about young children who were not doing well in school. Many of the children had parents who could not read or write, which meant that there were no bed-time stories, ABC songs or other kinds of similar at-home learning activities. Once the children were old enough for homework, there was no one at home to help. To address the problem, the first literacy program for adults was created on St. Helena Island. It transitioned later into The Literacy Volunteers of the Lowcountry, which is now called The Literacy Center. In the mid ‘90s, the ESL (English as a Second Language) program was launched to accommodate the large number of people who moved here from 26 different countries,
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charity featureTAMELA MAXIM
Family Literacy 360Turning the Tide – Changing Lives
including Eastern Europe (after the Iron Curtain came down), Central and South America and Asia. The number of students (currently around 600) jumped from less than 200 to over 1,000 in a very short period of time. The need for ESL classes has subsided because immigration numbers have declined, but the need for educating parents of
young children remains. There are still many children who are struggling to succeed in school because of a lack of literacy skills at home. Volunteer Opportunity 1: Help the Literacy Center find illiterate adults. After all, it’s not possible to advertise literacy classes except by word of mouth. If you can read this article, then you don’t need the program, but you might know
someone who does. Volunteer Opportunity 2: Family Literacy 360 is a new 16-week program that started in January hosting 10 families with 15 children ages 3-8 at the St. Francis Catholic School every Tuesday night from 6-8 pm. Tutors (they will train you) are always needed. Volunteer Opportunity 3: Two more programs will start
PREMIER SPRING 201640
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soon at Deep Well on Wednesday evenings and at Bluffton Self Help on Thursdays, also from 6-8 pm. If Tuesdays won’t fit in your schedule, how about Wednesdays or Thursdays? – or maybe you can help on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays! The Family Literacy 360 program places par-ents and their children together in a learning environment. Classes incorporate early childhood and parental instruc-tion to prepare high-risk children for success in school. It also provides the skills necessary to help parents become their child’s first teacher and create a home learning environment. The weekly Family Literacy 360 evening begins with dinner, which gives families a chance to relax, enjoy a meal together and practice conversation skills by sharing about their day with one another. Dinner-time is followed by a series of 20-minute lesson segments. For example, family members might work on predicting skills. “The dog jumped over the fence.” What do you think the dog will do now?” Both listening and reading skills are sharpened as parents read to children and children read to their parents. Conversations are enriched as new vocabulary words are
learned and used. Another benefit is the free take-home library and the summer reading program so that children won’t lose momentum gained during the school year. But, perhaps even better than all the reading, writing, and critical thinking skills gained – families become closer as they communicate and share! Parents need to know that they can be successful as their children’s first teachers, but many of them are unaware that there is a program that can help them break the cycle of illiteracy in their family. There are too many adults in Beaufort County who are ashamed to ask for help. How would you feel if you couldn’t read to your children or understand the labels on items in stores or if you couldn’t sing along in church until you memorized the lyrics?
This new family program is the first of its kind in South Carolina and is partnered with USC Beaufort and USC Columbia. Dr. Beth Binkerhoff, faculty member / Early Childhood Education Department at USC Beaufort, created the curriculum and attends all of the classes. USC Columbia monitors the program and measures how much the classes have helped the participants at the end of
each 16-week cycle and provides follow-up of family members after they leave the program. Volunteer Opportunity 4: Family Literacy 360 is designed in such a frugal way that any church, organization or school can implement it for under $1500. The preparation and training of volunteers is structured in a template format that is easy to adopt and implement. What about your church, organization or school? Volunteer Opportunity 5: Donations make it possible for the volunteers and staff members to do more of what they love to do. Donations, whether small or large can make a real difference. Your contribution can turn big dreams and visions for our community into reality. Let’s face it - literacy affects all of us. Lost wages, unemployment, government assistance, welfare, higher crime rates and even an increased cost to society for healthcare because people who can’t read can’t go to the internet or books to learn about how to stay (or become) healthy and if they get sick and go to the doctor, they can’t even read the instructions on their medicine containers. The hit to everyone’s pocketbook and society’s well-being is staggering, but the good news is that fixing the
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You can be the Happy Ending: Once upon a time in the land of America there were millions of people who didn’t read a single book in a year (44% of adults) and six out of ten families didn’t buy a single book that year either. Forty-five million of them could only read below a 5th grade level. Three out of four people on welfare couldn’t read and twenty percent weren’t able to read well enough to earn a living wage. School dropouts cost the land of America $240 billion in social services expenditures and lost tax revenues. In the land of Beaufort County eleven percent of the people couldn’t read at all, but the good people in that land got together and said, enough is enough! and they contacted the people in the land of Literacy called Pam Wall (Executive Director) at 843.815.6616 in Bluffton and Mike Powers at 843.681.6655 in Hilton Head and they also sent emails to Mr. Powers at mpowers@theliteracycenter.org. And, because The Literacy Center had more than enough volunteers and funding, everyone lived happily ever after, reading books, having interesting conversations, laughing, smiling and shedding lots of happy tears. The End.
PREMIER SPRING 201642
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keeps his borrowers and other business associates up to date by sending them regular status reports by email and text. You’ll have more loan options. Dedicated mortgage lenders don’t handle checking accounts or investment accounts. Their sole focus is to help more people buy a home by providing innovative home financing solutions. In addition to conventional, Jumbo, FHA and VA loans, Caliber Home Loans, Inc. assists borrowers who have experienced a recent bankruptcy or foreclosure, and investors planning to expand their portfolio of rental properties. Your lender will explain everything in everyday terms. Successful lenders will always make sure a mortgage provides lasting affordability. That’s why you can trust them to explain the exact costs of each loan to you well before closing. You can get started right now. With
35 years of experience to share, Don DeMattio is a Loan Consultant who’s highly familiar with South Carolina housing markets and neighborhoods. And since he represents Caliber Home Loans, you’re assured of a wider range of home financing options. To learn more, call Don (NMLS # 357462) at 843-681-8668 or visit his Web site at www.caliberhomeloans.com/ddemattio.
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PREMIER SPRING 201644
Architectural Q&AarchitectureJOSEPH K. HALL
One of the most distinctive ele-ments of the South Carolina and Georgia Lowcountry is the archi-tecture. Lowcountry style home architecture developed in the late 1700s and is still constructed today as the most efficient design for the hot subtropical climate of the southeast United States. Lowcountry buildings have historically been constructed of timber and set on pilings or had a raised first floor. The raised first floor was a response to the often swampy environment, high water tables, and tropical cyclone flood-ing. The underfloor space is often screened with lattice and used for storage or a carport. Lowcountry homes typically have broad hipped roofs that extend over deep and large covered front porches ac-cented by columns or pillars, that allow a shady sitting area and are often used as another living space. Large windows are used to allow warm inside air to escape in the cooler evening. Most modern Low-country homes feature a central open breezeway through the entire house allowing a cooling breeze to move through the building. Hi! Joe Hall, here with advice for the bewildered concerning the world of all things architectural. After my request for your ques-tions about architecture in the Winter 2015 issue, I was expecting something like this: “I have a friend who is absolutely losing her mind. She can’t decide how to re-do her kitchen. What should she do?” Signed, Worried Sick Instead, among other interesting questions and remarks, I received the following from one of our re-gion’s leading land planners and landscape architects, Ed Pinckney: “At our habitual Saturday morning breakfast, we have been discussing your newly acquired celebrity as “Bluffton’s architectural critic.” Congratulations! If I remem-ber correctly, either you or the magazine asked for questions, but they’re too slow to respond, so I’m
going to sprinkle a few of my ques-tions on you.’ Vernacular architecture seems to be a frequently used term, fol-lowed by lack of specificity. With Bluffton in mind, Q. How do you define “vernacu-lar” architecture? Pictures? Draw-ings? Handbook? Just words?” A. The smart aleck answer is YESThere were other questions from Ed in that same email. In fact, there were enough questions that when answered properly would provide the outline for a very timely text-book appropriate for our political leaders, real estate developers, bankers, lawyers, land planners, landscape architects, architects and anyone else interested in the built environment. All of you pub-lishers, take note please: in my opinion, the publication of such a book is much-needed and would result in a large readership. The Lowcountry is the home of some of the most creative and unique real estate development anywhere in the country. There are many communities that will pro-vide substantial case studies for critical reading and perhaps help those who are not doing such a commendable job in the develop-ment world. Some of whom, unfor-tunately, are right here in our own neighborhood. The standard American devel-opment, including commercial and residential is a lot like the standard American diet. It is SAD. And the saddest part is – it flies in the face of vernacular architecture. Stan-dard American development has found its way into the Lowcountry, riding on the coat tails of the fame of Hilton Head Island and sur-roundings and diluting the great work done here in the mid and late 20th century. With that being said and off my chest, back to the Q & A. About vernacular architecture in Bluffton: One more quick side note at dictionary.com Definition #14 for the word vernacular: “A style of
architecture exemplifying the com-monest techniques, decorative fea-tures and materials of a particular historical period, region or group of people.” For instance, igloos are vernacular architecture for Eski-mos. Note: the part about igloos is mine – not dictionary.comOkay, so here’s my answer to “How do you define vernacular architec-ture?”A. Dictionary.com already took care of that with Definition #14Next question:Q. How can I experience Bluffton’s vernacular architecture?A. Start looking for the elements described in the dictionary:
• Commonest technique• Decorative features and
material Next, take the Bluffton Walking Tour. The short version is a few blocks long. Starting in Old Bluffton, set your GPS to 110 Calhoun Street, The Church of the Cross, Bluffton, SC. It is on the bluff of the May River at the end of the street. The style is known as Carpen-ter Gothic. It was built in 1857 and designed by Charleston architect, E. B. White. Enjoy the garden. En-joy the view of the river. Enjoy the presence of the building. Enjoy the simple board and batten construc-tion. You will see the same tech-nique used on the nearby residen-tial buildings as you walk down the street. Be sure to go inside if you are there on a day when the door is open. Notice the pink stucco walls scored to look like stacked masonry units. The environmental psychologists tell us that this color soothes the troubled mind when used in architectural spaces. Was that a happy accident or did the architect in 1857 already know? No-tice the stained glass windows in various shades of pink and gray. All with that same soothing environ-mental quality. I hope the casement windows are open on the day you visit so
Part 1 Bluffton
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that you can take in the spectacu-lar view of the river from inside such an awesome place. Notice the transoms above the windows. Gothic shapes, with towers that look a lot like the palmetto palm fronds so ubiquitous to the land-scape. What you see in this wonder-ful church in terms of material and details of construction will show up again in different scale and for dif-ferent use as you stroll down Cal-houn Street. It makes no difference if it’s the house, the place of busi-ness, or even the gas station – look for board and batten walls, simple details, repetition of colors.Heading north on Calhoun Street you will find houses with generous porches painted white — VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE. Caution — gentrification in pro-cess, overriding the abuses of less attentive dwellers at other times in the town’s history. Walk across May River Road — VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE 21st century style. Critical mass is almost there – a work in progress. It is important to remember that neighborhoods, towns and cities, like children, take time to mature. Notice the style, its variations on the theme. It is an architectural jam session. Many players playing their
part of the whole composition. The best part is that it’s full of people. Living, working, playing — all in the same place. Urbanism. A toy town —VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE – a particular group of people — re-member that part about people in Definition #14?When you get a chance, take in a Sunset Party at the Old Oyster Factory Park at the end of Wharf Street, a street which has one of the few drivable boat ramps down to the river. The celebration takes place every month or two and is a col-lection of music, local craft beer, food booths, big kids, little kids, dogs, young people and yes — the mature, seasoned people too — the ones who have been there, done that and are back for more. It’s a good time for everyone. Commu-nity at its best! While you are there, walk a block or two in either direction on Bridge Street. More VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE. It’s where the well-to-do and the rest of the town are neighbors. VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE seems to encourage an egalitarian culture. The tour continues to New Town Bluffton – often referred to as Bluff-ganastan by Wags who think they
are so clever. The land planners know Bluffton as an Edge City. If Hilton Head Is-land is “Palm Beach,” then Bluffton is “West Palm Beach.” It is a 20th century phenomena. Without the car, it’s impossible. The Edge City is sometimes bigger than the Parent City. It has its own special charms. I’m not sure yet what they are. At other times it’s a substitute for a shopping trip to NYC. Brooks Brothers, Polo and Ann Klein are only a short drive away, along with grocery stores selling what was once only available at Balducci’s and Zabar’s in our past lives. Fording Island Road has turned into the miracle ten miles. List every major retailer in America and there they are. Just a short drive to them all. Hello America! Goodbye VER-NACULAR ARCHITECTURE! I’m still looking for more ques-tions about architecture as it in-volves your own personal lives, whether it is about your home, your business or your place of leisure, recreation and fun. “First we shape our environment. Thereafter it shapes us.” Those parting words from Sir Win-ston Churchill.
NEXT ISSUE: Part 2 Hilton Head
PREMIER SPRING 201646
wine & dineJEFF GERBER
hen you think of a wine competition, you likely think of places like Napa and Sonoma, France and Italy. The Judgement of Paris was made famous through newspapers, books and movies. Individuals who follow the wine industry might also consider Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Ar-gentina and Germany as hotbeds. But, Hilton Head Island?
We play host year after year to an international competition for wine. Hundreds of bottles arrive from all around the world, hop-ing to be acknowledged as Best in Show, receive a coveted Double Gold, or be noted with the re-spectable showings of Gold and Silver. In 2016, there were three Best in Show wines, 17 Double Gold Medal winners, 25 Gold Medal win-ners and 121 Silver Medal winners named from the entrants. But, let’s not get ahead of ourselves.
Not, every vintner, winery, im-porter, distributor and wine en-thusiast can win. Or even place. Competition is fierce, and I have been asked to demystify the pro-cess for the Premier Lowcountry readers. As the Judging Director for the last decade, let me tell you all of our secrets. First, the competition is part of the Hilton Head Island Wine & Food Festival. Celebrating 31 years in 2016 and presented by Publix, this was one of our most successful years yet. The event originated with the Hilton Head Hospitality Association, but folded into our festival after the recession. Second, the why. Our local competition creates scholarship opportunities for local college students in the fields of tour-ism, hospitality and culinary arts. The University of South Caro-lina – Beaufort and the Technical College of the Lowcountry award
scholars financial support to help them with a semester or two of tuition. Dozens of students have benefited and now work locally at hotels such as the Westin, Marri-ott, Sonesta, local restaurants and other tourism industry related businesses. How do we create scholar-ships? Each entry must submit three bottles, in the event of any mishaps. Most of the time, there are no problems and these wines become extras. At the conclusion of the judgment, we make these wines available in auction lots at the Wine Festival’s Grand Tasting and Public Tasting events. The bids and donations go towards the John & Valerie Curry Educa-tional Scholarship Fund. Please remember to come out to the event and support this fund to help our Lowcountry students in years to come. Third, the question I always get asked – “How do I become a
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judge?” Well, the truth is it’s not that easy. Our panel of judges include individuals who hold certi-fications from the Court of Mas-ter Sommeliers, Society of Wine Educators, International Som-melier Guild and Wine and Spirits Education Trust. Many judges participate year after year because of the wide variety of entrants and beauty of the Hilton Head area. As the kids say, “we are kind of a big deal.” Not to toot our own horn, but our event is unique. A few weeks ahead of the main festival, the wine competition takes place. Hav-ing both a competition and major festival is not common. We are also one of the few competitions – and the oldest on the East Coast
– making Hilton Head medals fairly prestigious. The judges also enjoy contributing to our event because they know that it helps support the industry ecosystem through the Curry Educational Fund. And, the last thing everyone wants to know is, “How are the wines actually judged?” Other events may use different scor-ing systems (like the UC Davis 20-point system). Then there is the 100-point method by Robert Parker that reminds you of grade school, which is used by Wine Spectator, Wine Enthusiast, Wine Advocate and others.
Maybe we should coin our sys-tem as The Hilton Head Protocol. Because we are so fortunate in the quality of our judges, we let them use their discernment and experience to debate placements amongst themselves. Here is how it works: A flight of wines shows up at the table, maybe five different pinot noirs and each judge has each of the five wines to taste and takes notes on all he/she knows about the wine. For ex-ample, (a) it is a Pinot Noir (b) it’s four-digit ID number (c) Aromas (d) Hints of ingredients, etc. Did you catch its ‘ID Num-ber?” You see, all of our wines are judged blindly. It would not be fair to the smaller wineries if
our judges ended up being a little predisposed toward a vintage because it had already done well in competitions or because it’s a $50 bottle and ‘should be better than a $10 bottle.’ Neither price nor heritage influences our judges, just their education and palate. After they review their notes, a judge decides on Gold, Silver or No Medal. Once all the judges have finished tasting their assign-ments, then everyone shares his or her score and discussion follows. If our esteemed judges agree, then we have a medal decision. If there is some disagreement at the table, then the judges discuss why they gave different scores until
they come to a consensus. Some judges may still use a more clas-sic methodology, while others will simply take notes and write their own personal score. And, how are the best in shows decided? If all the tasting judges agree that a wine is worthy of a Gold medal, then there is a discus-sion on whether or not it is good enough to warrant a Double Gold medal. Should the group elect it as a Double Gold wine, then that becomes the medal award and the wine will go into the Best of Show competition. All judges onsite taste every Double Gold wine to determine which is the best of the best. The very best are identified from each category and Best in Shows are awarded.
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Charleston: April 2 - The 39th Annual
Cooper River Bridge RunApril 3 - Lowcountry Cajun
FestivalApril 8 - Kiawah Island House
and Art TourApril 9 - Character Breakfast -
Children’s Museum of the Lowcountry
April 9 - WWE Presents NXT Live
April 22 - Widespread Panic at the Coliseum
April 24 - Blessing of the Fleet and Seafood Festival
April 29 - May 7 - North Charleston Arts Festival
May 7 - Annual Sheep Shearing at Middleton Place
May 27 - June 12 Spoleto Festival USA
June 18 - Brewhaha Festival of Craft Beer & Comedy
June 27 - Naturalization Ceremony at Middleton Plantation
For more info: charlestoncvb.com/events
Beaufort: April 8 - A Closer Walk with
Patsy ClineApril 9 - The Art of Jacques
LemoyneApril 13 - Wine Tour of
Argentina by Ta-ca-ron Trading
April 16 - Penn Center Hosts Spring Historic Campus Tour
April 16 - 13th Annual Soft Shell Crab Festival
April 23 - Annual Harbormaster Show
April 30 - The Met: Live In HD - Strauss’s Elektra
May 20 - Beaufort Children’s Theatre Presents Through The Looking Glass
For more info: beaufortsc.org
Hilton Head/Bluffton:
April 1 - Hilton Head Choral Society’s Notes from a Small Island
April 2 - Girls on the Run of the Lowcountry 4K
April 2 -May 28 - Sweetgrass Basket Classes
April 2 - May 21 - Coastal Discovery Museum’s Waterways Excursion Cruise
April 5 and 6 - Hilton Head Symphony Orchestra - Symphony Under The Stars
April 6-16 - Always Patsy ClineApril 7-Sept. 29 - Farmers
Market of BlufftonApril 7-May 19 - Music and
Taste on the HarbourApril 9 - Premier Lowcountry
magazine Thank You Party
April 10 - Literacy Center fundraiser: Jazz Corner Martin Lesch Band
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calendar of eventsAPRIL, MAY, JUNE
April 11-17 - RBC Heritage Presented by Boeing
April 12 - May River ExpeditionMarch-October 4th Thursday
- Carolina Dreamers Car Club Cruise-In
April 30-May 1 - The Art Market at Historic Honey Horn
April 30 - The 2016 Palmetto Heart Walk
May 1 - 12th Annual Yacht HopMay 7 - 38th Annual Bluffton
Village FestivalMay 8-9 - Hilton Head
Symphony Orchestra Brahms Symphony No 1
May 29 - Hilton Head Choral Society’s America Sings! Memorial Day Concert
June 17-Sept. 2 Every Friday - Sunset Celebration at Shelter Cove Community Park
For more info:hiltonheadisland.org/event
Savannah, Ga:March 24 - April 9 - Savannah
Music FestivalMarch 31 - April 3 - Savannah
Tour of Homes & Gardens
April 9 - Siege Weekend at Fort Pulaski
April 16-24 - USTA Savannah Challenger
April 16 - Susan G. Komen Savannah Race for the Cure
April 30 - State of the Art: Savannah Style
May 5 - Tea in the Garden of the Davenport House
May 6-8 - River Street Seafood Fest
May 6 - First Friday FireworksMay 21 - The Color RunJune 3 - Savannah Blues, Jazz
and BBQJune 11 - Juneteenth Festival
For more info:visitsavannah.com/events
Hardeeville/Ridgeland: April 5 - Young Explorers
Club of HardeevilleApril 9 - Edisto Beach State
Park’s Spring Survival Series
April 16 & 17 - Walterboro Handmade: A Celebration of the Elements of Craft
April 30 - St. Helena - Culture Keepers Youth Workshops
April - June, Fridays, 1-6 pm - Jasper County Farmers Market
June 3 - The Swingin’ Medallions
For more info:southcarolinalowcountry.com/events
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SPRING 2016 PREMIER
PREMIER SPRING 2016
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