Pamela Poole's Blog - Posts Tagged "charleston"

Charleston's Romantic Palmetto Roses

Most visitors to Charleston, SC will recognize the Palmetto Rose, sold at the historic Market and often by young vendors around the Battery. Charleston tradition says that Southern Belles would give their true love a Palmetto Rose as a token to keep them safe from harm as they rode into battle. Handcrafted woven roses are still popular keepsakes that symbolize everlasting love.

Palmetto Roses are skillfully created by hand, typically using four fronds from the Palmetto tree, which is on the flag of South Carolina and is the official State Tree. Since each leaf has a unique color and appearance, no two roses are ever exactly the same. Even their natural colors may vary from dark green to yellow or tan. The personal style of each person who crafts the roses also makes them unique.

One of the delights of living in Charleston was when my husband and I took walks around White Point Gardens at the Battery, where young vendors would sell their palmetto rose handiwork. I keep my roses out on a table all year to remind me of those wonderful walks, and created a painting of a trio of my roses that can be seen on my Fine Art America website at:
http://fineartamerica.com/featured/ch...

Palmetto roses play a role in Part 3 of my novel Painter Place, where they are purchased twice during romantic walks on the Battery and represent passion and everlasting love. If you would like to learn more about how Charleston's palmetto roses are made by hand, there is a video and step-by-step article on them here:
http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/ch...
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Published on February 25, 2015 18:13 Tags: battery, charleston, painter-place, palmetto, palmetto-roses, white-point-gardens

The Gazebo on the Battery and Painter Place

When I created the settings for my novel Painter Place, I knew what I wanted. I drew from my experiences of living in the Charleston, SC area and many visits to the coast north of the city. However, writing almost thirty years from the time of my story, I also knew that many things had changed, even in an old historic setting. One of those things is the change in the popular Pavilion Gazebo at White Point Gardens on the Battery in Charleston, SC. Since the gazebo was the setting for two important scenes in Part Three of my novel, I knew I had to get it right.

On any given weekend in Charleston on the Battery, weddings are taking place on the pavilion gazebo, and passers-by watch as the events unfold. Until 2010, the wedding photos were taken on a structure with a six foot tall foundation, but the new structure is now three feet off the ground. The new version wasn’t built until the year after we had to leave Charleston, so I still do a double-take when I see it instead of the taller one. Painter Place is set in the summer of 1985, and the gazebo foundation could be leaned against because it was as tall as a man. This is the description I used in the novel.

According to information on Wikipedia, the pavilion bandstand was built in 1907. In 1934, the structure was raised three feet and restrooms were installed under it (they still need restrooms on the Battery!). Because of law enforcement issues, the bathrooms were locked at some point. The city restored the bandstand and lowered it to the original height of three feet in April, 2010.

There is nothing like the experience of strolling under the tall palms and oaks on the Battery, especially at sunset. If you’ve read my novel Painter Place and get the chance to enjoy stepping up into the gazebo, just remember that it was much taller in the novel than the beautiful new one is today.
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Published on March 03, 2015 19:37 Tags: art, battery, charleston, gazebo, painter-place, pavilion, south-carolina, white-point-gardens

Video Love Letter to Charleston

Since I can't get to Charleston, SC often enough, I follow facebook pages that post photos of the area on any given day. They feature gorgeous sunrises and sunsets, historic sights, harbor views, beaches, and iconic views that make Charleston a favorite city in America. Today, I came across this video and was intrigued by the title, "A Love Letter to Charleston." Immediately I was hooked by the musician walking on the Battery at White Point Gardens, where I was walking myself six weeks ago. The haunting melody he began to play was perfect for the mood of the arial views of the city and outlying areas. If you'd like to enjoy the musical and visual love letter yourself, find it here:
https://vimeo.com/108797951

Little wonder that the Charleston area has become my main muse for Southern Ambiance in my work as an artist and author!
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Published on March 15, 2015 15:05 Tags: battery, charleston, south-carolina, white-point-gardens

Something Old, Something New: Charleston's Cooper River Bridges

Visitors and locals to Charleston, SC, can vividly experience settings described in my novel Painter Place, which launches the Painter Place saga Painter Place. Readers will enjoy scenes that take place downtown and in the area, such as the Battery and Middleton Place. In the next novel of the series, Hugo, they can taste something of what it was like for those who lived through the devastation of this direct hit to the old city and upper coastal area.

Some interactions in my upcoming novel Hugo bring up the iconic emblems of the original bridges over the Cooper River, the Grace Memorial Bridge (Old Gracie), erected in 1929, and her sister structure, the Silas N. Pearman Bridge, built in 1966. These bridges were to Charleston what the Eiffel Tower is to Paris, or the Golden Gate Bridge is to San Francisco. When they were removed in 2005 after the opening of the fantastic new Ravenel Bridge, Charleston lost two significant historic landmarks. But they gained the third-longest cable-stayed bridge in the Western Hemisphere. It is designed to ride out winds greater than Hurricane Hugo and being shaken by a 7.4 magnitude earthquake.

The old bridges spanned the Cooper River, a tidal river that joins with the Ashley River to form scenic Charleston Harbor, where the Battery is at White Point Gardens on the peninsula. The river has long been part of the history of Charleston as an important commercial waterway. Old Gracie was almost three miles long and built to handle cars the size of Model A Fords of the 1920s. The bridge made Charleston more accessible, and when it became overwhelmed by the increasing population and size of vehicles on US 17, the larger Pearman Bridge was built parallel to it.

Old Gracie was dubbed “scariest bridge in the world,” and you can only appreciate this infamous title if you have ever driven across it. To give you a mere taste of the experience, I’ve included two links within this blog of people recording their crossing. Many more are on youtube, a testament to the reputation of the bridge. When I lived there, I was told the bridge inspector himself wouldn’t go on it, and after Hugo, many wouldn’t cross it again. If you want some stories, read the comments made by people who viewed the videos, and imagine an accident on one during rush hour! I have a grown family member I won’t name who was terrorized by the thought of traversing Old Gracie.

I’m focusing mostly on Old Gracie because she’s the one my characters won’t cross after Hugo, either, and gets mentioned twice by name. By 1995, the year the third novel in my Painter Place series (Jaguar) is taking place, the bridge scored only a 4 out of 100 (4%), or an F, in safety. This was also the year it was in a notable movie, Die Hard With A Vengeance (not a personal endorsement of the movie). In the scene where the two main characters jump from the bridge to the ship, observant viewers will notice that instead of the tall buildings you’d expect in New York, the background is marshy. The bridges were used in other movie sets as well, including White Squall with Jeff Bridges.

Arthur Ravenel Jr. ran for SC Senate as a way to solve the problem, with a vision for an 8 lane bridge to replace the Grace and Pearman sister structures. Construction started in 2001 and the new bridge opened in July 2005, at which point the original bridges closed for demolition. Pieces of them are scattered for historic purposes around the area or dropped into the river as reef for fish.

I’ve traveled the old bridges and the amazing new Ravenel Bridge was built while I was living there. In fact, a highlight of any trip I make back “home” to Charleston is to cross the new bridge, which doesn’t even feel like a bridge to me. The photo I included with this blog on my website is my own viewed at this link: http://pamelapoole.com/blog/91257/som...

I snapped this photo from the perspective of the marsh at Patriots Point where the USS Yorktown is anchored. One of the older bridges is being dismantled in the shadow of the new one. You can find better photos and beautiful paintings of the original bridges online.

Now for the interactive part of this blog--you can watch some trips across the bridges on youtube! For credits, follow the links. The first ones are of the oldest of the Cooper River Bridges, Grace Memorial (Old Gracie):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o8e0j...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-auv...

I love this one! Once this family is on the Pearman bridge, they turn the cameras so you have views of Old Gracie on the driver’s left and the huge new Ravenel Bridge on the right. They show the Yorktown in the harbor.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEJsK...

If you have some Cooper River Bridge stories, I hope you'll leave comments.
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The Belle of the Ball, Charleston, South Carolina

It is with a full heart that I blog in tribute to the city I always consider to be home, Charleston, SC. I swing between tears for their loss and tears of pride and joy at their unity in the wake of the violence that took nine precious lives as they held a prayer meeting in church.

The photo reference for my painting Charleston Red Shutters was one that I took when my husband and I celebrated the release of my first novel and my birthday in February, 2015. The novel series, Painter Place, is set on a fictional island about an hour north of Charleston, with family interactions in the city. Some scenes occur at Middleton Place and on the Battery in White Point Gardens. My husband surprised me with a long weekend at Two Meeting Street Inn, just across the street, and we walked around town to map out an important scene on Church Street for the third novel in the series. I also photographed the rough cobblestones of Adger's Wharf, mentioned in the second novel, Hugo.

If you've ever visited Charleston and strolled the cobblestone streets, peeking into gates that beckon with curled iron fingers to look into quaint gardens, you know that Charleston Red Shutters is a typical example of the charm of Charleston. Among all cities in the entire world, she is the Belle of the Ball, the shining example of courtesy and kindness in a world spinning in a maelstrom of confusion.
Painter Place
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