





CHARLESTON'S POST NAVYBASE
1993 - 2024





Martha Lou's Kitchen


1994
Jan. 20 -- Shannon Faulkner became the first woman accepted (accidentally, because admissions officers thought Shannon was a man's name) to attend classes at The Citadel. She joined the cadet corps in August 1995, but dropped out a week later, citing isolation and stress from the legal proceedings and her reception at the college.
1996
April 1 -- After nearly a century as South Carolina's economic engine, the Charleston Naval Base and Shipyard closed.
1997
Oct. 19 -- David Byrne, Cracker and Cowboy Mouth were among the bands that played at 96 WAVEFEST.
2000
Aug. 8 -- The wreckage of the H.L. Hunley, the first submarine to succesfully complete its military mission when it sank the USS Housatonic on Feb. 17, 1864, was recovered off Sullivan's Island and returned to port. While many spectators paid to secure spots along its return route through the harbor, all they could see of the vessel at eye level was the supporting "cradle" that had brought up the sub. Those of us fortunate enough to be working at Historic Charleston Foundation in the Capt. James Missroon House at 40 East Bay Street, were greatly surpised when the recovery ship went off its announced route and passed directly east of our offices. Racing out to the fire escape from the third floor, we could see directly down into the very body of the Hunley.
2003
Jan. 27 -- Leonardo DiCaprio, Steven Spielberg, Charleston resident Frank Abagnale, and Tom Hanks attend a press conference in London before the UK premier of "Catch Me if You Can."
2006
Oct. 22 -- Bowens Island restaurant burned to the ground.
2015
June 17 -- Self-avowed racist Dylan Roof pulled out a revolver at the end of a Bible study at Emanuel A.M.E. Church and began firing on his fellow worshippers. Nine people were killed. Five survived.
2019
Dec. 12 --The results of a study published in the journal Current Biology presented new genetic evidence blaming the blame for the extinction of the Carolina parakeet squarely on human interference.
2021
June 7 -- Maggie Murdaugh, 52, the wife of prominent attorney Alex Murdaugh, and their son Paul, 22, were brutally shot to death by the dog kennels of their Colleton County estate, Moselle.
June 10 -- Randolph Murdaugh, 81, father of Alex Murdaugh, died at his home of natural causes, three days after his daughter-in-law and grandson were brutally murdered at their Islandton estate.
June 11 -- Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were buried in Hampton during a driving rain.
June 22 -- SLED reopened an investigation into the unsolved death of 19-year-old Stephen Smith, whose body was found in the road in 2015 in Hampton County. The agency said the probe was being reopened based on informaiton gathered while investigating the deaths of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh.
June 25 -- Alex Murdaugh and his surviving son, Buster, announced a $100,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of the person or persons responsible for killing Maggie and Paul Murdaugh.
2020
Feb. 28 -- At a rally at the North Charleston Coliseum, President Donald Trump asserted that Democratic complaints about his handling of the corona virus threat were "their new hoax."
2023
April 28 -- A golf cart carrying four people was struck from behind by a drunk driver on Folly Beach, killing 34-year-old Samantha Miller and injuring her new husband, Aric Hutchinson, and two members of Hutchison's family. The couple had celebrated their wedding on the beach a few hours earlier.
June 28 -- Sandra Meares of Folly Beach, passed away.
June 29 -- Marvin "Jerry" Gerome Beach of Mt. Pleasant died.
July 2 -- Six members of the Magwood family were stabbed to death in Green Pond, then their house set afire. A seventh victim, just 13 years old, was injured, but played dead until the killer left the house, then escaped to a neighbor's house. Among the dead were Maggie Magwood, 101; Amos Magwood, 73, Michelle Wright, 50; Jefferson A. Burnell, 49; Sha-Riya Manigo, 11; and Shamiah Rutledge, 7. Sha-Riya's father, Ryan Lenard Manigo, was arrested and charged. Arrest warrant affidavits said Manigo "entered the residence under the cloak of darkness while armed with a knife, stabbed family members to death ... and set the residence on fire." According to the affidavits, he also sexually assaulted several of the victims. (Source: Post and Courier, Aug. 1)
July 5 -- John Patrick O'Brien, a native of New Jersey who managed the James Island Wendy's during the 1980s, died.
July 13 -- Services were held at Holy Cross cemetery on James Island for Marie Heiterer Townsend. Her family asked friends and family to "[p]lease dress appropriately for the hot Charlestom heat - Granny would want you to wear shorts and short sleeves."
July 15 -- John E. Day, senior engineer and director of maintenance at ALUMAX of SC, died as did long-time Charleston physician Dr. William Thomason.
July 17 -- Marsha E. Hass, Esq., died at the age of 76.
July 22 -- Ronald Norris Jr., died in Summerville.
July 30 -- Local businessman, civic leader, and College of Charleston supporter Sam Kirshtein, 98, died.
Aug. 22 -- Elizabeth Rice Burbage of Ridgeville died at the age of 95.
Sept. 27 -- Sixteen high school, middle school and elementary school principals sent letters to the Charleston County School Board expressing disappointment after weeks of chaotic meetings that ended in newly hired Superintendent Eric Gallien's paid suspension, saying that the substance and conduct of the meetings did not meet the basic standard of good governance from elected officials, adding that partisan politics have no place in a system devoted to educating students.
Oct. 3 -- Demolition crews dismantled Martha Lou's Kitchen on Morrison Drive, described by writers of the 10Best.com travel guide as a "roll-your-eyes-its-so-good" soul food restaurant. Its specialties included lima beans, mac and cheese, pork chops, giblet rice, collards, and fried chicken. After 30 years, the iconic restaurant had closed in 2020 a year before founder and legendary cook, Martha Lou Gadsden, died at the age of 91.
Oct. 14 -- Less than a week after the death of Board Secretary Raquel Conchita Lawson Fielding, Fielding Home for Funerals announced that after 111 years, it was closing its business at 122 Logan St. and moving its operation to 2704 Meeting St. The announcement in the Post & Courier noted they would not be accepting new clients.
Oct. 17 -- Journalist and Playboy executive William T. Farley Jr. died in Mt. Pleasant.
2024
March 19 -- Elizabeth "Libby" Murdaugh, 85, died after a long illness with dementia. Her son, Alex, claimed he was visiting his mother on the June evening when his wife Maggie and son Paul were brutally murdered. Phone data showed Murdaugh did visit his mother that evening, although the timeline of his visit did not match his version of the story. A video taken by his son showed Murdaugh was with the two just minutes before he and his mother’s cellphones stopped sending messages. Prosecutors convinced a jury that Murdaugh had enough time to kill them, clean up evidence and get to his mother’s house and back. The case made international headlines for its Southern Gothic macabre.
April 6 --Professor Michael S. Kogan, who specialized in Jewish and Christian theology, passed away in Charleston.
May 15 -- Margaret Gregorie, formerly the manager of Mama's Money, a well-known King Street bar frequented by College of Charleston students in the 1970s and '80s, died.
June 9 -- Thomas Charles DiFiglio, a Charleston resident who was born in Brooklyn, NY, passed.
June 16 -- One of Charleston's foremost restauranteurs of his time, Ali Rahnamoon passed away.
June 30 -- Tom Sloggett, 91, a Michigan transplant who retired to Charleston died in Summerville.
Nov. 6 -- Forty-three juvenile female rhesus macaque monkeys escaped from the Alpha Genesis Primate Research Center in Yemassee. The situation made national news, as well became a source of jokes by late-night comedic shows including Saturday Night Live, ESPN's Radio Unsportmanlike morninbg show, Jimmy Kimmel Live, and Charleston's-own Stephen Colbert Show.
Nov. 12 -- A tow truck struck a mother and two young children, along with their dog, who were legally crossing the intersection of Ashley Phosphate Road and Tedder Street. The family was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries and the dog, who ran away, was found by local police and reunited with the family. In its coverage, the Post and Courier noted that the Charleston metro area is the ninth-deadliest place for pedestians in the country.The driver was cited for failure to yield.
Nov. 14 -- An article in the Post and Courier noted that Charleston had experienced more tidal flooding to date this year (35) than it had from 1922 to 1948 (30), according to the Weather Service's Coastal Flood Events Database.