CHARLESTON'S LATEST REINVENTION
2025 to Present
2025
Jan. 17 --Margaret Louise Drody Thompson passed away of complications following a fall the previous November.
Jan. 19 --Polina Sobchuk, 97 and a survivor of the Holocaust, died in Charleston.
Jan. 21/22 -- Shortly after sunset, snow and freezing ice began to blanket the Lowcountry. By the morning of the 22nd, 1.5 to 4 inches of white precipitation had blanketed the ground.
Feb. 2 -- In what was billed as "the world's largest oyster festival," 45,000 pounds of steamed oysters were served at Boone Hall Plantation.
Feb. 26 -- City officials ordered residents of the Dockside condominiums, the tallest building (excluding church steeples) on the peninsula, to evacuate within 48 hours because of engineers' warning that the building was in imminent danger of collapsing.
The Charleston Symphony Orchestra performed "A Charleston Celebration" at Carnegie Hall in New York City.
March 21 -- Renowned jurist Gedney Howe III passed away.
April 17 -- Attorneys for racist mass murderer Dylan Roof filed a motion in federal court seeking to set aside his death sentence, claiming that his attorneys had been incompetent. Roof had fired his attorneys and represented himself during juty selection and the sentencing phase of his 2017 federal capital trial in an effort to block evidence that portrayed him as autistic. He later told attorey David Bruck he would kill him if he ever got out of jail.
May 11 -- According to the Post and Courier Real estate transactions, Elizabeth Lucas Rawl sold her Dockside condo to James Daniel Gentry Jr. and Patrick Quinn Dunn for $575,000.
The TBLB Real Estate Holding LLC and the Estate of Barbara Eileen Rothwell sold 14 Atlantic Street to The JGA Irrevocable Trust for $2.8 million.
49 Society Street LLC sold 49 Society Street to the David Scott Pout Revocable Livinv Trust for $3.9 million.
The Myron C. Harrington Jr. and Ann Hurst Harrington Living Trust sold 3 George Street to Rex A. and Kristine L. McClure for $1.1 million.