Organizers of the first Charleston Trident Swim, a 4.1-mile swim around the Charleston peninsula, raised more than $106,000 this month to benefit the Navy SEALs Foundation, which assists active-duty ...
More than 100 years before the English settled in Charleston in 1670, the French built a small wooden fort on what is now Parris Island. Known as Charlesfort in honor of the French king, it was ...
The Thanksgiving season kicks off some of the busiest travel days of the year across the Palmetto State as families gather to ...
Three Charleston leaders and residents explored policies shaping local and national life and how citizens use that knowledge ...
Senior U.S. District Judge Cameron McGowan Currie tossed out separate criminal charges Monday against former F.B.I. Director ...
Yesenia Leon grew up in her parents’ Mexican restaurants in Anderson and Greenville. Raised in a family where helping out wasn’t optional, she began serving tables and learning the ins and outs of ...
The November 21 issue of Statehouse Report discusses how reducing child abuse could save billions, S.C. Senate panel rejects ...
A key Charleston City Council committee walked away last week from a $30 million offer to buy Charleston County's Morrison ...
Child abuse and neglect costs South Carolina more than $74 billion a year — or about $14,000 for every man, woman and child ...
Forecasters with the national Climate Prediction Center are predicting warmer-than-usual temperatures across the South over ...
Since the January inauguration of President Donald Trump, the nation has often felt like a place without red lights.
It didn’t take long for downtowners to adopt a new one-acre urban community park between King and Meeting streets as if it had always been there.