SC Picture Project / Charleston County / Charles Towne Landing
This wooden statue of a Native American chief is a familiar sight for long-time visitors to Charles Towne Landing State Park in the West Ashley area of Charleston. Nestled on the Ashley River, Charles Towne Landing honors the site of the first European settlement in the Carolinas, dating back to 1670. The settlement lasted only a brief time before being moved to Oyster Point in 1680, now known as White Point Garden.
E. Karl Braun, 2012 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
The location was initially chosen as the settlement for European explorers after the Cassique of Kiawah, leader of the Native American tribe which inhabited this area, met with English explorers Captain Robert Sanford and Dr. Henry Woodward. The Cassique persuaded the men to make this land their new home with the promise of cooperation and trade. The statue below, created by Charleston sculptor Willard Hirsch, was unveiled in 1971 and commemorates the Kiawah chief.
Susan Buckley of Charleston, 2015 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
Charles Towne Landing offers many opportunities to learn about the cultural and natural history of the Charleston area. For example, a replica of a seventeenth-century ship called Adventure (shown below) invites visitors aboard to see how settlers shipped trade goods – specifically raw materials such as timber. Also, the Animal Forest is home to many of the same species that greeted settlers upon their arrival, including native bears, pumas, otters, and bison. Interpretive trails allow for spectacular bird watching, and bicycles are available for rent.
Pete Lawrence of Sumter, 2018 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
The park underwent a full renovation and reopened to the public in August 2006. One of its highlights is beautiful Founders Hall, a large, LEED-certified event venue. Charles Towne Landing is also home to a former plantation home, the Legare Waring House, which today serves as an event venue as well.
SCIWAY, 2015 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
Enslaved Barbadians and indentured servants were among those who first landed here. The building shown below is a replica of what would be known as a common house. This common house provided shelter for the indentured and the enslaved after their long days of labor.
Ed Erhart of Greenville, NC, 2016 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
A museum located inside the Visitor Center preserves artifacts discovered in local archaeological digs, and within the grounds are an historical garden, an African-American cemetery, and a Native American ceremonial site. Dogs on leashes are permitted in the park with the exception of the Animal Forest.
JK Sommerfeldt of North Charleston, 2018 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
Charles Towne Landing is listed in the National Register as the Site of Old Charles Towne:
(Charles Towne Landing State Park) The settlement of Carolina was planned as a planting and trading province by the Lords Proprietor, and the success of the venture came about through the efforts of Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper, after a 1664 settlement on the Cape Fear had failed. After a stormy voyage during which the vessels Albemarle and Port Royal were lost, the Carolina anchored off the Carolina coast and the settlers decided to plant at Kayawah. They arrived early in April 1670. This group was joined on May 23 by a sloop, The Three Brothers, that had come by way of Virginia. The settlement was located on the Ashley River in a country known by the Indians as Kayawah, and that is was on a point of land having a river on one side and marsh on the other, known as Albemarle Point. In November 1670, the colonists were informed that the town in which they were settled was to be known as Charles Towne. Threats of a Spanish invasion made the settlers quick to build fortifications. Both a broad trench and a palisade may likely have been used.
More Pictures of Charles Towne Landing
One fun feature of the park is a replica of a 17th-century trading ship floating in the Ashley River. Named The Adventure, the ship was created to showcase a full-sized model of what would have been used to sail the Atlantic Ocean for the purpose of trading goods between the early colonies and the Caribbean.
William Thursby of Ware Shoals, 2017 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
The cabins of the ships were typically small, allowing only enough room for a captain and first mate to share a space. There would have also been a bunk room where other crew members could sleep.
Reflections on Charles Towne Landing
Peter Wolf Toth’s iconic wooden statue, seen below and at the top of the page, stands at 24 feet and is part of the Trail of Whispering Giants series, a collection of 74 wooden statues by Toth honoring Native Americans throughout the United States as well as in Canada. One such statue even stands in Hungary, where Toth was born. The carving was placed here in 1977 and is made from a 500-year-old Darlington oak (Quercus hemisphaerica).
Janelle Dawsey, 2007 © Do Not Use Without Written Consent
Janelle Dawsey, who took the above photo, adds this reflection, “I visited the newly renovated Charles Towne Landing State Park and snapped this picture of an Indian Chief statue located near the entrance to the animal forest. As a kid, this statue was one of my favorite things at the park. I couldn’t help but notice how time had weathered its appearance – it has aged just as I have. I thought I could get a dramatic effect by snapping the picture from the ground at an upward angle. The sky was also beautiful that day and made the perfect backdrop for the photo.”
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