Family time on Kiawah Island, circa 1975
Author Harlan Greene in 1975
The “Little Pig” on Broad Street
The Dock Street Theatre on Church Street, where Harlan lived that summer in a third-floor apartment
Governor James B. Edwards at the State of the State Address
The Dock Street Theatre, which reopened with air conditioning in 1975
Clippings from the ongoing “Folly Beach Strangler” news story
Jennet on stage in The Taming of the Shrew for the re-opening of the Dock Street Theatre
Church Street in the 1970s
Governor James B. Edwards in the early 1970s while serving the South Carolina Senate
With dad/step-dad Neil at Captain Sam’s Inlet
The kids go loco.
Author Edward Marshall’s stepmother, Lynn, stands ready to catch crabs with her extended brood.
Wild pigs root for some front beach real estate.
Step-brother Richie enjoys the view.
The Vanderhorst house was gated after development began.
The Marshall-Harrill gang poses for posterity.
Marshall’s dad, Neil, drives the family on front beach jaunts in their Willys jeep.
The family house on Kiawah
Coleman’s Hardware on Pitt Street
Shrimp boats clustered on Shem Creek.
June 15,1975: the day the USS Yorktown arrived in Charleston Harbor
The Pitt Street Pharmacy
A trawler on Shem Creek
The Grace and Pearman bridges
The Old Village home of author Ann Thrash’s aunt
The soda fountain at the pharmacy with Miss Linda behind the counter
Anice’s mother, Mrs. Wilhelmenia Geddis, who was the first African American to own a licensed day care in Charleston. She passed away in October 2004.
Anice on her birthday in August 1975
The Brooks Motel and Restaurant at the corner of Morris and Felix streets
Author Julian Buxton as a 15-year-old in his boat
Dr. Julian Thomas Buxton Jr., for whom the James Island Creek bridge is named
Julian standing with four of his siblings on the steps of their North Shore Drive home