THE COOPER RIVER HISTORIC DISTRICT

Learn more and visit some of the historic places included in this essay by joining us for A Day on the Cooper River Tour.


The story of the Cooper River Historic District,  30,020 acres that lie about 25 miles north of colonial Charles Town and designated as a National Historic District in 2003, pretty much encapsulates the history of America itself - from its Native American beginnings, through early European settlement, the rise of the great plantation society, the contributions and tribulations of the enslaved, the American Revolution and Civil War, into the industrial age of the 20th century. Here you'll find it all.

The cultural resources found within the now-overgrown thickets along the western branch of the Cooper River are among the most significant of the 17th through 20th centuries in America. Workday commuters unknowingly zip past the sites quietly tucked away just off today's highway arteries - fine historic houses, archaeologial sites, antebellum chapels and churchyards, and grand garden landscapes.

The Carolina colony's economic, political and social development was closely tied to the Cooper River's aquatic highway, the lifeline upon which the Carolina plantation society grew, flourished, and eventually was destroyed. Its themes embrace the essence of the New World's wealthiest agricultural society and a people's resilience in the face of both bounty and devastation.

 

nature's bounty in different and better ways.
So, it only makes sense that our menu is a mix of influences, flavors, and creative ideas. When it comes to dinning, we want more for you, as you deserve it.