Walks of Charleston
Guided walking tours of Charleston's historic streets, led by knowledgeable locals out of a small office on Pinckney Street.
Tours, parks, gardens, plantations, water — what to do with a free afternoon.
Guided walking tours of Charleston's historic streets, led by knowledgeable locals out of a small office on Pinckney Street.
Sightseers ride behind horses in old-fashioned carriages while receiving a narrated history lesson.
Narrated sightseeing trips on historic carriages pulled by horse, plus city-center walking tours.
Guided walking tours of the peninsula led by locals who know Charleston's history past the brochure version.
Narrated boat tours of Charleston Harbor departing from Wharfside Street, covering the waterfront, Fort Sumter, and the historic Cooper River.
Guided walking tours through downtown Charleston that pair neighborhood history with stops at local restaurants and food producers.
Guided ghost and history walking tours departing nightly from the Market Street area.
Guided cocktail history tours through Charleston's past, poured glass by glass at a dedicated tasting space on Calhoun Street.
Nightly ghost tours through the 1802 jail where pirates, prisoners, and a few thousand yellow fever victims reportedly never left.
Walking and carriage tour operator out of King Street covering Charleston history, architecture, and neighborhoods.
Featuring extensive floral displays, this park also offers a baseball diamond, playground & trail.
Ghost, history, and pub crawl tours departing nightly from Anson Street since 1998.
Boardwalks, trails & fishing boats highlight this tranquil town park with creek & wetlands views.
Adam leads walking tours covering Charleston history, haunts, and bars from the heart of the historic district.
Guided walking tours of the peninsula led by local historians, departing from the heart of the historic district on Broad Street.
Waterfront museum on Gadsden's Wharf, the precise site where enslaved Africans first arrived in America, documenting that history through galleries and genealogy resources.
A nautical-themed playground, 1,250-ft pier with bench swings, cafe/gift shop & scenic harbor views.
Guided walking tour of the peninsula's colonial streets, church yards, and antebellum architecture led by local historians.
Walking tours focused on the African American history of Charleston, led by guides who center Black narratives over Lost Cause mythology.
This public garden beside the water offers paved paths, military statues, canons & picnic areas.
Walking and boat tours of the peninsula led by local guides, departing from Waterfront Park.
Historic tidal pond & dog-friendly park with paved pathways, benches, fishing & open green space.
Self-guided tours offered in a historic building, formerly a Revolutionary prison & City Hall.
Family-friendly bus and boat tour operator running sightseeing routes through the historic peninsula since 1967.
Guided walking tours of the historic district led by local guides out of the Meeting and Chalmers Street corner.
Well-known park with Charleston Harbor views, plus a large lawn, walkways & fountains.
Tidal boardwalk along a working shrimp boat dock in Mount Pleasant, where pelicans outnumber tourists on slow weekday mornings.
Waterfront city park on James Island with marsh views, a fishing pier, and open green space for dogs and families.
Weddings & other events are held at this elegant, riverside plantation built in the late 1700s.
Lantern-lit walking tours through the French Quarter covering Charleston's actual pirate history, including Blackbeard and Stede Bonnet.
Waterfront playground beneath the Ravenel Bridge with harbor views, climbing structures, and wheelchair-accessible paths along the Mount Pleasant shoreline.
Federal ferry service running daily trips from Liberty Square to the Civil War fort in Charleston Harbor.
Lantern-lit guided tours of historic Charleston churchyards, blending documented history with local ghost lore.
Urban park with oak trees & flower displays centered on a 42-ft. model of the Washington Monument.
Guided walking tours of Charleston's historic peninsula, led by local Jonathan Bechtel out of Church Street.
Seawall promenade at the tip of the peninsula where antebellum mansions face the harbor and cannons point toward Fort Sumter.
Tours of this historic home of an influential 1800s family include a back lot where slaves lived.
Grassy national park on Cooper River featuring a small museum, aquarium & ferry to Fort Sumter.
Ferry service running visitors out to the Civil War fort where the first shots of the conflict were fired.
Colonial military history museum & gift shop in a 1713 gunpowder storage building.
Small urban park on the edge of the upper peninsula, with a playground, open lawn, and direct views of the Cooper River.
Urban green space with historic significance, hosting regular events including a farmer's market.
America's first museum, founded in 1773, exhibits relics from South Carolina & Confederate history.
Horse-drawn carriage tours through the historic district, departing from Pinckney Street since the 1980s.
Antebellum mansion on King Street hosting weddings across its courtyard, carriage house, and formal gardens since the 1830s.
Antebellum plantation house on Barre Street, built in 1825, now booked for weddings and private events.
Free natural history museum inside College of Charleston's science building, with fossil collections, minerals, and regional specimens.
Ornate, circa-1808 home known for its "free-flying" 3-story spiral staircase, with guided tours.
Walking tour company based in Mount Pleasant running history-focused guided tours through Charleston's streets.
Historic Federal-style home, open for tours showcasing architecture, furnishings & family artifacts.
Historic walking city where centuries of architecture, cobblestone streets, and harbor views reward those who slow down enough to look up.
National Park Service ferry from Patriots Point to the Civil War battery where the first shots of the war were fired.
Four-block open-air market downtown. Sweetgrass baskets, local artists, tourist staples.
Nightly walking tours through Charleston's darker history, covering cemeteries, haunted buildings, and the city's long catalog of documented tragedies.
Lantern-lit walking tours through the historic district covering Charleston's documented hauntings, graveyards, and colonial-era tragedies since 1999.
Scenic riverfront recreational area featuring a playground, walking paths & a fishing pier.
Restored 1942 movie house on King Street, now a wedding and event venue with original art deco bones intact.
Historic District cluster of 13 pastel-painted Georgian-style rowhouses dating from 1748 to 1845.
Horse-drawn carriage tour company running licensed routes through the historic district since 1983.
Ornate 1879 federal building on East Bay Street, still an active port authority office with a marble trading room open to visitors.
Local guide Tommy Dew leads walking tours through the historic district on foot, departing from Meeting Street.
18th-century Georgian-style home once belonging to a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
Compact neighborhood green space on Anson Street with benches, dog access, and a quiet break from the French Quarter foot traffic.
Greek Revival landmark built in 1841 offering Civil War history & tours by women's-group docents.
Built in 1803, this antebellum structure is furnished with period American, French & British pieces.
Narrated harbor and waterway boat tours departing from Ripley Point, covering Charleston's coastline and historic maritime landmarks.
Small-boat harbor tours departing from Ripley Point, covering Charleston's waterfront history and working port up close.
Restored 1861 rice mill on the Ashley River, now a waterfront event and wedding venue with industrial bones intact.
Walking tours of Charleston's colonial and Revolutionary War history, departing from Washington Square Park on Broad Street.
Small neighborhood park on Marlow Drive with open lawn, a playground, and a walking path suited for kids and leashed dogs.
Horse-drawn carriage tours departing from Anson Street, covering the French Quarter and historic district with licensed guides.
Free public swings overlooking the Cooper River at Waterfront Park, a reliable stop for kids and anyone who wants a harbor view.
Federal-era ballroom on Meeting Street, built in 1804, renting its plaster ceilings and heart-pine floors to wedding parties.
Private library housing historical state photos & documents, with a Colonial & antebellum focus.
Small neighborhood splash pad and green space on Chapel Street, open to dogs and strollers year-round.
Shaded neighborhood green across from the Gibbes Museum, popular with dog walkers and families on Rutledge Avenue.
A popular wedding venue, this landmark hall was built in 1840 & features Greek Revival architecture.
Wheelchair-accessible catering operation on Lockwood Drive handling weddings and events out of a ground-floor suite near the marina.
Neighborhood park on Cleveland Street with standard playground equipment, open lawn, and free parking in the upper peninsula.
Restored 19th-century ballroom on Meeting Street hosting weddings and private events inside a registered historic landmark.
Wheelchair-accessible neighborhood playground on Ashley Avenue, named for the Revolutionary War general who defended Sullivan's Island in 1776.
Preservation nonprofit on East Bay running house museums, educational programs, and advocacy for Charleston's built environment since 1947.
Walking tours rooted in Gullah Geechee culture and Black history, led by guides with direct ties to the Lowcountry community.
Candlelit walking tour threading through the French Quarter's churchyards and antebellum streets after dark.
Quiet James Island neighborhood park with a playground, open lawn, and marsh views off Fort Johnson Road.
Narrated bus tours of the peninsula, departing from Meeting Street, with routes covering historic districts and landmarks.
Compact public green on the Charleston Peninsula where Chisolm meets the waterfront, popular with dogs and strollers.
Accessible waterfront playground on East Bay, set between the harbor and the French Quarter.
Two-mile loop through maritime forest and marsh at the base of Patriots Point, with views of the Ravenel Bridge and Cooper River.
Boat tour to the harbor fort where the Civil War started. National Park Service runs it.