American South

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Why Art and Music Lovers Are Flocking to South Carolina's Lowcountry

Why South Carolina's Lowcountry Has Become a Mecca for Art and Music Lovers

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Explore 20,000 Acres of South Carolina's Wildly Beautiful Lowcountry

Cudjo Lewis, the last survivor transported to Alabama on the Clotilda

Search Continues for Last American Slave Ship After Recent Wreck Ruled Out

The <i>Clotilda</i> illegally transported 110 enslaved people from present-day Benin to Alabama more than 50 years after the U.S. outlawed the slave trade

The author Brett McNish and Fred Hay perch in a live oak on Sapelo island.

A Smithsonian Horticulturist Goes on a Quest for an Historic Seedling

A live oak tree from a South Georgia island community will one day enhance the grounds of the African American History Museum

A witness tree on Stuart's Hill loop trail in Manassas National Battlefield Park

These Five "Witness Trees" Were Present At Key Moments In America's History

These still-standing trees are a living testament to our country's tragic past

This 1962 photo shows author Flannery O'Connor in the driveway at Andalusia in Georgia.

Georgia College Gifted Farm Where Flannery O'Connor Composed Southern Gothic

The author's alma mater will take over and maintain the Savannah-born author's final home

Charleston, South Carolina, was founded in 1670 and is the state's oldest city. The drawing depicts it in 1860.

What Did Independence Day Mean to Southerners About to Secede?

As secession loomed, the Fourth of July took on new significance

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The Stark Reminders of the Birmingham Church Bombing

Upon the 60th anniversary of the tragic attack, these stained glass shards recall the day that saw four girls killed in Alabama

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