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About
Charleston South Carolina
Prager
Microsystems is a leading search
engine optimization and web
site design company with a sales and operations
office located in Charleston South Carolina. If you
are interested in search engine optimization consulting
or web site design services, please contact
us, otherwise learn about why we choose to call
the Charleston area home.
Charleston is a city in the county of Charleston
with some incorporated areas located within the boundaries
of Berkeley County and Dorchester County. The city
serves as the county seat and largest city of Charleston
County. The city proper consists of six distinct
areas: the Peninsula/Downtown, West Ashley, Johns
Island, James Island, Daniel Island, and the Cainhoy
Peninsula. The city was founded as Charlestown or
Charles Towne, Carolina in 1670, and moved to its
present location in 1680; it adopted its present
name in 1783. In 1690, Charleston was the fifth largest
city in North America and remained among the
ten largest cities in the United States through the
1840 census. Charleston is known as The Holy City
due to the prominence of churches on the low-rise
cityscape, particularly the numerous steeples which
dot the city's skyline.
As of July 2006, the estimated
population of the city proper is 107,845, making
it the second most populous city in South Carolina
behind the state capital Columbia. Current trends
put Charleston as the fastest growing central city
in South Carolina. The metropolitan area population
of Charleston and North Charleston, which includes
the entire populations of Charleston, Berkeley, and
Dorchester counties, was estimated to be 603,178
in 2007. This ranks Charleston-North Charleston
as the second largest metropolitan statistical area
in the state behind Columbia. Nearly 80% of the Charleston
metro population lives inside the city and its surrounding
urbanized area (2000 pop.: 423,410).
The city of
Charleston is located just south of the mid-point
of South Carolina's coastline, at the junction of
the Ashley and Cooper Rivers. Charleston's name is
derived from Charles Towne, named after King Charles
II of England. America's most-published etiquette
expert, Marjabelle Young Stewart, has recognized
the city since 1995 as the "best-mannered" city
in the U.S, a claim lent credibility by the fact
that it has the only Livability Court in the country.
Charleston is well-known across the United States
and beyond for its unique culture, which blends West
African, traditional southern American and French
elements.
As an old colonial city, Charleston has a wide variety
of museums and historical attractions. The Old Exchange
and Customs House in downtown Charleston, finished
in 1771, is arguably the third most important Colonial
building in the nation (behind Faneuil Hall in Boston,
Massachusetts and Independence Hall in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania). The building features a dungeon which
held various signers of the Declaration of Independence,
and also hosted events for George Washington in 1791,
and the ratification of the U.S. Constitution in
1788. It has also served as a U.S. post office, the
first Confederate post office, and was used by the
United States Coast Guard.
Not
far from Charleston is the location of Fort Moultrie,
which was instrumental in delivering a critical defeat
to the British in the American Revolutionary War,
and Fort Sumter, the reputed site of the "first
shot" of the American Civil War. Patriot's Point,
located across the river in nearby Mount Pleasant,
South Carolina, is also home to the USS Yorktown
as well as several other naval vessels. There are
also several former plantations in the area, including
Boone Hall Plantation, Drayton Hall, Magnolia Plantation,
and Middleton Place. Charleston's premier art museum
is the Gibbes Museum of Art, one of the country's
oldest art organizations and home to over 10,000
works of fine art. Also the Charleston Museum was
the first Museum in the Americas. Other attractions
include the South Carolina Aquarium, the Audubon
Swamp Garden, Cypress Gardens, and Charles Towne
Landing.
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