Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission purchases property to expand parking at the Shem Creek Boat Landing

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(MOUNT PLEASANT, SC) – The Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission (CCPRC) recently purchased a .53-acre property in Mount Pleasant that will allow for parking expansion at the Shem Creek Boat Landing, one of the area’s most popular landings. The purchase included two lots adjacent to the boat landing on Simmons Street.

The land was purchased by CCPRC for 1.9 million dollars from PSC, LLC, and the transaction was brokered by Buckley Powell with EXP Commercial.

“The purchase of this land is wonderful news for boat owners and any user of the Shem Creek Boat Landing, which is currently one of the county’s busiest boat landings,” said CCPRC Executive Director Kevin Bowie. “We were very pleased to have the opportunity to expand parking at this site to better serve the community.”

Initial planning is now underway for the site work and parking spaces that will come with the purchase of the Simmons Street property. In addition, the Shem Creek Boat Landing will undergo previously scheduled accessibility and drainage improvements with repaving the existing parking lot this winter.

CCPRC maintains 19 public boat landings throughout Charleston County. For additional information on these landings, visit ccprc.com/Boating.

The mission of the Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission is to improve the quality of life in Charleston County by offering a diverse system of park facilities, programs, and services. The large park system features over 11,000 acres of property and includes four-day parks, three beach parks, three dog parks, two landmark fishing piers, three waterparks, 19 boat landings, a climbing wall, a challenge course, a historical plantation site, interpretive center, an equestrian center, cottages, a campground, a marina, as well as wedding, meeting and event facilities.

The park system also offers a wide variety of recreational services – festivals, camps, classes, programs, volunteer opportunities, and more. For more information, call 843-795-4386 or visit www.charlestoncountyparks.com.

35 Free Things to Do in Charleston, South Carolina

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Family Destination Guide has just published this beautiful video of 35 free things to do in Charleston, SC, and surrounding areas.

About the video

Charleston is an elegant and charming place that ensures an unforgettable trip for your family and friends. You have tons of things to do in this city without worrying about your budget, such as free-access routes for you to bike through, walking on picturesque seashores, window shopping on trendy street markets, and checking out free-access events in museums.

Joe Engel, Holocaust Survivor and Charleston Resident passes away at 95

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The Charleston and Lowcountry community mourn the passing of Holocaust survivor Joe Engel who died on Saturday, November 26 at age 95

Engel was known throughout the community for sharing his powerful story and speaking against hate. He was a part of The Remember Project of the Charleston Jewish Federation, which educates Lowcountry students about the Holocaust.

If you were fortunate to meet and talk to Joe, as we were, you’d have seen a man with charm and pride and a heart of gold. Joe Engel dedicated his love to preserving the legacy of the Jewish faith while educating a new generation to carry on the stories.

You can view Monday’s service at Emanu-El Cemetery on Sycamore Avenue in Charleston HERE.

Full obituary – Temple Emanu-El

Joe Engel, Holocaust survivor and community leader, died on November 26, 2022. Joe was born on October 9, 1927 in Zakroczym, Poland to Moishe and Esther Engel. Joe dedicated his life to talking to students and other groups about the atrocities of the Nazis.

He spoke to countless organizations relaying what he saw with his own eyes, making sure that the six million Jews, including 1.5 million innocent children, killed by the Nazis during WWII are never forgotten.

Joe selflessly traveled throughout South Carolina to tell his story to tens of thousands of students in the hopes of educating a new generation of leaders to prevent a future Holocaust. If not telling his story at a school, Joe could often be found sitting on a bench at The Battery waiting for a tourist to ask him about the “Holocaust Survivor” sign he wore around his neck. He was delighted to meet people from all corners of the world who would stop and talk to him about the horrors of the Holocaust.

The City of Charleston and the State of South Carolina have honored Joe numerous times. The more memorable events were when Governor Mark Sanford conferred the prestigious Order of the Palmetto upon Joe in 2004 and the more than twenty “Joe Engel Day(s)” proclaimed by Charleston Mayors Riley and Tecklenberg. In 2016, the City of Charleston honored Joe by naming a street “The Joe Engel Street”.

The South Carolina General Assembly, in Columbia, declared May 1, 2019, as “Joe Engel Day”. Joe recently released a full feature documentary about his life entitled, To Auschwitz and Back: The Joe Engel Story. The following is a snapshot of Joe’s story. For more in depth information, google JOE ENGEL.

Joe’s small town of Zakroczym was occupied and destroyed by the Nazis in 1939. Joe’s family, which included his mother and father, his eight brother and sisters, their spouses, and offspring, left Zakrocyzm shortly after and settled in the Jewish ghetto in Pionsk. Conditions there were equally abysmal. Throughout his stay in Pionsk, Germans would make daily selections to be transferred to so called “labor camps”, where Jews were killed daily by mass shootings, gasoline bombings, and later by lethal gas. The elderly, infirmed, and parents with young children were chosen first.

Joe was among the last people to leave Pionsk in 1942 and was transported to Auschwitz/Birkenau at the age of fourteen. Prisoners were packed in sealed freight cars and suffered from severe overcrowding. They endured intense heat during the summer and freezing temperatures during the winter.

Aside from a bucket, there was no sanitary facility. Lacking food and water and proper ventilation, many deportees died during Joe’s four-day train ride. Upon arrival, Joe survived selection by the infamous Dr. Mengele. Once the prisoners exited the trains,

Mengele would motion whether the prisoner was to step to the right or to the left. This simple motion meant life or death, as one line went immediately to the gas chambers and the other were saved for slave labor. Of the 2,000 arrivals that day, only 300 were chosen to live.

Joe was taken to the Birkenau camp in Poland. Every morning, the prisoners were given a slice of bread and margarine. For lunch, they were given warm water and at dinner another slice of bread. Joe and his fellow prisoners were forced to live off 60 calories a day, the bare minimum to keep a human alive.

Thinking nothing could be worse than the situation he was in, Joe took a risk and volunteered to be moved to the neighboring camp, Auschwitz, not knowing what was expected of him there. Joe’s risk paid off as he was enrolled in their brick laying school, which played a big factor in Joe’s survival.

Rather than doing outdoor manual labor all day, Joe went to school in a building, sparing him the agony of the bitter Polish winter and disease ravaged camp for a short while. Joe was surrounded by the smell of flesh burning in the gas chambers.

He watched as his fellow prisoners died from beatings, starvation, disease, and gassing. On January 14, 1945, with Allied forces closing in, the Nazis ordered prisoners to march thirty-five miles to a depot for transport to a different concentration camp. Around 15,000 prisoners died during the “Death March” due to the extreme cold, heavy snow, or their inability to march any further.

Joe survived the march and was once again put in a cattle car headed for German occupied territory. This time, however, the cattle car did not have a roof and once night fell, Joe decided to jump from the car. Joe landed on a large snowbank, where he buried himself. He could hear the train stop, the Nazis searching and the bullets flying by.

Finally, the Nazis gave up their search and the train moved on. Joe wandered alone, not knowing where he was going or what he was going to do. Kind villagers smuggled food to Joe and helped him locate the Polish Resistance who were hiding in nearby woods.

Joe joined the Resistance and fought with them until the end of the war. Of the more than one hundred people in Joe’s family, only Joe and three of his siblings survived. On May 8, 1945, Germany surrendered to the Allied forces. Joe was placed in a DP camp (Displaced Persons) where he worked with a refugee agency, which helped Jewish prisoners reunite with their families.

Joe recalled having an aunt living in Charleston, SC. After four years of forms, affidavits and testimonies, Joe arrived in Charleston on March 13, 1949. His aunt, Bessie Engel and his two first cousins, Louis and Herbie Engel, were there to meet him at the Charleston train station.

Joe opened Glamour Cleaners at 526 King Street in 1955 and operated his dry-cleaning business until 1994. Joe was predeceased in death by his parents and his eight siblings. Joe said his greatest regret was “losing his parents, youth and education”. Despite all that Joe went through, he always had a smile for everyone and loved to joke that despite his lack of education, he was in fact a CPA: “Cleaning, Pressing and Alterations.”

Joe is survived by his nieces; Esther Goldberg, Ellen Engel and Sheila Goldberg (Mitchell) and nephews; Marvin Engel and Eric Engel (Adrienne), and their children. As well as beloved local family, Mike Engel (Debbie), Debbie Engel (Newt Klements) and Carla Engel-Cook (Steve) and their children. Joe had an extensive out of town family as well.

Joe was loved and cherished by the entire Engel/Bebergal Charleston family. Our family and the City of Charleston were truly blessed by the arrival of Joe Engel. A graveside funeral service will be held on Monday, November 28, at 11:00, at the Emanu-El Cemetery on Sycamore Ave., Charleston, SC.

In lieu of flowers, donations in Joe’s name may be made to; Synagogue Emanu-El, Joe Engel Holocaust Fund, 5 Windsor Drive, Charleston, SC 29407, Charleston Jewish Family Service at 176 Croghan Spur Road, Suite 103, Charleston, SC 29407 or to the Charleston Jewish Federation, 176 Croghan Spur Road, Suite 100, Charleston, SC 29407. Visit our guestbook at legacy.com/obituaries/charleston

Photos courtesy of Charleston Jewish Federation

MUSC Hollings Cancer Center Story of Courage and Friendship: “A breast cancer survivor found a special connection with a mammography tech who could truly say “I’ve been in your shoes.”

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Kelly Lewis never would have thought to get a mammogram on her own. There’s no history of breast cancer in her family; she had some protective factors, like nursing both of her children, and – quite honestly – she didn’t even realize that doctors start to recommend mammograms once you hit 40.So she’s forever grateful that her OB-GYN, David Soper, M.D., reminded her to get one. She visited him for a check-up in early 2022 after his office called to alert her that, like many others whose schedules were disrupted because of COVID, she hadn’t seen him since her six-week postpartum visit in 2019.  

“It was sort of a joke, you know, like, ‘You’re 40: Congratulations, you can go get a mammogram now,’” she said.  

First-time mammograms often necessitate a callback because there’s nothing to compare them to, she was told, so she wasn’t too worried when she was asked to do additional imaging. But after the second mammogram, the radiologist told her they had found suspicious calcifications; she would need a biopsy. 

“That was just mind-boggling to me because the only way I had understood breast cancer was that you feel a lump,” Lewis said. “That you could go into some routine screening, and then this thing’s been in your body when you have no reason to think that it was there – it’s really shocking.” 

The biopsy confirmed that it was cancer. Cancer is never good news, but the next best thing for Lewis was that the cancer was caught early. She was diagnosed with stage 0 noninvasive ductal carcinoma in situ. A multidisciplinary team at MUSC Hollings Cancer Center immediately swung into action to develop a plan of treatment in consultation with Lewis. Kelly Lewis worried what her breast cancer diagnosis would mean for her girls – both the immediate impact on them and their own odds of breast cancer once they grow up. Photo provided

With two little girls at home, Lewis worried whether she might have a genetic mutation associated with breast cancer that she could have passed to her daughters. She met with Kevin Hughes, M.D., the director of the MUSC Hollings Hereditary Cancer Clinic, who specializes in helping people to sort out the best course of action given their individual health histories, genetics and risk tolerance. Happily, genetic testing showed that she didn’t have one of the known genetic mutations associated with breast cancer.

Kelly Lewis worried what her breast cancer diagnosis would mean for her girls – both the immediate impact on them and their own odds of breast cancer once they grow up. Photo provided

Lewis’s treatment course would include a lumpectomy and radiation treatment. She’ll follow that with five years of taking the drug tamoxifen to reduce the risk of recurrence.  

She’s at a point now in her treatment where she feels like she’ll be OK. Early on, though, Lewis was awash in conflicting emotions. She was scared, yet she felt guilty about being scared because her prognosis was excellent, thanks to the cancer being caught so early. Everyone assured her that she would be OK. But it was hard to really, truly believe that.  

Enter Caroline Gay Martin.  

Martin is a mammography tech at Hollings with 25 years of experience in the world of radiology. She’s also a breast cancer survivor. Just like Lewis, she was diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ after an abnormal finding on a mammogram. In her case, the mammogram picked up a radial scar – a type of lesion that’s usually benign. Only after surgery to remove the tissue and subsequent testing did Martin learn that it had actually been cancer.  

When Lewis came in for Magseed placement – a magnetic seed that’s implanted at the site of the cancer to guide surgeons to the precise location of the tumor during surgery – she still felt worried and scared.  

“I don’t know if she could just read my face that day – I’m sure I looked stressed out,” Lewis said. “Everyone had said I was going to be fine. But Gay said to me, ‘I’ve had this, and I’m here. I had DCIS and truly I can tell you, this is the best place. You’re going to be fine.’ And that – for the first time, I really did feel like, talking to Gay, that I was going to be fine.”“Just because you feel good and you don’t feel a lump, and you don’t have family history, that’s not a reason not to get a mammogram. It’s uncomfortable. I totally agree. I don’t like them myself – but they’re so important.” Caroline Gay Martin 

“I think once you’re on that side, when you see somebody who you can tell just by their mannerisms that they’re really struggling with what’s going on, I can honestly look at them and say, ‘Hey, I know what you’re going through. I know the questions that are running through your mind. I know the worries that you have. I’ve been there,’” she said. “And I think it helps because they realize, ‘Hey, I’m not the only one. This person really understands.’ And I think it makes a better connection with your patient when you can do that for them.” 

Kelly Lewis and Gay Martin reunited for a video to talk about how mammograms caught breast cancer early for each of them. Photo by Clif Rhodes

Lewis said that after her experience, she’s going to be “that friend” who reminds everyone to get an annual mammogram. So many of her friends are busy moms who just haven’t thought about it, she said. Had she waited four or five years, she said, who knows at what stage the cancer would have been by the time it was found or what her prognosis would have been.  

“These screenings really do catch things before they become serious, before you have to have extensive treatment,” she said.  

Martin agreed.  

“Just because you feel good and you don’t feel a lump, and you don’t have family history, that’s not a reason not to get a mammogram,” she said. “It’s uncomfortable. I totally agree. I don’t like them myself – but they’re so important.”

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Cougar Night Lights Returns For Holiday Season at The Cistern

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College of Charleston holiday tradition returns this month to mark the start of the season.

The sixth annual Cougar Night Lights holiday light show kicks off in historic Cistern Yard on Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2022, with a special showing for College of Charleston students. Starting at 5 p.m., students can enjoy light refreshments and activities. President Andrew Hsu will give remarks at 6 p.m. followed by the light show.

Cougar Night Lights captures the magic of the holiday season with dazzling light displays set to classic holiday tunes as well as popular contemporary songs. This year’s show will feature new songs and lighting displays.

Cougar Night Lights will open to the public on Dec. 1, 2022, and run nightly through Jan. 2, 2023. The musical light show will run every half hour, between 6 and 9 p.m. Cougar Night Lights is a free event.

“I think Cougar Night Lights adds something to the lives of all who view it,” says Alicia Caudill, executive vice president for student affairs. “It provides joy and fun in the most beautiful of settings.”

The show is produced and designed by CofC alumnus John Reynolds ’97, an Emmy Award-winning lighting designer who has done work for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade and the Super Bowl.

The Cistern Yard is located at the corner of George and St. Philip streets. Public parking garages are available at two locations, including the George Street Garage and St. Philip Street Garage.

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Photo Gallery: Saint James Church (closing its doors after 302 years)

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By Mark A. Leon

On Sunday, November 20th, the Saint James Church on Camp Road (James Island) will host its final service at this location after 302 years.

Founded in 1720, this church has served the local community with open arms as well as the final resting place for prominent forefathers and foremothers of the Lowcountry.

On the dawn of the emotional final service, we wanted to share a photo journey and pay homage to the Saint James Church (1872 Camp Road).

The church will resume next month with a different denomination