Buxton Books is proud to be the bookseller for this event with Harlan Greene and St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church! This is a free event that all are welcome to attend.
On Sunday, January 8, join St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church and Harlan Greene for a lecture revolving around a brief summary of LGBTQ life in Charleston from the time before colonization to the first pride march. The material offered is part of an ongoing project to document the queer past and present centered in the Addlestone Library at the College of Charleston. Harlan’s book, The Real Rainbow Row: Explorations in Charleston’s LGBTQ History has just been published. Buxton Books will be on-site with copies of the book available for purchase.
This event will begin at 5:00 pm. A reception will follow the lecture in Stephen’s Hall. Both the lecture and the reception are free and open to all!
About Harlan Greene:
A native of Charleston, Harlan Greene is an award-winning novelist, archivist, and historian. He has served as Assistant Director of the South Carolina Historical Society, Director of the North Carolina Preservation Consortium, Archivist of the Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture at the College of Charleston, and is now Scholar in Residence at the College's Addlestone Library. He lectures frequently and has published books and essays on various aspects of Charleston history. A certified tour guide, he chairs the city's Historical Commission. He manages the South Carolina LGBTQ Oral History, Archives and Outreach Project at the College of Charleston. He is married to Jonathan Ray.
About The Real Rainbow Row: Explorations in Charleston’s LGBTQ History:
Though Charleston has a reputation for holding onto the past longer than most other places, it could not avoid the shock of change. Much has been written of the city's history of civil rights, and its rich African American, women's, ethnic, and religious past. One of the minority groups long left out of the club has been Charleston's lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, questioning, and other sexual minorities community. It's not that they haven't been here all along, making history, contributing greatly to the creation of one of America's most distinctive cities. But, even now, with so many people out and acknowledged, marching in the streets, being elected to public office, and marrying, there are still discrepancies. There are no statues to LGBTQ people (while some discriminatory statutes linger), and very few official mentions anywhere. While other pasts blaze brightly, there is just a flickering of knowledge about local LGBTQ history.
Historian Harlan Greene digs deep and uncovers a wealth of knowledge about Charleston's LGBTQ past and present in this fascinating and informative book.