ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 11月19日 08時21分


Charleston is an easy place for tourists to love. Visitors delight in the city’s cobblestone streets, Gothic-style churches, Greek Revival storefronts and array of trendy restaurants and hotels. Yet for all its appeal, Charleston also evokes a brutal chapter of American life, a city built on and sustained by slave labor for nearly 2 centuries. An estimated 40 to 60% of African-Americans can trace their roots to Charleston. And in the prosperous port city, vestiges of prosperity built on slave labor are everywhere. While on assignment for @nytimestravel, our staff photographer @cenicola0 took this photo of Magnolia Plantation and Gardens, founded by the Drayton family in 1676. The plantation has launched a preservation project that demonstrates how life was led in slave dwellings that date to 1850, several of which are being preserved. The project also celebrates the importance of Gullah culture, the Creole language and food and dance traditions that enslaved West Africans brought to the Lowcountry. Visit the link in our profile to read more about #Charleston, South Carolina.


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