2007 Gullah Heritage Series

2007 Gullah Heritage Series

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service on Dec. 11, 2006. It is reproduced in full below.

Celebrate Gullah Heritage! The National Park Service, in partnership with the Town of Mount Pleasant, is sponsoring a series of free cultural programs at Charles Pinckney National Historic site every Saturday at 2:00 pm during February and March, 2007.

Charles Pinckney, a principal author and signer of the United States Constitution, owned seven plantations. Enslaved Africans and African-Americans on Lowcountry plantations developed a unique culture known collectively today as “Gullah." Gullah people made significant contributions not only to the Lowcountry plantation system but also to American culture in general. A remnant of his Lowcountry plantation, Snee Farm, is preserved today as Charles Pinckney National Historic Site.

These Gullah programs range from craft demonstrations such as quilting, cast-net making, ironwork and sweetgrass basket sewing to cooking, African drumming and story-telling, folk-tales, spirituals and other musical performances.

Feb 3

Carolyn “Jabulile" White, Sea Island storyteller

Thomas Mark Pinckney, poetry reading, Spoken Words for My Soul

Vera Manigault, sweetgrass baskets

Feb 10

Sharon & Frank Murray, rice production & Gullah tales

Joyce Coakley, lecture Gullah: Then & Now

Feb 17

Anita Singleton-Prather, “Aunt Pearlie Sue" Gullah Tales

Jeannette Lee, sweetgrass basket demonstration

Feb 24

Ann Caldwell & the Magnolia Singers, spirituals

Vera Manigault, sweetgrass basket demonstration

Mar 3

Veronica Gerald & Jesse Gant, Gullah cooking demonstration

Alada “Muima" Shinault-Small, African tales

NIA Productions, African drumming & dance

Mar 10

Philip Simmons, master ironworker

Dorothy Montgomery, quilting

Elijah Ford, sweetgrass basket demonstration

Mar 17

Vermelle & Andrew Rodrigues, quilting & toys

Vera Manigault, sweetgrass basket demonstration

“Sista, Sista" stories & skits

Mar 24

Ann Caldwell & the Magnolia Singers, spirituals

Charles C. Williams, cast-net making & woodwork

William Rouse, sweetgrass basket demonstration

Mar 31

Anita Singleton-Prather, “Aunt Pearlie Sue" Gullah Tales

Charles Pinckney National Historic Site, located at 1254 Long Point Road in Mount Pleasant, is open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. except for Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Days.

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service

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