Charleston: Walk Charleston with Sue Bennett (November 2016)



Walk Charleston with Sue Bennett – Tour with a Native Charlestonian


My spouse and I booked a private walking tour with Sue Bennett of Walk Charleston on a Friday morning in mid-November 2016. We found Sue’s website online (www dot WalkCharleston dot com) and contacted her via email. Miss Sue responded promptly, and she graciously agreed to be our guide. (Please note that WalkCharleston is NOT the same organization as CharlestonWalks.)


Sue Bennett offers both public/group and private tours. Her group tours generally occur on Fridays at 1:00 pm and on Saturdays at 10:00 am; inquire about private tours at other times. She charges approximately $22 per person (payable in cash or personal check) for a 2- to 3-hour tour. The cost for a private tour is approximately $50 per hour, which was well worth the additional cost. We passed two large public tour groups as we walked around the Historic District (Charleston permits groups as large as 20 people), and it seemed difficult for the guide to keep the guests together on the narrow cobblestone streets, and challenging for the guests to hear the guide’s commentary. “Splurge” and spend a little more to book the private tour. 


Although Miss Sue has a “day job” during the week as an office manager, she guides in her “free” time. She became a licensed guide in 2004; the National Association for Interpretation (NAI) considers her a certified interpretive guide (CIG). Miss Sue offers a unique perspective on the city because she is a native Charlestonian who was born, educated, and resides in the city. Not only does she lead walking tours through Historic Charleston, but she also lectures, attends classes on local Charleston history, and volunteers for the Preservation Society of Charleston. She aspires to expand walk-and-learn opportunities for students in area schools so that every student can embrace his or her rich Charleston heritage.


We spent about three hours with Miss Sue. She agreed to meet us at our hotel at 10:30 am, and we strolled together through the Historic District for the next few hours, pausing to admire architecture, to hear history, and to take photographs. On our tour, we passed the City Market, Dock Street Theatre, Slave Mart Museum, Gibbes Museum of Art, Old Exchange and Provost Dungeon, Pink House (the second oldest structure in the city), Powder Magazine, City Hall, Charleston County Courthouse, and other structures. We visited a few of the Holy City’s churches (including the French Protestant Huguenot Church, Unitarian Universal Church and graveyard, Circular Congregational Church and graveyard, and Cathedral of St John the Baptist). One thing we will always remember from our tour: the difference between a graveyard (which is attached to a church) and a cemetery (which is not); we also heard interesting information about private gardens, earthquake bolts, fire mark plaques, and Carolopolis Awards. We learned about some of the more famous residences (Rainbow Row, Calhoun Mansion, Two Meeting Street Inn, home of Porgy and Bess writer DuBose Heyward), and we walked along Battery. Sue arranged our tour route so that we ended near where we planned to have lunch. (As we are writing this review, we feel terribly impolite for failing to invite her to join us to dine!) She advised us to bring along bottled water, and we stopped partway through our tour so that we could use the public bathroom at the art museum. Sue had also planned for us to stop and enjoy a cold beverage at a local cafĂ©/bar (called Blind Tiger, which has a hidden outdoor rear patio) during our tour, but we asked too many questions and ran out of time. 


We loved our private walking tour with Sue Bennett of Walk Charleston! In fact, we found her tour so enlightening and valuable that we wished we had booked her for a second tour on a subsequent day. Sue is a thoughtful, informative, and well-prepared guide!



































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