INTRODUCTION
WHY EVERYONE LOVES CHARLESTON
Charleston, South Carolina regularly commands the top spot on travel “favorite” lists. So far, Condé Nast Traveler voted her “America’s Favorite City” five years in a row and “America’s Friendliest City” for the last two years. Travel + Leisure voted her #1 City in the United States. She’s also landed a T+L Reader’s Choice designation of #1 Destination in the World.
A visitor enjoys a carriage ride down Church Street
I’d argue Charleston isn’t just the best city in the world—it’s the most irresistible city in the world. Like so many others, I moved here because I simply couldn’t stop myself. As a free-floating writer and artist, I can work from anywhere in the world. Naturally I considered Paris, Chicago, London, Rome, San Francisco, Sonoma, and many cities famous for their quality of life. It was over a to-die-for crab cake in the courtyard of Magnolia’s on East Bay that I realized no place on Earth felt like home to me as much as Charleston.
I meet people all the time who have similar stories. British designer Steven Shell drove 6,000 miles up and down the East Coast looking for the perfect American town in which to anchor his family and his business. He simply got out of the car here and didn’t get back in it. The same thing happened to Donatella and Giulio Della Porta, owners of The Hidden Countship, who decided to move to Charleston from Tuscany within a half an hour of a walk through the city. Stories like these prove that a visit to Charleston is both divine and dangerous. Come for just the weekend if you dare, but keep your realtor’s phone number handy.
Though I moved here from “off” as Charlestonians call it, I discovered that my 10th great grandfather, John Ashby, Esq., was one of the first cassiques sent by King Charles II to settle the new “Charles Towne”. This strange twist means I am at once a “come yah,” the local Gullah word for those who move here, and a “bin yah,” the word for those who have been here all along.
Does moving here live up to the dream? Yes, it does. It’s likely all that you’re dreaming of—and more. Is it like being on vacation all the time? Yes, it is. Even a dreaded Monday morning commute involves at least a few dolphins, the wide silver ocean, spritely blue shrimp boats, moss-draped oaks and all the funny seabirds you can handle. Even if it is a Monday, we don’t suffer.
Breakfast means biscuits; lunch is a salad of local John’s Island vegetables, and dinner means fresh fish (and more often than not) cocktails with friends on someone’s dock, patio, rooftop, or boat. Weekends are devoted to days at the beach, kayaking, paddle boarding, surfing, fishing and boating capped off by long southern-style dinners. You’ll find few here devoted to Saturday chores and home improvement projects. There are too many irresistible distractions.
If the weather is good, chores can wait
Here’s a secret: It’s a local custom to drive straight to the beach when we’ve had to leave Charleston for business or family matters. The smell of the pines followed by the distinctive smell of pluff mud, that oozy brown bouillabaisse of the tidal flats, means we’re home. If all that isn’t enough to convince you to trade your boots for flip flops, here are a few more good reasons to move to Charleston:
Top 10 Reasons to Move to Charleston
#1 Natural Beauty – The Lowcountry has some of the most unspoiled stunning natural beauty in the United States. You’ll enjoy the ocean, beach, and marshes every season of the year. Birders can choose from dozens of hot spots; water lovers have endless year-round options and hikers will enjoy miles and miles of trails through unspoiled nature reserves.
Sandy boardwalks give way to wide, uncrowded beaches
#2 Food – Charleston has some of the best restaurants in the world, and it’s not all seafood either. Whether you’re in shorts at a creek-side dive or in a seersucker suit at an award-winning eatery downtown, you’ll find chefs who are passionate about fresh, local ingredients and real southern hospitality. If you like to cook, come to the farmer’s market in Marion Square and spend your Saturday morning shopping, people watching and eating with the locals.
#3 Community – Charlestonians have a long history of hospitality and philanthropy. We are proudly the home of the largest no-kill animal shelter in the South (nearly half of Charleston households have at least one fur kid), our historic Preservation Society is the oldest in the United States, and every spring volunteers diligently walk the entire lengths of our beaches collecting trash, marking the nests of endangered loggerhead turtles and filling in sandcastle holes that could trap hatchlings. Locals are also fervently dedicated to the Buy Local movement.
FIG is one of Charleston’s many farm-to-table restaurants.
#4 People – People in Charleston are happy. Forget what you’ve heard about Charleston high society; most Lowcountry dwellers are too busy having fun to be concerned about keeping up with the Joneses. It’s implied that everyone, including houseguests, are welcome at parties. And, once you merely declare that you’re moving here, don’t be surprised that when your social calendar fills up so quickly that you don’t have time to worry if you’ll be able to make friends.
#5 Weather – If you’re moving from up north, you can donate your winter gear. You’ll never shovel snow again. Here you’ll play on the beach, garden and enjoy life outdoors virtually year round. Summer comes early and stays late into September. Locals will show you how to adapt your wardrobe and daily rhythms to make the most of the hot months. September through December is magical as summer’s heat and tourist traffic give way to cooler days, walk-in seating at world-famous restaurants, and plenty of parking at the beach.
A rescue dog and her mom check out the art at the Piccolo Spoleto festival
Kayakers enjoy a paddle to Magnolia Plantation
#6 Economy – Our economy is on fire. And, Charleston’s leaders are working hard to diversify it even more. The Digital Corridor initiative is responsible for Charleston’s growing identity as the “Silicon Harbor”, so if you’re in the tech field, get here—we need you!
#7 History – As one of America’s first colonies and the place where the Civil War began, Charleston has no shortage of carefully preserved historical sites. You can spend an entire lifetime wandering through buildings, museums, cemeteries, churches and military forts—and you’ll still never cover everything. Charleston is unique because everywhere you look her history is as obvious and apparent as the lines of rock in geological stratum. Take a short walk downtown and you’ll find streets named after indigenous Indian tribes. Turn down one of the many cobbled streets and you’ll be walking over ballast stones from merchant ships. Look up and you’ll spot the sharp Chevauxde-Frise iron spikes over garden gates—remnants of the slave revolt. You’ll see decorative earthquake rods inserted in historic houses and commerce still taking place at the outdoor City Market. Fragments of the old walls of the city still stand, as does the Powder Magazine, the forts where wars were started and fought, and many of the original taverns, hotels, and stables. Though Charleston has long progressed from banning atheists, the diverse and numerous houses of worship abide, giving the Charleston it’s nickname—the Holy City.
#8 Manners – “Ma’am” and “Sir” are still the preferred addresses between people of all ages, races and backgrounds. For example, if you’re in New York City you might get away with asking “Hey, where’s the closest ATM?” but in Charleston, you’ll need to begin your exchanges with “Excuse me (Ma’am or Sir)”, no matter the age, race or occupation of the person to whom you’re speaking. If you don’t, you’ll still get a friendly answer, but you won’t blend in or enjoy the perks of interactions that begin with respect.
#9 Style – A constant parade of straw hats, bow ties, seersucker suits and floor-grazing sundresses means style is alive and well in Charleston. Obvious designer labels are a faux pas, as is any overt show of wealth. Ladies wear skirts or dresses and men wear shirts with collars. Wearing black is verboten unless attending a funeral. Far from being an oppressive social obligation, Charleston’s smart sense of colorful, functional and...