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Episode 7: Lake Marion and Lake Moultrie, Part 4: Memory and Movement
Many families tore down their houses in the Santee–Cooper Basin to rebuild them outside the flooded area. Near Bonneau, South Carolina. March 1941. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division: LC-USF34-043456-D [P&P], LOT 1533 (corresponding photographic print). Other Number: E 5985. Listen to this episode here! The conclusion of the Lake Marion and Lake Moultrie story Episode 7 explores the aftermath of the flooding of the Santee Basin – how families relocated, rebuil
Nov 172 min read


Lake Marion and Lake Moultrie, Part 3: The Making of a Waterscape
Beneath the still waters of Lake Marion lies the ghost of a forest — and a town named Ferguson. Before the Santee River was dammed, the Santee River Cypress Lumber Company had already stripped much of the swamp bare, cutting and milling its centuries-old cypress. By the time the flood came, the forest that once sheltered the town was already gone. This episode traces how the Santee Basin itself was transformed — not only socially but ecologically. Thousands of acres were clea
Nov 72 min read


Lake Marion and Lake Moultrie, Part 2: The Ground Remembers — Echoes of Identity and Faith in the Santee Basin
Across the Santee Basin, communities built lives rooted in land, labor, and belief. In the years after emancipation, Black, Indigenous, and European families shaped intertwined identities through farming, faith, and community — stories that still echo in the cemeteries, churches, and waters that remain. The Ground Remembers explores how race, land, and belief shaped who belonged — and what endures beneath the water. Listen to this episode here! Featured Voices: Dr. Thomas R
Nov 71 min read


Lake Marion & Moultrie, Part 1: Reaching the Port of Charleston
Before Lake Marion or Lake Moultrie existed, South Carolina imagined connecting the Santee and Cooper Rivers to the port of Charleston. From the 18th-century Santee Canal to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal vision, this episode follows the long road from dream to dam — a story of ambition, technology, and belief in progress. Listen to this episode here! Historians Dr. Thomas Robert Hart explains how the New Deal reshaped the Lowcountry, while Dr. Kelsey Moore explores how t
Nov 72 min read
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