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Middle School Programs
Programs can be adapted to fit older or younger children. Many programs can be taken to your school- call 722-2996 ext. 236 for more information.
Tomb Travelers | Amazing Architecture| Archaeology
Revolutionary Charleston |Colonial Quest | Life in the Civil War | Victorian Charleston
Gullah Traditions| Bountiful Coast | WWII
A Step into the Past | The Dill Sanctuary
Museum Explorations |Guided Tours |Special Programming
Tomb Travelers
Grades: 3rd – 12th
Travel back to Ancient Egypt and visit with the tomb builders from Deir-El-Medina. Students will journey beyond the “9 to 5” of Egypt's most valuable workers to see what their lives were really like. Learn the steps of the mummification process, handle replicas of ancient artifacts, and dress like an Egyptian. By adding on a Self-guided Museum Tour students get a chance to see a real Egyptian mummy, mummy case, and other Egyptian artifacts.
Amazing Architecture
Grades: 3rd - 12th
This special program highlights five different styles of architecture visible in Historic Charleston- Georgian, Federal, Gothic Revival, Greek Revival, and International. The topics of preservation, adaptive reuse, and the Charleston single house will be addressed. This program includes a walking tour through the Mazyck-Wraggborough district that is designed so that you never have to cross the street. Amazing Architecture is a great addition to any Charleston History program.
Yesterday's Trash (Archaeology)
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Students will become archaeologists when they examine potsherds, glassware, bone, and metal to unlock the secrets of Charleston's past . This program will cover different types of archaeology as well as the methods involved.
Revolutionary Charleston
Grades: 3rd - 12th
The campaign against Charleston in 1780 launched British major operations in the South and eventually led them on the road to defeat at Yorktown. As British soldiers moved to surround the Charleston peninsula, life changed drastically for residents. Existence for the invading soldiers and their camp followers was difficult as well. Learn about the reality of the warfront through a hands-on tent activity, dressing up in period clothing, replica artifacts and much more.
Colonial Quest: Exploring Colonial and Revolutionary Charleston
Grades: 3rd- 12th
The Powder Magazine and Heyward-Washington House
Your visit begins at The Powder Magazine where students will have a first hand experience with the Carolinas' oldest public building. With the help of a colonial costumed interpreter, students will learn of "Charles Towne's" earliest geography and inhabitants and why this colonial town's powder magazine was an essential part of its survival.
Next, your group will engage in a colonial/American Revolution themed scavenger hunt through Charleston's historic district discovering locations and objects relevant to the early history of this city, state, and nation. Along the hunt students will experience a tour of the Heyward-Washington House, located within the original walled city. Students will learn of former owner Thomas Heyward Jr.'s role during the Revolution, as well as the stories of other patriots such as Christopher Gadsden, Francis Marion, and George Washington.
Approximate Time: 2 hours, $8 per student
Minimum 10 students, maximum of 80 students
Life in the Civil War
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Experience the day-to-day life of the civilians and soldiers from the Civil War. Students will pack a soldier's haversack, dress up in period clothing, write with a quill pen, and card cotton.
Click Here for curriculum guide.
The Museum Attic: Victorian Charleston
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Discover what it was like to be a child in late 19th century Charleston. Compare and contrast your lifestyle with that of a child in the late 1800s through discussion and handling artifacts. This Museum experience includes a chance for the students to grind coffee, dress in period clothing and look though the stereopticon.
Gullah Traditions
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Contributions by African-Americans have made a significant impact on the Lowcountry. Students will use artifacts, documents, and replicas to understand the African-American experience from their lives in Western Africa to the plantations of South Carolina to life after the Civil War.
Guided Tours
South Carolina Notables
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Travel through the Museum learning about the events, people, and animals that have made the Palmetto State so fascinating. This guided tour is perfect for South Carolina Studies classes and includes information on Native Americans, life on Lowcountry plantations, the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, special exhibit galleries, and even state symbols. Students will get a chance to handle artifacts, replicas, and animal mounts as they journey through The Charleston Museum.
The Bountiful Coast
Grades: 3rd - 12th
This program focuses on food ways and dining customs of the 18th and 19th century Lowcountry. Learn how food has been acquired, prepared, stored, and served by the different groups of people that call the Lowcountry their home. The program will discuss food ways of Native American, African-Americas, and early English settlers. Students will examine pictures from our archives of street vendors and the Old Market, as well as handle artifacts from archaeological digs.
World War II
(Offered January-March)
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Learn about World War II through the eyes of men, women, and children on the home front. Through letters, photographs, artifacts, and replicas learn about the events of the war and how everyone did their part during this difficult time in American history. The program concludes with a trip to the exhibit with your Museum teacher.
A Step into the Past
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Step back into the lifestyles of early Charlestonians. Students will go into the Museum's historic houses to compare and contrast old Charleston with today. The general tour for each house includes site history, architecture, decorative arts, and family and slave life. Focus tours of the houses are also available, see below.
Joseph Manigault House, 1803
A National Historic Landmark
350 Meeting Street
Located just across the street from the Museum this Federal style home was once a USO post, tenement housing, a dry cleaner, and even a gas station. Explore the varied history of this beautiful three-story brick house built for the Manigault family. The Manigault family came to Charleston from France escaping religious persecution to eventually become a very wealthy rice-planting family. Learn about their daily lives and the lives of their African American slaves.
Choose between general tour, architectural focus, World War II, or African American history tour.
Heyward-Washington House, 1772
A National Historic Landmark
87 Church Street
Step back in time to Charleston's golden age in the only Pre-Revolutionary War House open to the public. Located within the original walled city, this 1772 Charleston double house was owned by Thomas Heyward, Jr., one of the four signers of the Declaration of Independence from South Carolina. The house is famous for housing President George Washington during his Southern Tour in May 1791. The Georgian Style architecture and furniture crafted by local Charleston cabinetmakers make this house truly unique. Students will also get the chance to explore an English Formal and Kitchen Garden and also the only Colonial Kitchen open to the public.
Choose between the general tour, an architectural focus, Revolutionary War, or African American history tour.
Acquired by the Museum in 1985, the Dill Sanctuary contains numerous cultural features including three earthen Confederate batteries and prehistoric, colonial, antebellum, and postbellum archaeological sites. The Dill Sanctuary has been protected for purposes of preservation, wildlife enhancement, research, and education, and is used only for Museum-sponsored programs. The Dill Sanctuary provides assorted habitats for wildlife and nesting sites for both migratory and resident birds. Located on James Island this 580 acre site offers an excellent opportunity for education programming.
The Dill Sanctuary Marsh Walk
Grades: 3rd - 12th
Enjoy the great outdoors with a walk into the maritime forest and marsh of the Dill Sanctuary. Students will learn about the many plants and animals that flourish in the salt marsh, such as fiddler crabs, periwinkles, spartina grass, needle rush, herons, and osprey. Students also get a chance to obtain and observe fiddler crabs up close through use of the Museum’s bug boxes.
Charleston's Hidden History
Grades: 3rd- 12th
The visitor will find no great plantation house or gun-embellished fort at the Dill Sanctuary today. The history is literally hidden. Students will use maps, artifacts, census records, and oral history to uncover this hidden history. As you walk through the property learn of the Native Americans, Revolutionary and Civil War soldiers, Plantation owners and their slaves, and tenant farmers that have made the Dill Sanctuary their home. Approx. time- 1 hour
Yesterday's Trash
Grades: 3rd- 8th
This variation of our Museum class includes a mock dig. Students will get a chance to lay out their unit, dig and screen for artifacts, and wash and identify their artifacts. Maximum group size is 15 students, this program can be combined with others to accommodate larger groups.
A Museum tour is not automatically included with a Museum program. If you would like a Museum tour please check SELF-GUIDED MUSEUM TOUR on your reservation form. If you prefer a more focused tour, Explorations are perfect for your group!
- Students should be divided into groups determined by the number of chaperones/teachers that are available. One chaperone per every ten students is suggested.
- A Museum teacher will provide instructions and supplies upon arrival. Each group will receive a clipboard, a pencil, one scavenger hunt, and one answer sheet. Extra scavenger hunts can be available on request.
- Please allow at least an hour and a half for your group to complete the scavenger hunt.
Scavenger Sampler - Grades: 3rd - 12th
This exploration includes questions for each area of our permanent collection.
Other Exploration topics:
Celebrating African Americans, People in Passage (Immigration), Difference in Dirt (Pottery), Native Americans, City Under Siege (Civil War), Archaeology, Egyptian, and Special Exhibit galleries.
Special Programming
Colonial Quest: Exploring Colonial and Revolutionary Charleston
Grades: 3rd- 12th
The Powder Magazine and Heyward-Washington House
Your visit begins at The Powder Magazine where students will have a first hand experience with the Carolinas' oldest public building. With the help of a colonial costumed interpreter, students will learn of "Charles Towne's" earliest geography and inhabitants and why this colonial town's powder magazine was an essential part of its survival.
Next, your group will engage in a colonial/American Revolution themed scavenger hunt through Charleston's historic district discovering locations and objects relevant to the early history of this city, state, and nation. Along the hunt students will experience a tour of the Heyward-Washington House, located within the original walled city. Students will learn of former owner Thomas Heyward Jr.'s role during the Revolution, as well as the stories of other patriots such as Christopher Gadsden, Francis Marion, and George Washington.
Approximate Time: 2 hours, $8 per student
Minimum 10 students, maximum of 80 students