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This book has not the slightest pretension to be the continuous history of the City of Charleston.The writer has simply chosen from the story of its two hundred and fifty years such events as seem to her to have had most to do in shaping the fortunes of the men who made the town, or best to illustrate the character of their children who have lived in it.What that fortune and character were, it is to be hoped the book may show. The writer has made no attempt to judge her people; has only tried to draw them as they appeared to themselves and to their contemporaries.With this view she has used, wherever possible, the accounts of the actors in the drama, or of those who knew them best, - the earliest histories and memoirs to be found, especially the publications of the Hon. William A. Courtenay, and of the Historical Society of South Carolina, the Shaftesbury Papers, and others.
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