7 Things You Never Knew About Women’s History
Alison Piepmeier, faculty member of the College's Women's and Gender Studies Program, shares her thoughts and a few facts about Women's History Month.
Alison Piepmeier, faculty member of the College's Women's and Gender Studies Program, shares her thoughts and a few facts about Women's History Month.
From swimming with sharks to publishing the news and joining a tech startup, College of Charleston students gain invaluable experience – and even jobs – through internship opportunities.
The College of Charleston will host a Lincoln scholar from Oxford University for a lecture on March 11, 2015 at 2 p.m.
Professor of African American history Mari Crabtree will give a talk on March 11, 2015, titled “My Soul is a Witness: Theorizing Racial Violence with the Blues.”
A special exhibit celebrating South Carolina history will be on display at the Addlestone Library March 2, 2015 through the end of the spring semester.
After visiting England in 2013 as part of a first-year abroad trip, history major Luke Morris has returned to the UK for an internship with the Nottingham Forest Football Club.
The College remember alumnus Jim Edwards '50, former South Carolina governor and U.S. secretary of energy.
As the the reporter who broke the story about New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison's investigation into the JFK assassination, Rosemary Powell James '59 remembers some scary times in the Big Easy.
The College of Charleston's Office of Multicultural Student Services & Programs celebrates Native American heritage for Cultural Recognition Week 2014.
There are many veterans among the College community, including Marine sniper Andrew Smith '14. Smith left the College to join the Marines, then returned to school following a deployment in Afghanistan and a life-threatening injury.