Episode One: "The Caning"
May 22nd, 1856. A congressman from South Carolina walks onto the floor of the United States Senate with a metal-tipped cane and beats a Massachusetts senator unconscious at his desk. In Charleston, the city celebrates.
Four days later, a lawyer named Thomas Hale steps off a train and walks through that celebration without saying a word. He grew up in this city. He left it for Harvard and came back when he didn't have to. He believes in the law. He is about to find out what that belief is going to cost him.
Within hours of his return, a free Black man named Caesar Johns arrives at his office on Broad Street with a case — a fraudulent deed challenge designed to strip a free Black man of the warehouse he has legally owned for eleven years. The man behind the challenge is one of the most powerful businessmen in Charleston. The judge presiding over the case has never ruled in Thomas's favor when it mattered.
Thomas takes the case anyway.
The Caning introduces the world of Charleston in the spring of 1856 — a city of breathtaking elegance and profound moral rot, moving toward catastrophe it refuses to acknowledge. It introduces Thomas and his wife Eliza, whose marriage is about to be tested by forces neither of them can fully control. And it ends with the arrival of a name — Samuel Greene — and a case that will change everything.
Charleston is a narrative podcast narrated by a single voice. No cast. No performance. Just a man who knows how this story ends, telling it to you anyway.
Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/charleston1856
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.