Tour d'Amour



WRITER CREDIT: 
PHOTOGRAPHER CREDIT: 
Tour d'Amour | Wander Charleston's most romantic spots and hear her most love-struck stories on the Bridesmaids Tour

 

When I joined the Charleston Weddings team as editorial assistant in 2011, I—an unwed gal new to town—knew little about weddings, let alone what differentiated those in Charleston from others held south of the Mason-Dixon. Today though, I can sketch a Chiavari chair with my eyes shut and am thoroughly convinced we live in a mecca for romance (one glance at an oak allée draped in Spanish moss did the trick). But being ever-eager to learn more about local wedding lore, I tagged along with Mary Margaret Cornelius one weekend to see what was on her “Bridesmaids Tour.”

 

Though I wasn’t—as is the norm—part of a bachelorette party or there on a pre-wedding outing, within minutes of meeting bubbly Mary-Margaret at the White Point Garden gazebo on the Battery, I was in the matrimonial spirit. “I love starting here because it’s one of the most popular spots for couples to marry in Charleston,” said Mary-Margaret, who’s been leading women’s history tours of the area for three years. “During almost all of my bridesmaid tours we usually see a proposal or wedding, or at least spot rose petals on the ground, proof that there was a ceremony here the evening before.”


From the park, we crossed South Battery Street to Two Meeting Street Inn. The Queen Anne-style bed and breakfast, Mary-Margaret explained, was gifted from wealthy Charleston merchant George Williams to his daughter Martha on her wedding day in 1890. “It’s a great idea for any father,” Mary-Margaret said with a laugh as we continued walking up Meeting Street.


 We next strolled the lush gardens of the Calhoun Mansion (where scenes from the iconic romantic flick The Notebook were filmed) then headed east toward Charleston Harbor. Along the way, Mary-Margaret recounted lovelorn tales,  like the one of famed diarist Mary Boykin Miller Chesnut, who in 1836 was a 13-year-old from a well-heeled family smitten with the less well-heeled (and 22 years old) James Chesnut, Jr. Mary snuck out of the Madame Talvande French School for Young Ladies to stroll the Battery with her sweetheart, and rumor has it that after she was caught, the school’s garden walls were heightened to discourage other students from such inappropriate, unsupervised courting.


“Marriage in the early antebellum period was not so much about making love matches,” explained Mary-Margaret, “as it was about increasing family wealth. But,” she added, “during the Civil War there was a transition. War brought a sense of urgency, and men began starting letters with ‘my dear’ and ‘my darling’ to show a bit more passion.”


As we made our way toward Broad Street, we window-shopped high-end gowns at the consignment bridal boutique Fabulous Frocks on Church Street. Then, too many stories to recount later, Mary-Margaret led me into the back courtyard of the quaint Coco Vivo Fine Art Gallery, where chilled champagne and strawberries—a tour staple—awaited. As we raised our glasses, we toasted brides past and future, and a city awash in love stories.

 

Walk the Talk
Tours are offered Friday through Sunday. Tickets are $25 per person (brides tour for free) and include complimentary, post-walk refreshments. For more information, call (386) 631-5475; email ladiesofthelowcountry@gmail.com; or visit www.HerHistoryCharleston.com.
 

Illustration by Taylour F. Beadling

The Wedding Row

October 1 2018
Truth time: Sometimes we get these engagement sessions and straight-up envy the charmed Instagram-worthy lives the couples seem to live. And Kaitlin and Allan’s shots could do just that. But....

September 28 2018
We’re heading into this football weekend with a true fan fave. Molly, a University of South Carolina law school grad, and Logan, who works with the Gamecocks football team, were successfully nudged...

September 27 2018
Do you know about Alhambra Hall in Mount Pleasant? That two-story, meeting house on Charleston Harbor that’s tucked away in the Old Village? Let’s let these shots of Abby and Patrick’s wedding...

September 26 2018
For the love of a topknot, people! University of Pennsylvania freshman Praachi and Shiv met one night when each were out with their friends and topknot caught his eye. “I remember thinking how...

September 25 2018
Eleven months after Stephanie and Scott met, the avid travelers ventured to Iceland for a long weekend (a surprise trip planned by him) and Scott popped the question on their balcony overlooking...

September 24 2018
Amber and Phil met while working in the same nonprofit organization together in Washington, D.C. Three years later, during a hike in Great Falls, Virginia (the same place where they did their first...

September 21 2018
TWR: How and when did you meet one another? Was it love at first sight? Daisy: Brent and I met through mutual friends on Halloween night at the University of North Carolina Delta Kappa Epsilon house...

September 20 2018
The Wedding Row: Tell us how your love story all began. Kiernan: Pawel and I met each other while we worked together at an ad agency in New York City. Early on in our friendship, Pawel tried to plan...