High Wire Distilling Co. 311 Huger Street
Please join Alex and Kevin for a campaign-themed welcome cocktail party! Cocktail attire.
High Wire Distilling Co. 311 Huger Street
Grace Church Cathedral 98 Wentworth Street
We're excited for you to join us at our church for our wedding ceremony. Black Tie.
Grace Church Cathedral 98 Wentworth Street
Hibernian Hall 105 Meeting Street
At the historic Hibernian Hall, we'll dance the night away in celebration of our nuptials. Black Tie.
Hibernian Hall 105 Meeting Street
We'd love for you to join us for a Welcome Party at High Wire Distilling Company from 8:00 until 11:00 in the evening on Friday, February 23, 2023.
Located in the heart of historic downtown Charleston, SC, High Wire Distilling Company is dedicated to making premium, small batch spirits.
One of their beset products is their Jimmy Red Bourbon--one of Alex's favorite bourbons in the world.
High Wire Distilling Company uses Jimmy Red corn to set its whiskey apart from other producers. As the story goes, Jimmy Red corn had practically gone extinct when a moonshiner holding the last two cobs passed away.
Click here to learn more about High Wire and their Jimmy Red Bourbon.
Completed in 1848, Grace Church Cathedral is the diocesan cathedral of the Episcopal Church in South Carolina.
During the shelling of Charleston during the civil war, although many parishioners fled the city and most other Episcopal churches closed, Grace remained open until January 1864 when a single shell destroyed part of the clerestory. It reopened in March the following year, a month before Gen. Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox.
The window over the entrance door, which depicts Christ giving the great commission to men and women over the years, includes over 10,000 individual glass pieces.
Over its long history, Grace has only had ten rectors, including The Rev. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, the grandson of General Thomas Pinckney and great nephew of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, a signer of the U.S. Constitution.
Built in 1840 for the Hibernian Society of Charleston, an Irish benevolent society organized by Irish immigrants in 1801. The wrought-iron gates were crafted by German-American Christopher Werner, and includes Irish harps.
Hibernian Hall is nationally significant for its use during the 1860 Democratic National Convention. The party failed to select a nominee, and then later split, ensuring victory for Republican Abraham Lincoln in the general election.
Today, the Hall still serves as the home for the Hibernian Society and is the central location for Charleston's annual St. Patrick's Day celebration and a number of society balls.
Paid for by Stroman-Walling 2024.
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