- About the political party politics of the Reconstruction Era with National Park Service Historian Eric Ellis on Thursday, May 14 at Beaufort Branch at 11 AM. This lecture is part of the joint BDC and Beaufort County Historical Society "Historically Speaking" series.
- About a forgotten colonial industry. Dr. Randy James, AKA "Dr. Dirt," will discuss the economic value and history of the cochineal beetle on Tuesday, May 19 at St. Helena Branch at 2 PM. This lecture ends Season 9 of the joint Beaufort County Library and Beaufort History Museum local history series coordinated by the BDC.
- About a rather unknown intrepid Spaniard of the 16th century who was named Juan Pardo. Pardo left Santa Elena - twice - to explore areas in the hinterland and their Native American inhabitants Archaeologist Dr. David Moore will discuss in particular Fort San Juan built by Pardo's troops that he has studied for many years. Please note: This session will be held at the Coastal Discovery Museum on Hilton Head Island at 11 AM on Thursday May 28. This lecture ends season 7 of the "Historically Speaking" series brought to you by the BDC and Beaufort County Historical Society.
And of course, you can sort of create a local history program of your own by participating in our Revealing the Revolution Challenge. There's an in-library or in-bookmobile version and a more deluxe version that allows you to travel throughout Beaufort County and Jasper County to see and learn about the American Revolution as it transpired in Beaufort District via historic markers placed along our roadways. Deadline to enter is July 2, 2026 so you still have plenty of time to play and learn.
Cassandra and I will be sitting down with representatives of the BCHS and BHM later this month to map out those respective series offerings for July 2026 - June 2027. There are a lot of moving parts and personalities involved with setting up a local history program, but even more when setting up a series of local history programs with partners. But we do it year after year because 1) we love learning about aspects of local history ourselves and 2) you keep attending our sessions year after year. (Thank you!) And we do have the results of the Library system's strategic plan survey that shows that at least 3100 Library users and non-users think that the system should have more evening and weekend programs and longer hours of operation. We will take those results into consideration as well - though to be perfectly honest, it has been our recent experience that we get far fewer people to attend our evening programs than our 11 AM or 2 PM ones. On the other hand, the evening and Saturday programs attract a different clientele which allows us to be a bit more creative. And sometimes, for us at least, it's less about butts in seats than being transparent about what the BDC has and does so that the public is adequately apprised of the full spectrum of BDC programs and services.
We cannot do much with the topics on the Library's Marketing Calendar this month though Beaufort District has an interesting history regarding Memorial Day and later this month we'll provide you with some "Local History Books to Read in One Sitting." Instead we'll just emphasize our usual history related themes in May, mostly via our almost daily Facebook posts. For example, we'll finish National [Materials] Preservation Week on Saturday, May 2. (BTW: It's MayDay, the date upon which we cultural heritage professionals focus on emergency preparedness.) We feature National Postcard Week, May 3 - 9 on Facebook with Sydney's picks. You can also revisit her 2025 May display write-up about some of the postcards we have in the Research Room as a way of acknowledgement of the popular format. Cassi and I will highlight some historic structures during National [Historic] Preservation Month on Facebook as well.
I hope to be able to get at least one of my long languishing posts finished and uploaded for you. At the moment it's a toss up whether that post will be the Reverend George Whitefield's visits to Beaufort in the 1700s or the remarkable journalism career of a child who was born out on Coosaw Island in the 1890s. I think that both topics are in the words of Laugh-In's Arte Johnson's "very interesting." I hope you will too.
The only scheduled closure of the Library system this month will be Monday, May 25 for Memorial Day. As we get closer to the start of Hurricane Season 2026 on June 1 that could indeed change, though I have my fingers and toes crossed that I will retire without ever having to do any serious Hurricane Recovery activities.


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