9 Best Sights in Mount Pleasant and Vicinity, Charleston

Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge

Fodor's choice

Maritime forests, barrier islands, salt marshes, beaches, and coastal waterways make up this 66,287-acre refuge established in 1932 as a migratory bird haven. The Sewee Visitor and Environmental Education Center has information and exhibits on the property and its trails, as well as an outdoor enclosure housing endangered red wolves. The refuge is aiding the recovery of the threatened loggerhead sea turtle, and a video details the work.

From the mainland refuge, you can take a $40 ferry ride to remote and wild Bulls Island to explore its boneyard beach and freshwater ponds teeming with alligators.

Fort Moultrie

Fodor's choice

A part of the Fort Sumter National Monument, this is the site where Colonel William Moultrie's South Carolinians repelled a British assault in one of the first patriot victories of the Revolutionary War. Completed in 1809, the fort is the third fortress on this site on Sullivan's Island, 10 miles southeast of Charleston. Set across the street, the companion museum is an unsung hero. Although much is made of Fort Sumter, this smaller historical site is creatively designed, with figurines in various uniforms that make military history come alive. A 20-minute educational film that spans several major wars tells the colorful history of the fort. There's also an essential exhibit on Sullivan Island's role in the transatlantic slave trade.

Plan to spend the day bicycling through Sullivan's Island, where you'll find a cluster of century-old beach houses.

Mount Pleasant Memorial Waterfront Park

Fodor's choice

Sprawling beneath the Ravenel Bridge, this beautifully landscaped green space invites lounging on the grass with views of Charleston Harbor. You can also take a path up to the bridge for a stroll. Find helpful info in the visitor center, chat with Gullah artists selling traditional baskets in the Sweetgrass Cultural Arts Pavilion, and spend a quiet moment listening to the waterfall fountain in the Mount Pleasant War Memorial. Kids love the playground modeled after the Ravenel Bridge, and parents appreciate that it's fenced, with benches galore. A 1,250-foot-long pier stretches into the water—grab a milkshake from the River Watch Cafe and a seat on one of the double-sided swings to watch folks fishing for their supper. Better yet, rent a rod and bait for $10 from the pier's tackle shop and cast for your own.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Patriots Point Naval and Maritime Museum

Fodor's choice

Climb aboard the USS Yorktown aircraft carrier—which contains the Congressional Medal of Honor Museum—as well as the destroyer USS Laffey. The carrier's flight deck features stunning views of the harbor and city skyline and up-close views of 25 airplanes and helicopters from throughout the last century of American warfare. A life-size replica of a Vietnam support base camp showcases naval air and watercraft used in that military action.

Boone Hall Plantation and Gardens

Boone Hall Plantation and Gardens
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Celebrities Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively have publicly distanced themselves from their 2012 wedding here at Boone Hall Plantation and Gardens, apologizing for mistaking the longtime site of human enslavement for a pastoral setting. Still, Boone Hall remains one of the former Lowcountry plantations that continues to actively market itself as a wedding backdrop, complete with a moss-draped live oak allée and an heirloom rose garden. Nonwedding guests can also visit the plantation; most significant from a historic standpoint is a set of brick cabins, built at the turn of the 19th century, which housed enslaved people. While Boone Hall's interpretative strategy generally doesn't stress African American contributions or culture beyond the cabins, each one is devoted to a topic in black history, such as civil rights and sweetgrass baskets. The venue occasionally hosts Gullah storytelling and song performances.

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1235 Long Point Rd., Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, 29464, USA
843-884–4371
sights Details
Rate Includes: $26, Mid-march–Labor Day, Mon.–Sat. 8:30–6:30; Sundays noon–5; winter Mon.-Sat. 9-5

Charles Pinckney National Historic Site

This remnant of Charles Pinckney's 715-acre birthplace was winnowed down by development, but today the National Park Service uses archaeological findings to tell the story of the man who signed the U.S. Constitution and the people his family enslaved. While most structures linked to the site's history as a rice and indigo plantation no longer stand, an 1820s cabin erected after Pinckney's death is open to visitors, along with three buildings where enslaved people lived.

1254 Long Point Rd., Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, 29464, USA
843-881–5516
sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Closed Mon. and Tues., Daily 9–5

Mount Pleasant Palmetto Islands County Park

With an observation tower, paved nature trails, and boardwalks extending over the marshes, this 943-acre park offers a day full of family fun. You can rent bicycles and pedal boats, set the kids loose in the playground, or pay an extra fee ($6.99) for entrance to the small Splash Island water park (open daily June through mid-August and weekends in May and mid-August through Labor Day).

444 Needlerush Pkwy., Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, 29464, USA
843-795–4386
sights Details
Rate Includes: $2, Jan.–Apr. and Sept.–Dec., daily 8–sunset; May–Aug. daily 8–8

Old Village

The historic center of Mount Pleasant, this neighborhood is distinguished by white picket fences, storybook cottages, traditional homes with wide porches, tiny churches, and lavish waterfront homes. It's a lovely area for a stroll or bike ride, and Pitt Street offers a couple of locally loved eateries and boutiques. Head south along Pitt Street to the Otis M. Pickett Bridge and Park, popular for picnicking, fishing, and sunset views.

Shem Creek Boardwalk

Follow this quarter-mile-long boardwalk that stretches from Coleman Boulevard to the marshy mouth of Shem Creek for an up-close look at the recent past and vibrant present of Mount Pleasant's most important waterway. Decades ago, shrimping boats docked three or four abreast in the channel; now fewer than a dozen trawlers ply the creek, but visitors can buy crab and shrimp right off the working boats.