
What we’re about
This group is Sierra Club outreach to the community. Our mission is "To explore, enjoy and protect the wild places of the earth". We get you out there. We hike. We bike. We canoe. We kayak. AND We lobby. For our outings, we suggest that participants donate $5/person. This is a voluntary contribution not a requirement for participation. The funds go to the general treasury of the Robert Lunz Group, not to the Trip Leader. Contributions are for the outings and not Membership Meetings.You can sign up for our monthly electronic newsletter on the group website at https://www.sierraclub.org/south-carolina/robert-lunz
Land Acknowledgement
We want to acknowledge that we, the Robert Lunz Group of the Sierra Club (Berkeley, Charleston, Colleton and Dorchester Counties), work and live on lands once belonging to more than a dozen distinct groups of Native Americans whose existence is now evident in the familiar place names including: Ashepoo, Awendaw/Sewee, Bohicket, Catawba, Combahee, Coosa, Edisto, Etiwan, Kiawah, PeeDee, Shem (named by Sewee Tribe), Stono, Wando, Wappoo, Wassamasaw and Winyah. Disease, warfare and displacement led to the extinction of most of these groups by the middle of the eighteenth century. Shell mound evidence indicates that Native Americans were present in the lowcountry as long as 4,000 years ago. Their presence has continued to the present day including the Catawba, PeeDee, Wassamasaw, Edisto and Winyah tribes. The Wassamasaw have applied for Federal recognition. The Catawba Nation is the only Federally recognized tribe in South Carolina. A Native American Ceremonial Center is located in the Charles Towne Landing State Historic Park.
Sources
https://native-land.ca/.
https://www.sciway.net/hist/indians/geo.html
https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/first-people-south-carolina-lowcountry
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Upcoming events (3)
See all- Sierra Club and Piccolo Spoleto present J Henry Fair, PhotographerRita Liddy Hollings Science Center - College of Charleston, Charleston, SC
Thursday, June 5, 2025, 7 pm
Sierra Club and Piccolo Spoleto present
From Combahee to Winyah: The Importance of the South Carolina Coast
J Henry Fair, Photographer
Rita Hollings Science Center Auditorium, College of Charleston
58 Coming Street, corner of George, Charleston SC 29401
Free Admission
South Carolina has the largest undeveloped coastal area in the continental US. It is uniquely and stunningly beautiful. How do we prepare for the future and ensure a functioning world for our children? J Henry Fair is a photographer and filmmaker whose exhibit, Picturing Freedom: Harriet Tubman and the Combahee River Raid, shows at the Gibbes Museum of Art during Spoleto and into the fall. It links the history and beauty of this special place.
Sierra Club is the oldest and largest grassroots environmental organization in the US. The local Robert Lunz Group has 1,200 members in Berkeley, Charleston, Colleton, and Dorchester counties in South Carolina. Sierra Club motto: Explore, enjoy and protect the planet.
http://www.jhenryfair.com/
https://www.sierraclub.org/south-carolina/robert-lunz
https://www.gibbesmuseum.org/exhibitions/picturing-freedom-harriet-tubman-and-the-combahee-river-raid/141