ETV Classics Classroom

ETV Classics is a digital series featuring some of viewer's favorite shows from South Carolina ETV's vault.

ETV Classics is a digital series featuring some of viewer's favorite shows from South Carolina ETV's vault. The handpicked classics will beckon your nostalgia for art, history, how-to, nature, and more as each episode features a different show.

Cartwheel Bay (S.C.) Stop 1
Episode 1

Video

Longleaf Pine Forest - We see a recent controlled burning. Bracken and Cinnamon ferns grow here. We also see Hooded Pitcher Plants and Wild Indigo.
Chartres Cathedral
Episode 1

Video

Malcolm Miller discusses why Chartres Cathedral is a popular tourist destination in France, and his inspirations for wanting to study the cathedral.
Cheraw
Episode 1

Video

In 1865, the community of Cheraw unwillingly played host to General William T. Sherman’s Union troops. Miraculously, the town was unharmed. Today, the Cheraw State Park is South Carolina’s oldest...
Chester
Episode 1

Video

Settled around 1750, when Pennsylvania farmers came searching for new grazing ground for cattle, the town of Chester still bears its Pennsylvanian and English roots. The area also served as a buffer...
Citadel Telescope
Episode 1

Video

The Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina, proudly cherishes its military and Southern traditions. But, like other colleges, The Citadel also faces the challenge of recruiting both potential...
Colonial Williamsburg | 27:Fifty (1992)
Episode 1

Video

Join host Jim Welch as he takes viewers on a tour around Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia. Colonial Williamsburg is a living history museum, which showcases the colonial period in early U.S. history...
Conway
Episode 1

Video

Joanna Angle gives a brief overview on the history of Conway: Its founding, everyday life, and economic impacts.
D-Day: 40 Years Ago | Carolina Journal (1984)
Episode 1

Video

Part 1 of the D-Day: 40 Years Ago special of Carolina Journal. Veterans from both Axis and Allied powers gather to remember their experiences on D-Day, and to honor the fallen.