2021 Hold My Tea Bar Crawl

September 3, 2021

Why does Summerville celebrate sweet tea? 

Why does Summerville celebrate sweet tea? 

We have Andre Michaux to thank. It was the French botanist, sent to the United States by King Louis XVI in the late 1700s to investigate the flora of the New World, who introduced the tea plant to the Lowcountry at Middleton Place. The locals took to it with gusto, and have been drinking it — with a few modifications such as ice, sugar, and lemon — ever since.

But it was Dr. Charles Shepard who cemented Summerville’s place in Sweet Tea history by founding the Pinehurst Tea Farm, the first in the country to successfully grow tea as a viable crop commercially. In fact, the tea plants grown at the popular Charleston Tea Garden on Wadamalaw Island are cuttings from this Summerville tea farm.

Fast forward to 2006 when Firefly Spirits brought the sweet tea to a cocktail with their creation of the world's first Sweet Tea Vodka. The specialty vodka was crafted at the Firefly Distillery in Charleston, SC by owners Jim Irvin and Scott Newitt. Keeping true to its Southern roots, Firefly is distilled four times and infused with tea originating from those same tea plants from Dr. Shepards Pinehurst Tea farm.   

As the locals like to say- and they're only half-joking, that you can drink your way from one end to the other of our sweet town. So let’s take a drinking tour of Summerville on the Hold My Tea Bar Crawl, where the flowers that made the city famous are best enjoyed with a serving of something refreshing close at hand. And while we’re at it, let’s offer a toast to Dr. Shepard, whose tea farm started it all.

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