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The story of the city of Savannah starts with its founding in 1733 by British General James Oglethorpe. Unique and still puzzling to today's historians, Savannah's urban planning was laid out through the Oglethorpe plan on a grid pattern with wide streets and many public squares. Remarkably, this plan generated one of the best-designed cities ...
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- Savannah St. Patrick's Day Parade
If you’ve never been to Savannah for St. Patrick’s Day, then...
- Reynolds Square
Reynolds Square is surrounded by ancient brick pavers and...
- Savannah Music Festival
The Savannah Music Festival isn’t your run of the mill...
- Savannah Irish Festival
The Savannah Irish Festival usually takes place each...
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Growth of the Savannah Film Festival shows promise for the...
- Isaiah Davenport House
The Historic Savannah Preservation Committee was founded to...
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Savannah Market Report Tybee Island Real Estate Over the...
- Telfair Academy
Feb 17, 2024 · February 17, 2024. Embark on a journey through the deep roots of the South as you explore the Savannah Plantation History. Picture yourself meandering through the historic Savannah plantations, where the passage of time is etched in the landscapes and architecture, each with a story to recount on the plantation history in Georgia.
- Colonial Architecture
- Federal Architecture
- Gothic Revival Architecture
- Italianate Architecture
- More Photos from Savannah’s Historic District
Savannah was the last of the original 13 colonies and is still home to modest Colonial-style cottages from that era. Clapboard siding, symmetrical shuttered windows, and dormers define this style. It’s this combination of modest cottages and stately mansions that give Savannah its historic charm.
You’ll find fine examples of Federal architecture in Savannah. This style is defined by blocky square or rectangular buildings made of brick. These buildings are typically three to five bays wide with perfectly aligned shuttered windows. The entryway often features a raised portico or stoop, which you’ll find is a popular feature of Savannah homes.
Savannah’s Gothic Revival-style buildings are some of my favorites. Pitched roofs, towers, and pointed windows, often with stained glass, define this style. The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist and Temple Mickve Israel are two examples.
The Mercer Williams House, popularized by the book and film Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, is a fine example of Italianate architecture. This style is characterized by low roofs with deep, overhanging eaves supported by ornamental brackets. Rounded windows feature hood molding, often fashioned from cast iron.
You could (and should!) spend an entire day just wandering around Savannah’s squares and streets, taking in the sights. Whenever Kyle and I visit, we dedicate an entire day to just that. We pack our camera and a few different lenses so we can capture towering churches, street panoramas, and the tiniest architectural details. If you’re looking for a...
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Jan 23, 2004 · Savannah’s plan reflects political and organizational considerations of the day. Each ward had tythingmen, who shared guard and other duties. Wards were tied to a larger regional plan of garden and farm lots. The repetitive nonhierarchal placement of wards, squares, and equal-sized lots points to the utopian ideals of the colony.
May 13, 2024 · There was no doubt about it – the historic squares of Savannah were the city’s best feature. Savannah isn’t exactly the oldest city in the country – that title is held by St. Augustine about 150 miles further south – but Savannah claims to be the oldest planned city in the country.
Nov 12, 2004 · Historic Savannah Foundation. Historic Savannah Foundation is a local, private, nonprofit, preservation organization chartered in 1955 to preserve buildings, squares, and neighborhoods in the city of Savannah, Georgia’s colonial capital. The organization is managed by a professional staff under the direction of a board of trustees.
Feb 9, 2020 · Like Noble Jones, Benjamin Sheftall (1692-1765) and his wife Perla were present at the creation of the earliest squares in 1733… but it was their great-great-great grandson Isaac Cohen Hertz (1849-1875) who would, as a toddler, see the creation of the last squares of Savannah’s City Common.