The monument erected in this Square to the memory of General Casimir Pulaski, who fell at Savannah in the cause of American Independence, was completed in 1854. The corner-stone was laid,...
The epitaph to James Wilde on the nearby tomb is a melancholy reminder of the days of duelling and, particularly, of a tragic affair of honor fought January 16, 1815, on the Carolina side of...
Beneath this modest slab rest the remains of America´s foremost painter of miniatures. Malbone, a native of Rhode Island, began his career in Providence at the age of seventeen. He pursued...
This cemetery, the second in Colonial Savannah, was the burying ground for the City from about 1750 until it was closed against burials in 1853. Among the distinguished dead who rest here...
At this site was located the first public agricultural experimental garden in America. From this garden was disseminated the upland cotton which later comprised the greater part of the world´s...
This building, now the quarters of a private Club, was erected in 1857 for Edmund Molyneux, British consul at Savannah, and served as his residence and as the Consulate until Molyneux´s return...
" THIS IS NO TIME TO TALK OF MODERATION; IN THE PRESENT INSTANCE IT CEASES TO BE OF VIRTUE" The above quote is from his speech to Provincial Congress, June of 1776. Foremost among...
In this burial ground, hallowed to the ´men who go down to the sea in ships and occupy their business in great waters,´ are interred ship captains and seamen from many lands- America, Norway,...
Where Sergeant William Jasper and Sergeant Newton rescued two American prisoners and killed two and captured eight British soldiers in making the rescue. Plaque courtesy Lat34North.com....
Here rests James Habersham -- associate of George Whitefield and a leading merchant, planter, and public servant during Georgia´s colonial era. Mr. Habersham came to the colony in 1738 as a...
The three Habersham brothers -- who here rest beside their distinguished father, James Habersham -- were prominent patriots in the American Revolution and outstanding public men during the early...
The Georgia Historical Society, founded May 24, 1839, is one of the oldest historical societies in the country. Among it founders were L.K. Tefft, the noted autograph collector; William...
Beneath the monument in this Square repose the remains of Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene, of Rhode island, who died near Savannah on June 19, 1786, at Mulberry Grove Plantation which had been granted...
This tomb, known as the Graham vault, possesses the distinction of having been the burial place of two heroes of the Revolutionary War, one American and the other British. Lt. Col. John Maitland...
Mathilda Taylor was born in 1834 in New Orleans, and came to Savannah as a young woman. She taught black children in her home before the Civil War, when it was still illegal. She married...
In 1910 and 1911 the Mercer Automobile Company of Trenton, New Jersey made entries in the Great Savannah races. Washington Roebling II, the only company owner who drove in the races, and...
Mary Flannery O´Connor, novelist and short story writer, was born in Savannah March 25, 1925. She grew up in this houseand in later years, she referred to it simply as "the house I was raised in."...
This 1-1/2 mile oak avenue leads to the tabby ruins of Noble Jones´ colonial fortified plantation. Jones and his family were original settlers in Georgia, arriving in Savannah with founder James...
Over this ground, hallowed by the valor and the sacrifice of the soldiery of America and of France, was fought October 9, 1779, one of the bloodiest battles of the Revolution when Savannah, which...
James Edward Oglethorpe, the founder of Georgia, landed with the original colonists, about 114 in number, at the foot of this bluff on February 1 (February 12, new style), 1733. The site where...