A Short History of Savannah
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Transcript of A Short History of Savannah
The Beginning!
General James Oglethorpe founded the colony of Georgia in 1733, the last of the thirteen
original British colonies. !
In 1734, Peter Gordon, Oglethorpe’s surveyor, drew a map of Savannah. It was laid out in a grid which would ultimately contain 24 squares, of which 21
exist today.!
Oglethorpe and others had the fanciful notion that they could produce silk spun by silkworms
in Mulberry trees.!
Needless to say, this did not work and what began as a slave-free colony became slave-
owning in 1750 and embarked on rice production. Rice remained a commercial crop in coastal Georgia until the beginning of the
20th century.!
!
The Battle of Savannah was fought On October 9, 1779 for control of the city. There were roughly 2,500 British
defenders who wanted to keep Savannah within the clutches of the crown. They faced down a determined Allied force of 5,500 French and American troops. Soldiers from Haiti,
Germany, Scotland, Ireland, Sweden, and Poland took part in the fighting. When the smoke cleared the city remained
in British hands.!
Today, Battlefield Park, just off MLK Blvd., is a memorial to the hundreds who fought and died for freedom in 1779. Battlefield Park commemorates the second bloodiest battle of the war, and marks
where approximately 800 troops died or were wounded.!
In 1793 Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin on Mulberry Grove plantation just up-river from
Savannah. Cotton had not been a staple crop because it required so much man power to pull the seeds from
the harvested bolls.!
With the invention of the cotton gin, cotton production soared. Cotton was a crop that could be
stored for long periods and shipped long distances, unlike most agricultural products. It became the
U.S.'s chief export, representing over half the value of U.S. exports from 1820 to 1860. !
Coastal Georgia was among the leading producers of Sea Island cotton prior to 1861.!
The 19th Century!
On the floor of the U.S. Senate, Senator James H. Hammond (SC) declaimed on March 4, 1858: “You dare not make war upon cotton! No
power on earth dares make war upon it. Cotton is king.” !
With the firing on Ft. Sumter in Charleston on April 12, 1861, the north and South would enter
upon four years of bloody slaughter. Approximately one in four soldiers that went to war never returned
home. !
Sherman spared Savannah in 1864 on his march from Atlanta to the sea. He established his headquarters in the Green-Meldrim House, today the parish house of St. John’s Episcopal Church. !
Three days before Christmas, General Sherman telegraphed to Abraham Lincoln, "I beg to present you as a Christmas gift the city of Savannah with 150 heavy guns & plenty of ammunition & also
about 25,000 bales of cotton."!
Well, long story short: The Civil War or the War of
Northern Aggression or the War Between the States—take your pick—ended the reign of
King Cotton. With cheaper cotton available overseas and no more slaves to pick it, the
South was ruined financially and economically.!
From about 1870 and continuing into the 20th century, coastal Georgia experienced an economic boom with the production of naval stores which included lumber, railroad ties, rosin, and
turpentine. Here, laborers on a Savannah dock prepare barrels of rosin for shipment, circa 1895. !
From the 1890s until 1945, the ports at Savannah and Brunswick shipped out most of the world's supply of naval stores. !
The 20th Century!
Founded in 1881, the Union Bag and Paper Company from Pennsylvania built a major mill in Savannah in the late
20s. It eased the blow of the Great Depression.!The Camp Manufacturing Company was founded in 1887
by three local Camp brothers from Franklin, Virginia. It was a timber and sawmill business. After months of
negotiations, a deal was struck. On 13 July 1956 the merger was completed and the Union Bag-Camp Paper company was
born.!
Shrimp boats line the Altamaha River at Darien. Wild Georgia shrimp remain a staple seafood of the Georgia coast. !
Today, the Georgia Ports Authority (GPA) is Savannah’s biggest industry and employer. In 2011, the port had the
highest volume of all US ports and was fourth in container shipments.!
Four new ship-to-shore cranes arrived at GPA’s Garden City Terminal in early June 2013. The cranes can reach
across vessels 22 containers wide and lift cargo weighing up to 65 long tons to a height of 136 feet above the dock. !
!
Experience Savannah!
The Davenport House is located at 324 E. State St. It is one of Savannah’s premier
house museums.!
Had it not been for a determined group of Savannah women in 1955, the Davenport House might not have survived.
Savannah’s City Market had recently been torn down and the Davenport House was slated for demolition. The women bought the house and formed the Historic Savannah Foundation. We owe them much for the preservation efforts that followed and
for the City you see today.!
Other notable house museums include the Andrew Low House on
Lafayette Square and…!
…the Owens Thomas House on Oglethorpe
Square.!
The house above is the birth place of Juliette Gordon Low who founded the Girl Scouts in Savannah in 1912 in the Andrew Low House after she had married. It is now the Girl Scouts’ Savannah headquarters and sits on
the corner of Oglethorpe Ave. and Bull St.!
Savannah has been the setting for a number of movies.!
1989!
2000!
1997!
2010!
1994!
Love it or hate it but every March 17th Savannah puts on the second largest St. Patrick’s Day Parade in America.
Hundreds of thousands of determined revelers descend upon the City and a few may even catch the Budweiser Clydesdales
strutting along the parade route.!
River Street, which parallels the Savannah River, is a tourist Mecca. Here it is swollen
with a recent St. Pat’s crowd.!
Forsyth Park is the Historic District’s largest open, green space. You’ll find the Confederate Monument, shady walkways, a
glorious fountain dyed green every St. Patrick’s Day, a restaurant, play areas for kids, a covered stage for live
entertainment, spacious playing fields and tennis courts.!
A block north of Forsyth is the Mercer House on Monterey Square where the antiques dealer and bon vivant Jim
Williams lived for many years. It was the scene of a murder in 1981 which John Berendt used as the basis for his best
seller, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. Williams, accused of the murder, went to trial four times but was
finally acquitted.!
In Savannah it is simply referred to as “The Book.”!
Just two blocks north of the Mercer House on Bull St. is the Savannah College of Art and Design’s Admission Welcome Center. SCAD was started in 1979 with 71 students and now
has an international enrollment of nearly 10,000.!
The Welcome Center was the former Savannah Volunteer Guard Armory.!
Travelling further north on Bull St. you will arrive at Broughton St., the heart of the Historic District’s retail and restaurant area. Broughton St. has come a long way in the last two decades
and business booms day and night all week long.!
Tourism is Savannah’s biggest business after the Georgia Ports. It is definitely a walking city and Bull St., as you have
probably guessed, is a major route, running north from Forsyth Park to Bay St.!
There are many tour companies (and individual guides as well) to help you around
the Historic District. From carriages, to trolleys, to Pedi cabs—even by Segway— or
simply by foot with an individual guide or a map in hand, you will have a great time in
America’s largest Historic Landmark District.!
If you desire expert, individual attention, we recommend Victorian Lady Tours at 912
232-7708. !
Ardis Wood!
There is much to see outside Savannah. Here are two unique sites barely 15 minutes from Savannah’s
Historic District.!
White, frame houses perch on the Isle of Hope’s Bluff Drive facing
the Intracoastal Waterway.! And about a mile to the west is the grand, oak covered allee
of Wormsloe plantation.!
Tybee Island is about 25 minutes east of Savannah on the Atlantic Ocean. It is an amusing mixture of the old and the new. Traditional frame beach houses dot the island while new
motel/hotels have proliferated mostly on the north end of Butler Ave. The “Redneck Riviera” is neither as crass or
grand as its oxymoronic title implies. It falls somewhere in the middle: comfortable, relaxed, living on its own time.!
Enjoy!!