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A Walk Through Midnight

Truth is truly stranger than fiction. Who would have thought that a story about characters in a sleepy little southern town would have created such a stir?

  • Tour Duration: 1.5 hours
  • Tour Highlights: Unique walking tour based on the best selling novel, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, A Savannah Story.
  • See the sights made famous by this novel which became an International Phenomenon.
  • Rated by Walking Magazine as “One of the 10 Best Walking Cities in America.”
  • Tour begins at Oglethorpe Square.

Shocking soirees. Scandalous affairs. Don’t let the Southern charm fool you.

Even the rumors whispered beneath dripping Spanish moss are enough to make a man blush – and it’s all true! Just another day in this eccentric city…. The Savannah Walks is proud to present A Walk through Midnight, a saunter through the pages of John Berendt’s runaway bestseller, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.

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Andrew Low House Museum

The lovely brick Andrew Low House combines Grecian details with elements of the Italian Villa style and boasts one of Savannah’s most stunning ironwork balconies. A shuttered piazza overlooks a beautiful brick-walled garden in the rear of the home. The front garden remains much as it did when first planted, with two hourglass-shaped flowerbeds. Handsome inside as well as the out, the Andrew Low House features spacious rooms decorated with beautiful plaster cornices and carved woodwork.

New York architect, John Norris, designed and built this lovely home in 1848-1849 for Andrew Low, a wealthy cotton factor, who came to Savannah from Scotland when he was only 16 years old. He started working in his uncle’s cotton firm and later became a partner and later director of the Savannah operation. In 1843 he married Sarah Cecil Hunter. Unfortunately, Andrew’s wife and 4-year old son died before the house was complete. Five years later, Andrew married Mary Cowper Stiles, daughter of William Henry Stiles, United States Minister to Austria. During the Civil War, Andrew Low was imprisoned at Fort Warren in Boston harbor on suspicion of collaboration with the Confederacy.

The Andrew Low House was host to several important visitors over the years. One such visitor was English author, William Makepeace Thackery, who visited in 1853 and 1856 while on lecture tours.

Know that I write from the most comfortable quarters I have ever had in the United States. In a tranquil old city, wide stretched, tree-planted, with a few cows and carriages rolling through the sandy road, a red river with a tranquil little fleet of merchant men taking cargo, and tranquil ware-houses barricaded with packs of cotton; a famous good dinner, breakfast, etc. and leisure all morning to think and do and sleep and read as I like. The only place I stay in the United States where I can get these comforts — all free gratis — is in the house of my friend Andrew Low of the great house of A. Low and Co, Cotton Dealers, brokers.
William Makepeace Thackery

In 1870, Robert E. Lee, former commander of the Army of Northern Virginia paid a visit to Savannah with his daughter, Agnes. The general left the train to face one of the largest crowds that ever assembled to welcome him. Cheer followed cheer. As soon as the crowd would permit, Lee was driven to the home of General Lawton, at the corner of York and Lincoln Streets. Later in the evening he was taken to the Andrew Low House, where he was to sleep.

The Lowes invited some of Lee’s old comrades to dinner on April 2. General Joseph E. Johnson, General Andrew Lawton and General J. F. Gilmer came to pay their respects. It was the first time Lee had seen Johnson since the war. Before leaving Savannah, Lee paid a visit to Joseph Johnston, who was then living at 105 E. Oglethorpe Avenue. At some point during his stay, Lee and Johnston were photographed together at Ryan’s, a local photography studio in downtown Savannah. The familiar picture shows them, “grizzled, old and feeble,” seated on opposite sides of a small table.

That spot of spots! That place of places!! That city of cities!!!
Robert E. Lee to Savanahian Jack MacKay

Andrew Low’s son, William Mackay Low, married Juliette Gordon in 1886. Juliette, commonly known as Daisy, moved in the family home on Lafayette Square. It was here that the widowed Juliette founded the Girl Scouts of America. Daisy had become friends with General Robert Baden-Powell, former of the Boys Scouts of England. Baden-Powell and his sister, who had formed a society of “Girl Guides” in England, inspired Daisy to found a similar organization in the United States. She formed two such groups of girls in Savannah in 1912. Members of the Girl Guides, later known as the Girl Scouts, held their meetings in Daisy’s carriage house. Juliette Gordon Low died in 1927 and bequeathed the carriage house to the Savannah Girl Scouts. The National Society of the Colonial Dames in Georgia purchased the Andrew Low House in 1928. After painstaking restoration, the Colonial Dames used the home as their headquarters, and officially opened the home to the public in 1952.

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Beyond Good & Evil Walking Tour

Tour Details:

  • Adults only tour, ages 16+ only.
  • Pet friendly tour
  • Duration: 90-minutes.

Why You Should Take Tour:

  • The Beyond Good and Evil Tour’s unique blend of humor, the macabre, voodoo, ghosts, local folklore, and legends have created Savannah’s most popular Ghost Tour.
  • This tour contains mature language and themes.
  • You’ll visit some of Savannah’s most stately homes, such as the Mercer-Williams House and 432 Abercorn. Oh, and a haunted cemetery or two, as well.
  • An exciting journey into Savannah’s macabre haunted history.
  • All of our tours are walking tours.
  • Reschedule your tour for free if your plans change.
  • Additional tour times may be available.

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Bicycle Guided Historical Tour

This 2-hour historical bike tour is the most unique and complete tour Savannah has to offer. We cover much of the historical area and stop at many of the most popular sites. Travel back in time from the early 1700s to the early 1900s and learn from knowledgeable and experienced tour guides about the wonderful history Savannah has to offer. Our tours also include key knowledge of where to ride and what streets to avoid in order to safely ride through the city of Savannah. Helmets are included upon request, mandatory for 16 and under, optional for everyone else. Notice: Riders must be at least 5’0″ tall and must be able to ride a bicycle. You can upgrade to an electric bike for an additional fee which can be paid once you arrive (depending on availability). TourPass pays for a standard bike. Any and all upgrades must be paid out-of-pocket.

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Bicycle Rental | All Day

Rent your bikes and explore Savannah your way!
  • Pick-up your bike anytime 9:30am or later or after 11am on Sundays.
  • Bike must be returned no later than 5:00 pm that same day or 4pm on Sundays.
  • Helmets are included, mandatory for 16 and under, optional for everyone else.
  • Locks are included
  • Self guided route tour map also included if requested.

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Bonaventure Cemetery Tours

One of the oldest sayings in Savannah is, “No visit to Savannah is complete without a visit to Bonaventure Cemetery,” and with 800,000 people a year exploring 150+ acres of natural splendor mixed with statues, ironwork, and some of Savannah’s most famous reposed lying in state, you’ll soon understand why this should be at the very top of your Savannah-To-Do-Bucket-List! And, if you’re a present fan or one to be of “Midnight In The Garden of Good & Evil,” this Savannah walking tour is a no-brainer. A number of the “characters” are buried here, and the cemetery itself is a setting for some of the book’s important scenes.

Originally a 1750’s plantation that became Savannah’s great park during both Industrial Revolutions, Bonaventure became not only Savannah’s chief escapist place, but true to Savannah form, their setting for cocktail hour at sunset! Because of all this it was, and still remains, a great point of pride that we became the first company to offer daily cemetery tours in Bonaventure; to share her secrets and her serenity with visitors from all over the world!

History and Points of Interest on Tour:

  • Tour duration: 2 hours
  • Bonaventure Plantation: The history
  • Freemasonry: Secret societies revealed
  • Little Gracie: Savannah’s guardian angel
  • Johnny Mercer: 1,568 songs, 4 Oscars & Moon River
  • Conrad Aiken: Poetry & martinis at sunset
  • John Walz: Savannah’s greatest sculptor
  • Harry Hervey: Screenwriter & novelist
  • Corinne Lawton: Romantic rebel
  • Symbolism, funerary rites, & much more!
  • Tour provided by Sixth Sense Tours

 

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