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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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Civil War Walking Tour

Tour Highlights:

  • See the houses of the South’s most prominent generals
  • Learn Savannah’s role in the War
  • Hear about military strategies

It’s a march through Civil War era Savannah. Hear the strategies of the blue and the gray. See civil war era Savannah, and the houses and buildings involved in the great war between the states.

“…I beg to present to you as a Christmas Gift, the City of Savannah with 150 heavy guns and plenty of ammunition and also about 25,000 bails of cotton…”

So reads Union General William T. Sherman’s telegram to President Lincoln on Dec. 22, 1864 after the occupation of Savannah, ending his army’s infamous “march to the sea.”

For Savannah, the Civil War began in January of 1860 with the seizing of Ft. Pulaski by Georgian troops, preceding the bombardment of Ft. Sumter in Charleston by some three months before the “official” start of the war.

It is the story of the Civil War, pitting brother against brother, which has intrigued Americans since its inception. You’ll hear about military strategies of both sides and learn how Savannahians endured the hardships of the war. A tour for the amateur and buff alike, the Civil War Walk is an intriguing tour through the historic district.

Come tour the Civil War Walk. Make a reservation and experience what Savannah was like during the war.

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Davenport House Museum

Tours start every 30 minutes (on the half hour), are limited to 12 people and last approximately 70 minutes.

The Isaiah Davenport House is one of the best examples of Federal-Style architecture in Savannah. The simple but elegant exterior was constructed of English brick and brownstone and features an ornamental iron railing and handsome double entry stairway.

The interior of the home has been authentically restored and features beautiful woodwork, original plaster-work and a hanging staircase. Filled with furnishings of the period, visitors are able to get a glimpse of what life was like in Savannah in the 1820s.

A native of Rhode Island, Isaiah Davenport, arrived in Savannah before 1807 after completing his apprentice as a builder. He soon became known as one of Savannah’s most famous and prosperous builders and built a number of brick houses in the late Georgian and Federal styles, all with high basements made necessary by the dusty unpaved streets of Savannah.

Davenport’s heirs sold the Davenport house to planter William E. Baynard in 1840, and remained in the hands of that family until 1955. Unfortunately, the house was a run-down tenement building by the 1930’s and destined for destruction in 1955 to make way for a parking lot. The historic home was saved by seven Savannah society ladies who raised $22,500 to purchase the home. This effort was the first act of the Historic Savannah Foundation, which would be responsible for saving and preserving many of Savannah’s historic sites.

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Dolphin Eco Boat Cruise

Come aboard the River Explorer, conveniently located on River Street in downtown Savannah! Join us as the crew embarks on a sightseeing dolphin eco-tour of the Lowcountry! On this dolphin tour in Savannah, you will make your way down river passing the containerships heading up river to the Port of Savannah.

Throughout this dolphin eco tour, you’ll learn the history of Savannah and its surrounding waterways by your captain and first mate as you head out in search of our local Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins. This tour will cover all aspects of our Lowcountry ecosystem, which is where our sea-life truly starts in the protected salt marshes. This dolphin tour in Savannah is fun for all ages.

Highlights:

  • Tour Duration: 2 hours
  • Trip is fully narrated by the captain and first mate.
  • Sightings of dolphins, birds, and other marine life.
  • Sights of containerships headed to the Port of Savannah.
  • Restrooms aboard.
  • Drinks and snacks available for purchase including beer and wine.

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Georgia State Railroad Museum

Georgia State Railroad Museum is a historic site featuring the most complete antebellum railroad of its kind in the world and is located at the old Central of Georgia Railway Savannah Shops and Terminal Facilities in downtown Savannah. The museum gives visitors the opportunity to engage in interactive experiences, such as participating on the handcar, touring the historic railcars and taking a guided site tour by train which showcases our museum’s fully operational turntable. Check our website for a complete schedule of the days our train is operating. Space is limited on the site tour by train and is first come, first served.

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Ghost & Gravestones Trolley Tour

Your voyage will take you throughout the Savannah historic district, focusing on some of the most haunted sites, eerie legends and frightening residents. Your Ghost Host will entertain you with their expert storytelling and knowledge of all things “shadowy and sinister.” One never knows what one might encounter when you “cross-over” aboard Ghosts & Gravestones.

What You’ll Experience

  • Hear all about Savannah’s darker side!
  • Hear Tales No Other Tours Tell as Shadows Play Tricks on Your Mind
  • EXCLUSIVE night-time entry into 2 of Savannah’s Most Haunted Venues
  • FIRST is a stop at the Andrew Low House
  • THEN on to the Perkin’s & Son’s Ship Chandlery
  • Travel Past Ancient Cemeteries, Antebellum Mansions & Squares
  • Drive by the Sites of Some of the Bloodiest Battlegrounds in History
  • 100% Satisfaction Guarantee

Travel past ancient cemeteries, (those still standing and those that have fallen victim to the passage of time and progress), antebellum mansions, and lush squares ripe with live oaks dripping with Spanish moss. Drive by the sites of some of the bloodiest battlegrounds in history, where you may hear echoes of battles and the spirits that remain.

This tour is rated PG-13. No children under 6 allowed. An adult must accompany anyone under the age of 12.

Comfortable shoes are recommended so that you don’t become dead on your feet during the brief walking portions.

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Green Meldrim House Tour

Notice: This house is operated by St. Johns Church and can be closed at any time for any reason for church related functions.

General William Tecumseh Sherman used the house as headquarters when the Federal army occupied Savannah during the Civil War, upon the invitation of Mr. Green. It was at this time (December, 1864) that General Sherman sent his famous telegram to President Lincoln offering him the City of Savannah as a Christmas gift. In 1976, the house was designated a National Historic Landmark by the United States Department of the Interior.

Mr. Green was not possessed of great wealth when he arrived in Savannah. He became a cotton merchant and ship owner. By 1850, he had amassed a fortune sufficient to build the most elaborate house in Savannah at a cost of $93,000. According to Green family records, $40,000 of the cost of the building materials including flagstones, laths, planks and bricks, were brought from England as ballast on Mr. Green’s ships. Recent restorations have revealed that the bricks were actually made at a foundry in Macon, GA. The Green-Meldrim House is one of the finest examples of Gothic Revival architecture to be found in the South. The house was constructed in the early 1850’s as the residence of Mr. Charles Green, an Englishman who came to Savannah in 1833.

The architect for the house was Mr. John S. Norris of New York. Mr. Norris was in Savannah from 1846–1861 and during that time he designed not only the Green-Meldrim House but also the Custom House and numerous other fine residences. There are many unusual architectural features throughout the house. The front entrance has three sets of doors. The heavy outer double doors fold in and form a small closet on either side of the entrance. Of the other two sets, one has glass panels to give light and the third set is louvered for ventilation.

Features:

The woodwork on the main floor is American black walnut, beautifully carved, and the elaborate crown mouldings or cornices are stucco-duro. The doorknobs, hinges, keyhole escutcheons and covers are silver plated. The hanging consoles in the hall have supporting brackets or carved wood, while the ornate aprons are of papier-mache

There are marble mantles in each room in the house, the two in the double drawing rooms being of Carrara marble. Other original adornments in these rooms are the matching chandeliers and the large mirrors in gold-leaf frames which were brought from Austria.

The graceful curved stairway with skylight above is a feature found in other houses designed by Mr. Norris. Also of special significance are the oriel windows on the east side of the house.

The Garden:

The covered porch, on three sides of the house, is surrounded by ornate ironwork. The planting in the garden is not authentic to the period of the house, but after the removal of layers of soil it is believed that the pattern of the original flower beds was discovered and has been restored. The former kitchens, servants’ quarters and stable have been converted into the Rectory of St. John’s Church.

History of Ownership:

The house has been owned by only two families and St. John’s Church. After the death of Mr. Green in 1881, it became the property of his son, Edward Moon Green. On July 14, 1892, the house was purchased by Judge Peter W. Meldrim. On December 30, 1943, the Meldrim family sold this historic treasure to St. John’s, thus ensuring its preservation.

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Harper Fowlkes House Tour

This Greek Revival mansion located in Savannah’s historic district was built in 1842, and graciously opens their doors for tours. The house is beautifully furnished with antiques, yet continues to retain the feel of a warm and inviting home.

The Harper-Fowlkes House has served as the headquarters for the Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Georgia since Alida Harper-Fowlkes bequeathed the house to the Society in 1985.

The exterior and interior architectural features of the home have intrigued students and travelers from all over the world. One of the featured treasures of the house is the elliptical opening viewed from the lower and upper levels of the entry and stairwell.

What to Expect: 

  • Docent led tour of Greek Revival historic home. 
  • See fine furnishings and architectural features of the home.

NOTICE: This property can close for special events. To ensure they’re open prior to visiting, visit this link for updates: View Schedule

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Historic Homes Walking Tour

Savannah has charmed visitors for centuries with her history, architecture and famous hospitality. With this tour, you will:

  • Explore the rich architectural heritage that spans two centuries
  • More than a discussion on architecture, this enchanting walk through the heart of the Historic District focuses on Savannah’s majestic mansions and their residents.
  • Learn about Savannah’s ongoing historic preservation movement and hear of the contributions of residents dedicated to protect and conserve our rich history.
  • This tour may include depending on availability, a visit to one of Savannah’s most beautiful historic homes.
  • Tours departs from Warren Square.

One of the places you’ll see on this tour is the Owens-Thomas House, widely regarded as the premiere example of regency architecture in the United States, and learn about the achievements of architect William Jay. You’ll also see the Green Meldrim House, where Gen. William T. Sherman was a “guest” during the Civil War. Other house highlights includes discussions on the development of domestic dwellings in Savannah, from colonial times to the present, featuring fine examples of architecture that span two centuries.

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Jepson Center for the Arts

The Jepson Center links the history preserved by the Owens-Thomas House & Slave Quarters and Telfair Academy to the future of art and architecture. The strikingly modern building, opened in 2006, is filled with art, activities, and educational opportunities that will encourage learning for generations to come.

Holiday Closures:

  • New Year’s Day
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
  • St. Patrick Day Observance
  • Easter
  • Thanksgiving Day
  • Christmas Eve, open 10am-3pm
  • Christmas Day
  • New Years Eve Day, open 10am to 3pm

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Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace

Guided Tours

The Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace is offering guided tours exploring the fascinating life and world-changing legacy of Juliette Gordon Low, Founder of the Girls Scouts, through stories, art, and artifacts held in her childhood home.

Please allow at least an hour for your visit, so you can fully enjoy the tour, garden, and museum store.

What You’ll Experience

A tour of the Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace provides an exciting look into the history of our remarkable founder and her home, as well as a glimpse into a movement that is still building girls into strong women of courage, confidence, and character over 100 years later.

During your visit to the Birthplace you will be guided on a journey through the life of Juliette Gordon Low. Original and period furnishings adorn seven spacious rooms with high ceilings. You will see unique architectural features, including elaborately carved millwork, decorative plaster ceilings, and the impressive staircase with its curved mahogany rail. Numerous works of art, including many pieces created by Daisy herself, are on display throughout the house.

You may browse the garden independently before or after your tour. Be sure to look for the monogrammed gates that are believed to be forged in part by Daisy herself.
Before you head back out into beautiful Savannah, you’ll want to visit our shop for great local gifts, items made by girls and women around the world, and Girl Scout merchandise.

Admission to this attraction is subject to availability

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Mighty Eighth Air Force Museum

Visit one of the world’s most powerful museum experiences, the National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force. Located only minutes from historic downtown Savannah, where the Eighth Air Force was activated in 1942, the 90,000-square-foot museum is dedicated to preserving the history and stories of the Eighth Air Force, the “greatest air armada of all time.” Hear the unforgettable stories of bravery, experience a bomber mission and briefing, and see the ongoing restoration of the World War II B-17 Flying Fortress “City of Savannah” inside the Museum’s Combat Gallery. The National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force is an experience not to be missed while visiting Savannah!

We are pleased to be able to offer group tours of the National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force. These tours can be self-guided or guided by our incredible Museum Docents. If you choose for your group to tour self-guided (on your own), you will want to plan on a minimum of two hours. Guided tours are two hours in length. If you have limited time, just let us know and we will tailor a shorter tour for your needs.

The National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force is home to a traditional English Pub. You can enjoy lunch there, Monday thru Friday from 11 am to 2 pm, with food prepared by our in-house restaurant, Miss Sophie’s Marketplace.

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Old Fort Jackson

Old Fort Jackson is a must-see National Historic Landmark offering daily cannon firings and exciting interactive programs for adults, kids and families! Only minutes away from historic downtown Savannah, you can experience unique views of Savannah’s riverfront and walk on the grounds of one of the oldest brick fortifications on the East Coast.

History

This fortification is located on the Savannah River, just 3 miles east of the city. It was constructed in 1808 as part of President Thomas Jefferson’s Second System coastal defense initiative and named after Revolutionary War patriot James Jackson. This brick fort was constructed over an old earthen battery from the Revolutionary War which had been called “Mud Fort.” Soldiers were stationed at Fort James Jackson to guard Savannah during the War of 1812. Following the War of 1812, two periods of construction continued expansion of the fort from the 1840s-1850s, prior to the outbreak of the American Civil War.

Local Confederate militia units occupied the fort at the start of the Civil War in 1861. In 1862, it became the headquarters for Savannah’s river defenses after the fall of Fort Pulaski. In 1864 the Confederate troops quickly evacuated Fort Jackson just prior to the arrival of federal troops under the leadership of General William Tecumesh Sherman after his infamous “March to the Sea,” leaving Fort Jackson under control of federal troops. The last American soldiers to be stationed at Fort Jackson were members of the 55th Massachusetts, an African- American unit of the Federal Army.

The War Department abandoned the fort in 1905 and the state of Georgia reopened it in 1965 as a maritime museum. After the state decided to close the museum in 1975, the newly formed nonprofit Coastal Heritage Society approached the State in 1976 asking permission to re-open and operate the site, which was granted. The historic site was now referred to as Old Fort Jackson. In 1978, Fort Jackson and CHS came under the leadership of Scott W. Smith. Operation continued to grow with modest success as did development of educational programming for regular guests and student field trips.

Currently, Old Fort Jackson has a successful model of independent operation and a solid reputation of delivering high-quality, engaging educational programming for booked groups. This program offering has been expanded to regular operation for daily museum guests and includes cannon, musket firings and other interactive & hands-on activities.

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Owens-Thomas House & Slave Quarters

Built as a beautiful Regency style mansion in 1819, the Owens-Thomas House, along with its adjacent gardens, carriage house, and slave quarters, allows visitors to explore the complicated relationships between the most and least powerful people in the city of Savannah in the early 19th century.

History of the Richardson-Owens-Thomas House

In November 1816, work began on the new home of banker, shipping merchant, and slave trader Richard Richardson and his wife, Frances. The home was designed by English architect (and relative to Richardson by marriage) William Jay, but was constructed by builder John Retan and the team of free and enslaved men in his charge. The site also included a two-sided privy and a building located on the east end of the lot, which was divided into a carriage house and slave quarters.

The Richardsons moved into the home with their six children and nine enslaved men, women, and children in January 1819. Unfortunately for the Richardsons, the next three years saw steady decreases in their prosperity, including the financial Panic of 1819, a yellow fever epidemic, a fire that destroyed half the city, and the death of Frances and two of the children. By 1822, Richardson decided to sell the house and move to Louisiana, where he had family and business interests. He had been shipping enslaved people, mostly children, from Savannah to New Orleans for years.

By 1824, the Bank of the United States owned the house, which they leased to Mary Maxwell as a boarding house. The Marquis de Lafayette was a guest of Mrs. Maxwell when he visited Savannah in March 1825 as part of his whirlwind tour of the United States for the 50th anniversary of the American Revolution.

In 1830, George Welshman Owens, then mayor of Savannah, purchased the property at auction for $10,000. Owens, who was also a lawyer, planter, and politician, moved in with his wife, Sarah, and their six children in 1833. Over the years, Owens kept nine to 15 enslaved people on the property and held almost 400 men, women, and children in bondage on his plantations.

The last Owens descendant to live in the home was George Owens’ granddaughter, Margaret Gray Thomas. When Thomas passed away in 1951 with no direct heirs, she willed the house to the Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences to be run as a house museum in honor of her grandfather, George Owens, and her father, Dr. James Gray Thomas. The site opened to the public in 1954.

Carriage House

Orientation Gallery

The south half of this building originally housed horses and carriages on the first floor with a hay loft on the floor above. Beginning in;November 2018, the first level of this building will house our Orientation Gallery. Exhibits in this space help put the story of the site into the larger context of local, regional, and national history. The site of the original hay loft now houses The Loft, a workspace for Telfair’s historical interpreters to study primary documents, examine archaeological artifacts, and research our sites’ history.

Slave Quarters

The north half of the building contains the original slave quarters for the site. This two-story structure was composed of three rooms on each level. Nine to 15 enslaved people, about half of whom were children, lived and worked on the site at any given time between 1819 and the end of the Civil War. Once the war ended, the space became servants’ quarters, housing many of the same people.

Now these these wonderfully preserved spaces offer new interactive exhibits to help visitors understand the day-to-day lives of the enslaved people who lived and worked in the space, as well as the most unique architectural feature of the house, the indoor plumbing.

Holiday Closures:

  • New Year’s Day
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
  • St. Patrick Day Observance
  • Easter
  • Thanksgiving Day
  • Christmas Eve, open 10am-3pm
  • Christmas Day
  • New Years Eve Day, open 10am to 3pm

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Pinpoint Heritage Museum

Pin Point Heritage Museum is located in the former A.S. Varn & Son Oyster and Crab Factory. The community was founded in 1896 by freed slaves after the Civil War. The former factory has been transformed into an educational center for visitors to authentically learn about the Gullah/Geechee culture directly from residents who grew up in the small, close-knit community. Guests can discover these unique lifeways, from daily life to religion, language and food.

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Pounce Cat Cafe

Children under the age of 12 are not allowed. If your group has 8 or more people please call ahead.

What you receive: 1 hour at the Cat Cafe along with one non-alcoholic beverage per person

Pounce Cat Cafe is a place where you can come to enjoy freshly brewed coffee or tea, sip on wine or craft beer, snack on delicious pastries, and cuddle with adorable (and adoptable!) cats. We’ve teamed up with our local shelter, Charleston Animal Society, to provide our cats, so if at the end of your visit you’ve fallen in love with your new feline friend, you can take them home with you!

Visits to the cafe include 1 hour in the cat lounge along with one non-alcoholic beverage per person while you hang out with the kitties. Alcoholic beverages can be purchased for an additional fee. Fresh, local pastries are also available for purchase at the cafe if you would like a snack. Additional time can be purchased at the cafe if the cat lounge is not fully booked for the next hour.

AGE RESTRICTIONS: The minimum age for visiting Pounce Cat Cafe is 12 years old. A parent or guardian will need to sign a minor waiver for anyone visiting the cafe between the ages of 12 and 17.

MAXIMUM GROUP SIZE: Parties larger than 8 people are required to reserve the space as a private event. Not only can large groups be loud and distressing for our cats, they can also be disturbing for other guests who are visiting the cafe during the same hour.

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Prohibition Museum

Located in Savannah’s popular City Market, the American Prohibition Museum is the first and only museum in the United States dedicated to the history of Prohibition. Highlighting an era of gangsters, rum runners, and flappers, this Savannah museum brings the roaring twenties to life with over 20 intoxicating exhibits and an authentic speakeasy. Featuring 21st century technology and immersive displays, this Savannah museum takes guests on a journey through the past to the early 1900s when anti-alcohol rallies swept the nation and the struggle with alcohol was brought to light.

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Riverboat Narrated Sightseeing Cruise

IMPORTANT: Be aware that this tour normally operates 1 to 2x per day. Advance reservations are not required. They do not allow upgrades to your ticket to the dinner or sightseeing cruise.

During this 1.5 hour cruise you can experience the river that was the lifeblood of Savannah! Hear the Captain’s intriguing tales and historic facts about this modern port and the ships that visit from all over the world. Then make your way down river to Old Fort Jackson, home of one of the largest and oldest original artillery pieces in the country! Take advantage of the great photo opportunities of Savannah’s historic riverfront and skyline. Snacks and beverages are available on board at our Riverboat Snack Shop.

 

Scheduled Tour Times

Boarding from 12:00 to 12:30 p.m., Sailing at 1:00 p.m., Returning at 2:30 p.m. Every Saturday & Sunday in December & January Every Wednesday through Sunday in February Daily from March through November PLUS December 26-31

Boarding from 2:30 to 3:00 p.m., Sailing at 3:30 p.m., Returning at 5:00 p.m. Saturday only in February, March & November Daily from April through October

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Savannah Carriage Tours

Due to hot weather concerns, it’s best to schedule your tour before 11 am in the summer. Tour can be cancelled if over 90 degrees.

Our Pubic History Tours cover approximately 8 of Savannah’s beautiful squares and last 45-50 minutes. Sit back, relax and enjoy the narration of Savannah’s rich history while your horse clip-clops past unique landmarks and historic homes.

Tours departs in front of the Hyatt Regency Hotel.

They monitor the temperature outdoors as well as the horses internal temperatures to ensure that our horses never work in extreme conditions! The horses are hosed down regularly once outdoor temps reach 85. They are also offered water before, during and after each tour.

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Savannah Haunted Pub Crawl

Tour Details:

  • Duration: 2 hours.
  • Alcohol friendly…of course.
  • Ages 21+ only.
  • This is a walking tour.
  • Tour meets and departs at the entrance of Churchills Pub

What You Will Experience:

  • Conde Naste and others agree that this is the best Pub Crawl in Savannah.
  • Explore Savannah’s most historic and haunted bars and pubs. You will hear the ghost stories of these haunted locations while standing where the events happened.
  • Perfect for date nights or meeting other people out for fun.
  • Take advantage of Savannah’s open carry laws. Oh, you did not know? You can carry your alcoholic beverage on the streets, making a pub crawl truly… interesting.
  • This tour is the most popular haunted pub crawl in Savannah.

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Savannah History Museum

Savannah History Museum is located in the former historic Central of Georgia Railroad’s passenger station. The museum walks guests through the city’s history from 1733, spanning the American Revolution and Civil War, all the way to modern day Savannah. Many exhibits highlight Savannah’s musical, cultural and artistic contributions including the famous bench from the movie Forrest Gump. Located just across the street is Battlefield Memorial Park, which presents visitors with a free memorial to those who fought in the 1779 Battle of Savannah, second bloodiest battle of the American Revolution. This park marks the exact location where approximately 800 troops died or were wounded.

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Savannah Stroll History Walking Tour

Hear the story of Savannah’s rich cultural heritage from it’s founding to present day.

Tour Highlights:

  • Learn the fascinating history of Savannah
  • See the history and culture
  • Hear about the best shopping and dining
  • Get an overview of this beautiful city
  • Tours at 10 am and 1 pm daily.
  • Tours depart from Warren Square.

The Savannah Stroll is the best way to get acquainted with this fair city, and a wonderful introduction that will have you strolling the streets like a native.

If you’re only in Savannah for one day, or need a tour that gets you oriented to the major streets and squares of our fair city, then The Savannah Stroll is for you.

A great 90 minute introduction to the fascinating history of Savannah. This tour is the best way to see the history and culture of Savannah, from ancient times to the present. You’ll walk the streets with an experienced, licensed guide who’ll answer your questions and go at the only suitable pace for this city…WALKING.

The Savannah Stroll…where else can you learn about history, get recommendations for shopping and dining, and spend the day outside in the fresh air. Topics covered on this tour merely scratch the surface of city’s rich history, and are designed to give you an overview of the city, her history, and the people that have made Savannah a destination for travellers since its founding day.

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Savannah Theatre Show Admission

Notice: This attraction does not have shows daily. Visit their website to see if there’s a show the days you’d like to visit Savannah

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The Savannah Theatre, first opened in 1818 and is located on Chippewa Square in Savannah, Georgia, is one of the United States’ oldest continually-operating theatres. The structure has been both a live performance venue and a movie theater. Since 2002, the theatre has hosted regular performances of a variety of shows, primarily music revues.
 
History
The Savannah Theatre opened its doors December 4, 1818 with a performance of “The Soldier’s Daughter”. The original structure was designed by British architect William Jay, whose other notable works include the Telfair Mansion and the Owens-Thomas House, both located in Savannah. During the 1850s and 1860s, it was sometimes known as the Athenaeum. On March 21, 1861, Alexander H. Stephens delivered the Cornerstone Speech at the theatre.
 
Notable players
Over the past two centuries, the Savannah Theatre has showcased an array of talented performers, including Fanny Davenport, E. H. Sothern, Julia Marlowe, Otis Skinner, Oscar Wilde, Sarah Bernhardt, W. C. Fields, Tyrone Power, and Lillian Russell. Edwin Booth played several engagements at the Theatre in February 1876, with Shakespearean roles including Hamlet, Iago, and King Lear. It is unknown as to whether or not Edwin’s younger brother John Wilkes Booth ever performed at the Savannah Theatre.
 
In 1851, the New York Dramatic Company leased the Theatre briefly. Among the players was Joseph Jefferson, whose most well-known role was that of Washington Irving’s “Rip Van Winkle”. However the company’s stand failed to succeed, as their “lineup of standard hits failed to tempt Savannah audiences.”
 
One of the more memorable performances in the Theatre’s history came in November 1911, when baseball great Ty Cobb appeared in The College Widow.

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Sixth Sense Ghost Walking Tour

This original and time established classic, the Sixth Sense Savannah Ghosts Tour, is for both the novice and the aficionado seeking great historical narrative and hair-raising paranormal intrigue! Previous to 2002, no ghost storytelling occurred in this central Historic District neighborhood. That all changed when this tour unveiled the haunted history, garnering stories from many friends and neighbors residing there to create the best haunted walking tour of Savannah.

In fact, both Scariest Places On Earth (Linda Blair) & Ghost Hunters episodes were filmed in the neighborhood because of our investigations! That’s the personal nature of what this tour offers guests that will take you up-close with first-hand encounters of disembodied spirits, Ouija board sessions gone awry, poltergeists in plethora, shadow people, warnings from the beyond, and if you are especially after the insiders scoop on Midnight In The Garden of Good and Evil, this is as close to the dark details that you can get while in Savannah! If you want the signature ghost tour of Savannah, this is it!

Highlights of our Sixth Sense Savannah Ghost Tour:

  • Tour Duration: 2 hours
  • A true neighborhood haunted tour
  • The Espy House: Gangsters & ghosts
  • The Mercer House: A killer house
  • Dr. Corson Mansion: X-rays & exorcism
  • Old Candler Hospital / Morgue Tunnels
  • Hamilton-Turner Inn: Haunted hospitality
  • Calhoun Square: A lost cemetery found

(*) This list represents a partial picture of this tour, but some sites may not be covered due to guide prerogatives, other tour crowds or legal time restrictions on certain sites per Savannah laws.

Photography: Permitted, but please do not use your flash at night and NO video recording.

Accessibility: All sidewalks and parks have handicap access.

Restrooms: No restrooms on this particular ghost tour.

Alcohol: The City of Savannah does have an open container ordinance north of Jones Street; however, unruly patrons may be asked to leave without a refund.

Smoking: Savannah City Ordinance does NOT permit smoking on tours.

Pets: Service animals only please.

Location: Click here for directions. The CORNER of Abercorn and Jones Street. We use the landmark, Clarys Cafe (404 Abercorn St., Savannah 31401) for GPS purposes only. Clarys has a sign stating no tours at their location. We are at the CORNER of ABERCORN and JONES ST. and your guide will meet you there. Please use street parking ONLY – Do not park in Clarys parking lot. Violators will be towed.

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Sunset Dolphin Eco Boat Tour

The only thing that could make a day spent in Savannah better is to finish it off on the water with a breathtaking sunset surrounded by the natural beauty of the Lowcountry waterways!

Come join the captain and crew aboard the River Explorer as they depart River Street in search of the local Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins! On this sunset dolphin tour, you will learn the history of Savannah and its surrounding waterways by your captain and first mate. This tour will cover all aspects of our Lowcountry ecosystem and will conclude with a picturesque sunset view of Savannah as we make our way up the river to port. This sunset dolphin tour is fun for all ages.

Highlights:

  • Tour duration: 2 hours.
  • Trip is fully narrated by the captain and first mate.
  • Sightings of dolphins, birds, marine life, and the sunset.
  • Sights of containerships headed to the Port of Savannah.
  • Restrooms aboard.
  • Drinks and snacks available for purchase including beer and wine.

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Telfair Academy

The Telfair Academy is just short walk away from the Jepson Center, but that short distance covers nearly 200 years of history. The stately two-story mansion, designed by William Jay in the Neoclassical Regency style and built in 1819, is just three historic squares away from Jay’s other masterpiece, the Owens-Thomas House. The Telfair Academy contains three nineteenth-century period rooms and houses nineteenth- and twentieth-century American and European art from the museum’s permanent collection including paintings, works on paper, sculpture, and decorative arts.

Holiday Closures:

  • New Year’s Day
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
  • St. Patrick Day Observance
  • Easter
  • Thanksgiving Day
  • Christmas Eve, open 10am-3pm
  • Christmas Day
  • New Years Eve Day, open 10am to 3pm

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Yes Queen! Drag Queen Pub Crawl

This is a one of a kind Drag Pub Crawl! Are you ready? Yes, Queen! Tour includes a signature cocktail and you get to jump the lines to all of the bars. Experience the fabulous side of life on this unique and outrageously fun drag queen guided pub crawl. Visit the best nightlife scenes in Savannah, enjoy dancing and sing-a-longs, and spend the night in the company of a world-class drag queen.​

More Info

  • Tour begins at El Rocko Lounge. Come early to grab a signature cocktail!
  • Tour duration: 2 hours
  • Rain or Shine, the show must go on! We guide this pub crawl no matter the weather.
  • What to Bring: Have your I.D. handy! We only allow guests 21 or older.
  • All reservations are final. You will not be able to reschedule or cancel your tour.

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Pass purchases can be refunded (minus 3% credit card processing fees) if requested within thirty-days of purchase date (for unused passes). Optional Trip Insurance can be purchased for a nominal fee at checkout which extends the refund period up to one-year from purchase date. Conditions apply. View full refund policy by clicking button below.