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Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Sightseeing in Savannah, Georgia on Old Town Trolley Tours






Eric picked up this flier for
Old Town Trolley Tours
earlier this month at the
Georgia Visitors Center
in Plains.

The flier included a
discount coupon.






This is our second visit to Savannah and we wanted a tour of the historic district to have a greater understanding of city's past.






There are 16 spots around
Savannah where Eric & I
hop on & off the trolley.






City Market covers
four city blocks.






A memorial marks the site of
in Savannah.

Jews were originally banned from the Georgia Colony.  When 42 Jews, including Dr. Samuel Nunes, arrived in 1733, they were welcomed by General James E. Oglethorpe.  Dr. Nunes treated Yellow Fever patients in the colony.








A distinctive cast iron "Dolphin" 
downspout on the Dr. James
Johnson Waring house,
built in 1831.








outside the Six Pence Pub.










We pass grand homes.








Union General William Tecumseh Sherman and his army started marching across Georgia in September, 1864, spreading fear among the civilian population.  Troops under his command raided farms; stole food and farm animals and burned what they could not carry.

While planning a siege of Savannah, Confederate troops withdrew and the city surrendered, Mr. Charles T. Green offered the use  his home as the General's headquarters. Besides preserving his own home, Mr. Green's gracious gesture helped save Savannah from destruction.









This quiet, shaded spot is
Savannah's dueling grounds.







Conveniently located next to







Interesting factoids from the tour:
General Sherman's Cavalry was quartered in the cemetery because it was fenced in.  The horses knocked down head stones, which have been lined up against the fence.  
Union soldiers, many of them in their teens, grew bored with their quarters while in the city.  They changed birth and death dates on some of the headstones.  In one case, an altered headstone shows the husband's death date was before his wife was born.

Savannah's history can be seen in its churches.








 the Baptist congregation
emigres in the late 1700s.















The Pirates' House is the
oldest surviving structure
in Savannah.






More fun factoids from the Old Town Trolley Tours:
The charter for the Georgia Colony forbade "strong spirits."  Wine and beer were legal and distilled alcohol was illegal.  Pirates tunneled from this building to the port an smuggled rum and other liquors into their headquarters.
Visitors who drank too much were in for a cruel fate...  They woke up on strange ships and were pressed into service for the length of the cruise.  The best these shanghaied men could hope for was to jump ship and make their way home, possibly from a strange country, with no money and no friends to rely on for help.





Ballast Stones from ships
were used to build this
retaining wall, staircase, for
 street paving & building
construction in the





Savannah Riverrfront fun factoids:
The Savannah River was originally 12 feet deep in colonial times.  It has been dredged and re-dredged over the years, accommodating larger ships, over 100 feet tall.
The Port of Savannah is a major port on the east coast.





Emmet Park, located above
the Riverfront has a Celtic
Cross to honor Savannah's
Irish residents.







Savannah hosts a huge Saint Patrick's Celebration every year.





the site of the City Exchange.

A local philanthropist funded
the 23 Carat gilt dome that
was installed in 1987.





Established in 1733, Savannah long history, there are stories of hauntings....  Travel Channel has an article detailing the city's spooky spots.






Twenty-two of Savannah's
original twenty-four Squares
have survived the city's
282 year history.











We see the fountain in Forsyth
Park in the distance.







Riding the Old Town Trolley around Savannah has helped Eric and me plan our day.  It's time to "hop off" and start walking....

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