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The Myrick Family home at 2807 Abercorn Street in Ardsley Park, Savannah, GA built by Shelby and his mother Marie in 1914. With the proceeds she had received from the sale of the Americus Times-Recorder, Louis and Shelby began construction of a very grand home in the new Ardsley Park neighborhood of the city. At the time, only one other home ...
This is a list of historic houses and buildings in Savannah, Georgia, that have their own articles or are on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). Houses Green–Meldrim House. Owens–Thomas House (NRHP and National Landmark) Isaiah Davenport House (NRHP) Oliver Sturges House (NHRP) William Scarbrough House (NRHP and National Landmark)
The Nathanael Greene Monument is a public monument in Savannah, Georgia, United States.Located in Johnson Square, the monument was designed by William Strickland and honors Nathanael Greene, a general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War.
Hardy Strickland (November 24, 1818 – January 24, 1884) was a Confederate politician. He was born in Jackson County , Georgia , and served in the state legislature from 1847 to 1858. He served in the Confederate Army and represented the state in the First Confederate Congress .
Bonaventure Plantation was a plantation founded in colonial Savannah, Province of Georgia, on land now occupied by Greenwich and Bonaventure cemeteries. The site was 600 acres (2.4 km 2), including a plantation house and private cemetery, located on the Wilmington River, about 3.5 miles (6 kilometres) east of the Savannah colony.
R. F. Strickland Company is a historic general store business in Concord, Georgia. The company's records from 1887 to 1914 are held by Emory University . [ 2 ] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 26, 1982.
The Mordecai Sheftall Cemetery is a Jewish cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.It is one of the oldest Jewish cemeteries in America. [1] Located at the end of Coyle Street (a small turnoff of Cohen Street) in the Kayton/Frazier area of West Savannah, it is sometimes referred to as the Old Jewish Burial Ground, the Jewish Cemetery Memorial, [2] the Jewish Community Cemetery or the Sheftall Cemetery.
Mills Bee Lane Jr. [1] (January 12, 1912 – May 7, 1989) was an American banker in Atlanta, Georgia. He was born in Savannah, Georgia, and after graduating from Yale University in 1934 took a job as a clerk at a Citizens & Southern National Bank (C&S) branch in Valdosta, Georgia. The bank had been founded by Lane's father in 1906 and when the ...