2016 Savannah Preservation Festival Guidebook

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Presented by

2016

SAVANNAH PRESERVATION F E S T I V A L


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Table of

Contents

W elcom e S ponsor s a n d P atrons S chedule of E v e n ts P r es ervati on A wa r ds L uncheon R e - ribbon C u t tin g T he L ou i se L au r e tti L ectu re S erie s :

2 4 5 7 9 10

W ine T asti n g

a n d H om e T ou r Historic Warren and Washington Wards

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B lock P a r ty : B r o u ghton S treet P e nnie s f or P r e se r vation P oster C onte st B ox C it y A bout H i stor i c S avannah F oundation HSF B oa r d of T r u stee s HSF S taf f

18 20 20 24 26 27

Women and the Future of Preservation

OUR 2016 FESTIVAL COVER This year’s cover artwork was created by Soniya Bhagat. Last May, Bhagat was honored as the high school winner of the Pennies for Preservation Poster Contest under the direction of Art teacher Steve Shetski at Savannah Arts Academy. Bhagat’s artwork, which highlights a historic building on Broughton Street, was selected as the featured image for the 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival and has been promoted locally and regionally.

The 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival is organized by: Historic Savannah Foundation 321 E. York Street Savannah, GA 31401 912.233.7787 myHSF.org 1


HISTORIC SAVANNAH FOUNDATION WELCOMES YOU TO THE

We all must reinvent ourselves from time to time. It’s not that we need to start over so much as we need to take stock and make adjustments. That’s what HSF did five years ago when we hatched the idea of the Savannah Preservation Festival. This town’s calendar is chock full of festivals, but noticeably absent was one on Savannah’s raison d’être…preservation. So HSF took stock and adjusted. We let go of a once favorite but clearly waning event (Garden Expo), and we focused attention on what we do best—historic preservation. Instead of making it an exclusive event, we made it inclusive. After all, what good is a festival if it’s just the same old faces? Behold, we now share a tightly packed weekend featuring an array of events ranging from the Preservation Awards Luncheon and Wine Tasting & Home Tour, to a free lecture featuring officials from the National Park Service and one heckuva Block Party (also free and familyfriendly) to cap it off. May is Preservation Month and where better to celebrate it than right here in Savannah?! Thanks to generous sponsors and patrons (listed on page 4), HSF is able to offer a rich program that balances substance with good-old-fashioned fun. It’s easy to forget how all this good stuff happened in Savannah, so HSF is here to remind you that it took decades of hard work and thousands of volunteers who envisioned and labored to help make the Savannah we enjoy today. In recognition of them and the need for continued vigilance, we invite you to participate. Pres Fest, as we call it and want you to call it, grows each year. We’re proud of the schedule and urge you to get your tickets and attend all the events. After all, you’re included!

Daniel G. Carey President & CEO 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


Last Year Flashback to the fun

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Thank You!

Historic Savannah Foundation would like to extend sincere appreciation and deep gratitude to our corporate sponsors for their support of the 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival.

In Partnership with:

EVENT SPONSORS LASTING PROTECTION & PRESERVATION

Scott & Louise Lauretti Fund of The Savannah Community Foundation, Inc.

MEDIA SPONSORS

COMMUNITY PARTNER SAVANNAH DEVELOPMENT & RENEWAL AUTHORITY

And special thanks to our patrons!

Grand Patrons

Barbara and Charlie Cortese Rhonda and Dow Hoffman Hansen Architects LeeAnn and Jeff Kole Mr. and Mrs. Aaron M. Levy Mrs. John O. Paull Mr. and Mrs. W. Hurley Ryan, Jr. Charles C. Taylor and Samir Nikocevic

Patrons

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival

Chloe Fort


Schedule OF EVENTS Thursday, May 5th

Preservation Awards Luncheon 11:30AM – 1:00PM Location: Savannah Golf Club 1661 E. President St $45 per person Re-Ribbon Cutting 4:00PM Location: Columbia Square Free and open to the public The Louise Lauretti Lecture Series: Women and the Future of Preservation 6:00PM Location: SCAD Museum of Art 601 Turner Blvd. Free and open to the public. Reception to follow.

Friday, May 6th

Wine Tasting and Home Tour 6:00PM - 9:00PM Early Check-in begins at 5:30PM in Washington Square at Houston and East St. Julian Streets Location: Sites throughout Warren and Washington Wards $75 per person

Saturday, May 7th

The Block Party: Broughton Street 11:00AM - 3:00PM Location: 100 Block of West Broughton Street Free and open to the public Tickets available at myHSF.org and will be sold at all Festival events based on availability.

Attending an event? Use the hashtag #SPF2016 on your social media accounts to let everyone know that you were at the Savannah Preservation Festival! 5


HSF PA Ad.pdf 1 3/14/2016 2:15:56 PM

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KEIM was proud to partner with Landmark Preservation and Alchemy Restoration for the recent Telfair Academy exterior restoration. Lime + Mineral Silicate Finishes + Stains Historic Mix Stucco + Plaster Natural Stone Repair Mortars + Stains

KEIM www.KEIM.com 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


Preservation AWARDS LUNCHEON Thursday, May 5th 11:30AM – 1:00PM Savannah Golf Club 1661 President Street

S ponsored

by :

LASTING PROTECTION & PRESERVATION

For several decades, Historic Savannah Foundation has recognized the best in preservation through its annual Preservation Awards program. Those receiving awards are held up as models for others to admire and emulate, truly making this a celebration of outstanding rehabilitation, new design, craftsmanship and stewardship. The review process is extremely competitive. A jury of local experts in architecture, planning, design and related fields meet and scrutinize nominations. The jury seeks to honor projects that make a difference and represent a variety of interests throughout Savannah and Chatham County. Three primary criteria are applied: 1) quality and degree of difficulty; 2) impact on the community; and 3) the degree to which the project or effort is unusual or pioneering, or serves as an example that influences good preservation practices in others. In addition to a number of project winners, three other special awards will be given: the President’s Award, the Nichola Parker Coe Volunteer of the Year Award, and the Davenport Trophy. Recipients of the Davenport House Scholarships will also be acknowledged.

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THE ART OF PRESERVATION SCAD has restored nearly 70 buildings in Savannah, home to one of the largest National Historic Landmark Districts in the country. Students learn in this living laboratory celebrated for its excellence by the American Institute of Architects, the National Trust for Historic Preservation and countless others.

SCAD is proud to sponsor the HSF Preservation Festival. Join us at our lecture and panel discussion, “The Role of Women in the Future of Preservation,� with Kennedy Smith of CLUE Group at 6 p.m., Thursday, May 5, 2016, at the SCAD Museum of Art.

Learn more at scad.edu/hp

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


Re-ribbon Cutting Honoring the 50th Anniversary of Savannah’s National Historic Landmark District

Thursday, May 5th 4:00PM Columbia Square Free and open to the public 2016 marks the 50th anniversary of Savannah’s designation as a National Historic Landmark District. In 1966, the area comprising Oglethorpe’s Plan was recognized by the U.S. Department of the Interior because of its unique and well preserved city plan, and its historic building stock. This honor was made possible by the establishment of the National Historic Preservation Act, enacted the same year, which was prompted by the loss of thousands of historic buildings and sites in the suburban growth years following World War II, and the policies of highway construction and urban renewal in the 1950s and 60s. Join elected officials and representatives from the National Park Service, City of Savannah, Chatham County, Visit Savannah, MPC, SCAD, Savannah Technical College and HSF as we mark the 50th anniversary of the designation of Savannah’s National Historic Landmark District with a re-ribbon cutting and birthday cake.

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Opening Lecture The Louise Lauretti Lecture Series: Women and the Future of Preservation

Thursday, May 5th 6:00PM SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd. Free and open to the public. Reception to follow.

S ponsored

by :

Scott & Louise Lauretti Fund of The Savannah Community Foundation, Inc. and

Louise Lauretti loved Savannah, especially its history and architecture. She passed away just prior to taking a seat on HSF’s Board of Trustees, but her family wanted to honor her memory by sponsoring a lecture series. HSF uses this platform to focus on the key role women play in preservation—in Savannah and across the country. The Festival’s opening lecture features Kennedy Smith. One of the country’s foremost experts on commercial district revitalization, downtown economics, and independent business development, Kennedy focuses on creating dynamic retail development plans, cultivating locally owned businesses, creating effective business and property development incentives, finding new uses for historic buildings, and strengthening the organizational infrastructure needed to create vibrant town centers. She worked for the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s National Main Street Center for almost 20 years, serving as its director for more than a decade. During her tenure, the Main

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


OPENING LECTURE Street program became one of the most successful economic development models in the US, generating $18 billion in new investment and stimulating the development of 226,000 new jobs and 56,000 new businesses. Today, more than 2,000 towns and cities participate in the Main Street program. In 2004, Kennedy co-founded the Community Land Use and Economics Group (CLUE Group), a consulting firm that helps civic leaders develop innovative downtown economic development, historic preservation, and sustainability strategies. She currently serves as Principal of the CLUE Group.

K ennedy S mith

Following the keynote address, Kennedy Smith will be joined by Sherri Fields, Deputy Regional Director, Southeast Region for the National Park Service and SCAD graduate student, Ashley-Anne East, for a panel discussion on the role of women in the future of preservation. The panel—which includes Q&A with the audience—will be facilitated by Justin Gunther, Professor of Historic Preservation at SCAD. Please join us for a reception following the lecture.

ABOUT LOUISE LAURETTI Louise Vaughn Lauretti and her husband Scott decided to move their young family of four to Savannah in 2001. A southern California native, Louise also lived in Boston and New York City but Savannah was her chosen place to plant roots and raise her family.”. From the beginning, Louise had a love affair with the City’s sense of place—the people, their history, the culture and the historic architecture that laced it together. Louise’s unwavering generosity made more than just a mark in Savannah, she has given us her spirit. We intend for the Louise Lauretti Lecture Series to inspire you as she inspired us. 11


2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


Wine Tasting and HOME TOUR

Friday, May 6th S ponsored by : 6:00PM - 9:00PM Early Check-in begins at 5:30PM in Washington Square at Houston and East St. Julian Streets Location: Sites throughout Warren and Washington Wards Take advantage of this rare opportunity to tour some of Savannah’s finest private homes and HSF award-winning properties while enjoying light hors d’oeuvres paired with distinctive wines chosen by Nolan Wolf of In Vino Veritas. All sites will be within walking distance of Washington and Warren Squares. Early check-in will begin at 5:30PM. Upon check-in you will receive a map of the tour and overview of the selected wines. Don’t forget your wine glass, compliments of United Community Bank. The glass serves as your admission “ticket” into each of the homes on the tour. At 8:00PM we encourage you to join HSF in Washington Square to toast the 50th Anniversary of the designation of the National Historic Landmark District.

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The Setting

Excerpts from Savannah Square by Square by Michael Jordan & Mick McKay (©2015)

Warren Ward

Bounded by Habersham Street between East Bryan Street and East Congress, many of the houses on the north and the east sides of the square were built between 1790 and 1820, allowing visitors to imagine how the square looked in its first years of development. “Dating to 1791, Warren Square and Warren Ward were named for General Joseph Warren, a patriot killed in the Battle of Bunker Hill in 1775. This is a reminder of Savannah’s early connections to the city of Boston, Massachusetts. Savannah’s patriots seized gunpowder from Georgia’s Royal authorities and sent it to their compatriots in Boston, who in turn used it in the Battle of Bunker Hill. The relationship bore fruit for Savannah in 1864, when generous Bostonians sent food and other aid to help impoverished Savannahians shortly after Union Forces captured the war torn city.” Warren Ward is also home to the Jane Deveaux House, “…once home to a clandestine slave school. Devaux was a free person of color who gave instruction to black children in the years before the Emancipation Proclamation freed the slaves.“

Washington Ward “Washington Square and Washington Ward were named for our nation’s first president, George Washington, in January 1791- five months before his visit to Savannah in May of the same year. Not surprisingly the former president’s visit was one of the biggest events in the early history of a city just freed from British control. It’s fitting that the area where the square sits was also the scene of a great celebration following a public reading of the Declaration of Independence on August 10, 1776. Washington Ward is better known, however, as ground zero in Savannah’s first major infectious disease outbreak- the yellow fever epidemic of 1820, which killed 666 people.”

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


WINE TASTING & HOME TOUR

The Wine The wine for the 2016 Wine Tasting and Home Tour was selected by Nolan Wolf of In Vino Veritas; located at 102 East Liberty Street #109. As a former Air Force Officer turned wine and craft beer enthusiast, Wolf is excited to offer In Vino Veritas to the residents and visitors of Savannah! His personal goal for the establishment is to offer the highest quality products in a relaxed, casual atmosphere for the best prices possible. He hopes that you will join him and help grow In Vino Veritas to be the neighborhood destination for fine wines, craft beer and sparkling wine! N olan W olf

The Tour 535 B East Congress Street This building was built in 2014. It was specifically designed in a Georgian style to externally resemble the other buildings on Washington Square, which mainly date from the 1800s. It consists of three units. Although the main house has a central entrance, it is actually a duplex and contains two units that are each 1,500 sq. ft. These two units includes an open plan with the living room, dining room, and kitchen downstairs and two bedrooms with ensuite baths upstairs. The interior incorporates traditional finishes, with high ceilings, crown moulding and wide baseboards. The third unit is a 400 sq. ft. studio, located in the carriage house, which was also constructed at the same time as the rest of the property. It has a two-car garage downstairs and a studio apartment upstairs, the latter with a cathedral ceiling and windows opening north into the garden and south onto the lane. Internally it is decorated in a cottage-style with bead-board wainscoting and wood floors. 2015 HSF Preservation Award Winner. 15


533 East Congress Street The residence at 533 East Congress Street, designed by a prominent local architect, represents a compatible, yet modern, addition to Savannah’s National Historic Landmark District. Completed in 2014, the construction of this house on a tithing lot on Washington Square transformed a neglected corner lot into an anchor for the square and neighborhood. The interior is beautifully designed with maple-stained walnut floors and handsome finishes. The new construction of the property allowed the interior to be designed in a more open concept than traditional historic houses. This, combined with all of the doors and windows incorporated on the main level, allows for generous natural light in the living spaces and a great view of Washington Square. 2015 HSF Preservation Award Winner.

21 Houston Street This 1852 house was built for Simon Miuralt, a free man of color and descendant of Frenchman Louis Mirault, a tailor, who died in 1828 after fleeing to Savannah from Toussaint l’Overture’s revolution in St. Domigue. This 110 year old structure once occupied a site on Habersham Street just north of Jones Street and was moved to its current location in 1963 by antiques dealer Jim Williams. The home originally stood on a brick floor, but was set on new masonry garden level, effectively reconfiguring the home as a duplex with a 650 sq.ft. apartment on the ground level and the upper floor and finished attic becoming the primary apartment. In 2015 the current owners undertook a careful renovation of the home, conscientiously preserving most of Williams’ slate floor on the ground floor, the rustic fireplace he created in what is now the dining room, and retaining most of the brick garden wall, wall fountain, and paving in the courtyard. All the new interior doors were modeled on an existing historic paneled door in the house that Williams may have brought from another location. 2016 HSF Preservation Award Winner. 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


WINE TASTING & HOME TOUR

418 East Bryan Street This c.1898 detached home may be considered a version of folk Victorian but with the symmetrical front façade of much earlier styles. Savannah, in its post war years, continued to maintain previously established patterns of building while incorporating the decorative motifs of popular architectural styles. The carriage house, built in 2006, has one large open area which includes the living room, bedroom, and kitchen. The wooden floors are 89 years old and were obtained from an abandoned warehouse. The vaulted wooden ceiling and dark stained beams reflect current trends. Outside, the courtyard’s fountain is from an abandoned hotel and the potted urns are full of annuals and perennials. The look of the courtyard is very reminiscent of New Orleans with its double covered porches and carriage house/garage.

THANK YOU!

HSF would like to thank each of our homeowners for sharing their homes with our guests. Also, we would like to recognize and thank each caterer who contributed to this unique event.

Bar • Food | Cha Bella | The Collins Quarter

Special Thanks

Jeanne Brooks and the Washington and Warren Ward Neighbors, and Nolan Wolf

1995-2015 - Celebrating 20 Years of Service in the Savannah Area Robert A. Ciucevich 22 West Bryan Street, #139 Savannah, Georgia 31401 (912) 547-1940 17


Block Party Broughton Street presented by

S ponsored

by :

Saturday, May 7th 11:00AM - 3:00PM 100 Block of West Broughton Street Free and open to the public. Please join HSF for this family friendly event as we showcase preservation in progress and the economic development of Broughton Street. 2016 marks a year of many noteworthy anniversaries for historic preservation and Savannah. The National Park Service Centennial, the 50th anniversary of the National Historic Preservation Actwhich allows Historic Savannah Foundation to do much of its work—and especially the 50th anniversary of Savannah’s designation as a National Historic Landmark District. Without these significant pieces of legislation and recognition, our Landmark District would look very different from what we see today. Much has happened in those 50 years, and what better place to see it than on dynamic and vibrant Broughton Street. Named for Thomas Broughton of South Carolina, Broughton Street began its life as a residential street during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Its transformation began in the 1860’s as Savannah took advantage of commerce brought in by the ports. Residences along the thoroughfare were slowly replaced by grocers, department stores, tailors and other business, making Broughton a hub of commerce. 1929 began a trend of economic decline and by the 1950’s, business sought to compete with the booming malls by applying faux facades and new signage. Today we see continued development with the transformation of over 30 buildings. Broughton Street’s continuous development economically impacts our city greatly, providing jobs and drawing tourists and residents to enjoy the eclectic shops. The 100 Block of West Broughton has seen recent and significant transformation and serves as the backdrop to this year’s Block Party.

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


Progress Preservation

in

courtesy of the Chatham County- Savannah Metropolitan Planning Commission

before

110 W. BROUGHTON

after

Felder & Associates

before

207 W. BROUGHTON

proposed design 19


2016 Pennies for Preservation Poster Contest

The 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival Poster Contest features the artwork of students in Savannah and Chatham County, who have created posters which portray the festival theme: “This Place Matters.” Contestants were encouraged to submit creative and original posters with vibrant images celebrating our community’s strong sense of place. Block Party attendees are asked to participate in this year’s contest by voting for their favorite posters with pennies! The winners and first runners-up for each category will receive certificates of accomplishment as well as cash prizes.

Box City Display Take advantage of this chance to see some of the cool things HSF is doing through our Hands on History Program with Savannah Chatham County Public Schools, by checking out the Box City Projects display. Box City is a nationally recognized urban planning activity, which was created to help develop an understanding of the built environment and its implications for students. In the Box City project, students are given boxes to alter and decorate to represent a particular type of building: residential, industrial, commercial or public. A city map is created and students are tasked with thoughtfully incorporating their buildings into the city plan, while keeping zoning, scale and design in mind. The end result is a comprehensive box city, planned by the students themselves through their newfound knowledge in architecture, the planning process, deadlines and group decisionmaking.

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


BLOCK PARTY

D i s p l ay s

Join the FUN!

The Development of Broughton Street Through the Years Beyond Tourism: The Economics of Historic Preservation in Savannah

P r e s e rvat i o n T r a d e D e m o n s t r at i o n s Joinery Timber-framing Blacksmithing Laser Scanning

Activities

Preservation Bingo Savannah Jenga Architectural Scavenger Hunt Trivia Childrens’ activities

THANK YOU!

HSF would like to thank the residents and businesses of the 100 block of West Broughton Street. We would also like to recognize organizations and vendors who made the event possible.

DPR Construction 13th Colony Committee Floor & DĂŠcor Guerry Lumber Moon River Brewing Co. Savannah Technical College

Savannah College of Art and Design Savannah Chatham County Public School System Savannah Development & Renewal Authority Missionary Blues 21


SIX PENCE PUB

“Savannah’s Original Authentic British Pub” In the Heart of the Historic District

Non-Smoking · Full Menu Served Until Midnight

245 Bull Street · Savannah, GA (Across from The DeSoto Hilton)

912-233-3156

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


SHIPS OF THE SEA MARITIME MUSEUM

WILLIAM SCARBROUGH HOUSE AND GARDENS

Commemorating Savannah’s Illustrious Maritime History 41 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Savannah, Georgia Tuesday-Sunday 10-5. Gardens open free to the public 7 days a week. www.shipsofthesea.org (photograph by Attic Fire)

We are proud to provide audit and tax services to Historic Savannah Foundation Christopher H. Holland, CPA, CFP S. Stewart Bromley, CPA, CFP Ronnie A. Barnhill, Jr., CPA Shannon L. Brett, CPA, CFE

2 East Bryan Street, 14th Floor Savannah, Georgia 31401

(912)235-3410 www.hhbcpa.com 23


About

Historic Savannah Foundation Historic Savannah Foundation (HSF) is a non-profit historic preservation organization sustained by dedicated supporters. HSF’s mission is to preserve and protect Savannah’s heritage through advocacy, education and community involvement. HSF was originally established in 1955 in order to save the 1820 Isaiah Davenport House from demolition. Seven visionary Savannah women - Katherine Judkins Clark, Elinor Adler Dillard, Anna Colquitt Hunter, Lucy Barrow McIntire, Dorothy Ripley Roebling, Nola McEvoy Roos and Jane Adair Wright – joined forces to raise $22,500 to purchase the Davenport House, which opened to the public as a museum in March of 1963. From this initial project, Historic Savannah Foundation launched the Revolving Fund which has since saved more than 360 historic buildings, not just in the Landmark District but throughout several of Savannah’s National Register districts. The organization has earned national acclaim for its creative, strategic approach to preservation. HSF has grown into one of the most respected local preservation organizations in the country, emphasizing not only the protection of individual historic buildings but also the revitalization of blighted neighborhoods. Instead of being a reactive crisis-oriented organization, HSF became a credible civic-minded organization that works proactively to save the city’s heritage. HSF proves the cultural, social and economic benefits of preservation as good public policy by demonstrating that preservation and progress go hand-in-hand. For more information about HSF, please visit myHSF.org.

2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


In 1955 seven women started a movement that went on to save a city.

And it started right here!

OPEN DAILY 324 E. State Street Savannah, GA 31401

www.DavenportHouseMuseum.org

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2016 HSF Board of Trustees Officers

Board of Trustees

Chair

Mr. Phillip Adams

Mr. Jeffrey S. Eley

Savannah State University

Mr. Russ Aldridge

Savannah College of Art and Design

DPR Construction

Vice Chair Mr. Brian Felder Felder and Associates, LLC

Mr. Josh Brooks Brooks Construction Group, LLC

Mr. William Daniel, Jr.

Secretary

Vaden Automotive Group

Ms. Sarah Lamar

Ms. Elizabeth DuBose

Hunter Maclean

Ossabaw Island Foundation

Mr. Austin Hill

Treasurer

Austin Hill Realty

Ms. Susan Clifford

Mrs. Rhonda Hoffman

Hancock Askew & Co., LLP

Landmark District Resident

Parliamentarian

Mr. Jeffrey Kole

Mr. Gregori S. Anderson

Kole Management Company

Mr. Robert Long

Chatham County Building Safety and Regulatory Services

Long, Alston & Bird, LLP (Atlanta)

HSF Past Chair

Mr. Patrick Monahan Community Volunteer

Ms. Kathleen Horne Bouhan Falligant

Mr. Gary Radke Professor emeritus at Syracuse University

Ms. Gaye Reese United Community Bank

Ex Officio Mrs. Melinda Allen

Downtown Neighborhood Association, President

Mrs. Megan Manly 13th Colony, Chair

Mrs. Cari Clark Phelps 2016 Gala, Chair

Ms. Debbie Webb

2016 Tour of Homes and Gardens, Chair

Mrs. Brooke Wilford

Davenport House Committee, Chair 2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


Mr. Ryan Arvay

HSF STAFF

Historic Properties Coordinator

Mr. Daniel G. Carey President & CEO

Ms. Frances C. Col贸n Special Events Coordinator

Ms. Jamie Credle Director, Davenport House Museum

Mr. Jeff Freeman Assistant Director, Davenport House Museum

Ms. Meghan Lowe Development Director

Ms. Chassidy Malloy Membership & Volunteer Coordinator

Ms. Danielle Meunier Preservation & Education Coordinator

Mrs. Kimberly Newbold Administrative Assistant

Our Volunteers

Thank you! HSF would like to thank its loyal Blue Ribbon Volunteers for their outstanding support. We appreciate the time and energy you invest to ensure the success of each of our events.

321 East York Street Savannah, GA 31401 912.233.7787 myHSF.org Davenport House Museum 324 East York Street Savannah, GA 31401 912.236.8097 DavenportHouseMuseum.org 27


2016 Savannah Preservation Festival


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