Java Games: Flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search.

Greater Savannah Tours

Students will match sites to their description.

AB
Ralph Mark GilbertMuseum, African American heritage, named after a clergyman who pioneered Savannah's civil rights movement
Ships of the SeaThe first steamship, Savannah, to cross the Atlantic Ocean, is the setting for a colorful exhibition of ship models
Factor's WalkNoted for bridges and cobblestones
City MarketLocated at Jefferson and West St. Julian Streets
FranklinA square at the western end of City Market
First African BaptistFounded by Rev. George Liele, the oldest black Baptist church in North America
Tel fairA square named for early Savannahians who were influential in business, politics, and philantropy
Trinity United MethodistThe mother Church of Savannah Methodism
OrleansThe square that contains the Savannah Civic Center
PulaskiThe square that honors a Polish who was mortally wounded in the siege of Savannah during the American Revolution
ForsythThe square that contains a Confederate monument known for the Fragrant Garden for the blind
MontereyThe square that honors Casimir Pulaski and is across from the Mercer House
MadisonThe square that is named after a US President and honors Sgt. William Jasper
Green-MeldrimThe parish house of St. John's Episcopal Church and served as General William T. Sherman headquarters
ChippewaThe square that contains the statue of James Edward Oglethrope
Savannah TheatreBuilt by William Jay; opened in 1818 for actors
Juliette Gordon LowFounder of the Girl Scouts
WrightThe square named for Georgia's last colonial governor and marks the grave of Yamacraw Indian Chief Tomochichi
JohnsonThe first square that contains the grave of Nathaniel Greene, Revolutionary War general
Christ EpiscopalGeorgia's mother church
Cotton ExchangeThis building dates to 1886 and was a center of commerce
EmmetThe park that is named for an Irish patriot and contains the Harbor Light
ReynoldsThe square that honors John Wesley, the father of the Methodist Church
OglethropeThe square that honors Georgia's founder
The Owens -Thomas HouseThis house designed by William Jay that also includes the Urban Slave Quarters
LafayetteThe square that is named for an important French ally during the Revolutionary War
Andrew LowThe house that belongs to the father of the Girl Scouts' founder
CalhounThe square that is named for the South Carolina congressman and staunch defender of the Old South
DavenportThis house museum restored by the Historic Savannah Foundation as its first project
Second African BaptistOn the steps of this church, General Sherman read the Emancipation Proclamation
CrawfordThe square that includes a modern amenity: a basketball court
Beach InstituteEstablished by the Freedman's Bureau (circa 1837) to educate newly freed slaves
King-TisdellThis Victorian 1896 house, gingerbread ornamentation of the porch and dormers, is a museum highlighting contributions of African Americans
BonaventureProminent in "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil" is the final resting place of Conrad Aiken and Johnny Mercer
Laurel Grove-SouthDedicated in 1852 for the burial of free persons of color and slaves
Laurel Grove-NorthThe final resting place for Juliette Gordon Low
Old Fort JacksonThe oldest standing brick fort in Georgia was manned during the War of 1812 and served as a headquarter for Confederates
Savannah State UniversityEstablished in 1890 as the State's first public institution of higher learning for African Americans
BethesdaEstablished in 1740; George Whifield and James Habersham opened their doors to the orphaned children
Nicholsonboro BaptistThe church is the monument for a community established in 1868 where eighteen African Americans signed a mortgage for 200 acres of land

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