Abbreviation | HSF |
---|---|
Founded | 1955 |
Founders | •
Anna Colquitt Hunter • Katherine Judkins Clark • Elinor Adler Dillard • Lucy Barrow McIntire • Dorothy Ripley Roebling • Nola McEvoy Roos • Jane Adair Wright |
Type | Non-profit |
Focus | Preserving and protecting historic buildings |
Headquarters | 321 East York Street [1] |
Location |
|
Area served | Savannah, Georgia, U.S. |
Services | Preservation |
Key people | • Susan Adler (CEO and President)
[2] • Ryan Arvay (Director of Preservation and Historic Properties) [2] |
Website | https://www.myhsf.org/ |
Historic Savannah Foundation (HSF) is a preservation organization founded in 1955 and based in Savannah, Georgia, United States. [3]
In 1950, the four-story Wetter House on East Oglethorpe was demolished. [4] [5] This, combined with the razing of Savannah's popular City Market in Ellis Square, to be replaced by a parking garage, prompted a public outcry. [6] The following year, a funeral home was set to purchase the Isaiah Davenport House in Columbia Square and tear it down for a parking lot. [5] This sparked a movement to start a preservation process in the city. [5]
"What began as an effort to save one house quickly turned into an organized movement that went on to save an entire city." – Historic Savannah Foundation [5]
Local journalist, artist and activist Anna Colquitt Hunter (1892–1985) [7] formed a group with six of her friends to block the demolition of the house and formed the Historic Savannah Foundation. The group managed to raise the $22,500 needed to purchase the property themselves. [5]
The office of the foundation is in the southwest tything of the Columbia Square, at the Abraham Sheftall House, 321 East York Street. [1] It had formerly been at the Isaiah Davenport House at 324 East State Street. [8]
The Foundation bestows its highest honor, the Davenport Award, on select individuals. [9]
In 1977, the foundation published Historic Savannah: A Survey of Significant Buildings in the Historic and Victorian Districts of Savannah, Georgia.
Lee Adler, son of Elinor Adler Dillard, served as the Foundation's president for six terms. [11]