RDM MANAGEMENT
1310 Abercorn Street
Savannah, Ga 31401
Email - Rlead44@aol.com
912 660-1200 Office
912 355-2130 Fax
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About Savannah

The City of Savannah, the "Hostess City of the South", is the oldest planned City in the world. . Savannah's recorded history begins in 1733. That's the year General James Oglethorpe and the 120 passengers of the good ship "Anne" landed on a bluff high along the Savannah River in February. Oglethorpe named the 13th and final American colony "Georgia" after England's King George II. Savannah became its first city. Savannah is known as America's first planned city. Oglethorpe laid the city out in a series of grids that allowed for wide open streets intertwined with shady public squares and parks that served as town meeting places and centers of business. Savannah had 24 original squares; 21 are still in existence. Savannah's Historic District was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1966. It is one of the largest historic landmarks in the country. Significant buildings that were saved and restored include: the Pirates' House (1754), an inn mentioned in Robert Louis Stevenson's book "Treasure Island"; the Herb House (1734), oldest building in Georgia; and the Pink House (1789), site of Georgia's first bank. Also saved were the birthplace of Juliette Gordon Low (completed in 1821), now owned and operated by the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. as a memorial to their founder. The Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences, built in 1812 as a mansion, was one of the South's first public museums. Restored churches include: the Lutheran Church of the Ascension (1741); the Independent Presbyterian Church (1890) and the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist (1876), one of the largest Roman Catholic churches in the South. The First African Baptist Church was established in 1788. Savannah's Temple Mickeve Israel is the third oldest synagogue in America.
 
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