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Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room is a casual restaurant in Savannah, Georgia, US which offers a menu of Southern US home cooking. Situated in a historic house dated to 1870, it is a popular dining spot in the city. The restaurant was owned and managed by Sema Wilkes for 59 years, from 1943 until her death in 2002 at age 95. [1]
The Grey is located inside a former Greyhound bus depot in downtown Savannah. Morisano invested millions of dollars to make the restaurant Streamline Moderne in style and design. [2] Parts and Labor designed the interior and Felder & Associates were the architecture firm. [3] The depot's former diner became the Grey's dining room.
Below is a selection of notable buildings and structures on Montgomery Street, all in Savannah's Historic District. From north to south: [6] Abram Minis Property, 20–22 Montgomery Street (1846) First African Baptist Church, 23 Montgomery Street (1859–1861) George Hardcastle Building, 30–38 Montgomery Street (1855) 37–39 Montgomery ...
In 1980, they moved to Savannah where she planned to open a sandwich shop. [1] This eventually became a restaurant housed on the ground floor of a mansion built in 1900, while the family (now including a second daughter) lived upstairs. [2] The restaurant, Elizabeth on 37th, opened on May 14, 1981.
The City of Savannah purchased the River Street Branch line right-of-way from Norfolk Southern in 2004 [7] for approximately $600,000. [8] Old Town Trolley Tours has a stop (number 10 of 15) on River Street below Factors Walk. [9] Old Savannah Tours has two stops on River Street: one close to Old Town's stop and the other at the marketplace ...
With the growth in Savannah's Jewish population, the congregation outgrew its structure. It planned for a new building, laying the cornerstone for what its current structure on March 1, 1876. The building's Gothic Revival architecture [ b ] was the work of New York architect Henry G. Harrison , whose previous buildings included the Cathedral of ...
The Savannah Historic District is a large urban U.S. historic district that roughly corresponds to the city limits of Savannah, Georgia, prior to the American Civil War.The area was declared a National Historic Landmark District in 1966, [1] and is one of the largest districts of its kind in the United States. [2]
Gordon Street is a street in Savannah, Georgia, United States.Located between Taylor Street to the north and Gaston Street to the south, it runs for about 0.62 miles (1.00 km) from Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in the west to East Broad Street in the east.