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The Masonic Temple in Savannah, Georgia was also called the Scottish Rite building. It was built in 1913 and is located at the corner of Charlton and Bull Streets. Hyman Wallace Witcover was the architect. The order was chartered in Savannah in 1802 and remained a center for activity and in 2002, celebrated their 200th anniversary.
Hyatt Regency Savannah is a high-rise hotel in Savannah, Georgia.Built in 1980, [1] it stands adjacent to Savannah City Hall at Bay Street's downtown midsection. Originally envisioned as a 14-story structure in Savannah's Historic District, a long battle with the Historic Savannah Foundation concluded with a compromise being reached of its being limited to six storeys.
The hotel was constructed by Eleazer Early of Charleston, South Carolina, to a design by William Jay, [2] and completed in 1821 as the City Hotel. It was built on land purchased by his wife, Jane, four years earlier [2] and was the first hotel in Savannah. [1] It had "33 rooms, exclusive of the bar."
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]
Located on East Broughton Street, it is the city's oldest operating hotel today, owned by Savannah's HLC Hotels, Inc., which also owns the city's Olde Harbour Inn, the Eliza Thompson House, the East Bay Inn, the Gastonian and the Kehoe House. [2] The building was occupied by the Union Army in 1864 and 1865 during the American Civil War. [3]
Below is a selection of notable buildings and structures on Gordon Street, all in Savannah's Historic District. From west to east: [2] West Gordon Street. Matilda Heitman Properties, 209–213 West Gordon Street (1895) Thomas McArthur Duplex, 205–207 West Gordon Street (1853) Gordon Row, 101–129 West Gordon Street (1854)