Three centuries of history surround the River Street Inn and include some of the Nation’s most significant 18th and 19th-century architecture. The Inn’s past is intertwined with that of its surroundings.
The River Street Inn’s lower two floors, built of ballast stone in 1817, were quickly inadequate to house the increasing amount of cotton moving through the growing port of Savannah. Surrounded by the Savannah River to the north, a high bluff to the south, and additional warehousing on either side, the only way to expand was to expand up. In 1853 the top three floors, comprised of Savannah gray brick, were added, allowing additional storage on the third floor and offices for the cotton brokers on the fourth and fifth floors.
Hotel News Resource
Hotel News Resource
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