City Market
City Market in 2017, looking east from West St Julian Street to Ellis Square
LocationSavannah, Georgia, United States
Coordinates32°04′51″N 81°05′42″W / 32.0808290°N 81.0949980°W / 32.0808290; -81.0949980
Opening date1733 (1733)
Websitesavannahcitymarket.com

City Market is a historic market complex in the Historic District of Savannah, Georgia. Originally centered on the site of today's Ellis Square from 1733,[1] today it stretches west from Ellis Square to Franklin Square.[2][3] Established in the 1700s with a wooden building, locals gathered here for their groceries and services.[1] This building burned in 1820 and was replaced the following year with a single-storey structure that wrapped around the square.[4] A brick building, the work of architects Augustus Schwaab and Martin Phillip Muller, was erected in 1876.[4] They had submitted plans to the city six years earlier. The cost of the building's construction "vastly exceeded expectations" after excavations revealed weakened arches in the basement floor that required them to be replaced.[5] It was an ornate structure with arches in the Romanesque style and large circular windows.[6]

The interior of the Schwaab and Muller structure encompassed 33,000 square feet. The city's mayor, John Screven, described it as "roomy, capable of being kept in the highest condition of cleanliness, with ample ventilation". The construction was headed by carpenter James C. Saltus.[7]

The market area survived two fires (in 1796 and 1820),[8][9] the Civil War, and the hurricane of 1896.[2] It is now part of the Savannah Historic District, and is a popular destination for tourists due to its restaurants, art galleries and shops, which occupy many of the buildings erected in the 19th century.[2]

Ellis Square parking garage controversy

In 1954, the city signed a 50-year lease with the Savannah Merchants Cooperative Parking Association, allowing the association to raze the existing structure and construct a parking garage to serve the City Market retail project. "The demolition of City Market was a disaster. That was the worst thing Savannah ever did," said preservationist Cornelia Groves.[6] A farewell ball was held on the eve of the demolition.[6]

Anger over the demolition of the market house helped spur the historic preservation movement (most notably the Historic Savannah Foundation) in Savannah.[10] The outer structure of this city market building influenced the design of the Kroger grocery store on Gwinnett Street and the Publix grocery store in the Twelve Oaks shopping center on Abercorn Street.

When the garage's lease expired in 2004, the city began plans to restore Ellis Square. The old parking garage was demolished in 2006 to make way for a new public square (park) that features open spaces for public concerts, as well as an underground parking garage on Whitaker Street. The underground facility was completed and formally dedicated in January 2009.

Timeline of market buildings

The second incarnation of the City Market building, built in 1821 and pictured here sometime between 1855 and 1876, looking northwest. Behind City Market on the right is the John Montmollin Building, a former slave market
  • c.1733–1820 – a wooden building was erected; burned down in 1820
  • 1821–1876 – a single-storey structure was erected which wrapped around the square's center
  • 1876–1954 – a brick structure was the third and final structure that existed; torn down by the city

Buildings in City Market

References

  1. 1 2 "Savannah Then and Now: City Market"WSAV-TV, March 3, 2020
  2. 1 2 3 "Savannah's Heart Since the 1700s" – Savannah City Market
  3. "Franklin Square - Savannah, GA". Savannah.com. Savannah.com. Retrieved 21 February 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 Lost Savannah: Photographs from the Collection of the Georgia Historical Society, Luciana M. Spracher (2003), p. 52 ISBN 9780738514871
  5. Building Savannah, David E. Kelley, Arcadia Publishing (2000), p. 77 ISBN 0738505730
  6. 1 2 3 Sickler, Linda. "Cornelia Rankin Groves witnessed Savannah's preservation movement come to life and was dedicated to bringing it forward". Savannah Morning News. Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  7. 1 2 Building Savannah, David E. Kelley, Arcadia Publishing (2000), p. 78 ISBN 0738505730
  8. Morse 1797.
  9. William Darby; Theodore Dwight Jr. (1834), New Gazetteer of the United States of America (2nd ed.), Hartford: E. Hopkins, p. 482
  10. Project for Public Spaces' Squares of Savannah, accessed June 13, 2007
  11. Lost Savannah: Photographs from the Collection of the Georgia Historical Society, Luciana M. Spracher (2003), p. 53 ISBN 9780738514871

Bibliography

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