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Telfair Academy

Telfair Academy
Savannah, GA USA Telfair Academy.JPG
Telfair Academy in 2015
Telfair Academy is located in Georgia (U.S. state)
Telfair Academy
Telfair Academy is located in the US
Telfair Academy
Location 121 Barnard St., Savannah, Georgia
Coordinates 32°4′44″N 81°5′43″W / 32.07889°N 81.09528°W / 32.07889; -81.09528Coordinates: 32°4′44″N 81°5′43″W / 32.07889°N 81.09528°W / 32.07889; -81.09528
Built 1818
Architect Jay,William; Brandt,Carl N.
Architectural style English Regency
Part of Savannah Historic District (#66000277)
NRHP Reference # 76000612
Significant dates
Added to NRHP May 11, 1976
Designated NHL May 11, 1976

The Telfair Academy is a historic mansion at 121 Barnard Street in Savannah, Georgia. It was designed by William Jay and built in 1818, and is one of a small number of Jay's surviving works. It is one of three sites owned by Telfair Museums. Originally a family townhouse belonging to the Telfair family, it became a free art museum in 1886, and thus one of the first 10 art museums in America, and the oldest public art museum in the South. Its first director, elected in 1883, was artist Carl Ludwig Brandt, who spent winters in Savannah. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1976.

Telfair Academy is located in historic central Savannah, on the west side of Telfair Square. It occupies an entire block, bounded by Barnard, West President, North Jefferson, and West State Streets. It is a two story masonry structure, built out of brick finished in stucco. Its entrance is a form typical of architect William Jay, with a projecting four-column portico that is accessed via side-facing stairs. The columns are of a composite order, and the portico's entablature is continued around the building as a stringcourse. Unlike the symmetrical exterior, the interior of the house is asymmetrical, its unusually shaped rooms including an octagonal drawing room, round-ended dining room, and long drawing room with rounded ends. The building's west wing is its former carriage house, which was adapted in the 1880s as part of the building's conversion to a museum, and has fine Adam style woodwork.

The house was designed by William Jay and built in 1818 for Alexander Telfair, son of Edward Telfair, one of Georgia's early post-independence governors. The site on which it was built previously housed the official residence of Georgia's colonial royal governors. In 1875 Alexander's sister Mary bequeathed the house, including its furnishings and family collections, to the Georgia Historical Society, which opened the first art museum in the southeastern United States here in 1886.

Telfair Academy features furnished period rooms that highlight the museum's collection of decorative arts and many family furnishings including beautiful 19th and 20th century American and European paintings and sculptures. In front of the building are statues of Rembrandt, Phidias, Rubens, Raphael, and Michelangelo (see the link to Commons below).


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