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U.S. Customhouse (Savannah, Georgia)

U.S. Customhouse
GA Savannah Customhouse02.jpg
United States Customhouse (Savannah, Georgia) is located in Georgia (U.S. state)
United States Customhouse (Savannah, Georgia)
United States Customhouse (Savannah, Georgia) is located in the US
United States Customhouse (Savannah, Georgia)
Location 1–3 E. Bay St., Savannah, Georgia
Coordinates 32°04′50″N 81°05′28″W / 32.08065°N 81.09101°W / 32.08065; -81.09101Coordinates: 32°04′50″N 81°05′28″W / 32.08065°N 81.09101°W / 32.08065; -81.09101
Area 0 acres (0 ha)
Built 1848
Architect Norris, John S.
Architectural style Greek Revival
Part of Savannah Historic District (Savannah, Georgia) (#66000277)
NRHP Reference # 74000666
Added to NRHP May 29, 1974

The U.S. Customhouse is a historic custom house located in Savannah in Chatham County, Georgia. It was built to house offices of the United States Customs Service.

The impressive U.S. Custom House symbolizes Savannah's importance to Georgia's import-export trade during the 18th and 19th centuries. The site is also significant in Savannah's history. A wood-frame residence used by James Edward Oglethorpe, founder (in 1733) of the Colony of Georgia and designer of Savannah's town plan, was previously on the site. The federal courthouse and the Tabernacle, where John Wesley preached his first sermon in America, were located on the rear of this lot.

Savannah's first U.S. Custom House opened in 1789 on Commerce Row on East Bay Street. The second, opened in 1819 on East Bryan Street, burned in 1837. In 1845 the federal government purchased a site at East Bay and Bull Streets for a third U.S. Custom House. New York architect John S. Norris (1804–1876) served as designer and supervisor of construction. The building was the first of eighteen commissions Norris designed while living in Savannah from 1846 to 1861. The cornerstone was laid on July 20, 1848.

The building was completed in 1852 and had the U.S. Post Office in the basement, the Customs Service on the first floor, and the federal courts on the second floor. The notorious case involving the yacht Wanderer was tried here in 1860. It was the last documented violation of the law against the importation of slaves. U.S. control of the building temporarily halted in January 1861 when the Confederate flag was raised above it the day after the Georgia State Convention adopted the Ordinance of Secession. In 1864 General William T. Sherman occupied Savannah and returned control of the building to the Union. In 1889 Colonel John H. Deveaux worked in the building as the first African American U.S. Customs Collector.

The U.S. Custom House was designated as a contributing building in the Savannah National Historic Landmark District in 1966. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.


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