Impressive in workmanship and size, the park-side mansion was built in 1873 for Samuel Pugh Hamilton and his family. Mr. Hamilton was a successful businessman and prominent Savannah citizen and alderman.
He and his wife, Sarah V. Hamilton, created a social center for Savannah’s elite, hosting a variety of society activities in their home.
The Hamilton mansion was the first residence in Savannah with electricity. In 1883 electric lights were installed in the salon. Spectators witnessing the inaugural room lighting feared the house would explode. The entire house was fitted with electric lights by 1886. It was no coincidence that the illustrious Samuel Hamilton became the President of the Brush Electric Light & Power Company around the same time his prestigious mansion was illuminated, encouraging the acceptance of the invention.
Because of the Hamilton mansion’s tin roof, it withstood the Savannah fire of 1898. All of the homes on Lafayette Square survived the fire due to their heat resistant roofing. A neighbor on the square, St. John the Baptist Cathedral—completed the same year as the Hamilton mansion—was not as fortunate.
In 1915 Dr. Francis Turner purchased the house from the Hamilton estate. He and his family lived there until 1926, when they opened the house up for boarding. The mansion became a home for the Marine Hospital nurses in 1928. The Turner family moved back to the mansion in the 1940s, and the basement of the house served as office space for Dr. Turner’s practice. Dr. Turner was known by neighbors as an electric car enthusiast, preferring electric to the noise and smell of gas cars.
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