Savannah’s Haunted Historic District – Derby Ward

Like Decker Ward, Derby Ward is one of the first wards laid out when Savannah was created in 1733. It is named for James Stanley, Tenth Earl of Derby, while its central square is named for Robert Johnson, Royal Governor of South Carolina at the time Georgia was settled. The large monument at the center of Johnson Square was erected to the memory of General Nathanael Greene, a hero of the American Revolution.  Savannah is frequently described as a city built on top of the dead. This is a fact for this scenic square as the probable remains of General Greene, who died near Savannah, are buried beneath the monument.

The fountain in Johnson Square, 2021, by Seasider53, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Sources

  • Fertig, Barbara C. City of Savannah Tour Guide Manual: Manual for the Instruction and Licensing of Tour Guide in the City of Savannah. Savannah, GA: Tourism and Film Services, City of Savannah, 2006.
  • Johnson Square (Savannah, Georgia). Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed 8 September 2025.

Tondee’s Tavern (7 East Bay Street)This mid-19th century building once housed a bank and the offices of a slave dealer. Spirits continue to occupy the building once even saving the lives of two servers sleeping in the basement by alerting them to a fire in a planter box affixed to the front façade. This location has been covered in a separate entry.

Churchill’s Pub (13 West Bay Street)This British-style pub originally opened at 9 Drayton Street (now occupied by The Fitzroy, seer below) that is haunted only to love into another haunted location. Investigator and author Ryan Dunn frequented this bar for many years before asking one of the bartenders if it was haunted. A couple weeks later, he arrived with two other investigators to explore it after hours. Hearing that many patrons had experiences in the ladies’ room in the basement, Dunn focused his investigative efforts there, coming away with a decent amount of evidence that spirits are still lurking.

Sources

  • Dunn, Ryan. Savannah’s Afterlife II: More True Tales of a Paranormal Investigator. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, 2018.
The infamous basement of the Moon River Brewing Company, 2019. Photo by Lewis O. Powell, IV, all rights reserved.

Moon River Brewling Company (21 West Bay Street)Of the many haunted locations in Savannah, perhaps the Moon River Brewing Company has gained the most notoriety. Nearly every book and article on the city’s hauntings written in the last twenty years includes this location, and it has drawn tourists, paranormal investigators, and the just plain curious in hopes that they may experience something unworldly here.

Opening as the City Hotel in 1821, this mostly unremarkable building has seen a little more than two centuries of activity played out in its rooms and corridors. While many have had chilling experiences in the basement and the upper floors of the building, patrons and staff have had encounters throughout the building.

Sadly, the brewery served its last drinks just last year. While the business has closed, I’m certain that the spirits remain.

Sources

View of the former site of the Pulaski Hotel at left, with City Hall in the background. Photo 2025, by Lewis O. Powell, IV, all rights reserved.

Regions Bank (formerly Piccadilly Cafeteria on Pulaski Hotel Site) (15 Bull Street)Built on the former site of the large, antebellum Pulaski House Hotel, this site supposedly remains the playground for six-year-old Gracie Watson. The child, the only daughter of W. J. Watson and Margaret Frances Waterman, was often given the run of the hotel where her father was the resident manager. When little Gracie died of pneumonia at the age of six, her parents buried her in Bonaventure Cemetery, marking her grave with a marble likeness.

Before the hotel’s demolition in 1957, staff continued to hear a child laughing and playing. These sounds have continued to be heard after the construction of this modern structure, while witnesses also report seeing the apparition of a little girl.

Sources

  • Caskey, James. Haunted Savannah: The Official Guidebook to Savannah Haunted History Tour, 2008. Savannah, GA: Bonaventure Books, 2008.
  • Gracie Perry Watson (1882-1889). Find-A-Grave. Accessed 16 September 2025.
  • Gracie Watson. Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed 16 September 2025.
9 Drayton Street, 2017, by Seasider53, courtesy of Wikipedia.

The Fitzroy (9 Drayton Street)Built in 1853, this building is believed to have housed saloons and restaurants throughout its 172 years of existence. One legend states that a man died here during a boxing match and instead of alerting authorities to the man’s death, his body was walled up. Churchill’s Pub occupied this space before moving to Bay Street.

Sources

  • 9 Dayton Street. Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed 16 September 2025.
  • Cobb, Al. Savannah’s Ghosts II. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, 2007.

Circa 1875 (48 Whitaker Street)According to the authors of the blog, Eat It & Like It, the owners of this French restaurant and gastropub began experiencing paranormal activity in the building shortly after it opened. After problems with lights being mysteriously turned off, the owners locked the electrical box. Despite the lock, they continued having issues.

A sensitive visited, informing them that the spirits were of enslaved people who had been held on the premises in the Antebellum era. They wanted confirmation that the new owners would not use the building for enslavement. In an effort to appease the spirits, the owners drew up an agreement and hung it in the wine cellar.

Sources