First Bryan Baptist Church at 575 W. Bryan Street in Savannah, Georgia, frames a living chapter of Yamacraw Village — an 18th- to early 20th-century neighborhood whose history is essential to understanding the city’s Black heritage. On Thursday, June 18, HSF brings together legal advocates, preservationists, community leaders, and historians for a public panel titled "Yamacraw Village: History, Community, and Continuity." Doors open at 5:30 p.m.; the conversation begins at 6:00 p.m. in the Sanctuary.
The event gathers David Sunshine Hamburger of Georgia Legal Services, Shana Williams from the Yamacraw Residents Council, Ellie Isaacs of Landmark Preservation Consulting, LLC., and Georgia Benton, Historian for First Bryan Baptist Church, with moderation by Collier Neeley, HSF’s CEO & President. Together they trace Yamacraw’s arc: origins tied to the Brampton Plantation and the founding of First Bryan by Andrew Bryan in 1788, waves of growth through the 19th century, the 1939 clearance of a multicultural neighborhood, and the 1941 construction of one of the nation’s earliest federally funded public housing projects. That complex now faces planned demolition and redevelopment, making this conversation urgent for residents and preservationists alike.
Visit for more than the lecture: the church itself is a distinctive architectural and spiritual anchor — its Sanctuary offers woodwork, period stained glass, and a congregational history that predates much of American institutional memory. The panel puts human faces on policy: legal strategies, resident advocacy, preservation practice, and the faith-based continuity that sustained Yamacraw through displacement and change.
Practical details are concise: the talk is free and open to the public; pre-registration is encouraged at www.myhsf.org/events/lecture-series/. Expect a 90-minute program in a sanctuary setting; seating may be limited, so arrive early for best views. This is a community-forward event; listen for resident testimony and bring questions—there’s a distinct chance to connect with local advocates and learn concrete ways to support preservation.
First Bryan’s lineage traces to Andrew Bryan, who founded the congregation in 1788 while enslaved at Brampton Plantation; that history gives the site a rare continuity of worship and civic life that outlived neighborhood erasures. HSF’s panel series uses this community context to explore how preservation intersects with legal advocacy and resident-led organizing. With a seating capacity for 250 and a sanctuary designed to focus conversation, attendees leave informed and connected — often with concrete next steps to support preservation campaigns or volunteer with local residents’ groups.
Why book a trip around it? Savannah’s National Historic District rewards slow attention: attending this panel reframes the city’s streets as contested landscape, where architecture, housing policy, and faith intersect. For travelers who care about social histories as much as cobblestones and oaks, this program is a rare, on-the-ground briefing about living heritage and local stewardship.