Greene Square (Savannah, Georgia)


Greene Square is one of the 22 squares of Savannah, Georgia, United States. It is the easternmost square in the second row of the city's five rows of squares. The square is located on Houston Street and East President Street, and is south of Washington Square, east of Columbia Square and north of Crawford Square. The oldest buildings on the square are at 510 East York Street, 509 East President Street and 503 East President Street, each in the southwestern trust/civic block, which are believed to have been built at the same time as the square itself.
The square is named for Revolutionary War hero General Nathanael Greene, an aide to George Washington. A native of Rhode Island, Greene commanded Southern forces during the Revolution, and after the war settled at Mulberry Grove, an estate above Savannah. Greene, along with his son, is actually buried in Savannah's Johnson Square.
134 Houston Street, in the square's southeastern tything block, dates to the late 1800s. Between 1899 and the mid-1900s it was the home of the Kate Baldwin Free Kindergarten.
Greene Square was once the center of Savannah's African-American community. In the northwestern trust lot is the Second African Baptist Church, the site where Union Army general William Tecumseh Sherman announced Special Field Orders 15, better known as "40 acres and a mule".
546–548 East President Street are two seamen's cottages, built circa 1897.
The John Dorsett House, in the northwestern tything, is the smallest free-standing house in the city, hence its nickname Tiny House. It was moved here from 422 Hull Street.
In 1967, Savannah landscape architect Clermont Huger Lee and banker Mills B. Lane planned and initiated a project to replace the cistern that caved-in, design and install shoring, close the fire lane, and install new walks, benches, lighting and planting.

Constituent buildings

Each building below is in one of the eight blocks around the square composed of four residential "tything" blocks and four civic blocks, now known as the Oglethorpe Plan. They are listed with construction years where known.
;Northwestern tything/residential block
;Northwestern trust/civic block
;Southwestern trust/civic block
;Southwestern tything/residential block
;Northeastern tything/residential block
;Northeastern trust/civic block
;Southeastern trust/civic block
;Southeastern tything/residential block