Davenport House Museum to open new exhibit in 2025
Dec 19, 2024
SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) -- The Davenport House Museum's newest exhibit will bring the historical narrative into the early 20th century for the first time since the building opened in 1963.
“Old Chan Magic: Chinese Roots, Southern Branches,” a new exhibit curated by Davenport House Museum Executive Director Danielle Hodes and featuring a wide range of historic photography, will open at Historic Savannah Foundation’s Murray C. Perlman and Wayne C. Spear Preservation Center, located at 323 E. Broughton St., on Thursday, January 16 and run through May 2025. The exhibit shares the fascinating story of the Chan family who lived in the iconic 1820 home when it operated as a tenement in the early 20th century, before the Davenport House was saved from demolition and renovated as a 19th-century house museum.
“Until now, the Davenport House Museum’s primary period of interpretation has been from 1820 to 1827, when Isaiah Davenport, his wife Sarah, their children and 13 enslaved workers lived in the home,” said Danielle Hodes, Davenport House Museum Executive Director. “This new exhibit offers insight into Savannah’s vibrant Chinese-American community in the early 1900s.”
In November of 2023, the Davenport House Museum opened an immersive urban slavery exhibition on the garden-level of the historic 1820 home that was originally built by carpenter Isaiah Davenport, transforming the space into an educational exploration of urban slavery in the antebellum period. “Old Chan Magic: Chinese Roots, Southern Branches” expands the narrative at the Davenport House even further, marking the first exhibition that has focused on the period in the 20th century when the home operated as a tenement building.
“Old Chan Magic” will explore the life and legacy of the Chan family in Savannah in the early 1900s. This exhibition features rare photographs and stories that reveal the daily lives of the Chan family, their business endeavors and their experience as part of a growing Chinese-American community in the South in the early 20th century. Through these images, visitors will discover a unique perspective on the intersection of Chinese heritage and Southern identity during a pivotal time in Savannah’s history.
In 1889, Robert Chung Chan became one of Savannah’s first Chinese immigrants. Robert and his wife, Annie, lived in the Davenport House from 1901 to 1902 while operating a Chinese laundry in what is now the Historic Kennedy Pharmacy. Their story embodies the broader experience of early Chinese immigrants in America while uniquely reflecting Savannah’s cultural landscape, shaped in large part by Robert’s leadership, influence, and social connections.
“’Old Chan Magic’ will offer a rare glimpse into Savannah’s vibrant Chinese community, explore our city’s rich multicultural heritage and celebrate the narratives that continue to shape Savannah’s vibrant history,” said Sue Adler, CEO and President of Historic Savannah Foundation.
Built in 1820, the Davenport House was designed by carpenter Isaiah Davenport and officially launched Savannah’s historic preservation movement when a group of seven local women joined forces to purchase the historic home, which was slated for demolition, in 1955. The Davenport House officially opened as a house museum in 1963 and has been open to the public ever since.