Union Society and Bethesda

Union Society and Bethesda

Courtesy of Carl Vinson Institute of Government.

Year Erected: 1962

Marker Text: In 1750 the Saint George's Club, a benevolent organization, was founded in Savannah. Of its 5 original members Peter Tondee and Richard Milledge had attended Bethesda. At some time prior to 1765 its name was changed to the Union Society. The organization from its beginning took a deep interest in Bethesda.

The Union Society continued in existence during the American Revolution. While prisoners of the British at Sunbury 4 members of the Society, Mordecai Sheftall, Josiah Powell, John Martin and John Stirk, held a meeting April 23, 1779. The Union Society was incorporated by the Legislature in 1786.

After Bethesda was discontinued in 1805, the Society carried, along with other charitable work, a considerable share of the burden of educating orphan children in the community. In 1854 it purchased 125 acres of the original Orphan House Tract for $2500.00. Buildings were erected and furnished at a cost of $4700.00. The children under the charge of the Society were removed to Bethesda that year.

Past Presidents of the Union Society include Mordecai Sheftall, George Houstoun, Noble W. Jones, Joseph Clay, Joseph Habersham, David B. Mitchell, John Macpherson Berrien and Richard D. Arnold.

Tips for Finding This Marker: On Ferguson Avenue in Savannah