Andrew Low House Museum Tickets in Savannah
About this activity
Smartphone tickets accepted
- Your booking is confirmed immediately
- This activity is available in your language
- This option includes FREE cancellation—book now, risk-free!
Experience Highlights
Your visit to the beautiful city of Savannah would not be complete without a visit to the Andrew Low House Museum. These museum tickets include a docent-led tour to learn about the history of the house and the Low family.
- Discover how Savannah's wealthy families lived in the 19th century on a 40-minute guided tour of the Andrew Low House Museum.
- Learn interesting information from a docent who will guide you through the tour.
- Tour the museum and the iconic garden, one of the few survivinggardens created in Savannah in the 19th century and the only one open to the public.
What’s included
- Entrance to the Andrew Low House Museum
- Guided tour of about 40 minutes by an educator
Select participants and date
Step by Step
With tickets to the Andrew Low House Museum in Savannah you'll get to see the most historic part of the city. The house, now a museum, was built in 1848 and was home to the Low family .
Learn more about the history of the house and the Low family on a 40-minute guided tour. An expert docent will be on hand to provide you with all the relevant information throughout the tour of the museum:
- Get a close-up look at how a wealthy 19th century family lived.
- Get an insight into the lives of the slaves who lived and worked in the house.
- Tour the rooms on the first floor: two formal and informal parlours, the library and dining room
- Go upstairs to discover the children's playroom, an unusual interior bathroom for the time, and the bedrooms.
But the visit is not limited to the interior of the museum. Andrew Low House has one of the few surviving original gardens created in Savannah in the 19th century, and the only one open to the public.
The design of this garden dates from mid-century, shortly after the completion of the house. Its layout and planting plans have been preserved ever since, first by the Low family and then by the National Society of Colonial Dames of America, the current owners of the house.