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Juliette Gordon Low's Birthplace Reviews

10 East Oglethorpe Ave, Savannah, Georgia 31401

Featured Review : Walking from the museum by the Tourist Information Center to go past the Civic Center and towards River Street, we saw the Juliette Low Birthplace beckoning to us from the corner of a lovely square. As a girl, I proudly ...See Full Review

  • #3 most popular
    thing to do in Savannah
  • Avg. User Rating:
    4 out of 5 stars

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  • Juliette Gordon Low's Birthplace

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    barbara from Atlanta
  • January 17, 2026
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: Walking from the museum by the Tourist Information Center to go past the Civic Center and towards River Street, we saw the Juliette Low Birthplace beckoning to us from the corner of a lovely square.

As a girl, I proudly wore the Brownie beanie, diligently worked for merit badges as a Junior, and then finally crossed the bridge to Cadets before leaving the program. So OF COURSE I thought it was a good idea to pay homage to the lady who had started it all. My mother and I ponied up the $8 per adult ticket for the tour.

First, let's talk Juliette Gordon Low. Her friends and family always called her "Daisy." She was born into a prominent Southern family that had founded the railroad line that truly opened up economic prosperity for the region. Yet her mother was a fiery Yankee from Chicago who had gone to school with Sherman in her youth. (Sherman would be entertained in the very house where Juliette was born when he captured Savannah, though Juliette's father was a proud officer for the Confederate Army.) As a young woman, Juliette met and married a rake from England...though a very wealthy rake. Her husband was a womanizer who died early, thus leaving Juliette with some money. Still feeling like a failure in love (her husband's will left a sizable chunk o' change to the OTHER woman!), the new widow discovered her life's purpose when the founder of Boy Scouts asked her to help him with England's "Girl Guides." Juliette saw such value in the program, she brought it home to her own country and made her niece the very first registered Girl Scout in the United States.

Now let's talk about the tour of the house.

We had a delightful guide with an educated, distincly Georgian drawl take us through the home. Girl Scouts aside, I enjoyed the opportunity to view this fine example of regency architecture. The period furnishings were wonderful, including the hefty dining room chairs Juliette's father had specially made to support the weight of a rotund President Taft when he made a visit to the home. The best thing about the tour, however, was hearing the story of one of America's great families. With ties to both the North and the South, the histories of Juliette's many prominent relatives are interesting to hear about in their own right. No wonder Juliette herself grew to be a strong and accomplished woman!

Even if you weren't a Girl Scout, you'll find something worth hearing during a tour of this historic place. I'd highly suggest it to anyone visiting Savannah.

Phone: (912) 233-4501
From journals A Novel Approach to Savannah
  • Juliette Gordon Low's Birthplace

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    beachbumm63 from delanco
  • May 11, 2025
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: "The Birthplace" is a term used by Girl Scouts to refer to the house Juliette Gordon Low, founder of Girl Scouts, lived in. It’s a great place to visit whether you’re a Girl Scout or not. However, if you have or are in a Girl Scout troop, there are a few extras you can enjoy like the programs just a few feet away in a house across the courtyard. My troop took the Fashion, Fabric, and Frills workshop and it was so much fun. Our great workshop leader, Diane, made it a hundred times better! We learned about fashions in every decade, got to see antique clothing of Juliette’s time, and even put on corsets and hoop skirts.Later, we got into Victorian-like dresses and had a ‘proper’ southern Victorian dinner with a host, guest of honor, and really good food. We learned about the parlor games the women played after dinner while the men smoked their pipes. One was called ‘poor pussy’ which is pretty funny to a bunch of 16-year-old girls.Anyway, we got to go back into Juliette’s house alone after the exhibit closed to take pictures. Afterwards we were told the tale, which we had obviously forgotten or else we would not have gone in there, about how Juliette’s parents haunt the house. We looked at the pictures on our digitals and sure enough there were creepy orbs in almost all our pictures. However, Willy and Nellie had an amazing marriage and happy life, so they haunt in peace.Before you leave Savannah, be sure to stop outside the house again to say goodbye, or it’s said that the orbs will follow you home. I assure you I said thank you and goodbye to Willy and Nellie numerous times.I really encourage everyone to learn more about Juliette; she was an awesome person and her life was very interesting. If you have a little girl definitely get her involved with a good Girl Scout troop. She’ll make friends and learn tons of things; I promise.
From journals Savannah Spree

Popular Hotels Near Juliette Gordon Low's Birthplace

  • Wayne-Gordon House: Juliette Low Birthplace

  • 4 out of 5 stars
    smmmarti guide from Lahaina
  • May 7, 2025
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: It’s true that the copy of the biography of Juliette Low that I found one rainy afternoon in my grandfather’s basement was the first biography I ever read. It told the compelling tale of a girl raised in the grand old South during historical times that would prove to be as tumultuous as the young woman’s personal feelings about the limitations imposed on females in that time in history.

The story hits home to most young women. Yesterday I could run barefoot with my brother through the woods, shooting BB guns and playing "war" but today I was being told it wasn’t proper for a young lady. Instead, I should tend to the young ones, learn to cook and sew, sit more quietly and maybe read a book. Juliette’s story seemed to whisper, "don’t listen to it!"

I’m not sorry that I learned to cook and sew, care for babies, develop good posture and smile in polite company. I‘m not sorry that I embraced the obvious gifts that being the "fairer" sex can offer. I’m just glad that I read about Juliette at a time in life when that Ophelialike madness can threaten to seep into a young girl’s sense of freedom and self unless she has encouragement from somewhere else to be all that she is and can be. But most of all I’m grateful that I was able to continue to fish and play with fire responsibly, to train an arrow on a distant target and let it fly, to row a canoe and shoot a free throw, all under the acceptable guidance of the Girl Scouts.

In knowing this organization that offers young girls and women the awareness of their options in making contributions to the world, I feel I owe a personal debt of gratitude to it’s founder. Ms. Low managed to grow up in the South in an age preceding suffragettes and women‘s movements and still develop and pursue a passionate vehicle that would propel more girls toward self-reliance and a sense of achievement outside the home at an early age than ever before or since it’s founding.

Started with just eighteen girls in the carriage house outside The Low-Gordon family home, the organization now has nearly 4 million members and has influenced the lives and futures of over 50 million women since it’s inception. Devoted troops make the pilgrimage to the childhood birthplace of its founder joined by interested visitors from all over the world who climb up the steps to the "The Birthplace," as it’s known to all, and take the guided tour through the restored home outfitted with classic Egyptian Revival period pieces owned by the family as well as artwork by the grand dame herself. The Wayne-Gordon house, home to four generations of Gordons, was the first National History Landmark in Savannah, Georgia. This honor speaks to the tremendous contribution to society made by Juliette Gordon-Low.


From journals Savannah: Sweet and Low(down)country