Martus, Florence, 1868-1943

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Florence Martus (1868–1943), also known as "the Waving Girl", took it upon herself to be the unofficial greeter of all ships that entered and left the Port of Savannah, Georgia, between 1887 and 1931. A few years after she began waving at passing sailors, she moved in with her brother, a light keeper, at his small white cottage about five miles up the river from Fort Pulaski. From her rustic home on Elba Island, a tiny piece of land in the Savannah River near the Atlantic Ocean, Martus would wave a handkerchief by day and a lantern by night. According to legend, not a ship was missed in her forty-four years on watch. A statue of Martus by the sculptor Felix de Weldon has been erected in Morrell Park on the historic riverfront of Savannah.
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referencedIn Lillian Chaplin Bragg papers, 1858-1967. Georgia Historical Society
referencedIn De Weldon, Felix, 1907-2003. Florence Martus, 1869-1943, Savannah's waving girl [model]. Centre canadien d'architecture, | Canadian Centre for Architecture | CCA
referencedIn Altrusa Club of Savannah (Ga.) records, 1938-2002. Georgia Historical Society
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associatedWith Altrusa Club of Savannah (Ga.) corporateBody
associatedWith Altrusa Club of Savannah (Ga.) corporateBody
associatedWith Bragg, Lillian Chaplin, 1895-1967. person
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