
Once home to the second largest black-owned bank in America, this commercial building served as the Savannah branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and is now a museum documenting the struggle for equality. W. W. Law (who served twenty-six years as president of the Savannah NAACP) and the Savannah Yamacraw Association for the Study of African American Life and History worked to ensure its reuse. The museum, which opened in 1996, honors Ralph Mark Gilbert, a religious, political, educational, and social leader who advocated African American voting, organized over forty NAACP branches in Georgia, and was the father of civil rights in Savannah.