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One of Savannah's favorite stories involves the life of Florence Martus (1868 - 1943), who was known well by Savannahians and sailors of the sea as the Waving Girl. The daughter of a sergeant stationed at Fort Pulaski, Florence later moved to a cottage along the river near the entrance of the harbor with her brother George, the Cockspur Island Lighthouse keeper.
As the story goes, life at the remote cottage was lonely for Florence whose closest companion was her devoted collie. At an early age, she developed a close affinity with the passing ships and welcomed each one with a wave of her handkerchief. Sailors began returning her greeting by waving back or with a blast of the ship's horn. Eventually Florence started greeting the ships arriving in the dark by waving a lantern.
Florence Martus continued her waving tradition for 44 years and it is estimated that she welcomed more than 50,000 ships during her lifetime. There is a lot of unsubstantiated speculation about Florence having fallen in love with a sailor who never returned to Savannah. The facts, however, about why she started and continued the waving tradition for so many years remain a mystery.
In any event, Florence Martus grew into a Savannah legend, known far and wide. On September 27, 1943, the SS Florence Martus, a Liberty ship, was christened in her honor.
The Waving Girl Statue by renowned sculptor Felix De Weldon, the sculptor of the United States Marine Corps Memorial in Arlington, Virginia (also known as the Iwo Jima Memorial,) depicts Florence with her loyal collie.
The Waving Girl Statue is located on the eastern end of River Street, overlooking the Savannah River from the bluff.
Also nearby you can view the 1996 Olympic Yachting Cauldron. This cauldron was lit with the original Olympic flame from Olympia, Greece at the Savannah Opening Ceremony, July 20, 1996, and burned throughout the Centennial Olympic Games in Savannah, Georgia, site of the Olympic Yachting events. The five fluted columns on round bases represent the five Olympic rings and the fluted slice of a classic column symbolizes the Olympic Greek heritage. The six sails represent the Olympic yachting events and the copper flame replaces the billowing real flame.
Parking availability depends on when you attempt this cache. There is some free parking nearby. Parking on nearby streets such as Bay Street is pay to park till 5 P.M. Free after 5 and on weekends.
The Cache
Is located nearby the Waving Girl statue. This “park” area stays really busy, so the cache had to be well hidden to prevent it from disappearing hence the difficulty rating. Ground zero is located in a upper section of the brick area. Beware! GPSr's like to "bounce" alot down here so Definitely bring your Geosense. I did a 6 visit waypoint average before publishing and my Oregon 450t still only got me within 10 ft. This Cache is visible without moving anything.