Johnny Mercer, courtesy NBC

Our Mission

The Friends of Johnny Mercer is a group of individuals dedicated to preserving the memory and legacy of Johnny Mercer and his connection to Savannah, Georgia. The organization is an IRS approved 501-c-3 Non Profit Corporation. It was originally organized and incorporated on May 20, 1993.

Membership dues are used for the purpose of engaging the general public through the website and special events planned from time to time. While Johnny Mercer is recognized nationally for his many accomplishments, the soul of Johnny Mercer is intertwined in the fabric of Savannah. He was “Always Our Johnny” 

Johnny and brother Walter, with Nick Mamalakis - courtesy John Mamalakis

Photo by Daniel L. Grantham

Our Projects

In 2009, our organization undertook the task of commissioning a statue to commemorate Johnny's legacy in Savannah as "the original goodwill ambassador for the city of Savannah." The statue, officially unveiled on Johnny's 100th birthday, November 18, 2009, was a culmination of the efforts of the Friends of Johnny Mercer to remember the city's famed musician. Created by Savannah sculptor Susie Chisholm in her City Market studio, the statue is a life-sized depiction of Johnny based on a photograph. It proudly stands in Ellis Square today, and is one of the most photographed monuments in Savannah.

Nancy Mercer Keith Gerard, Johnny's Niece, had this to say to Connect Savannah regarding the monument:

"I believe Uncle Bubba would be very happy to be, yet again, greeting Savannahians and City Market visitors to the square," Gerard said. "I can envision friends getting together for lunch or dinner, and saying, ‘Where do you want to meet?’ and the reply will be, ‘Let’s meet at Johnny,’ in Ellis Square."

Making the Johnny Mercer Statue

Video Courtesy Susie Chisholm

Photograph by Mike Stroud

The Historical Marker

In 2006, the Friends of Johnny Mercer partnered with the Georgia Historical Society to erect a historical marker at the intersection of E. Gwinnett Street and Lincoln Street. 

Marker Text: World-renowned songwriter John Herndon
Mercer was born in Savannah and spent much of his
youth in this house at 226 East Gwinnett Street. His lyrics
reflected the sounds of Southern conversation,
influenced by the African-American music and the natural
world he experienced. During his career Mercer wrote
more than one thousand songs, and nearly four hundred
were used in motion pictures. Of these, eighteen were
nominated for Academy Awards® — four of which (“On
the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe,” “In the Cool,
Cool, Cool of the Evening,” “Moon River,” and “Days of
Wine and Roses”) won Best Song. Mercer was a co-
founder of Capitol Records and the founding president
of the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Johnny Mercer is buried
in Savannah’s Bonaventure Cemetery.

Officers and Members

Stephen H. Gerard
President/CEO

John Mamalakis
Historian

Cliff McCurry
Member

Diane Ciucevich Parker
Vice President/Secretary

Gordon Baker
Member

Terri Doyle
Member

Shannon Scott
Member

Tom Lewis
Member

Henry Minis
Member

Carol Berry
Treasurer

Barbara King
Member

Megan Morgan
Member/Web Designer

In the Press

Articles, letters, and new projects.
Tom Coffee in the Savannah Morning News

Courtesy the Armstrong/GSU Library

Johnny Mercer's Hat

From the Mamalakis collection

Nick Mamalakis on Johnny Mercer's Heart

Text:
On speaking with your  heart...

"Now when the depression hit bottom, and everybody was running on the banks...the certificate holders started making a run on the Mercer Company, too. So that's when he [George Anderson Mercer, Jr.] put the G. A. Mercer company into liquidation, and, systematically...paid back eighty-two cents on the dollar.

[In the 1950's, Johnny Mercer paid the certificate holders the approximately three hundred thousand dollars still owed.] It was something that Johnny had promised himself at the time his daddy was putting the company into liquidation. I tried to get Johnny not to do [it] because I thought his father and mother's name would be perpetuated with scholarships...in their memory. 

But he said, 'Well, you're speaking with your head, but I'm speaking with a heart.' I found out that he had promised himself that if he ever made it, nobody who bet on his father would lose one cent. That was speaking with the heart."

Nick Mamalakis, from his oral history interview with Chris Paton (Special Collections, Georgia State University Library) conducted on May 15th, 1997

Nick Mamalakis on Johnny's leadership

"[Johnny]...inherited what was left of the G. A. Mercer Company. The bank president, Mr. Hunt said, 'now what do you want done with the residue?' And [Johnny] says, 'Mr. Hunt, what the hell is residue?' He says, 'That's what's left over.' And Johnny took his pencil out and on the back of an envelope wrote 'residue'. Johnny said...'I want to remember that word because sometime I might want to use it in some lyrics.'

Because there was forty-five thousand dollars left as residue...he gave fifteen thousand to the Crippled Children's Hospital in Atlanta...fifteen thousand to his Episcopal Bishop...and then the last fifteen thousand he gave to the Jenkins Boys' Club for the gym, which they named in honor of his father.

Johnny came to town to visit his mother and had a day extra on his schedule, so we [Nick and Walter Mercer] asked him to look at the Boys' Club. And we went in the middle of summer. The swimming pool was jumping. The basketball courts were full of boys...and he saw a bunch of activity. And he just said, 'Well, how much [do] you owe on this gym?' I said, 'Approximately, fifteen thousand dollars.' And he said, 'Mark it paid. Mark it paid'...He came down on a subsequent visit and spoke to the boys at the Boys' Club in the gym building. That was the night we dedicated it to his father.

When Johnny went into the hospital over in California for his surgery, we were having a county fair...so there was a card prepared, a three by six foot card that folded in half and all the boys from the Boys' Club...signed the 'Get Well, Johnny' card, and we mailed it over to California."

Nick Mamalakis, from his oral history interview with Chris Paton (Special Collections, Georgia State University Library) conducted on May 15th, 1997