


The ghost that appeared in the hotel since then was Grace Tremont, Harper’s ancestor and the rightful owner of the family farm. It turns out that the vast Tremont property belonged to this black family as a farm in the 1930s but lost it to Judge Walker through a fraudulent agreement. Harper uncovered her ancestral connections to the Tremont Hotel. Soon the mystery of Savannah’s disappearance began to reveal more about a past trauma. This trip opened their eyes to what institutionalized racism looked like. They traveled back in time to 1962 in search of Savannah. In their effort to solve the mystery about Savannah, Griffin and Harper discovered that this hotel has always been a portal back in time. A ghost has been haunting this hotel ever since. Rumors circulated that a young girl named Savannah (Elle Graham), who was a school friend of Griffin’s father, had gone missing on the Tremont hotel property in the 1990s. After having settled down, Griffin met a new friend Harper Dunn (Kyliegh Curran), and the two of them discovered a secret about the local community. Twelve-year-old Griffin (Preston Oliver) and his family purchased an old hotel property (Tremont) in a fictional place of Sulfur Springs, New Orleans, trying to refurbish it and open for business. While entertaining the young audience with stories about ghosts and mysteries, a more solemn message about Southern racism and black land loss also came through.
#SAVANNAH SECRETS OF SULPHUR SPRINGS SERIES#
Can time travel shows tackle racism? This TV series says yes.
