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Awendaw (/ ˈ ɔː w ɪ n d ɔː / AW-win-daw) is a small fishing town in Charleston County, South Carolina, United States. The population was 1,294 at the 2010 census . [ 5 ] Awendaw is part of the Charleston, South Carolina metropolitan area .
The Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge is a 66,287 acre (267 km²) National Wildlife Refuge in southeastern South Carolina near Awendaw, South Carolina. The refuge lands and waters encompass water impoundments, creeks and bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands. 29,000 acres (120 km 2) are designated as a wilderness area. Most of the ...
Awendaw (South Carolina) Metadata. This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
Typical river-bottom hardwood forest from the Little Wambaw Swamp Wilderness. Wambaw Swamp is a swamp in northeastern Charleston County, South Carolina.It is located entirely within the Francis Marion National Forest and contains 4,755 acres (19 km 2), all of which is designated as a wilderness area.
Sewee Mound (38CH45), also known as the Old Fort, is a historic mound located near Awendaw, South Carolina. It is one of 20 or more prehistoric shell rings located from the central coast of South Carolina to the central coast of Georgia. On average, it measures 149 feet in diameter and stands 10 feet high.
A driftwood fort, driftwood hut, or teepee, [failed verification] is a man-made collection of driftwood stacked to make a hut, usually at a beach. Most driftwood forts are conic in shape, though they may more closely resemble an ordinary camping tent, or be built in the manner of a log cabin with logs stacked horizontally.
Theodora Stanwell-Fletcher (born Theodora Morris Cope, January 4, 1906, died Theodora Gray, January 15, 2000 [1]) was an American naturalist and writer.She is best known for her book Driftwood Valley (1946) which won the John Burroughs Medal for distinguished writing in natural history in 1948.
Ashtabula is a plantation house at 2725 Old Greenville Highway near Pendleton in Anderson County, South Carolina, USA. It has been also known as the Gibbes-Broyles-Latta-Pelzer House or some combination of one or more of these names. [2] It was named in the National Register of Historic Places as a historic district on March 23, 1972.