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Stony Creek is located at (36.946277, −77.399837 According to the United States Census Bureau , the town has a total area of 0.6 square miles (1.5 km 2 ), all of it land. Stony Creek is located along Interstate 95 at Exit 31 ( VA 40 ), but it is also served by Exit 33 (VSR 602) with US 301 running along the west side as a frontage road at ...
Stony Creek flows east then south from the Butterwood-White Oak Creek confluence west of the town of Dinwiddie, Virginia. It flows east again south of the town. Both US 1 and I-85 have bridges over it. Stony Creek flows east and south, where it picks up a large tributary, Sappony Creek, just north of VA 40.
This is a complete list of tributary streams of the Potomac River in the Eastern United States, listed in order from source to mouth.. North Branch Potomac River (Maryland/West Virginia)
State Route 40 Business is a former segment of SR 40 that was converted into a business route that runs through "downtown" Stony Creek. It runs along Lee Avenue from a realigned section of SR 40 west of the town, crosses the CSX North End Subdivision and then turns south in a multiplex with US 301 ( Blue Star Memorial Highway ), where it ends ...
SR 606 (Ware Creek Road) King and Queen [48] 5.08 8.18 SR 678 (Centerville Road) Clancie Road Royal Oak School Road Cul-de-Sac Gap between segments ending at different points along SR 609: King George [49] 3.17 5.10 SR 694 (Lambs Creek Church Road) Igo Road Muscoe Place Dead End Gap between segments ending at different points along SR 609: King ...
Glenview, also known as Chambliss House, is a historic home located near Stony Creek, Sussex County, Virginia. The original section of the house was built about 1800. It was enlarged and modified in the 1820s. It is associated with John R. Chambliss Sr. (1809-1875), who lived here during his lifetime. He was a planter and served in the ...
Stony Creek Plantation, also known as Shell House, is a historic plantation house located at DeWitt, Dinwiddie County, Virginia. The original section was built about 1750, and is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story, three-bay, center-hall plan house.
The Lower Little Stony Creek special biological area, which includes a large part of the area, contains many rare plants. [3] Little Stony Creek is a tributary of the Clinch River, part of the Upper Tennessee River system with 100 species of fish and 37 species of freshwater mussels, of which fourteen or more are endangered. [3]