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Camp Creek is a 14.1-mile-long (22.7 km) [1] tributary of the Chattahoochee River in Fulton County, Georgia. Rising in College Park, the creek flows west to join the Chattahoochee northeast of Campbellton.
The Camp Creek train wreck was a railroad disaster that took place on 23 June 1900 just outside McDonough, Georgia.The northbound Southern Railway train hit a washout 1.5 miles north of the town, plunging 60 feet into the swollen creek below before bursting into flames, killing 35 of the 45 aboard the train.
Camp Creek (Tuolumne County, California) Camp Creek (Fulton County, Georgia) Camp Creek (Gwinnett County, Georgia) Camp Creek (Clayton County, Georgia) Camp Creek (Henry County, Georgia), site of the 1900 Camp Creek train wreck. Camp Creek (Union County, Georgia) Camp Creek (Iowa) Camp Creek (Root River), a stream in Fillmore County, Minnesota
State Route 6 (SR 6) is a 72.1-mile-long (116.0 km) state highway that travels northwest-to-southeast in the U.S. state of Georgia.It is known as Jimmy Lee Smith Parkway, Jimmy Campbell Parkway, Nathan Dean Parkway, and Wendy Bagwell Parkway in Paulding County; C.H. James Parkway in Cobb County; Thornton Road in Douglas County; and Camp Creek Parkway and honorarily as Tuskegee Airmen Parkway ...
The Anneewakee Treatment Center was a Douglasville, Georgia, United States, based adolescent treatment center which changed name to the New Annewakee, Inner Harbour Hospital and now Inner Harbour, Ltd (DBA) Inner Harbour for Children and Families, after a major lawsuit by 110 former "patients" for $432M in 1990, represented by attorneys B. Randall Blackwood and Patricia Edelkind.
Opened in 2003, Camp Creek Marketplace is a 309,089-square-foot (29,000 m 2) retail space, containing 39 stores and 14 restaurants. [29] [30] The Commons is a $150 million, 79,000-square-foot (7,300 m 2), retail, restaurant, and residential development expected to bring over 1,500 jobs to East Point, with an estimated completion between 2027 ...
To the Gates of Atlanta: From Kennesaw Mountain to Peach Tree Creek, July 1–19, 1864 (Mercer University Press, 2015) xxiv, 378 pp. Jenkins Sr., Robert D. The Cassville Affairs: Johnson, Hood, and the Failed Confederate Strategy in The Atlanta Campaign, 19 May 1864.
The Georgia International Convention Center or GICC, opened in April 2003, is the second largest convention center in the U.S. state of Georgia, the largest being the Georgia World Congress Center. It is located at 2000 Convention Center Concourse, just off Camp Creek Parkway and Roosevelt Highway in College Park.