Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This map shows the incorporated and unincorporated areas in Glynn County, Georgia, highlighting St. Simons in red. It was created with a custom script with US Census Bureau data and modified with Inkscape. Date: 19 September 2007: Source: My own work, based on public domain information. Based on similar map concepts by Ixnayonthetimmay: Author ...
St. Simons Park marker St. Simons Park. Just north of the village on St. Simons Island off Mallery Street is a park of oak trees named St. Simons Park. On the southern edge of the oaks, along a narrow lane, is a low earthen mound where 30 Timucuan Native Americans are buried.
The following 22 pages use this file: Altamaha Park, Georgia; Anguilla, Georgia; Belle Vista, Georgia; Bladen, Georgia; Brunswick, Georgia; Country Club Estates, Georgia
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 585 square miles (1,520 km 2), of which 420 square miles (1,100 km 2) is land and 165 square miles (430 km 2) (28.3%) is water. [4] The majority of Glynn County is located in the Cumberland-St. Simons sub-basin of the St. Marys-Satilla River basin.
Gascoigne Bluff is a bluff next to the Frederica River on the western side of the island of St. Simons, Georgia which was a Native American campground, the site of a Franciscan monastery named San Buenaventura, and the site of the Province of Georgia's first naval base. [1]
St. Simons Island: Two-story garage and residence built in 1925, formerly associated with an estate that no longer exists, converted to a residence-only. 18: US Coast Guard Station-St. Simons Island: US Coast Guard Station-St. Simons Island
Get the St. Simons Island, GA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days. ... Hughes Fire breaks out near Castaic Lake in Los Angeles County: See wildfire map.
St. Simons Island Airport at McKinnon Field (formerly Malcolm McKinnon Airport) (IATA: SSI, ICAO: KSSI, FAA LID: SSI) is six miles east of Brunswick, in Glynn County, Georgia on Saint Simons Island. [1] The airfield was named after Malcom B. McKinnon, chairman of the County Commission when construction started in 1935.