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Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Unincorporated communities in the Atlanta metropolitan area ... Talbot County, Georgia; Centerville, Wilkes County, Georgia;
A few counties in Georgia have changed their names. Jasper County was originally named "Randolph County". Later, the present-day Randolph County was founded. Webster County was once named "Kinchafoonee County", and Bartow County was originally named "Cass County".
The Burnt Village (9TP9) was an historic Native American archaeological site located under West Point Reservoir in Troup County, Georgia.The settlement, also known by the Creek name Okfuskenena, was a trading crossroads for natives west of the Chattahoochee River, and reportedly a center for raiding parties against American expansionist efforts in the late 18th century.
Map of Georgia with Cobb County highlighted. ... 2430 Burnt Hickory Rd., NW ... SE of Smyrna at 501 Log Cabin Rd.
Southwest Georgia is a fourteen-county region in the U.S. state of Georgia, [1] bordering Alabama and Florida. Colloquially referred to as SOWEGA, the region is anchored by Albany—its most populous city and the region's sole metropolitan statistical area. As of the 2020 United States census, Southwest Georgia's
A variant name was "Monk". [1] The present name is in reference to the large stone wall built surrounding the former prison camp that sits on the grounds of the former county works facility at the corner of Stonewall Tell Road and Camp Drive.
From the route's western start at SR 40 Conn in Folkston, the route runs east, through rural areas, to its eastern end at US 17/SR 25/SR 110 in White Oak. Known as MLk Dr in Folkston and Burnt Fort Road in Camden county, SR 252 runs past the D. Ray James Prison and provides the most direct route between Folkston and Brunswick, via US 17.
The Western and Atlantic Railroad reached Bartow (then Cass) County in 1843, the Iron Belt Railroad in the 1880s, and the Louisville and Nashville Railroad reached Pine Log Mountain in 1906. The Pine Log WMA area contains multiple historic sites. Among them are: A Woodland-era Native American site. The site of the Sugar Hill convict labor camp.