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Dacula (/ d ə ˈ k j uː l ə / də-KEW-lə) is a city in Gwinnett County, Georgia, United States, located approximately 37 miles (60 km) northeast of Atlanta. The population as of the 2010 census was 4,442, [ 5 ] and the U.S. Census Bureau estimated the population to be 6,255 as of 2018. [ 6 ]
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The Elisha Winn House is located at 908 Dacula Road near Dacula, Georgia, United States, 1.9 miles (3.1 km) north of Dacula city limits.The house, currently in Gwinnett County, was built in 1812, six years before the county was established.
The Gwinnett Manufacturing Company, a cotton textile factory, operated in Lawrenceville in the 1850s through 1865, when it burned. The Bona Allen Company in Buford, Georgia produced saddles, harnesses and other leather goods from 1873 to 1981. [11] The northeastern part of Gwinnett County was removed in 1914 to form a part of the new Barrow County.
The following 32 pages use this file: Auburn, Georgia; Berkeley Lake, Georgia; Braselton, Georgia; Buford, Georgia; Centerville, Gwinnett County, Georgia
The Little Mulberry Indian Mounds are a series of carefully stacked rock piles located in Little Mulberry Park, Dacula, Georgia. In 1990, architect Michael Garrow counted 200 of these stone mounds while surveying the land ahead of a proposed golf course residential development. [2] The stone piles are typically circular or semicircular in shape.
Sugarloaf Parkway is an at-grade and limited-access highway in Gwinnett County in the north-central part of the U.S. state of Georgia.The highway provides a cross-county route from Duluth to Dacula.
U.S. Highway 29 (US 29) in the state of Georgia is a north–south United States Numbered Highway that runs southwest to northeast from West Point at the Alabama state line to the South Carolina state line, near Lake Hartwell.