Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Ardsley Park–Chatham Crescent Historic District is a historic district in Savannah, Georgia, United States. Covering 400 acres (1.6 km 2), the district was first listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.
Today, the Lewis Kayton House, also known as Mansion on Forsyth Park, is a 126-room Romanesque Revival-style hotel which covers 18,000 square feet (1,700 m 2). The former Kayton mansion was converted into a lounge and restaurant that includes a cooking school. The three-story hotel was built onto the mansion with the same exterior style.
H0916 Brunswick Fire Station And Flats, 24 Blyth Street Brunswick; H0594 Cottage, 130 Barkly Street, Brunswick; South Brunswick Brickworks; H1285 Former Ferry Terra Cotta And Enamelled Brickworks Office, 310 Albert Street Brunswick; H2027 Former Brunswick Gas & Coke Company Retort House, 21-35 Hope Street Brunswick
In 1995, the path of US 17 between Savannah and Hardeeville, South Carolina, was shifted to the southeast, onto I-16 and SR 404 Spur, thus replacing US 17 Alt./SR 25 Alt. The portion of US 17 in South Carolina was replaced by a westward extension of South Carolina Highway 170. [43] [44]
State Route 25 (SR 25) is a state highway in the eastern part of the U.S. state of Georgia.It travels south-to-north near the Atlantic Ocean, serving the Brunswick and Savannah metropolitan areas on its path from the Florida state line at the St. Marys River to the South Carolina state line at the Little Back River, a channel of the Savannah River.
The current 7,780-foot-long cable-stay bridge built to replace the old vertical-lift one opened in 2003 with extra safety measures, according to Tom Boyd, chief communications officer for the ...
Johnson Square was the first of Savannah's squares, and remains the largest of the 22. It was named for Robert Johnson, colonial governor of South Carolina and a friend of General Oglethorpe. [9] [10] Interred under the Nathanael Greene Monument in the square is Revolutionary War hero General Nathanael Greene, the namesake of nearby Greene Square.
The district is about 2 square miles (5.2 km 2) in area. It is bounded by the Savannah River on the north, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard on the west, Gwinnett Street and Forsyth Park on the south, and East Broad Street and Trustees' Garden on the east. [1] Below is an incomplete list of relevant buildings inside Savannah Historic District ...