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Alligator Creek is a creek on Eglin Air Force Base near Wright, Florida. [1] [2] [3] It flows out to East Bay River and eventually into East Bay. [1] References
The Battle of Alligator Bridge took place on June 30, 1778, and was the only major engagement in an unsuccessful campaign to conquer British East Florida during the American Revolutionary War. A detachment of Georgia militiamen under the command of General James Screven chased Thomas Brown 's Loyalist company into a large position of British ...
Panther Creek, Alligator Creek, and several other unnamed creeks The East Bay River (also called the East River [ 1 ] and historically known as The River Jordan or the Chester River [ 2 ] ) in Florida is a 15-mile-long (24 km) [ 3 ] river located in Santa Rosa [ 4 ] and Okaloosa counties.
The river forming the eastern boundary of the Lunga perimeter was the Ilu River, nicknamed Alligator Creek by the Marines, a double misnomer: there are crocodiles not alligators in the Solomons, and Alligator "Creek" was a tidal lagoon separated from the ocean by a sandbar about 7 to 15 meters (23 to 49 ft) wide and 30 meters (98 ft) long. [27]
Alligator Creek [6] Panther Creek [7] Parker Lake via an unnamed creek [8] Dean Creek. West Head [9] Watering Head [9] Steep Head [9] East Head [9] Gable Lake via an unnamed stream Hidden Pond via an unnamed stream Hidden Creek [10] Poplar Creek; Fundy Bayou [11] Miller Bayou; Tom King Bayou; Yellow River [12] Boiling Creek Fishtrap Branch ...
The first segment of Jacaranda Boulevard built was from Center Road south to Alligator Creek in the 1970s to provide access to the Jacaranda communities. [18] The road was built from Venice Avenue north to Interstate 75 when I-75 opened in Sarasota County in 1981. This segment was originally known as Everglades Boulevard. [18]
Construction progress on an intake area for collecting Black Creek water along Florida 16 near Penney Farms was reflected in aerial images shown in August to the St. Johns River Water Management ...
Ceramic and other artifacts recovered from the mound in 1975 by James Miller has made the Aqui Esta one of the most significant sites in peninsular Florida. Approximately 45 rare shell cups, along with exotic incised ceramics vessels from Fort Walton and St. John, both 200 miles (320 km) to the north, were excavated. [2]