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Green Cove Springs is a city in and the county seat of Clay County, Florida, United States. [4] Green Cove Springs is a part of the Jacksonville, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area . The population was 9,786 at the 2020 census , up from 6,908 at the 2010 census.
The Green Cove Springs Historic District is a U.S. historic district (designated as such on March 28, 1991) located in Green Cove Springs, Florida. The district is bounded by Bay Street, CSX RR tracks, Center Street, Orange Avenue, St. Elmo Street and St. Johns Road. It contains 78 historic buildings and 1 structure.
Green Cove Springs: 9: Joseph Green House: Joseph Green House: July 15, 1998 : 531 McIntosh Avenue: Orange Park: Part of the Orange Park, Florida MPS. Photo is of building on site. The house was demolished in 1999. [6] 10: Haskell-Long House
The Florida National Guard developed this 28,000-acre (110 km 2) complex. During World War II, it trained over 90,000 troops and became the fourth-largest "city" in the state. In Green Cove Springs, Lee Field was a flight training center. After World War II, Lee Field became a base for the mothball fleet.
Military Museum of North Florida is located at the Reynolds Industrial Park opened in 2007. Located at 1 Bunker Avenue, Green Cove Springs, Florida, off State Road 16 East (Leonard C. Taylor Parkway) at . The Museum features indoor and outdoor displays of plane and vehicles.
The Clay County Historic Courthouse is a historic county courthouse in Green Cove Springs, Florida.The two-story brick building was built in 1889 and used until 1973. A historical marker commemorates its history. [2]
Clay County Historical Museum. The Clay County Historical Society Museum is located in Green Cove Springs, Clay County, Florida.It is located in the 1890 Courthouse Annex. Exhibits include a country kitchen, a music room, doll room, vault, climb aboard wooden caboose, fully equipped railroad transfer station and a country sto
St. Mary's was organized in 1878 as a mission church of the Episcopal Diocese of Florida. [2] Green Cove Springs was a popular winter resort at the time, and a woman from Boston who spent her winters there wrote to Bishop John Freeman Young asking that a chapel be built to serve the town's seasonal guests.