About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 41. Chapters: Museums in McIntosh County, Georgia, People from Brunswick, Georgia, People from McIntosh County, Georgia, Sonny Carter, Darien, Georgia, Fort King George, Ray Lloyd, Kwame Brown, Adam Wainwright, Mary Hood, U.S. Route 17 in Georgia, Harris Neck Army Airfield, Ed Dudley, Interstate 95 in Georgia, Sapelo Island, Mack Mattingly, Christopher Barrios, Jr., Steve Melnyk, Madaline A. Williams, Georgia State Route 57, John William Davis, Bumble Bee Slim, Eulonia, Georgia, Charles S. Thomas, Paul Phillips, Brunswick metropolitan area, Crescent, Georgia, Blackbeard Island National Wildlife Refuge, Townsend, Georgia, A.D. "Pete" Correll, Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge, Ellis E. Williams, Sapelo Island Light, ReShard Lee, Anthony A. Alaimo, McIntosh County School District, Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary, Willie McClendon, George Rose, Ken Blackman, Francis Muir Scarlett, Wolf Island National Wildlife Refuge, Aaron Swinson, First African Baptist Church at Raccoon Bluff. Excerpt: Fort King George was a fort located in the U.S. state of Georgia. The fort was built in 1721 along the Altamaha River, and served as the southernmost outpost of the British Empire in the Americas until 1727. The fort was constructed in, what was considered at that time, the colony of South Carolina, but territory later settled as Georgia. It was to be one of many forts intended to precipitate frontier settlements that would expand Great Britain's southern border at the Savannah River to the Altamaha River. The fort was located many days away from the next closest British town, Beaufort, South Carolina to the north. It was built at a time when Great Britain, France, and Spain were all engaged in a heated imperial competition to control the Southeast, especially the Savannah-Altamaha River region. On the surface, Fort King George seemed a col...