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The Gasconade River is about 280 miles (450 km) long [1] and is located in central and south-central Missouri. [2] [3]The Gasconade River begins in the Ozarks southwest of Hartville in Wright County and flows generally north-northeastwardly through Wright, Laclede, Pulaski, Phelps, Maries, Osage and Gasconade counties, through portions of the Mark Twain National Forest.
Bald Ridge Creek; Bear Creek (Gasconade River tributary) Beaver Creek (Gasconade River tributary) Big Piney River; Boone Creek (Big Piney River tributary) Brush Creek (Osage Fork Gasconade River tributary) Buck Elk Creek
This 5,977-acre (24.19 km 2) area has a unique combination of river, floodplain, rolling uplands, and steep river bluffs. The Lamine River is a signature feature of the area meandering through bottomlands of forest, cropfields, oldfields, and small wetlands. Upl : 5,985 acres 2,422 ha: Cooper, Morgan
It is situated at the mouth of the Gasconade River, from which it takes its name. [6] The Gasconade Bridge train disaster was a rail accident that took place in Gasconade on November 1, 1855, when the Gasconade bridge collapsed under the weight of the O'Sullivan locomotive. Thirty-one people were killed.
It continues east entering Pulaski County one half mile before entering the Gasconade under the Missouri Route 133 bridge south of Richland. [2] Bear Creek was named for the fact the area was a hunting ground of bears by pioneer settlers. [3]
Double Cabins, also known as Mitchell-Walker-Hollberg House, is a historic site outside Griffin, Georgia in Spalding County, Georgia. [1] The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 7, 1973. It is located northeast of Griffin on Georgia State Route 155, at 3335 Jackson Road.
This page was last edited on 26 October 2023, at 16:08 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Blue Ridge is the home of the Blue Ridge Scenic Railway, a restored railroad that features a four-hour, 26 mile roundtrip journey along the Toccoa River to the sister towns McCaysville, Georgia, and Copperhill, Tennessee. [8] The original tracks started in Marietta, Georgia, and reached Blue Ridge and the surrounding areas in 1886.