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Related Historical Markers
more Sunbury Road markers shown.
By Mike Stroud, 2009
Old Sunbury Road Marker, along GA 23/121 and Canoochee Road
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
| On Georgia Route 23/121 at Canoochee Road, on the left when traveling south on State Route 23/121. |
| | The route crossing at this point is the Sunbury Road, one of the longest vehicular thoroughfares of post-Revolutionary Georgia. It was laid out in the early 1790's from Greensboro via today's Sparta and Swainsboro to the town of Sunbury, a port on . . . — — Map (db m13361) HM |
| On U.S. 280 at Sunbury Road, on the right when traveling east on U.S. 280. |
| | The highway leading south is a remnant of
the Old Sunbury Road, one of the leading
vehicular thoroughfares of post-Revolutionary
Georgia. It was laid out in the early 1790's
from Greensboro via Sparta and Swainsboro to
the Town of Sunbury, . . . — — Map (db m18621) HM |
| On Ocean Highway (U.S. 17) at Martin Road, on the right when traveling south on Ocean Highway. |
| | The highway entering here is the Sunbury Road which once served as an arterial vehicular route from the interior of Georgia to the town of Sunbury, a former leading port and educational center, located 11 miles to the eastward on the Midway River. . . . — — Map (db m8943) HM |
| On North Coastal Highway (U.S. 17) at Martin Road, on the right when traveling north on North Coastal Highway. |
| | Important Colonial port of entry. First Masonic Lodge meeting in Georgia believed held here February 1734 with Oglethorpe as Master. — — Map (db m8252) HM |
| On Sunbury Road, 0.1 miles west of Fort Morris Road, on the left when traveling west. |
| | The bustling seaport of Sunbury was
once the largest city of this region of
Georgia. Sunbury was the destination
for many trading ships loaded with cargo
from regions around the world. Rum,
sugar, and slaves arrived from the West
Indies. . . . — — Map (db m17242) HM |
May. 6, 2024