Dungenss Ruins I Cumberland Island Georgia
by Dawna Moore Photography
Title
Dungenss Ruins I Cumberland Island Georgia
Artist
Dawna Moore Photography
Medium
Photograph - Nature And Travel Photography
Description
"English Gen. James Oglethorpe arrived at the Georgia coast in 1733. The name of Cumberland Island was given by a young Timucuan named Toonahowi, (the nephew of Chief Tomochichi who visited England with Oglethorpe.) He suggested the island be named for William Augustus, the 13-year old Duke of Cumberland.
Oglethorpe established a hunting lodge he called Dungeness, named after a headland in Kent, England. A fort was erected at the southern point of the island called Fort William. At the northern end of the island, Oglethorpe built Fort St. Andrews, and for a decade a small village named Berrimacke existed near the fort. The forts were built to defend English settlements to the north from the Spanish in Florida." (brownsguide.com)
Uploaded
March 19th, 2015
Statistics
Viewed 119 Times - Last Visitor from Cambridge, MA on 04/18/2024 at 3:05 AM
Embed
Share
Sales Sheet
Comments
There are no comments for Dungenss Ruins I Cumberland Island Georgia. Click here to post the first comment.