Simons, Georgia Simons, Georgia Glynn County Georgia Incorporated and Unincorporated areas St.

Simons is a census-designated place (CDP) positioned on St.

Simons Island in Glynn County, Georgia, United States.

The improve and the island are interchangeable, known simply as "St.

Simons is part of the Brunswick, Georgia Metropolitan Statistical Area, and as stated to the 2010 census, the CDP had a populace of 12,743. Located on the southeast Georgia coast, midway between Savannah and Jacksonville, St.

Simons Island is both a seaside resort and residentiary community.

It is the biggest of Georgia's famous Golden Isles (along with Sea Island, Jekyll Island, and privately owned Little St.

Visitors are drawn to the Island for its warm climate, beaches, range of outside activities, shops and restaurants, historical sites, and its natural surrounding.

The 2010 Enumeration notes that 26.8% of total housing units are for "seasonal, recreational, or occasional use". The vast majority of commercial and residentiary evolution is positioned on the southern half of the island.

Originally inhabited by tribes of the Creek Nation, the region of South Georgia that includes St.

Simons Island was contested by the Spaniards, English and French. After securing the Georgia colony, the English cultivated the territory for rice and cotton plantations worked by large numbers of African slaves, who created the unique Gullah culture that survives to this day. Simons Land Trust Simons Island Lighthouse Museum Simons Island Simons Island is part of a cluster of barrier islands and marsh hammocks between the Altamaha River delta to the north, and St.

Sea Island forms the easterly edge of this cluster, with Little St.

Simons on the north, and the marshes of Glynn plus the Intracoastal Waterway to the west.

Simons is positioned at 31 9 40 N 81 23 13 W (31.161250, -81.386875), midway between Savannah, Georgia and Jacksonville, Florida, and approximately 12 miles (19 km) east of Brunswick, Georgia, the sole municipality in Glynn County and the county government seat.

Simons Island as humid subtropical. Ocean breezes tend to moderate the island climate, as compared to the close-by mainland. Daytime mean highs in winter range from 61 to 68 F (16 to 20 C), with eveningtime lows averaging 43 to 52 F (6 to 11 C).

Simons was in 1989. The island is positioned in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 9a. Simons Island, a diverse and complex ecology exists alongside residentiary and commercial development.

The island shares many features common to the chain of sea islands along the southeastern U.S.

Simons Island and the Altamaha River delta is an meaningful stopover for migrating shorebirds traveling between South America and their spawning grounds in the Canadian arctic.

Simons Island is a designated stop on the Colonial Coast Birding Trail. Simons Island are likewise home to a great range of sea life, including dolphins, right whales, a wide range of gamefish, and the occasional manatee.

Like most barrier islands, St.

Simons Island beaches are constantly shifting as tides, wind and storms move tons of sand annually.

Dolphin sightings are common, especially off the island's south coast.

Simons Land Trust Simons Land Trust is a non-profit conservation organization dedicated to territory preservation on St.

Simons Island.

Funded by improve membership, government grants and small-town fund-raisers, the Land Trust seeks to acquire and/or preserve territory on the island in order to maintain its character and appearance, and to educate the enhance on the importance and benefits of territory conservation.

Simons Land Trust is accredited by the Land Trust Accreditation Commission of the Land Trust Alliance. Simons Land Trust acquired a 608-acre tract of undeveloped territory in the northeast portion of the island.

The ethnic makeup of the CDP was 94.8 percent White, 2.8 percent African American, 0.1 percent Native American, 1.0 percent Asian, 1.53 percent from other competitions, and 0.7 percent from two or more competitions.

Simons Park marker Simons Park Simons Island off Mallery Street is a park of oak trees titled St.

Simons Island was the northern boundary of the tribal and Spanish mission province known as Mocama, which extended southward to the St.

The town of Guadalquini was positioned on the south end of the island at the site of the present-day lighthouse.

Fort Frederica, now Fort Frederica National Monument, was assembled beginning in 1736 as the military command posts of the Province of Georgia amid the early English colonial period.

Nearby is the site of the Battle of Gully Hole Creek and Battle of Bloody Marsh, where on July 7, 1742, the British ambushed Spanish troops marching single file through the marsh and routed them from the island.

It has been preserved in the 20th century and identified as a nationwide historic site largely by the accomplishments of Margaret Davis Cates, a small-town resident who contributed much to historic preservation.

Simons United Methodist Church were commissioned, with Bishop Frank Robertson as first pastor, to begin a new church on the north end of St.

Simons Island.

During the plantation era, Saint Simons became a center of cotton manufacturing known for its long fiber Sea Island Cotton.

The plantations of this and other Sea Islands were large, and often the owners stayed on the mainland in Darien and other towns, especially amid the summers.

A concentration of Africans on these islands led to the evolution of the Gullah citizens , preserving more remnants of West African ethnic groups than in areas of the Upper South, where black slaves were held in lesser groups and interacted more with whites.

One of the last slave ships to bring slaves from Africa docked at St.

Simons Island, but the slaves rose up against their captors and took control of the ship.

Simons Island to protect its strategic locale at the entrance to Brunswick harbor.

Most property owners and their former slaves then retreated inland, and the Union army occupied the island for the remainder of the war. Former slaves established a improve in the center of the island known as Harrington. Saint Simons' first exports of lumber occurred after the Naval Act of 1794, when timber harvested from two thousand Southern live oak trees from Gascoigne Bluff was used to build the USS Constitution and five other frigates (see six initial United States frigates).

The second phase of lumber manufacturing on the island began in the late 1870s, when mills were constructed in the region surrounding Gascoigne Bluff.

Simons Island.

Simons, on the present site of Massengale Park, opened in 1888. About a decade later, two hotels were assembled near the pier.

Simons Island, when a German U-boat sank two petroleum tankers in the middle of the evening.

Simons Island as well as encircling mainland communities.

Simons Island since the late 19th century, at first by boat, disembarking at the pier on its south shore, and later by car via the F.

Simons Island Airport opened, serving general aviation.

Today, the island is marketed as one of Georgia's "Golden Isles," and visitation occurs throughout the year, but is heaviest in the spring and summer months.

Simons Island for its beaches and scenic vistas, water sports, fishing, sailing, golf, historical sites, and laid back lifestyle.

The PGA Tour's RSM Classic (formerly Mc - Gladrey Classic), is held annually in November at the Sea Island Golf Club on St.

Simons Island.

Simons Island is also a magnet for photographers and painters.

Its selection of scenic and historic venues, such as the St.

Simons Lighthouse and Christ Church have made the island a prominent wedding site.

Simons Island has received recommendations from a number of travel publications and websites, including Conde Nast Traveler, Travel+Leisure, Smithsonian Magazine, Coastal Living, Country Living, and Trip - Advisor.

Simons Island is conducive to a range of outside sports and activities year-round.

Eight enhance parks are positioned on the island, with picnic tables, sports fields, and playgrounds.

The Neptune Park Fun Zone, on the south end of the island, near the Pier Village, includes a enhance swimming pool, miniature golf, two playgrounds, picnic tables, and restrooms. The adjoining St.

Simons Casino Building hosts weddings, parties, meetings, and is home to the St.

There are beach access points all along the island's Atlantic shoreline, but the most prominent are Coast Guard Beach and Massengale Park.

Simons Island-wide Trail System that stretches from the Village region to East Beach and Hampton Point at the north end. Other options include the Alice Richards Botanical Trail in Frederica Park, the John Gilbert Nature Trail just off Frederica Road, the Southeast Georgia Health System Fitness Trail near Gascoigne Bluff, and Cannon's Point Preserve (appropriate clothing and provisions for a wilderness region are recommended).

Simons Island as both inhabitants and visitors.

Glynn Visual Arts is a non-profit organization serving small-town artists with exhibits, festivals, and classes in a several media including painting and drawing, pottery, photography, different media, jewelry, and many others. The Literary Guild of St.

Simons Island supports writers with literary and cultural affairs. A non-profit theater group, The Island Players, schedules productions in the Pier Village Casino Theatre. Craft shows are held throughout the year in Postell Park in front of the Casino Building at the Pier Village.

Simons Island, with small-town bands and musicians appearing in a several venues, including summertime concerts on the oceanfront lawn by the Lighthouse, and classical music concerts sponsored by the Island Concert Association. Island history and culture are preserved in a number of small-town museums and sites: Simons Island as she was driving from Chicago to Jacksonville in 1961.

Fascinated by the island, she spent the next several years doing research that eventually resulted in three novels known as the "St.

After the Civil War, a number of former black slaves remained on St.

Simons Island, subsisting on whatever they could harvest from their plant nurseries and the encircling waters.

Many later found jobs with the lumber mills starting in the 1870s. They attended the First African Baptist Church, assembly of which was instead of in 1869 by former slaves of the St.

Simons Island plantations.

In October 2000, at the First African Baptist Church, a group of island inhabitants and property owners formed the St.

Simons African American Heritage Coalition to protect and preserve the history and tradition of African-Americans on St.

Simons Island.

Today, the Coalition conducts tours of historic sites and produces the annual Georgia Sea Islands Festival to jubilate traditional black music, food, and crafts.

More recently the Coalition, together with Friends of Harrington School has organized a prosperous fund-raising accomplishment to restore the historic Harrington School House, which was originally assembled in the 1920s to serve the island's black children. It homes a compilation of books and historical artifacts related to the early history of St.

Simons Island and John and Charles Wesley, framers of the Methodist Movement, who appeared on the island with General James Oglethorpe.

Originally planted in 1850 by Anne Page King as the carriage entrance to Retreat Plantation, two rows of live oaks presently grace the entry to Sea Island Golf Club at the south end of St.

Simons Island on Retreat Avenue, off Kings Way.

Located off Old Demere Road, the site is managed by the National Park Service as a unit of Fort Frederica National Monument.

Simons Island, Cannon's Point is the last remaining undisturbed maritime forest on the island.

Simons Land Trust, the Preserve includes salt marsh, tidal creek, and river shoreline, as well as 4,000-year-old shell middens and ruins of a 17th-century plantation home and slave quarters.

Located on Gascoigne Bluff, Hamilton Plantation was one of the most prosperous plantations on St.

Simons Island, burgeoning high character Sea Island cotton.

In 1808 the State of Georgia gave 100 acres (40 hectares) of territory on St.

Located at 6329 Frederica Road, just south of Fort Frederica National Monument, this historic building is home to an active Episcopal congregation. The adjoining cemetery contains gravesites dating as far back as 1803. Simons Island, Gascoigne Bluff has been a focal point.

Simons Island, GA 31522.

The Maritime Center is a exhibition directed by the Coastal Georgia Historical Society at the former Coast Guard Station positioned at East Beach on St.

Simons Island.

Simons Island Lighthouse Museum Simons Island Light Simons Island Light Simons Island are single-family homes and condominiums.

Census, there were 9,931 housing units on the island, 6,117 of which were occupied either by the owners (74%) or renters (26%); and 2,662 were held for "seasonal, recreational, or occasional use." Simons Island economy.

Major industries include hospitality, food services and retail, along with service businesses and the professions. The biggest employers are the Sea Island Company, King & Prince Resort and Rich Products Consumer Brands Division. Simons Island is part of the Glynn County School District.

There are two enhance schools on the Island: Oglethorpe Point Elementary and St.

Eugenia Price, Author of the Georgia Trilogy and St.

Simons Trilogy, among other historical novels.

"St.

Simons Land Trust".

Simons Land Trust.

"Fort Frederica National Monument - History & Culture".

"Sherpa Guides | Georgia | Coast | Southern Coast | St.

"Gould's Inlet, St.

"Georgia's Colonial Coast Birding Trail | Georgia DNR - Wildlife Resources Division".

"Land Trust Accreditation Commission - Land Trust Accreditation Commission".

Simons Land Trust.

Simons Land Trust, Inc.

Fort Frederica National Monument, 6515 Frederica Road, St.

Simons Island, GA 31522, Historic_Places, https://nps.gov/fofr/, National Park Service Simons Island: A Summary of Its History.

Simons Island.

"History of Saint Simons Island, Georgia".

"Georgia Historic Hotel, Historic Beach Resort | The King and Prince".

"History of Saint Simons Island, Georgia, GA".

"Saint Simons Island, Georgia Golf Courses".

"Literary Guild of St.

Simons Island.

"SSAAHC | St.

"Christ Church, Brunswick, Georgia, Saint Simons Island, Jekyll Island, GA".

"Christ Church and Cemetery - St.

Simons Island, Georgia".

Simons, Georgia.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Saint Simons Island.

Simons Island, New Georgia Encyclopedia Simons Island, Sherpa Guides Simon's Light Station, National Park Service Simons Island historical marker Simons Trolley Stop historical marker

Categories:
Census-designated places in Glynn County, Georgia - Barrier islands of Georgia (U.S.

State) Sea Islands - Landforms of Glynn County, Georgia - Islands of Georgia (U.S.