Fort Frederica National Monument - Camping

Campgrounds you can reserve online

Fort Clinch Sp Campground

Mileage:39 mi
Description: Camping sites are reservable on a year-round basis. Reservations can be made up to 11 months in advance. Park is open from 8:00 am to sunset daily. The Fort is open from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm daily. The Gift Shop and Museum is open from 9:00 am to 4:30 pm daily. For further information on this campground, please click on the following link: click here
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Little Talbot Island Sp Campground

Mileage:53 mi
Description: For further information on this campground, please click on the following link: click here
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Anastasia Campground

Mileage:94 mi
Description: Quiet hour starts at 11:00 pm. Vehicles and dogs are prohibited on the beach. Campers with pets must comply with the established pet policies. For further information on this campground, please click on the following link: click here
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Hunting Island Campground

Mileage:97 mi
Description: Hunting Island State park is a 5000 acre semi-tropical barrier island offering one of the longest public beaches in the lowcountry of South Carolina. Its 4 miles of beach, prisitine maritime forest, historic 1873 lighthouse, camping and cabin facilties makes this park one of South Carolina's largest and most visited properties.
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Gold Head Branch Sp Campground

Mileage:101 mi
Description: The park contains 2300 acres of rolling sandhills and long leaf pines, with several lakes and a ravine with seepage springs cutting through the park for approximately 1.5 miles. The park is home to bald eagles, Sherman's fox squirrels, gopher tortoises, red cockaded woodpeckers, various snakes, hawks, fox, and numerous songbirds. The time for wildflower viewing is during October.Starting July 1, 2009 - You must being your own linens. For further information on this campground, please click on the following link:
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Stephen Foster Folk Cc Sp Campground

Mileage:103 mi
Description: Stephen Foster Folk Culture Center State Park offers within the park, the Stephen Foster Museum, Carillon Tower, Craft Square/Gift Shop, and a view of the famous Suwannee River. The Stephen Foster Museum and Carillon Tower features exhibits and dioramas from Stephen Fosters songs as well as a display of antique pianos. The Carillon Tower is also home to the worlds largest tubular bell instrument, constructed and installed in 1957. The tower rings out Fosters tunes in scheduled concerts throughout the day. Visit the Craft Square where working craftsmen demonstrate cultural arts and traditions, from quilting to blacksmithing and home canning. Classes are offered regularly. The Cousin Thelma Boltin Craft & Gift Shop sells regional foods, crafts, gifts, handmade items by local artists as well as Stephen Foster memorabilia For further information on this campground, please click on the following link: click here
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Edisto Beach Campground

Mileage:109 mi
Description: This 1255-acre park includes a dense maritime forest and an expansive salt marsh where visitors can explore the wonders of nature. The park offers 113 improved campsites, several walk-in tent sites, 7 rental cabins, a day-use area for beach access and a four-mile nature trail that winds through the maritime forest with beautiful vistas overlooking the salt marsh.
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O'leno Sp Campground

Mileage:116 mi
Description: O'Leno State Park is located on the banks of the scenic Santa Fe River. Within the park, the Santa Fe disappears and flows underground for approximately 3 miles before it again becomes a surface stream. The park was originally constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the late 1930's, and encompasses in excess of 6000 acres. For further information on this campground, please click on the following link: click here
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Suwannee River Sp Campground

Mileage:121 mi
Description: Suwannee River was among the first parks to become part of the Florida State Park system. An original 300 acres was purchased in 1936. The park now has more than 1800 acres in three counties: Suwannee, Madison, and Hamilton. The river hums with echoes of history - of the booming days of plantations and logging empires, of the high times of paddle-wheel boats steaming up and down the river, of the long disorientation after the Civil War, and of the quiet persistence of strong pioneers who lived off this land and profited from the rivers. South of the junction of the rivers, an earthworks was constructed by the Confederates during the Civil War. Its main purpose was to protect the railroad bridge across the Suwannee. Essential supplies, such as the beef, salt, and sugar needed to feed the Confederate armies, were shipped by rail to Georgia. Union troops dispatched from Jacksonville to capture the bridge were turned back near Olustee in a hard fought battle on February 20, 1864. The park offers many opportunites for recreation in the "Real Florida." For further information on this campground, please click on the following link: click here
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Note: All mileage numbers are "as the crow flies"

Crazy Creek


$158.95


Crazy Creek Crazy Criband LEX w/Tarp : Redesigned with a fully enclosed mosquito net canopy. Beats sleeping on the ground!

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