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  1. The Bartram Trail follows the approximate route of 18th-century naturalist William Bartram’s southern journey from March 1773 to January 1777. Bartram explored much of the territory which is now the states of North and South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Tennessee.

  2. The National Bartram Trail is being created as Heritage Corridor. The Corridor encompasses all of the land 25 miles either side of the best approximation of the actual routes followed by William Bartram. Within Florida, the corridor includes routes taken by John and William Bartram in 1765 as well as those taken by William Bartram in 1774.

  3. 1 août 2023 · John Bartram wrote of excellent swamps, plentiful alligators, and the majestic stature of cypress trees. Billy Bartram wrote of a Palatka filled with Native American festivals, rattlesnake encounters, and watermelon feasts.

  4. The St. Johns served as the main thoroughfare for Bartram’s travels in Florida as he recorded his impressions of the area’s ferocious alligators “roaring terribly and belching floods of water,”...

  5. William Bartram St. Johns River Loop. Discover the beauty of Welaka State Forest on a 5 mile footpath that winds along ecotones and hugs the bluffs of the St. Johns River to showcase natural wonders that botanist William Bartram documented in 1774.

  6. In the winter of 1765-66 a sixty-six year old Quaker from Pennsylvania named John Bartram, accompanied by his son William Bartram, traveled in a dugout canoe to explore East Florida’s most important waterway, the St. Johns River.

  7. 31 oct. 2005 · The William Bartram Scenic and Historic Highway – State Road 13 (SR13) – winds its way along the St. Johns River through pine and palmetto barrens, oak hammocks and swamps, often canopied with trees.