Quality Inn Fort Jackson - Benelux Hotel Rotterdam
Quality Inn Fort Jackson
Fort Toulouse and Fort Jackson are two forts that shared the same site at the fork of the Coosa River and the Tallapoosa River, near Wetumpka, Alabama.
Fort James Jackson (usually shortened to Fort Jackson) is a restored nineteenth-century fort located one mile east of Savannah, Georgia, on the Savannah River. It hosts the Fort Jackson Maritime Museum.
Fort Jackson was one of the four fur trading forts that lined the South Platte River area north of present-day metro Denver area. It was built by in the early part of 1837 at a cost of $12,000.00 by Peter A.
Choice Hotels International is a hospitality holding corporation which owns several hotel brands and is based in Silver Spring, Maryland. In 2008, Choice Hotels’ total revenue was $642 million, of which $637 million was from Franchise and $4.94 million was from Corporate Items.
Fort Jackson Panorama
OLD FORT JACKSON
Old Fort Jackson is the oldest standing brick fortification in Georgia! A National Historic Landmark, the fort is one of only eight Second System fortifications (a series of forts built prior to the War of 1812) still standing in the United States.
Built on the site of a battery used in the American Revolution, construction began in 1808.
The fort protected Savannah during the War of 1812 and served as the headquarters for the Savannah River defenses during the Civil War. Confederate troops garrisoned the fort and protected Savannah for most of the war. The city and Fort Jackson finally fell to Union forces in December 1864 when General William Tecumseh Sherman ended his famous "March to the Sea" in Savannah.
Old Fort Jackson - Savannah
OLD FORT JACKSON
Old Fort Jackson is the oldest standing brick fortification in Georgia! A National Historic Landmark, the fort is one of only eight Second System fortifications (a series of forts built prior to the War of 1812) still standing in the United States.
Built on the site of a battery used in the American Revolution, construction began in 1808.
The fort protected Savannah during the War of 1812 and served as the headquarters for the Savannah River defenses during the Civil War. Confederate troops garrisoned the fort and protected Savannah for most of the war. The city and Fort Jackson finally fell to Union forces in December 1864 when General William Tecumseh Sherman ended his famous "March to the Sea" in Savannah.