Kings Road Meets Apalache Trail - Jacksonville, FL
N 30° 19.775 W 081° 39.516
17R E 436689 N 3355490
An historical plaque about the intersection of Kings Road and Apalache Trail is located at Hemming Plaza in downtown Jacksonville, Florida.
Waymark Code: WM8XZB
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 05/29/2010
Views: 18
The plaque reads as follows:
"At this spot the Kings Road met the Apalache Trail, so connecting the English colonies and the Spanish settlements of the West with St. Augustine and New Smyrna."
The following additional information about this historic site is from the
Financial News & Daily Record:
"The slab of coquina with the brass plaque attached commemorating the exact spot where the Apalache Trail and The Kings Road connected is located on the northeast corner of Hemming Plaza across Duval Street from City Hall. When the two trade routes met in the late 1700s, the new interstate highway (even though it wasn’t thought of as that back then) provided a way to move people and supplies from the colonies in Florida up the east coast to the British settlements."
According to a website by William S. Lowe
(visit link): "The Old King's Road was Florida's first highway, beginning from St Augustine in about 1765 to eventually connect Colerain, Georgia, on the St. Mary's River, passing through the settlement of Cowford (Jacksonville), with the new settlement of New Smyrna on the Florida east coast. The road was constructed by British engineers, following the established trails of indigenous people and using crushed Coquina shell as the surfacing material. Most of the highway has disappeared under pavement; however, traces remain."
The Apalachee Indian Trail passed through Alligator (now known as Lake City) to near the upper Mineral Springs (White Springs) on to Tallahassee via Alapaha (
visit link)