Suwanee River, misspelled by Stephen Foster in writing "Old Folks at Home".
Bridge over the Suwanee River, thus entering Dixie County.
On the infield's enormous lake, a miniature red-and-white paddlewheeler called the Suwanee River putts back and forth aimlessly.
Bolek was designated as a village or itwála chief while a young man; he was based near the Suwanee River of western Florida.
From there it turns north, roughly following the Suwanee River back into Georgia and along the western fringes of the Okefenokee Swamp.
The St. Marys River and the Suwanee River both originate in the swamp.
By January 19, 1957, The Saturday Review had accepted and published a poem titled Suwanee River.
The park is situated on the Suwanee River and features Limestone bluffs as well as the biggest whitewater rapids in all of Florida.
The area is one of Florida's least populated, and includes a wildlife refuge near the mouth of the Suwanee River.
In the mid-1950s, he performed traditional dances at the Florida Folk Festival in Union County, on the Suwanee River.