place

Lake Toxaway, North Carolina

Unincorporated communities in Transylvania County, North CarolinaWestern North Carolina geography stubs
Lake Toxaway Methodist Church, Lake Toxaway, NC (49081569493)
Lake Toxaway Methodist Church, Lake Toxaway, NC (49081569493)

Lake Toxaway is an unincorporated community in western Transylvania County, North Carolina on U.S. Route 64, and North Carolina Highway 281.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lake Toxaway, North Carolina (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lake Toxaway, North Carolina
Blue Ridge Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Lake Toxaway, North CarolinaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.132222222222 ° E -82.933888888889 °
placeShow on map

Address

Grand Olde Station

Blue Ridge Road 502
28747
North Carolina, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
grandoldestation.com

linkVisit website

Lake Toxaway Methodist Church, Lake Toxaway, NC (49081569493)
Lake Toxaway Methodist Church, Lake Toxaway, NC (49081569493)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Camp Merrie-Woode
Camp Merrie-Woode

Camp Merrie-Woode is a non-profit residential camp for girls ages 7–17 in the western hills of North Carolina with a history started in 1919. The camp resides beneath Old Bald [1] and alongside Fairfield Lake in Jackson County. In 2005 there were twenty-eight U.S. states and four foreign countries represented with 85% of campers returning the following summer. Young ladies at Camp Merrie-Woode develop confidence by participating in activities such as horseback riding, sailing, hiking, rock climbing, theatre, and river trips down the Chattooga, Nantahala, French Broad, Nolichucky, and the 'mighty' Tuckaseegee River.The North Carolina National Heritage Program lists Old Bald/Cherry Cove as one of the "significant natural areas of Jackson County" because of the forest of Northern Red Oaks in the region, as well as one of the two historic grassy balds [2] in the county. The land is registered a U.S. National Heritage Area and is owned by a combination of the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, local, and private entities. Camp Merrie-Woode operates as a 501(c)(3) non-profit educational institution. Camp Merrie-Woode's extraordinary natural setting has inspired a lasting appreciation of the world's beauty in thousands of girls and young women since 1919. In this friendly, non-competitive community of simplified living, each individual is valued for who she is and who she will become. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places for Jackson County in 1995 as a national historic district, Merrie-Woode is recognized for historical and architectural significance as a historic district that has been preserved in its original Adirondack style.