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St. Philip's Church, Brunswick Town

1768 establishments in North Carolina1776 disestablishments in North Carolina18th-century Church of England church buildingsArchaeological sites on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaBrick buildings and structures
Brunswick Town Historic DistrictBuildings and structures on the Cape Fear RiverCemeteries in North CarolinaChurches completed in 1768Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaColonial architecture in North CarolinaDestroyed churches in North CarolinaFormer Church of England churches in North CarolinaGeorgian architecture in North CarolinaHistoric American Buildings Survey in North CarolinaHistoric district contributing properties in North CarolinaNational Register of Historic Places in Brunswick County, North CarolinaProtected areas of Brunswick County, North CarolinaRuins on the National Register of Historic PlacesUse American English from December 2017Use mdy dates from December 2017
Brunswicktown St Phillips Church Ruins
Brunswicktown St Phillips Church Ruins

St. Philip's Church, Brunswick Town, is a ruined parish church in Brunswick County, North Carolina, United States. The Anglican church was erected in 1768 and destroyed in 1776. The ruins are located beside the Cape Fear River in the Brunswick Town Historic District, along with Fort Anderson, Russelborough, and the nearby Orton Plantation. Construction lasted 14 years, but took only one day to be destroyed when the British Army burned Brunswick Town. Before its demise, the church was considered one of the finest religious structures in North Carolina. On February 26, 1970, the historic site was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. Philip's Church, Brunswick Town (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. Philip's Church, Brunswick Town
State Road 1533,

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Latitude Longitude
N 34.041277777778 ° E -77.946666666667 °
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Address

State Road 1533
28428
North Carolina, United States
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Brunswicktown St Phillips Church Ruins
Brunswicktown St Phillips Church Ruins
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Pleasure Island (North Carolina)
Pleasure Island (North Carolina)

Pleasure Island is a coastal barrier island in Southeastern North Carolina, United States, just south of the City of Wilmington. Pleasure Island is located within Federal Point Township, in New Hanover County. The coastal resort towns of Carolina Beach and Kure Beach, as well as the annexed communities of Wilmington Beach and Hanby Beach are located on the island. The southern end of Pleasure Island was separated from Bald Head Island (Smith Island) by Corncake Inlet (New Inlet) until the inlet was shoaled and closed in 1998 by Hurricane Bonnie; thus Pleasure Island and Bald Head Island are no longer separate islands. The combined island now stretches from Carolina Beach Inlet in the north, the Cape Fear River to the west, Onslow Bay (Atlantic Ocean) to the east and Long Bay (Atlantic Ocean) to the south. It is 17 miles long, 2 miles wide in the far north, 3 miles wide at the far south and about ½ mile wide in the middle. On the southeastern tip of the combined island lies "the point", or headland, known as Cape Fear. The shallow and treacherous Frying Pan Shoals jut 30 miles into the Atlantic Ocean southeasterly from the point. The shoal (or sandbar) is formed by the intersection of the longshore currents of Onslow Bay and Long Bay as well as the discharge from the Cape Fear River.Pleasure Island refers to the northern half of the combined island (the portion in New Hanover County) and Bald Head Island refers to the southern half of the combined island (the portion in Brunswick County). Prior to the 1931 completion of a man-made canal called Snows Cut, the land that now forms Pleasure Island was part of a peninsula known as Federal Point, a long narrow strip of sandy ground that stretched from Myrtle Grove to Fort Fisher. The Federal Point Light once stood at southern end of the peninsula at the edge of New Inlet. U.S. Highway 421 provides the only bridge access to Pleasure Island. A ferry at the southern terminus of Route 421 at Fort Fisher connects Pleasure Island to Southport, NC at (North Carolina Highway 211). A separate ferry from Southport brings travelers and supplies to Bald Head Island to the south. There are no roads between the two halves of the combined island, but park ranger vehicles, fat-tire bike riders and pedestrians can traverse the beach strand to make the connection as needed. Pleasure Island is home to an unusual 11-acre fresh water lake that was once the headwater of Myrtle Grove Sound. It is spring fed and less than 200 yards from the salty waters of the Atlantic Ocean. The lake was formerly known as "The Freshwater Lake" but is now called "Carolina Beach Lake". The name "Pleasure Island" was the product of a marketing effort by the local Chambers of Commerce back in 1972. They thought Pleasure Island was a positive way to refer to the coastal resources of the area. Pleasure Island is now part of a 20-mile, unbroken strand of sandy beach stretching from Carolina Beach Inlet, 7 miles south to New Hanover/Brunswick County line, 10 more miles south to the Cape and then 3 miles west to the mouth of the Cape Fear River.