Petit Gauke and Little Petit Gauke Islands
Petit Gauke at 30 acres and Little Petit Gauke Island at 7 acres are located in the beautiful marshes of coastal Georgia, with excellent climate, sea breezes, adjacent to Intracoastal Waterway, near Skidaway Island, high ground and beautiful tree cover.
There is currently a dock, a floating dock and a deep well on each island and a very small cabin on Little Petit Gauke Island. Petit Gauke Island is zoned for 4 lots and Little Petit ...
Petit Gauke at 30 acres and Little Petit Gauke Island at 7 acres are located in the beautiful marshes of coastal Georgia, with excellent climate, sea breezes, adjacent to Intracoastal Waterway, near Skidaway Island, high ground and beautiful tree cover.
There is currently a dock, a floating dock and a deep well on each island and a very small cabin on Little Petit Gauke Island. Petit Gauke Island is zoned for 4 lots and Little Petit Gauke Island is zoned for one.
The land was granted by Sir James Wright, governor of the colony of Georgia, in the name of King George III to Philip Delegal on May 1, 1764. He was an army officer under Oglethorpe. However, at the end of the revolutionary war, the patriot government confiscated the islands and they were sold at public sale to William Steadman and then to Joseph Stiles. The islands were sold out of the Stiles estate in 1925 to Livingston McLaws.
Petit Gauke at 30 acres and Little Petit Gauke Island at 7 acres are located in the beautiful marshes of coastal Georgia, with excellent climate, sea breezes, adjacent to Intracoastal Waterway, near Skidaway Island, high ground and beautiful tree cover.
There is currently a dock, a floating dock and a deep well on each island and a very small cabin on Little Petit Gauke Island. Petit Gauke Island is zoned for 4 lots and Little Petit Gauke Island is zoned for one.
The land was granted by Sir James Wright, governor of the colony of Georgia, in the name of King George III to Philip Delegal on May 1, 1764. He was an army officer under Oglethorpe. However, at the end of the revolutionary war, the patriot government confiscated the islands and they were sold at public sale to William Steadman and then to Joseph Stiles. The islands were sold out of the Stiles estate in 1925 to Livingston McLaws.