Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

It all begins with an idea. Maybe you want to launch a business. Maybe you want to turn a hobby into something more. Or maybe you have a creative project to share with the world. Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference. Don’t worry about sounding professional. Sound like you. There are over 1.5 billion websites out there, but your story is what’s going to separate this one from the rest. If you read the words back and don’t hear your own voice in your head, that’s a good sign you still have more work to do.

GIFT Tables
TREE NUMBER TREE NAME TREE LOCATION GIRTH (FEET) APPROX. AGE _ 50 Years LOCAL HISTORY or SIGNIFICANCE
91 Wesley Academy of Early Learning Oak 6520 Frederica Rd., SSI 13�2� 149 In the Victorian Era, a mule-drawn trolley met visitors at the pier in the Village and took them to their destination on the Island. Around 1900, rails for a motorized trolley were laid along Railroad Avenue, now Beachview Drive.
92 Big old oak 1240 Demere 16'8" 258 Willis Proctor�s ancestors lived on the Island for generations. His grandfather, Robert Merchant, was a slave at Retreat Plantation. In 1848 Robert planted the now famous Avenue of Oaks at the entrance to Retreat Plantation. His mother was also a Retreat slave and his father was enslaved by the Goulds of Blank Banks. Willis was valet to William Rockefeller when Rockefeller was in residence at his home on Jekyll Island. Willis Procter later owned a store on the corner of Proctor Lane and Demere Rd. He was also a member of the Sea Island Singers. His brother lived on Jekyll Island, and when Willis wanted to visit him it is said that he swam there.
93 Old Proctor Lane Oak 1150 Mallery St., SSI 22� 199  
94 Wesley Academy of Early Learning Oak 6520 Frederica Rd., SSI 13�2� 149 The eccentric millionaire McEvers Bayard Brown, a Jekyll Island Club millionaire, commissioned a cottage that was constructed on Jekyll Island near the site of this tree. The elegant cottage was built for his bride to be, but the wedding was cancelled. Heartbroken, Brown left for England, never to return to the Golden Isles. He spent the rest of his life on a yacht in an English harbor. The lovely Queen Anne style home he had built was occupied only by caretakers and Club staff. The house fell into disrepair and was demolished after the State of Georgia obtained title to the Island in the 1940s.
95 Wesley Academy of Early Learning Oak 6520 Frederica Rd., SSI 13�2� 149  
96 Wesley Academy of Early Learning Oak 6520 Frederica Rd., SSI 13�2� 149  
97 Wesley Academy of Early Learning Oak 6520 Frederica Rd., SSI 13�2� 149