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Places We Protect

Okefenokee National Wildlife Preserve

Georgia

Closeup of an American alligator lying in a swamp.
American alligator An alligator rests within a swamp at Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. © Tim Parkinson/Creative Commons

In 1978, a private company donated 14,849 acres of the swamp to The Nature Conservancy.

Okefenokee Protection Update—June 20, 2025

America’s Okefenokee Swamp is a world-renowned treasure and now, thanks to the efforts of The Conservation Fund, conservation partners and supporters like you, it will stay that way.

In June 2025, The Conservation Fund finalized a deal to purchase approximately 8,000 acres near the southeastern boundary of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. This land includes the Trail Ridge property owned by Twin Pines LLC, the company that proposed dragline mining for titanium dioxide just a couple of miles outside the boundaries of the refuge. 

“The Okefenokee Swamp is one of Georgia’s most iconic natural resources,” said Monica Thornton, Executive Director of The Nature Conservancy in Georgia. “The Nature Conservancy has proudly supported the Okefenokee since the 1970s, when we facilitated adding nearly 15,000 acres to the wildlife refuge. The Okefenokee belongs to all of us, and I am grateful to not just The Conservation Fund for protecting it, but also the hundreds of thousands of people who raised their voices in support of the Okefenokee and helped make this outcome possible.”