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  Home / Flights on Delta Airlines / Delta Airlines Flights from Jacksonville (JAX) to Atlanta (ATL)

Delta Airlines Flights from Jacksonville (JAX) to Atlanta (ATL)

Orbitz is pleased to offer airline tickets on Delta Airlines, which operates 9 regularly scheduled daily non-stop flights from Jacksonville (JAX) to Atlanta (ATL), departing between 6:00am and 6:00pm, and 2 additional non-stop flights, departing between 7:00am and 7:20pm on select days of the week. The average travel time from Jacksonville, FL to Atlanta, GA is 1 hour and 15 minutes.

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Vice versa? Search for last minute deals on airline tickets from Atlanta (ATL) to Jacksonville (JAX)

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Regularly Scheduled Flights to Atlanta (ATL) from Jacksonville (JAX)
Daily
Non-Stops
Select
Non-Stop
Earliest
Flight
Last
Flight
 
Delta Airlines
9
2
6:00am
7:20pm
2
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3:22pm
6:00pm
1
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3:22pm
3:22pm
4
2
6:20am
7:31pm
1
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7:00am
7:00am
2
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11:30am
12:50pm
 


During your Atlanta vacation, don't miss these great establishments and attractions:

White Water
Forty acres of wet, splashy fun await you at White Water, one of the largest water parks in the South. Its star attraction is the $1-million Tree House Island, a four-story fantasy treehouse with over 100 different activities -- curvy slides, net bridges, water cannons, chutes, and more. A 1,000-gallon bucket of water empties over the whole attraction every few minutes. Other park highlights include Cliffhanger, a 990-foot free fall (one of the tallest such attractions in the world); the 735-foot Run-A-Way River, an enclosed tunnel raft ride; the "Atlanta Ocean," a 750,000-gallon wave pool; and a host of different slide and splash experiences. There's much more, including a special section for children 48 inches and under called Little Squirt's Island, offering 25 tot-size water attractions. Adjacent Captain Kid's Cove has dozens of additional activities for kids age 12 and under. Restaurants and snack bars are on the premises, as are rental lockers and shower facilities. Swimsuits are essential.Next to White Water is American Adventures (tel. 770/424-9283), an indoor/outdoor family amusement park featuring children's rides in the Fun Forest (bumper cars, a small roller coaster, a tilt-a-whirl, and others); a classic carousel; a go-cart track; a penny arcade with over 130 games; Professor Plinker's Laboratory -- a large children's play area with ball crawls and nets to climb; 18-hole miniature golf; and the Foam Factory, a huge, multilevel interactive play area featuring scads of foam ball activities. It's all geared to children age 12 and under. A family-style restaurant is on the grounds. Admission to American Adventures is $15 plus tax for children 36 inches and up, $5 plus tax for adults and children age 3 and under. If you just want to visit the Foam Factory, admission is $3 for parents and children age 3 and under, $6 for children ages 4 to 17. The park is operated seasonally. Call for open dates and hours.

Wren's Nest
Named for a family of wrens that once nested in the mailbox, Wren's Nest is the former home of Joel Chandler Harris, who chronicled the wily deeds of fictional African characters Br'er Rabbit and Br'er Fox. It's been open to the public since 1913, when Harris's widow sold it to the Uncle Remus Memorial Association.Harris's literary career began at the age of 13, when he apprenticed on the Countryman, a quarterly plantation newspaper. During the four years that he spent learning at the Countryman, young Harris spent many an evening hanging about the slave quarters, drinking in African folk tales and fables spun by George Terrell, a plantation patriarch who became the prototype for Uncle Remus. Sherman's army put the Countryman out of business, and Harris went on to other newspapers, working his way up to editorial writer at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution by age 28. There, plagued by writer's block one gloomy winter afternoon, he remembered the plantation stories of his youth and evoked Uncle Remus to fill his column. Enthralled readers clamored for more, and the rest is history.The house itself is an 1870s farmhouse with a Queen Anne-style Victorian facade added in 1884. Harris lived here from 1881 until his death in 1908, doing most of his writing in a rocking chair on the wraparound front porch. On a 30-minute tour, including a slide presentation about Harris's life, you'll see a good deal of memorabilia: the stuffed great horned owl over the study door was a gift from Theodore Roosevelt, whose White House Harris visited; the original wren's nest mailbox reposes on the study mantel; and all of Harris's books, along with signed first editions from major authors of his day (Mark Twain and others) are displayed in a bookcase.The house is interesting, but the best part is the storytelling. Call ahead to find out when the storyteller-in-residence will be telling stories culled from African and African-American folklore; it's a real treat.

CNN Studio Tour
This tour of the world's largest newsgathering organization is lots of fun, and a uniquely Atlanta experience. The CNN Center is headquarters for CNN, CNN International, and Headline News. During 40-minute guided walking tours, visitors get a behind-the-scenes look at the high-tech world of 24-hour TV network news in action.You'll find the tour desk in the main lobby near the base of an eight-story escalator. While you're waiting for the tour to begin, you can have a videotape made of yourself reading the day's top stories from behind a CNN anchor desk. The tour starts in an exhibit area where you'll find timelines covering the history of CNN and Turner Broadcasting, interactive kiosks where you can surf the CNN websites or access clips from the top 100 stories that CNN has covered, memorabilia from some of those events, and a journalism ethics display. A theater that re-creates CNN's main control room allows you to experience the behind-the-scenes elements of a news broadcast.Next, you'll enter a special effects studio and get a glimpse of the technology that goes into the production of global news. Here you'll discover the magic of a high-tech Blue Chromakey system (it's what's used to broadcast that big map behind the weather folks), see how on-air graphics are made, and learn the secrets of the TelePrompTer.On another level, visitors get a bird's-eye view of the main CNN newsroom from a glass-walled observation station. You'll see the hustle and bustle of writers composing news scripts. If a live broadcast is in progress -- and chances are good that one will be -- you can see CNN newscasters at work. Tour guides are knowledgeable and can answer virtually any question.The longer, more extensive VIP tour allows visitors to actually step out onto the main CNN newsroom floor and explore production areas not normally accessible to the public.After your visit, stop by the Turner Store, which carries network-logo clothing and gift items, along with MGM movie paraphernalia. For sports fans, there's the Braves Clubhouse store, featuring the Atlanta Braves logo on every item you can imagine. There are several restaurants and numerous fast-food outlets in the atrium of the CNN Center, as well as a few shops. Keep in mind that this tour includes quite of bit of walking and a very steep escalator ride, which carries you to great heights to begin the tour. Those afraid of heights might want to consider skipping the tour.


Make your reservations for discount hotel rooms in the Atlanta area, including:

Four Seasons Hotel
This elegant hotel is the one to choose if you're looking for luxurious surroundings and impeccable service in the heart of Atlanta's cultural area. Built in 1991 as the Grand Hotel Atlanta, it was acquired in 1998 by Four Seasons, who immediately gave it a $65 million renovation.Accommodations are lavish and sophisticated, with large windows, upholstered lounge chairs and sofas, and handsome Beidermeier-style furnishings. The gorgeous marble bathrooms have huge tubs perfect for soaking, and some have separate showers.The hotel offers several services for children, including a gift upon arrival, board and video games, movies, and books. Infant supplies are available. For older children, trips can be arranged to nearby attractions, such as the Center for Puppetry Arts, Children's Garden at the Atlanta Botanical Garden, World of Coca-Cola, and Fernbank Natural History Museum, which has an IMAX theater.The Park 75 restaurant, open all day, serves New American cuisine, featuring the freshest goods from the local markets. The atmosphere is modern, with Beidermeier furnishings and original oil paintings. Guests at the restaurant's Chef's Table dine in the heart of the kitchen, getting a close look at the chefs at work. The Park 75 Terrace, overlooking a three-story atrium, offers a garden-like setting for lunch, afternoon tea, and cocktails. The Park 75 Lounge serves cocktails, light fare, and a wide selection of single-malt scotches; there's a pianist each night. Complimentary coffee is served from 6 to 8am each morning in the lobby.Thirteen of the rooms have been modified to accommodate travelers with disabilities. Pets under 15 pounds are welcome and receive treats.

Marriott Suites
Located in the heart of Midtown, this all-suite hotel is a perfect choice for culture buffs, and its proximity to MARTA makes it easy to get to the rest of the city's attractions, too. Each spacious suite, attractively decorated in a warm, homey style, offers a king-size bed and a full living room with a convertible sofa. Bedrooms are set off from living room areas by lace-curtained French doors. Each marble bathroom has a separate shower. Twelve rooms are accessible to travelers with disabilities.

Ritz-Carlton Buckhead
The Ritz-Carlton Buckhead is the Rolls Royce of Atlanta hotels. Every inch of this hotel oozes luxury, from the lobby to the public areas, which are graced with Regency and Georgian antiques and an outstanding collection of 18th- and 19th-century paintings and sculpture. And the quality of service matches the sumptuous surroundings. The location is excellent -- on the fringe of lovely neighborhoods, across the street from two upscale malls (Phipps Plaza and Lenox Square), and close to Buckhead's fine restaurants and nightspots. Many visiting celebrities, used to discreet elegance, choose to stay here, and Atlantans looking for a special getaway often check in on the weekends.The rooms, all with large bay windows, were upgraded during a $5 million renovation, and are exquisitely decorated, with armoires, luxuriously upholstered sofas or armchairs, and marble-topped desks. Bathrooms contain the usual amenities you'd expect in a posh hotel. Twelve rooms are accessible to travelers with disabilities. Pets are accepted with a $250 nonrefundable deposit.The Dining Room at the Ritz-Carlton Buckhead is one of Atlanta's premier restaurants. The Lobby Lounge, with mahogany-paneled walls and a glowing fire, is the setting for afternoon English-style teas, which are hard to come by elsewhere in this city. A classical pianist plays here daily, a jazz quartet entertains in the evenings, and a martini menu is offered each night.Facilities: 3 restaurants; wine bar; indoor pool; fitness center w/aerobics and weight rooms, saunas, Jacuzzi, and sundeck; concierge; limousine on request; airport shuttle; shuttle when available to nearby malls; salon; 24-hr. room service; dry cleaning; laundry service; 1-hr. pressing on-premises. Babysitting and business services are available for a fee for Club Level guests. The Club Lounge, w/4 bay windows and comfortable living-room seating, also offers Club Level guests 5 complimentary meals or snacks, including continental breakfast, light lunch, afternoon tea, cocktails and hors d'oeuvres, and cordials and chocolates.


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Other direct flights to Atlanta (ATL) on Delta Airlines

Flights from Birmingham (BHM)
Flights from Cincinnati (CVG)
Flights from Detroit (DTW)
Flights from Durham/Raleigh (RDU)
Flights from Hartford (BDL)
Flights from Houston (IAH)
Flights from Huntsville (HSV)
Flights from New York (LGA)
Flights from New York (JFK)
Flights from Tallahassee (TLH)

 

Other direct flights from Jacksonville (JAX) on Delta Airlines

Flights to Boston (BOS)
Flights to Cincinnati (CVG)
Flights to Memphis (MEM)
Flights to Minneapolis (MSP)
Flights to New York (LGA)
 
 
 

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