Saint John River, river rising in Guinea, West Africa. Its source is northwest of the Nimba Range, and with its upper reach (the Mani River) it forms part of the Guinea-Liberia border. Entering north-central Liberia it very nearly bisects the country, discharging into the Atlantic at Edina, where the Benson and Mechlin rivers empty into its estuary. The Saint John River’s southwesterly course of 175 miles (282 km) is interrupted intermittently by rapids. The river (whose basin drains 6,650 square miles [17,220 square km] in Liberia and Guinea) is so named because it was discovered on the feast day of St. John by 15th-century Portuguese navigators.