- Tallulah River
:"This article refers to the river. For the town, see
Tallulah Falls, Georgia , for the lake, seeLake Tallulah Falls and for the waterfalls and gorge, seeTallulah Gorge ."The Tallulah River is a short
river in Georgia andNorth Carolina . It begins inClay County, North Carolina nearStanding Indian Mountain in theSouthern Nantahala Wilderness and flows south into Georgia, crossing the state line into Towns County. Mast, M.A., and Turk, J.T., 1999, [http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/circ1173/circ1173a/chapter05.htm U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1173-A, p.158] USGS.gov (accessed October 19, 2006) ] The river then travels through Rabun County and ends in Habersham County. It cuts through theTallulah Dome rock formation to form theTallulah Gorge and its severalwaterfalls (collectively known as Tallulah Falls). The Tallulah River joins theTugaloo River in Habersham County, which joins theSavannah River and eventually flows to theAtlantic Ocean .From its
headwaters to itsconfluence with the Tugaloo River, the Tallulah River is approximately 47 miles (75.6 km) long. The Tallulah River Basin drains approximately 184 square miles (476.5 km²), as measured at the Tallulah Falls Hydroelectric Plant inHabersham County, Georgia near the lower end of the Tallulah Gorge. [ [http://ga2.er.usgs.gov/LibAreportPDF/2004/Discharge/sp02181580.pdf Tallulah River summary in 2004 Water Resources Data for Georgia] USGS.gov (accessed October 19, 2006)] The lower part of the river includes a string of man-made lakes along the river created by hydroelectric dams operated byGeorgia Power . The first (and northernmost) lake in the series is Lake Burton, which is followed byLake Seed ,Lake Rabun , andLake Tallulah Falls . From Lake Tallulah Falls, the lower part of the river flows through the Tallulah Gorge and now ends as an arm ofLake Tugalo , the other arm of the lake being formed by theChattooga River . Starting at a point about .5 miles downstream from the dam for Lake Tallulah Falls, the boundary line between Habersham and Rabun counties follows the course of the Tallulah River to its end.The upper Tallulah River Basin drains to the portion of the Tallulah River that is upstream from Lake Burton and includes northwestern Rabun County, northeastern Towns County and part of Clay County, North Carolina. The
United States Geological Survey collects data for the upper Tallulah River Basin from its gauging station at the point where the river crosses Plum Orchard Road. [ [http://www.topoquest.com/map.asp?lat=34.89028&lon=-83.53056&datum=nad83&u=6&layer=DRG&size=l&s=50 TopoQuest map of gauging location] ] The upper Tallulah River Basin includes a section of the river that is about 14.3 miles (23 km) long, draining a 56.5 square mile (146 km²) area. [ [http://ga2.er.usgs.gov/LibAreportPDF/2004/Discharge/sp02178400.pdf Tallulah River summary in 2004 Water Resources Data for Georgia] USGS.gov (accessed October 19, 2006)] Annually, the area receives at least 72 inches of rainfall and is entirely within the boundaries of theChattahoochee National Forest , with about one third of the land falling in theSouthern Nantahala Wilderness and about one fifth privately owned. The primarytributaries of the Tallulah River in Rabun County are theColeman River and Persimmon Creek.The upper Tallulah River Basin is as scenic as it is rugged. The highest elevations are found in North Carolina on
Standing Indian Mountain , elevation 5,499 feet, where the Tallulah River headwaters are located. After coming into Georgia and passing through the old mining and logging town ofTate City, Georgia in eastern Towns County, the river enters into to what some people call Tallulah’s uppergorge or the Rock Mountain Gorge. [http://www.sherpaguides.com/georgia/mountains/blue_ridge/eastern/tallulah_basin.html The Tallulah Basin] Sherpa Guides (accessed October 19, 2006) ] This upper "gorge" is far less dramatic that the more famous Tallulah Gorge, but it starts just upstream from the river’s confluence with the Coleman River and runs nearly 3 miles past Rock Mountain on the western side of the river. The scenic "gorge" is accessible via a drive along the Tallulah River Road (Forest Service Road 70). The Tallulah River Road follows an old railroad bed before ending in the Southern Nantahala Wilderness and provides the only access to Tate City. Heavily wooded today, the upper Tallulah River Basin was stripped nearly bare by logging in the 1930’s before the establishment of the Chattahoochee National Forest.Because Georgians long have assumed that Tallulah was a Cherokee word, there is no agreement regarding the derivation of the name for the Tallulah River. Tourism promoters in the late 1800s described the word Tallulah as meaning "thundering waters" in Cherokee. Some scholars later theorized the that "tallulah" meant “terrible” in
Cherokee or was possibly derived from a number of other words, but it is more likely that there is no translation for the word. [Krakow, K., 3rd Ed. (1999) [http://www.kenkrakow.com/gpn/t.pdf Georgia Place-Names] (accessed October 19, 2006) ] It actually has no meaning in Cherokee. The most likely source of the word is the Okonee (a branch of the Creek Indians) word talula, which means "town." The Okonee People occupied northeastern Georgia and northwestern South Carolina for hundreds of years prior to the arrival of the Cherokees in the early 1700s.In any event, there was a Cherokee Over-the-Hill settlement called Tallulah located on the upper portion of the river. [ [http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tennessee/cherokeeindianhist.htm The Cherokee Tribe] AccessGenealogy.com (accessed October 19, 2006) ]
References
Thornton, Richard. The Indigenous People of the Southern Highlands: An Historical, Linguistic and Architectural Analysis, Morris,NC:Lula Publishing, 2007.
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