- Emory River
Infobox River
river_name = Emory River
caption = The Emory River nearOakdale, Tennessee
origin =Morgan County, Tennessee
mouth =Clinch River
basin_countries = USA
length =
mouth_elevation = 741 ft (226 m) [Gnis|1283771|Emory River] The Emory River is astream draining a portion ofTennessee 'sCumberland Plateau .Hydrography
The Emory River rises on the slopes of
Frozen Head and Bird Mountain, prominent peaks in that part of the Cumberland Plateau inMorgan County, Tennessee . Frozen Head is the focus of a Tennesseestate park and natural area calledFrozen Head State Park . The surrounding area has been the subject of extensivestrip mining forcoal which has resulted in some stream pollution. The stream initially flows basically westward and is crossed byU.S. Highway 27 . Turning more southwestward, it is paralleled for a time by a line of theNorfolk Southern railroad . It meets theObed River in the southeast corner of the expansiveCatoosa Wildlife Management Area , a large game-management area operated by the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency.In an unusual departure from the generally accepted convention that the larger stream name is retained downstream of the confluence with a notably smaller one, the stream from this point retains the name "Emory River" even though the Obed at the point of confluence is considerably larger than the Emory. Still paralleled by the railroad, the stream crosses into Roane County near Harriman. Backwaters of the
Watts Bar Lake impoundment of theTennessee River cause the water below Harriman to be somewhat slack. TheLittle Emory River is also impounded somewhat above its mouth into the Emory below Harriman.The mouth of the Emory is into the
Clinch River at theTennessee Valley Authority 'sKingston Power Plant , a coal-fired electric generation station initially developed duringWorld War II , largely to power theuranium enrichment plants used to make the world's firstatomic bomb at nearbyOak Ridge National Laboratory .Etymology
The "Rockwood Times" reported (in a 1910 article by Capt. W. E. McElwee) that the river was named after "William Emery", an early traveler who drowned while swimming the river with his "accoutrements" on. Early deed books sometimes refer to this as "William Emeries River". [ Tennessee, Roane County Deed Book D, pages 7 & 8 ] The Indian name for the Emory River was "Babahatchie", which means "babbling waters." [ Roberts, Synder E. "Roots of Roane County, TN" ]
ee also
*
List of Tennessee rivers Notes and references
* Roberts, Synder E. "Roots of Roane County, TN."
External links
* [http://www.roanetn.com/emory.htm Roan County, Tennessee]
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