Tellico River

Tellico River
River
The Tellico River near Tellico Plains, Tennessee
Country United States
States North Carolina, Tennessee
Tributaries
 - left Bald River
 - right North River
Source near McDaniel Bald in Cherokee County, North Carolina
 - elevation 4,200 ft (1,280 m) [1]
 - coordinates 35°14′52″N 84°0′19″W / 35.24778°N 84.00528°W / 35.24778; -84.00528 [1]
Mouth Little Tennessee River at Vonore, Tennessee
 - elevation 814 ft (248 m) [1]
 - coordinates 35°36′13″N 84°12′45″W / 35.60361°N 84.21250°W / 35.60361; -84.21250Coordinates: 35°36′13″N 84°12′45″W / 35.60361°N 84.21250°W / 35.60361; -84.21250 [1]
Length 52.8 mi (85 km) [1]
Basin 285 sq mi (738 km2) [2]
Discharge for Tellico Plains, Tennessee, 28.3 miles (45.5 km) above the mouth
 - average 284 cu ft/s (8 m3/s) (mean for water years 1926-1981)[3]
 - max 21,500 cu ft/s (609 m3/s)
May 1840[3]
 - min 13 cu ft/s (0.4 m3/s)
September 1925[3]

The Tellico River rises in the westernmost mountains of the U.S. state of North Carolina, but it flows mainly through Monroe County, Tennessee. With a length of 52.8 miles (85.0 km), it is a major tributary of the Little Tennessee River, and is one of the primary streams draining the Unicoi Mountains.

The Tellico River and its main tributaries are renowned for their brook, brown, and rainbow trout fishing. Upstream from Tellico Lake, above Tellico Plains, Tennessee, the Tellico is a premier trout stream. It meanders through a mountain gorge before reaching the broad plains downstream of Tellico Plains.

Hydrography

The Tellico River rises in the Unicoi Mountains (a subrange of the Blue Ridge Mountains) near the Cherokee County/Graham County line, in North Carolina's Nantahala National Forest. The North Carolina side includes the Upper Tellico Off-highway vehicle area.

The lower Tellico River, near the Sequoyah Birthplace Museum

After the river crosses into Tennessee and enters the Cherokee National Forest, it is joined by its major tributaries, the Bald and North rivers. After exiting the mountains, the river enters Tellico Plains, a relatively flat and isolated area carved out by the river and several tributaries, namely Morgan Creek and Smoky Run. A 4-mile (6.4 km) stretch of the river above Tellico Plains runs parallel to the Cherohala Skyway.

Beyond Tellico Plains, the river winds its way northward through rural Monroe County, Tennessee, before entering the slack waters of Tellico Lake. This lower section of the river absorbs several major streams, including Ballplay Creek and Notchy Creek. Fort Loudoun, a reconstructed 18th-century fort that is now the focus of a state park, stands on an island at the Tellico River's confluence with the Little Tennessee River.

History

The Tellico River basin was logged by the Babcock Lumber Company in the early 20th century. The present-day road up the Tellico River from Tellico Plains was built on the old Babcock logging railroad bed. After the Tellico River basin forests were cut, Babock sold the land to the United States Forest Service.

The Tellico River's rocky descent provides class III-IV whitewater recreation. The runs are especially popular during the spring because of higher water levels. The narrow extreme rapids on the Tellico River are well suited for kayaks, canoes - C1's and duckies, but not for larger rafts. There is continuous access to the river from the road, but these runs are popular:

Etymology

According to the United States Geological Survey, variant names of the Tellico River include Delaquay River, Talequo River, Terrique River, and Tellequo River.[1]

The word "Tellico" was the name of several Cherokee towns, the largest of which was Great Tellico, located on the Tellico River near present-day Tellico Plains, Tennessee. In Cherokee the word is more properly written "Talikwa". According to James Mooney, the Cherokee meaning of the word was lost.[4] The origin of the word is believed to be Muskogee (Creek). A Muskogean town named Taliko was thriving on the Tellico River when Spanish explorers visited in area in the mid-16th century. Taliko means "bean" in Muskogee.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Tellico River
  2. Burton English, Jamey Menard, and Kim Jensen, "Estimated Economic Impacts of Upper Tellico Off-Highway Vehicle Users and Tellico River Trout Anglers," University of Tennessee website. Retrieved: 4 June 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 United States Geological Survey, Water Resources Data Tennessee: Water Year 1982, Water Data Report TN-82-1, p. 162. Gaging station 03518500.
  4. Mooney, James Myths of the Cherokee (1900, repr. 1995).
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