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Thurmond Lake is one of the southeast's
largest and most popular public recreation lakes. Built by the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers between 1946 and 1954 as part of a flood control,
hydropower, and navigation project, authorized purposes now include
recreation, water quality, water supply, and fish and wildlife
management. Each year, millions off people utilize the many public
parks, marinas, and campgrounds conveniently located around the lake to
pursue a variety of outdoor recreational experiences -making Thurmond
one of the 10 most visited Corps lakes in the nation.
Thurmond Lake is a man-made lake bordering Georgia and South Carolina on
the Savannah, Broad, and Little Rivers. The lake is created by Thurmond
Dam located on the Savannah River twenty-two miles above Augusta Georgia
and 239.5 miles above the mouth of the Savannah River. The lake extends
39.4 miles up the Savannah River, 29 miles up the Little River, and 6.5
miles up the Broad River in Georgia, and 17 Miles up the Little River in
South Carolina, at normal pool elevation of 330 mean sea level, Thurmond
Lake comprises nearly 71,100 acres of water with a shoreline of 1200
miles. The entire Thurmond “Project” contains 151,000 acres of land and
water.
J. Strom Thurmond Lake and Dam is the first Corps of Engineers project
to be built in the Savannah River Basin. Hartwell Lake and Dam the
second project built in the basin was completed in1963, and a third
project, Richard B. Russell Lake and Dam was completed in 1985. Together
these three lakes form a chain of lakes that is 120 miles long.
Congress authorized Thurmond Lake in 1944 and construction began in
1946. The project was completed in 1954 at a cost of $79 million.
Originally the
project was to be called “Clarks Hill Dam”. The “s” at the end of
“Clarks” was omitted due to a clerical error in the original
Congressional Authorization, and the project became “Clark Hill Dam”.
The authorization document outlined the plan of development for the
basin with authorized purposes of power production, incidental flood
control, and navigation. Later, recreation, water quality, water supply,
and fish and wildlife management were added as authorized purposes.
After that the dam was renamed “Clarks Hill Dam”.
The 1966 Flood
Control Act authorized the building of Trotters Shoals Lake and Dam on
the Savannah River between Clarks Hill Lake and Hartwell Lake. This lake
was later renamed to commemorate a late senator from Georgia, Richard B.
Russell who was very important in supporting the building of dams on the
river. This created a movement to rename Clarks Hill Lake after J. Strom
Thurmond, the longest serving senator in US history who was from
Edgfield on the South Carolina side of the lake. This movement gained
support due to the senators’ great popularity in the area, and in 1988
the project was congressionally renamed “J. Strom Thurmond Dam and Lake
at Clarks Hill”
Thurmond Dam is a concrete-gravity
structure flanked on both sides by embankments of compacted earth some
5,680 feet (over 1 mile), crossing the Savannah River. The concrete
section is 2,282 feet long and rises 200' above the riverbed at its
highest point. Highway 221 crosses over the top of the dam connecting
Georgia and South Carolina. The spillway contains 23 large gates, each
40 feet wide by 35 feet high, for the quick release of water from the
lake.
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Did you know...
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The Thurmond "Project" was originally
authorized for three purposes, hydropower, flood control, and
navigation. Later, recreation, water quality, water supply, and fish
and wildlife management were added.
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Construction of the Thurmond Project
took place from 1946 – 1954
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Construction of the dam began in 1948
and was completed in 1951.
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The power plant was completed in 1954;
the first generator went on-line in November, 1952.
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The Thurmond Power plant is a “peaking
power plant” - this means that power is not constantly generated.
Instead, power is generated at times when electricity is in the
greatest demand.
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Thurmond Lake contains 71,100 acres of
water and has 1,200 miles of shoreline. 79,900 acres of public land
surrounds the lake.
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The lake is located in two states
(Georgia and South Carolina) and 7 counties (Georgia – Columbia,
Lincoln, McDuffie, Wilkes and Elbert Counties; South Carolina
–McCormick, and Abbeville counties).
Thurmond Dam is built of more than
1,000,000 cubic yards of concrete and more than 3 million pounds of
reinforcing steel.
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The depth of the lake behind the dam is
approximately 180 feet.
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The top of the dam is 200 feet above the
Savannah River Bed.
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The power plant contains seven 55,000
horsepower turbines. The seven penstocks that carry the water that
drives the turbines are 20 feet in diameter.
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The dam's 23 spillway gates are each 40
feet wide and 35 feet high.
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The average yearly generation from the
Thurmond Power plant is 700 million Kilowatt hours.
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The three Corps managed lakes on the
Savannah River - Hartwell, Richard B. Russell, and J. Strom Thurmond -
are responsible for maintaining water supply and water quality needs
of the Savannah River from below Thurmond Dam all the way to Savannah,
Georgia and the Atlantic Ocean.
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Thurmond Lake is one of the largest
inland bodies of water in the south
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The project has prevented millions of
dollars in flood damage along the Savannah River
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The average lake
elevation is 330 ft. msl.
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