Holston River

For other uses of "Holston", see Holston (disambiguation).
Holston River
River
The North Fork of the Holston River near Weber City, Virginia.
Country United States
States Virginia, Tennessee
Part of TennesseeOhioMississippi
Primary source North Fork Holston River
 - location Bland County, Virginia
 - elevation 2,880 ft (878 m)
 - coordinates 37°03′51″N 81°16′15″W / 37.06417°N 81.27083°W / 37.06417; -81.27083 [1]
Secondary source South Fork Holston River
 - location Smyth County, Virginia
 - elevation 2,900 ft (884 m)
 - coordinates 36°46′11″N 81°22′04″W / 36.76972°N 81.36778°W / 36.76972; -81.36778 [2]
Source confluence
 - location Kingsport, Tennessee
 - elevation 1,158 ft (353 m)
 - coordinates 36°32′51″N 82°36′44″W / 36.54750°N 82.61222°W / 36.54750; -82.61222 [3]
Mouth Tennessee River
 - location Knoxville, Tennessee
 - elevation 814 ft (248 m) [3]
 - coordinates 35°57′33″N 83°51′0″W / 35.95917°N 83.85000°W / 35.95917; -83.85000Coordinates: 35°57′33″N 83°51′0″W / 35.95917°N 83.85000°W / 35.95917; -83.85000 [3]
Length 136 mi (219 km) [3]
Basin 3,776 sq mi (9,780 km2) [4]
Discharge for J. Will Taylor Bridge (Hwy. 70) near Knoxville, Tennessee, 5.5 miles (8.9 km) above the mouth
 - average 4,759 cu ft/s (135 m3/s) (mean for water years 1931–1975, 1979-1983)[5]
 - max 62,900 cu ft/s (1,781 m3/s) March 1935[5]
 - min 44 cu ft/s (1.2 m3/s) December 1941[5]

The Holston River is a 136-mile (219,000 m) river that flows from Kingsport, Tennessee, to Knoxville, Tennessee. Along with its three major forks (North Fork, Middle Fork and South Fork), it comprises a major river system that drains much of northeastern Tennessee, southwestern Virginia, and northwestern North Carolina. The Holston's confluence with the French Broad River at Knoxville marks the beginning of the Tennessee River.

The North Fork flows 138 miles (222 km) southwest from Sharon Springs in Bland County, Virginia. The Middle Fork flows 56.5 miles (90.9 km) from near the western border of Wythe County, Virginia, joining the South Fork in Washington County, Virginia, southeast of Abingdon. The South Fork rises near Sugar Grove in Smyth County and flows 112 miles (180 km) southwest to join the North Fork at Kingsport.[6] The Watauga River, a tributary of the South Fork Holston, flows 78.5 miles (126,300 m) westward from Watauga County, North Carolina.

The main stem of the Holston is impounded by the Tennessee Valley Authority's Cherokee Dam near Jefferson City, Tennessee. Five other dams, also managed by TVA, impound the Holston's headwater streams: Watauga Dam and Wilbur Dam on the Watauga River, and Boone Dam, Fort Patrick Henry Dam, and South Holston Dam, on the South Fork Holston River.

Power generation

The Holston River valley has been greatly developed for electrical power generation, both with hydroelectric dams and coal-fired steam plants. In the upper reaches, some of these plants are controlled by private interests; in the downstream portion, they are owned by the United States Government's Tennessee Valley Authority.

Area

Among the dams and associated reservoirs on the South Fork Holston River are Boone Dam and Boone Lake, named for the explorer Daniel Boone; Fort Patrick Henry Dam and Fort Patrick Henry Lake, named for the Revolutionary War hero; and South Holston Dam and South Holston Lake. Cherokee Dam on the Holston River forms Cherokee Lake, named for the historic Native Americans who occupied the areas along the Holston River at the time of European-American settlement. The United States settlers and army fought with the Cherokee over land and eventually removed most of them to territory west of the Mississippi River, under the 1830 Indian Removal Act.

Name

Early Tennessee historian and Tennessee Supreme Court Justice John Haywood cited in his 1823 book The civil and political history of the state of Tennessee from its earliest settlement up to the year 1796, including the boundaries of the state that the Holston River was identified and named on earlier produced French maps as the "Cherokee River".[7]

The Holston River was later named after Stephen Holstein, a European-American settler who built a cabin in 1746 on the upper reaches of the river.[8] Holston Mountain was named after the Holston River.

Recreation

All three forks in Virginia, South Holston Lake, and the Holston River in Tennessee below the South Holston Dam offer relatively easy-to-reach recreation opportunities. The North Fork in Virginia is known as an excellent smallmouth bass river (due to mercury contamination, fish caught in the North Fork of the Holston below Saltville, Virginia must not be consumed).[9] Both the South Fork in Virginia and the first 20 miles (32 km) of the Holston in Tennessee below South Holston Dam are quality brown trout and rainbow trout fisheries. The Holston River is wide and open enough to allow extensive fly fishing. South Holston Lake offers a variety of fishing opportunity as well, as it contains smallmouth bass, common carp, walleye, pike, sunfish, crappie and a few trout.

List of crossings

Holston River

The following is a list of major Road crossings on the Holston River:

Bridge Name Crossing/Road Location Notes
Boyds Bridge Boyds Bridge Pike/Strawberry Plains Pike Knoxville, Tennessee First Road crossing on the Holston
Holston River Bridge Interstate 40 Knoxville
J.W. Will Taylor Memorial Bridge US 11E / US 25W / US 70 / SR 9 / SR-168 (Asheville Highway) Knoxville
Mascot Bridge Mascot Road Mascot/Strawberry Plains, Tennessee Concrete Arch Bridge
John K. Shields Bridge SR-92 Near Jefferson City, Tennessee
Olen R. Marshall Bridge US 25E / SR 32 (Davy Crockett Parkway) Morristown/Bean Station, Tennessee The Olen R. Marshall Bridge is the only two bridges that cross the Cherokee Lake
Melinda Ferry Bridge SR 344 (Melinda Ferry Road) near Rogersville, Tennessee
Hugh B. Day Bridge SR 66 / SR 70 near Rogersville and Persia, Tennessee
William L. Jenkins Bridge SR 347 (Burem Pike) location near Rogersville
Longs Bend Bridge Longs Bend Pike Surgoinsville, Tennessee Original bridge was demolished in 2014.
Goshen Valley Road Church Hill, Tennessee Bridge does not have a name; Final crossing on the main Hoston River

See also

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: North Fork Holston River
  2. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: South Fork Holston River
  3. 1 2 3 4 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Holston River
  4. U.S. Geological Survey, "Introduction to the Upper Tennessee River Basin," 11 January 2013. Accessed: 2 June 2015.
  5. 1 2 3 United States Geological Survey, Water Resources Data Tennessee: Water Year 1983, Water Data Report TN-83-1, p. 123.
  6. "Holston River - South Fork". Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.
  7. https://archive.org/stream/civilpoliticalhi00hayw#page/39/mode/1up "The civil and political history of the state of Tennessee from its earliest settlement up to the year 1796, including the boundaries of the state" by John Haywood, republished 1891
  8. Stewart, George R. (1967) [1945]. Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (Sentry edition (3rd) ed.). Houghton Mifflin.
  9. "Holston River - North Fork". Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.
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