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  2. Lake Keowee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Keowee

    Lake Keowee's waters cover approximately 18,500 acres (75 km 2) and there are 300 miles of shoreline. The full water elevation of Lake Keowee is around 800 feet. It is 23 miles long and 3 miles wide at the widest point. The average depth is 54 feet. Drinking water. The lake provides drinking water to Greenville and Seneca and surrounding areas ...

  3. Keowee River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keowee_River

    The Keowee River flows out of Lake Jocassee Dam and into Lake Keowee, a reservoir created by Keowee Dam and Little River Dam. The Keowee River flows out of Keowee Dam to join Twelvemile Creek near Clemson, South Carolina, forming the beginning of the Seneca River, a tributary of the Savannah River. The Keowee River is 25.7 miles (41.4 km) long. [1]

  4. Keowee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keowee

    Keowee (Cherokee: ᎫᏩᎯᏱ, romanized: Guwahiyi) was a Cherokee town in the far northwest corner of present-day South Carolina.It was the principal town of what were called the seven Lower Towns, located along the Keowee River (Colonists referred to the lower reaches of the river as the Savannah in its lower reaches, with its mouth at the city they named Savannah).

  5. Seneca River (South Carolina) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seneca_River_(South_Carolina)

    The Seneca River is created by the confluence of the Keowee River and Twelvemile Creek in northwestern South Carolina, downriver from Lake Keowee near Clemson. It is now entirely inundated by Lake Hartwell, and forms a 21-mile-long (34 km) [2] arm of the lake. The Seneca River and the Tugaloo River join to form the Savannah River. [3]

  6. Historic Cherokee settlements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_Cherokee_settlements

    Located along the Lower Cherokee Traders Path; it was the largest of the "Lower Towns" and part of the Upper Road through the Piedmont; across the river from Fort Prince George; destroyed by the British, Creeks, and Chickasaws in 1760; [25] flooded by Lake Keowee. [26] Keowee New Towne [25] Kuwoki Little Keowee [25] ᎫᏬᎩ

  7. This SC lakefront home has a record-high $12M price tag for ...

    www.aol.com/news/sc-lakefront-home-record-high...

    A fully furnished house on 1.75 acres on a Lake Keowee peninsula was recently listed for just over $12 million. Located at 132 Mountain Shore Trail in Six Mile, the house will break the record for ...

  8. Cherokee Path - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_Path

    The British constructed Fort Prince George near Cherokee Country. It was a total of 302 miles (486 km) from Charlestown to Keowee , the principal Cherokee town of what the colonists called the Lower Towns along the Keowee River and its tributaries (in present-day Oconee , Greenville , Pickens and Anderson counties), which extended into ...

  9. Isunigu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isunigu

    Isunigu (also called Seneca, Esseneca, and Sinica) was a Cherokee town on the Keowee River. It was on the west side of the Keowee River, near the mouth of Coneross Creek, in today's Oconee County, South Carolina. Present-day Clemson and Seneca, South Carolina later developed near here.