Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dale Hollow Reservoir lies mainly in northern Tennessee, where it covers portions of Clay, Pickett, and Overton Counties. Small arms of the lake also extend northward into the Kentucky counties of Cumberland and Clinton. The project consists of 27,700 acres (112 km 2) of water and 24,842 acres (101 km 2) of surrounding land.
South Holston Lake is located near the town of Abingdon, Virginia and the city of Bristol, Virginia / Bristol, Tennessee, and is a 7,580-acre (31 km 2) impoundment operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). Much of the reservoir is in Tennessee, but the Virginia portion of the reservoir offers anglers more than 1,600 acres (6 km 2) of
Dale Hollow Reservoir; Douglas Lake; E. Eighth Avenue South Reservoir; F. Fort Loudoun Lake; H. Herb Parsons Lake; K. Kentucky Lake; L. Lake Graham (Tennessee) Lake ...
The city of Byrdstown and the Kentucky town of Albany, 11 miles (18 km) to the northeast, are positioned between two Army Corps of Engineers lakes: Dale Hollow Lake, mainly in Tennessee, and Lake Cumberland, in Kentucky. The area is known as "Twin Lakes" and Byrdstown is noted as "The Gateway To Dale Hollow Lake".
Dale Hollow Reservoir; Davy Crockett Lake; Douglas Lake; Fort Loudoun Lake; Fort Patrick Henry Lake; Lake Graham; J. Percy Priest Lake; Kentucky Lake (extends into Kentucky) Larry Collins Lake; Melton Hill Lake; Nickajack Lake; Norris Lake; Ocoee Lake; Old Hickory Lake; Reelfoot Lake; Tellico Lake; Tims Ford Lake; Watauga Lake; Watts Bar Lake ...
The Wolf River is a 40.3-mile-long (64.9 km) [2] river in the U.S. states of Tennessee and Kentucky [3] that rises at the base of the Cumberland Plateau in Fentress County, Tennessee and flows westward for several miles before becoming part of Dale Hollow Lake. The river is part of the Cumberland River drainage basin in Middle Tennessee and ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
J. Percy Priest Lake is a reservoir in north central part of Tennessee. It is formed by J. Percy Priest Dam , located between miles six and seven of the Stones River . The dam (easily visible from Interstate 40 ) is located about 10 miles (16 km) east of downtown Nashville and impounds a lake 42 mi (68 km) long.