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Wednesday, March 28, 2018

The Coosa River is a tributary of the Alabama River in the U.S. states of Alabama and Georgia. The river is about 280 miles (450 km) long.

The Coosa River begins at the confluence of the Oostanaula and Etowah rivers in Rome, Georgia, and ends just northeast of the Alabama state capital, Montgomery, where it joins the Tallapoosa River to form the Alabama River just south of Wetumpka. Around 90% of the Coosa River's length is located in Alabama. Coosa County, Alabama, is located on the Coosa River.

The Coosa is one of Alabama's most developed rivers. Most of the river has been impounded, with Alabama Power, a unit of the Southern Company, maintaining seven dams on the Coosa River. The dams produce hydroelectric power , but are costly to some species endemic to the Coosa River.

History




Lake Mitchell - Coosa River - Spotted Bass Fishing: Bass South TV - Bass South TV - Traveling the South - Trying to catch bass with no practice days or local help.

Native Americans had been living on the Coosa Valley for millennia before Hernando de Soto and his men became the first Europeans to visit it in 1540. The Coosa chiefdom was one of the most powerful chiefdoms in the southeast at the time.

Over a century after the Spanish left the Coosa Valley, the British established strong trading ties with the Creek bands of the area around the late 17th century, much to the dismay of France. With a base in Mobile, Alabama, the French believed that the Coosa River was a key gateway to the entire South and they wanted to control the valley. The main transportation of the day was by boat. The convergence of the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers near present-day Montgomery forms the Alabama River, which has its mouth at Mobile Bay, the port used by the French for travel around the Caribbean and to France. They wanted to retain control of both the Coosa and the Alabama rivers.

In the early 18th century, almost all European and Indian trade in the southeast ceased during the tribal uprisings brought on by the Yamasee War against the Carolinas. After a few years, the Indian trade system was resumed under somewhat reformed policies. The conflict between the French and English over the Coosa Valley, and much of the southeast in general, continued. It was not after Britain had defeated France in the Seven Years' War (also known as the French and Indian War that France relinquished its holdings east of the Mississippi River to Britain. This was stated in the Treaty of Paris signed by both nations in 1763.

By the end of the American Revolutionary War, the Coosa Valley was occupied in its lower portion by the Creek and in the upper portion by the Cherokee peoples, who had a settlement near its start in northwest Georgia. After the Fort Mims massacre near Mobile, General Andrew Jackson led American troops, along with Cherokee allies, against the Lower Creek in the Creek War. This culminated in the Creek defeat at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. Afterward, the Treaty of Fort Jackson in 1814 forced the Creek to cede a large amount of land to the United States, but left them a reserve between the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers in northern Alabama. Even there the Creeks were encroached on by European-American settlers who had begun moving into their territory from the United States.

Finally, during the 1820s and 1830s the Creek, Cherokee, and virtually all the southeastern Indians were removed to Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma). The Cherokee removal is remembered as the Trail of Tears. The Cherokee capital city of New Echota was located on the headwater tributaries of the Coosa River, in Georgia, until the tribe's removal. The Creek and Choctaw removals were similar to the Cherokee Trail of Tears. After the removals, the Coosa River valley and the southeast in general was wide open for American settlers. The cotton gin made short-staple cotton profitable to process, and it was a new cotton hybrid that could be grown in the upland regions; large-scale migrations known as "Alabama Fever" filled Alabama with new settlers.

The first river town to form in the Coosa Basin was at the foot of the last waterfall on the Coosa River, the "Devil's Staircase." Settlers soon adopted the native name Wetumpka (meaning "rumbling waters" or "falling stream") for this new community.

The Coosa River was an important transportation route into the early 20th century as a commercial waterway for riverboats along the upper section of the river for 200 miles south of Rome. However, shoals and waterfalls such the Devil's Staircase along the river's lowest 65 miles blocked the upper Coosa's riverboats from access to the Alabama River and the Gulf of Mexico.

The building of the dams on the Coosa - Lay, Mitchell and Jordan â€" allowed Alabama Power to pioneer new methods of controlling and eliminating malaria, which was a major health issue in rural Alabama in the early 1900s. So successful were their pioneering efforts in this area, that the Medical Division of the League of Nations visited Alabama to study the new methods during the construction of Mitchell Dam.

For a time, the Popeye the Sailorman cartoons were inspired by Tom Sims, a Coosa River resident in Rome, Georgia who was familiar with riverboat life and characters of the early 1900s .

Impoundments and sections


15 best Coosa County, Alabama images on Pinterest | Alabama, March ...
15 best Coosa County, Alabama images on Pinterest | Alabama, March .... Source : www.pinterest.com

The following table describes the seven impoundments on the Coosa River from the south to north built by the Alabama Power Company as well as the tailwater section below Jordan Dam. Harvey H. Jackson III in a book Putting Loafing Streams To Work characterized the importance of the first Coosa River dams as follows:

Flora and fauna biodiversity highlights


NPS Fishing - Lake Mitchell Road, Clanton, AL, United States
NPS Fishing - Lake Mitchell Road, Clanton, AL, United States. Source : www.nationalprostaff.com

In the Middle Coosa River Watershed, 281 occurrences of rare plant and animal species and natural communities have been documented, including 73 occurrences of 23 species that are federal or state protected. Ten conservation targets were chosen: the riverine system, matrix forest communities (oak hickory-pine forest), gray bat (Myotis grisescens), riparian vegetation, mountain longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) forest communities, red-cockaded woodpecker (Picoides borealis), critically imperiled aquatic species (fish, mussels, and snails), southern hognose snake (Heterodon simus), caddisflies, and imperiled plants. Maintaining the biodiversity of the Coosa River system is particularly important because it has already lost a significant portion of its aquatic fauna to extinction.

Tributaries


RUSTIC, BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED, COZY LAKE FRONT CABIN ON LAKE ...
RUSTIC, BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED, COZY LAKE FRONT CABIN ON LAKE .... Source : www.stays.io

The Coosa River's drainage has hundreds of tributaries, which have been divided into sections based on the different areas of the watershed. The first four sections are tributary systems that converge to form the main artery of the Coosa River in Georgia. These main tributary rivers are the Conasauga and Coosawattee Rivers, which together then form the Oostanaula River. The Oostanaula then joins with the Etowah River in Rome, Georgia, forming the Coosa River.

Other significant tributaries of the Coosa are:

  • Amicalola Creek
  • Armuchee Creek
  • Big Wills Creek
  • Cartecay River
  • Cedar Creek
  • Chattooga River
  • Chocolocco Creek
  • Coahulla River
  • Ellijay River
  • Hatchett Creek
  • Heath Creek
  • Little River
  • Mill Creek
  • Mountain Creek
  • Raccoon Creek
  • Rock Creek
  • Spring Creek
  • Sugar Creek
  • Terrapin Creek
  • Weogufka Creek (through Hatchett Creek)

Major cities


Interstate 65 North - Autauga & Chilton Counties - AARoads - Alabama
Interstate 65 North - Autauga & Chilton Counties - AARoads - Alabama. Source : www.aaroads.com

A number of significant cities lie on the banks of the Coosa River. They include:

  • Gadsden, Alabama - between Weiss and H. Neely Henry lakes
  • Rainbow City, Alabama - on the Coosa due south of Gadsden
  • Childersburg, Alabama - near Lay Lake
  • Rome, Georgia - headwaters
  • Southside, Alabama - on the Coosa due south of Rainbow City
  • Wetumpka, Alabama - near confluence with Tallapoosa River forming the Alabama River

Advocates


NPS Fishing - Lake Mitchell Road, Clanton, AL, United States
NPS Fishing - Lake Mitchell Road, Clanton, AL, United States. Source : www.nationalprostaff.com

The Coosa-Alabama River Improvement Association, founded in 1890 in Gadsden, Alabama to promote navigation on the Coosa River is a leading advocate of the economic, recreational and environmental benefits of the Coosa River system.

The Alabama Rivers Alliance works to unite the citizens of Alabama to protect peoples right to clean, healthy, waters.

Alabama Water Watch is dedicated to volunteer citizen monitoring of water quality in Alabama Rivers.

The Alabama Power Foundation is a non-profit foundation providing grants for watershed, environmental and community projects along the Coosa River and within the state of Alabama

The Coosa River Basin Initiative is a grassroots environmental organization with the mission of informing and empowering citizens so that they may become involved in the process of creating a clean, healthy and economically viable Coosa River Basin.

Coosa Riverkeeper is a citizen-based river conservation group that patrols the river, educates the public and advocates on behalf of the river. The staffed organization is based on Yellowleaf Creek and works in the Middle and Lower Coosa Basins.

See also


RUSTIC, BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED, COZY LAKE FRONT CABIN ON LAKE ...
RUSTIC, BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED, COZY LAKE FRONT CABIN ON LAKE .... Source : www.stays.io

  • List of rivers of Georgia (U.S. state)
  • List of rivers of Alabama
  • List of dams and reservoirs in Alabama

References



  • Atkins, Leah Rawl (2006). "Developed for the Service of Alabama" - The Centennial History of the Alabama Power Company 1906-2006. Birmingham, Alabama: Alabama Power Company. ISBN 978-0-9786753-0-1. 
  • Jackson, Harvey H. III (1997). Putting Loafing Streams To Work-The Building of Lay, Mitchell, Martin, and Jordan Dams, 1910-1929. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-8173-0879-2. 
  • Jackson, Harvey H. III (1995). Rivers of History - Life on the Coosa, Tallapoosa, Cahaba and Alabama. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-8173-0771-0. 
  • Kimbrow, Dustin R. (2013). Erosion Monitoring Along the Coosa River below Logan Martin Dam Near Vincent, Alabama, Using Terrestrial Light Detection And Ranging (T-Lidar) Technology. Reston, Virginia: U.S. Geological Survey. 

Notes





 
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