Abstract

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In May 1933, the United States government enacted legislation establishing the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). The TVA Act charged the federal agency with multiple responsibilities throughout the Tennessee River watershed, a region spread across Tennessee, western North Carolina, northern Georgia and Alabama, southern Kentucky, southwestern Virginia, and a small part of northeastern Mississippi. Within several decades, the TVA's construction of dams in pursuit of its goals transformed a millennia-old network of free-flowing rivers into a chain of slow-moving reservoirs creating a landscape or, more properly, a lakescape. transformation of rivers into reservoirs not only physically altered the Valley, it also displaced established uses of the natural environment. The damming of the region's rivers drowned the homesteads, farm fields, timberlands, hunting grounds, and fish traps that represented the primary ways of residents interacted with nature. But the creation of reservoirs also opened up other uses of the lakescape. Boating, waterskiing, sport-fishing, swimming, sunbathing, and other outdoor leisure activities--in a word, recreation--increasingly became principal ways individuals experienced the region's reservoirs. The rising importance of can be seen in the ways TVA officials, local leaders, and residents described the value of these lakes. By the 1950s, became a defining aspect of the relationship between people and nature in the Tennessee River Valley. On September 2, 1940, President Franklin Roosevelt arrived at Chickamauga Dam northeast of Chattanooga, Tennessee, to dedicate the newest structure in the TVA's growing system of multipurpose impoundments. In his dedication speech, Roosevelt dutifully noted all of the main purposes for creating the TVA seven years before. He spoke about the devastating floods that had existed for many generations in the region, floods that washed away houses and roads and factories, floods that took great tolls of human lives, floods that threatened ... communities on [the] river, on the Ohio River and even down in the lower reaches of the Mississippi River. (1) Roosevelt also observed that TVA dams had overcome long-standing impediments to commercial navigation, such as shallow water, seasonal river flows, narrow channels, and treacherous shoals. And he highlighted the benefits flowing to the residents and industries of the Tennessee Valley from a new, low-cost source of energy: hydroelectricity. Over the next several years this use of the region's rivers came to overshadow the other two, particularly as demands for electric power increased. Roosevelt's emphasis on these three uses--flood control, navigation, and hydroelectricity--of the Tennessee River and its tributaries is not surprising; the TVA Act explicitly sanctioned them. But he also saw fit to mention another use of the changing river valley environment: recreation. This chain of man-made inland seas, Roosevelt proclaimed, referring to the expanding network of TVA reservoirs, may well be named 'The Great Lakes of the South.' And, looking out on the waters of the newest great lake, he saw new opportunities for recreation represented in a flotilla of pleasure boats that had arrived to view the dedication ceremony. (2) [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In fact, as part of its mission to improve the general welfare of the region, the TVA undertook efforts in the 1930s and 1940s to demonstrate the recreational benefits of the agency's reservoirs, and indeed emerged as a notable use of the Valley's lakescape during those decades. After World War II, however, on the Great Lakes of the South increased dramatically and became a primary way of relating to the environment in the Tennessee River Valley. Postwar changes in work and labor contributed to the expansion of recreation, tourism, and leisure opportunities in the United States. …

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