Chatuge Lake


Lake Chatuge is a man-made reservoir in Towns County, Georgia, and Clay County, North Carolina. It was formed by the Tennessee Valley Authority's construction of Chatuge Dam in 1942. The lake is relatively shallow with depths of and reaches by the dam. In an average year the water level varies from winter to summer to provide seasonal flood storage. Lake Chatuge is the highest major lake in the state of Georgia. It takes up 7,000 acres and is long.
The lake is named after an 18th-century Cherokee Native American settlement once located near the dam site. The word means “Beautiful” and “Land where the waters meet”. The reservoir is home to rainbow trout, catfish, bass, crappie, walleye, blue gill and brim. Bass clubs hold tournaments on the lake. Clay County shoots fireworks over the lake for Independence Day each year.

History

The construction of Chatuge Dam and its reservoir required the purchase of 11,641 acres of land, 1,904 acres of which had to be cleared. 278 families, 532 graves, and of roads had to be relocated. One house relocated from the Elf community during the clearing of the land later became the Clay County School District superintendent’s office until 2005. The TVA delayed its plans to fill the lake after a 92-year-old resident suffered a severe stroke and could not be removed from his homestead without dying. After he died the next month, Chatuge Dam's flood gates were closed. Old Burch Cemetery was surrounded by the creation of the lake, creating Cemetery Island. More than 300 graves were moved from the graveyard but 30 remain on the island at the request of their families. In 2025, TVA acknowledged that ancient burial grounds may be covered by the lake.
The total cost of creating Chatuge Lake was $8,874,866. Chatuge Dam was raised ten feet in 1954 so the lake level could rise an additional four feet. The Hinton Rural Life Center was built next to the lake in 1957. The annual Lake Chatuge Shoreline Cleanup started in 2011. In the event's first 15 years, 17.7 tons of trash have been picked up from public land along the reservoir. In 2024, TVA announced it was investigating an infestation of the invasive Myriophyllum aquaticum plant that was threatening the lake.
TVA announced in 2025 that it is planning to lower Chatuge Lake's water level by an additional ten feet below its low winter level starting in late 2027. The draw-down is expected to take place over two years during the fall and winter seasons. The purpose is to complete extensive repairs to the dam's spillway and prevent a breach of the reservoir.