The Tallulah Gorge is a canyon in the southern Appalachian Mountains of the U.S. state of Georgia. Located near the town of Tallulah Falls in the northeastern part of the state, the gorge was formed by the Tallulah River as it cut through the Tallulah Dome rock formation. It measures approximately long and almost deep. Georgia's Tallulah Gorge State Park protects much of the gorge and its waterfalls. The Tallulah Gorge has been dubbed one of the "Seven Natural Wonders of Georgia".
Tallulah Falls Lake lies just above the gorge. It was created in 1913 by a hydroelectric dam built by Georgia Railway and Power (now Georgia Power) in order to run Atlanta's city streetcars. The dam still collects most of the water from the falls via a tunnel sluice or penstock around the falls. It then redirects the water to a 72 MW hydropower electricity generation station downstream. This station lies at an elevation below the lake, but a few days each year the dam releases water and the river's water levels rise considerably. The days when water is released are especially popular for recreation, including and whitewater rafting.
In the 1910s, Georgia Railway and Power began building dams on the river. The town of Burton, Georgia was purchased and its residents relocated. The area was cleared and then flooded to become Lake Burton in 1919. Many nearby residents opposed the dams, including Helen Dortch Longstreet, widow of Confederate general James Longstreet, who led an unsuccessful campaign in 1911 to have Tallulah Gorge protected by the state. The Georgia Assembly was unable to raise the $1 million required to purchase the gorge, but Mrs. Longstreet's efforts are among the first recorded conservation movements in Georgia. Once the dam was completed in 1913, the roar of the Tallulah Falls (which could be heard for miles from the gorge) was quieted, and tourism dwindled. A state park was created by Georgia governor Zell Miller in cooperation with Georgia Power.
Because of the variation in sunlight, shade, and moisture caused by the steep cliffs, several different exist in and around the canyon-like gorge. The persistent trillium, an endangered species of trillium, grows in this river basin and only few other parts of the South Carolina/Georgia area.
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