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Lake Hartwell

Bodies of water of Anderson County, South CarolinaBodies of water of Franklin County, GeorgiaBodies of water of Hart County, GeorgiaBodies of water of Oconee County, South CarolinaBodies of water of Pickens County, South Carolina
Bodies of water of Stephens County, GeorgiaProtected areas of Anderson County, South CarolinaProtected areas of Franklin County, GeorgiaProtected areas of Hart County, GeorgiaProtected areas of Oconee County, South CarolinaProtected areas of Pickens County, South CarolinaProtected areas of Stephens County, GeorgiaReservoirs in Georgia (U.S. state)Reservoirs in South CarolinaUse mdy dates from April 2023
Lake Hartwell
Lake Hartwell

Lake Hartwell is a man-made reservoir bordering Georgia and South Carolina and encompassing parts of the Savannah, Tugaloo, and Seneca rivers. Lake Hartwell is one of the Southeastern United States' largest recreation lakes. The lake was created by the construction of the Hartwell Dam, completed in 1962 and located on the Savannah River seven miles (11 km) below the point at which the Tugaloo and Seneca Rivers join to form the Savannah. Extending 49 miles (79 km) up the Tugaloo and 45 miles (72 km) up the Seneca at normal pool elevation, the lake comprises nearly 56,000 acres (230 km2) of water with a shoreline of 962 miles (1,548 km). The entire Hartwell "Project" contains 76,450 acres (309 km2) of land and water. I-85 bisects Hartwell Lake and makes the area easily accessible to visitors.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lake Hartwell (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lake Hartwell
Old Andersonville Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.45 ° E -82.85 °
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Address

Old Andersonville Road

Old Andersonville Road

South Carolina, United States
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Lake Hartwell
Lake Hartwell
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H. E. Fortson House
H. E. Fortson House

The H. E. Fortson House, at 221 Richardson St. in Hartwell, Georgia, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.It was built around 1913. It is a one-story frame house with a hipped roof and a wrap-around shed-roofed porch. It was deemed "important in local black/social history for its association with the Reverend H. E. Fortson" and its NRHP nomination provides:Fortson served as minister of the Hartwell First Baptist Church in the early twentieth century and preached at other Baptist churches in Hart County during his career. He was a prominent minister and teacher in the Rome community of Hartweil. Traditionally, churches were among the most important social and cultural institutions in black communities, and ministers were among the prominent figures in these communities; the role played by Fortson in the Rome section of Hartwell is no exception. / Architecturally, the Fortson House is significant as an example of the type of house built for and lived in by relatively prominent middle-class black citizens of Hartwell in the early 20th century. This type of modest, straightforward house, with its simple arrangement of rooms around a central hall and its wrap-around porch and hipped roof, typifies the housing found in many of Georgia's small-town black neighborhoods. Relatively few examples of this type of housing survive with their major features intact, making this house a good example of the type.