Valley River

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Valley River
Tributary to Hiawassee River
Old railroad bridge over the Valley River in Murphy, North Carolina, in July 2023
Map of Valley River mouth location
Map of Valley River mouth location
Location of Valley River mouth
Map of Valley River mouth location
Map of Valley River mouth location
Valley River (the United States)
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNorth Carolina
CountyCherokee
CityAndrews
Murphy
Physical characteristics
SourceTulula Creek divide
  locationabout 2 miles northwest of Topton, North Carolina
  coordinates35°15′24″N 083°42′42″W / 35.25667°N 83.71167°W / 35.25667; -83.71167[1]
  elevation3,520 ft (1,070 m)[2]
MouthHiwassee River
  location
Murphy, North Carolina
  coordinates
35°05′33″N 084°02′22″W / 35.09250°N 84.03944°W / 35.09250; -84.03944[1]
  elevation
1,525 ft (465 m)[2]
Length29.57 mi (47.59 km)[3]
Basin size117.13 square miles (303.4 km2)[4]
Discharge 
  locationHiwassee River (in Hiwassee Lake)
  average295.62 cu ft/s (8.371 m3/s) at mouth with Hiawassee River[4]
Basin features
ProgressionHiwassee RiverTennessee RiverOhio RiverMississippi RiverGulf of Mexico
River systemHiwassee River
Tributaries 
  leftPowder Burnt Branch, Long Branch, Watkins Creek, Beetree Branch, Jenkins Cove, Turnpike Creek, Harris Creek, Puncheon Branch, Worm Creek, Junaluska Creek, Tatham Creek, Town Branch, Whitaker Branch, Brown Creek, Sharp Branch, Taylor Creek, Parker Branch, Laurel Branch, Parsons Branch, Vengeance Creek, Highfall Branch, Sam Branch, Long Branch, Pole Bridge Branch, Sam Newton Branch, Rogers Creek, Sales Branch, Rattler Branch, George Martin Branch, Wesley Martin Branch, Palmer Branch
  rightTrim Cove, Wright Branch, Nelson Creek, Millseat Branch, Bryson Branch, Brady Branch, Tank Branch, Mill Branch, Melton Creek, Doctor Branch, Tom Thumb Creek, Stillhouse Branch, Flat Branch, Mill Branch, Burnt Shanty Branch, Gipp Creek, Stewart Branch, Pile Creek, Britton Creek, Don Holland Creek, Webb Creek, Ricket Branch, Morris Creek, Welch Mill Creek, Hyatts Creek, Bettis Branch, Magazine Branch, Mason Branch, Stillhouse Branch, Morgan Creek, Mary Branch, Colvard Creek, Hayes Mill Creek, Moose Cove, Stillhouse Branch, Marble Creek, Brittain Branch
WaterbodiesHiwassee Lake
BridgesCampbell Terrace (x3), Kadie Lane, Woodhaven Lane, Old US 19, US 19 (x2), Nelson Road, Patterson Lane, US 19-US 129 (x3), Driftwood Lane, Gipp Creek Road, Stewart Road, US 19, Robbinsville Road, Cover Avenue, Main Street (US 19 Business), NC 141, US 19 (x4), Casino Parkway, Snap On Road, US 19-US 129, Black and Gold Drive, Bulldog Drive, Valley River Avenue (US 19 Business), Tennessee Street
U.S. Route 19 bridge over the Valley River at Murphy, North Carolina in 1937

The Valley River is a tributary of the Hiwassee River. It arises as a pair of springs in the Snowbird Mountains of Cherokee County, North Carolina and descends 2,960 feet (900 m)[5] in elevation in approximately forty miles (64 km) to enter the Hiwassee embayment at present-day Murphy, North Carolina.

The Valley River flows generally southwest. US 19 runs parallel to it between Topton and Murphy, North Carolina, where it crosses the river via a small bridge. The river has a total watershed of 120 m2 (11.15km2)[6]

According to the Geographic Names Information System, it has also been known historically as:[1]

  • Konchete River

Geology

The Valley River formed in the uplifting of the Appalachian chain during the Paleozoic Era, Devonian Period, in an event known as the Alleghenian orogeny. Earlier in the Paleozoic, the area was the site of shallow seas which resulted in large limestone deposits. The Alleghenian orogeny caused both uplift and the metamorphism of rock at the highest pressure points within the various Appalachian mountain chains. The Snowbird and Unicoi Mountains, which border the Valley River, contain silver, gold, copper, limestone, sandstone, marble, brown iron ore in economically recoverable quantities.[7] During the erosion of the mountains over a 480 million-year period, the Valley River carved a broad, flat valley and deposited rich fertile soil.

Marble, North Carolina is the site of high-quality white, gray, pink and blue marble. It has been known by European Americans since the removal of the Cherokee in 1838–1839. They have quarried here intermittently ever since.

Near Rhodo, North Carolina is Silvermine Creek, said to be the location of a small silver deposit. Silvermine Creek is a tributary of the Valley River. The following account was dated 1849.

"In the counties west of the Blue Ridge, there has been as yet no exploration to any depth beneath the surface of the ground, with perhaps the single exception of the old excavations in the county of Cherokee. According to the most commonly received Indian tradition, they were excavated more than a century ago, by a company of Spaniards from Florida. They are said to have worked there for two or three summers, to have obtained a white metal, and prospered greatly in their mining operations, until the Cherokees, finding that if it became generally known that there were valuable mines in their country, the cupidity of the white men would expel them from it, determined in solemn council to destroy the whole party, and that in obedience to that decree no one of the adventurous strangers was allowed to return to the country whence they came. Though this story accords very well with the Indian laws which condemned to death those who disclosed the existence of mines to white men, yet I do not regard it as entitled too much credit".[8]

Talc has been mined in Cherokee County since at least the 1850s.[9]

At Tomotla, the river has a mean annual discharge of 247 cu ft/s (7.0 m3/s)[10]

History of settlement

The Valley River Today

References

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