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Encyclopedia > Clarks Hill Lake

Lake Strom Thurmond is a reservoir at the border between Georgia and South Carolina in the Savannah River Basin. It was built between 1946 and 1954 by the Army Corps of Engineers at the confluence of the Little River and Savannah River. At 71,000 acres (287 kmē), it is the largest man-made lake east of the Mississippi River.


Until 1988, it was called Clarks Hill Lake, after the nearby South Carolina town of Clarks Hill, and the Revolutionary War hero Elijah Clark, whose burial place, on the grounds of Georgia's Elijah Clark State Park, is on the western shore of the lake. In 1987, however, Representative Butler Derrick of South Carolina introduced a bill before Congress to rename the lake after Strom Thurmond, the long-time Senator from South Carolina.


The bill passed through Congress with little fanfare or notice, and local Georgia residents were quite surprised the next year when they discovered that the lake had been renamed after a politician from another state. In response, a group of Georgia legislators, led by Representative Doug Barnard, Jr. (who was, ironically, the only Georgia co-sponsor of the original 1987 bill) introduced a bill to rename the lake as "Clarks Hill" once again. That bill, however, was unsuccessful, and the name remained unchanged.


To this day, many residents of Georgia, including most of those who live nearby, refer to the lake by its original name. Some residents of South Carolina do, as well.


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Montana - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (3157 words)
In addition to its rivers, the state is nome to Flathead Lake, the largest natural fresh-water lake west of the Great Lakes.
Subsequent to the Lewis and Clark expedition and after the finding of gold and copper in the state in the late 1850s, Montana became a United States territory (Montana Territory) on May 26, 1864 and the 41st state on November 8, 1889.
Tourism is also important to the economy with millions of visitors a year to Glacier National Park, Flathead Lake, the Missouri River headwaters, the site of the Battle of Little Bighorn and three of the five entrances to Yellowstone National Park.
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