PURCHASED JUNE 2014: Two side-by-side lots, totaling 0.94 acre, with 280 feet of waterfront on the 62 acre Lake Chickasaw in Lake Arrowhead gated community. Nestled in the Cherokee County foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, just 40 minutes north of I-285, this is one of metro-Atlanta’s best kept secrets - the majestic lake, golf and mountain, Lake Arrowhead retreat. Admired as the best place to live in metro-Atlanta, the Lake Arrowhead community was recently awarded 'Community of the Year' by the Atlanta Home Builders Association. Lake Arrowhead is graced with over 8000 carefully protected acres of lush woodlands, gentle waterfalls and crystal clear lake waters. This private gated community, consists of two lakes, the 540 acre Lake Arrowhead and the smaller 62 acre Lake Chickasaw. It has two security gates, a new 18-hole championship golf course, new clubhouse and restaurant, a marina, boat rentals, nature trails, a non denominational chapel, a community swimming pool, tennis courts and two volunteer fire departments. The Lake Arrowhead community property was bought in the 1960's and established in the early 1970's as a remote mountain retreat, but now finds itself at the edge of metro-Atlanta's exurban expansion.
While the Lake Arrowhead Community offers an exceptional lifestyle to its residents, great care has been taken to preserve the natural beauty and ecological balance of this unusually pristine residential setting. The centerpiece of this waterfront community is Lake Arrowhead itself, a beautiful 540-acre, 80' deep, clear blue lake of pure mountain stream fed water. It is one of the largest privately owned man-made lakes in Georgia and is ranked as one of the cleanest lakes in Georgia. Since Lake Arrowhead’s topography is graced with a series of graceful mountain ridges, the lake itself can be viewed from many vantage points and distances. Add to this, the new 18-hole Highlands Golf Course, a generous array of outstanding amenities, and 8000+ acres of lush woodland and you have all the ingredients to enjoy a rewarding lifestyle.
. . . . . . . . . . FOURTH OF JULY FIREWORKS
History: This ancient land, and most of what is now North Georgia, was once occupied by the Cherokee Nation. The small college town of nearby Waleska takes its name from Warluskee, daughter of a local Cherokee chief. The fate of the Cherokee was sealed in 1830 when gold was discovered in the nearby town of Dahlonega. In 1832, Georgia held the Gold Lottery of 1832, which awarded Cherokee land to the winners of the lottery in 40-acre (16 ha) tracts. In 1838, the Dahlonega Mint was established by the United States Congress as a branch mint of the United States Mint. This was a testimony to the amount of gold being produced in Georgia. The Cherokee had to abandon their lands in 1838 and were force-marched 1000 miles west to Oklahoma in the infamous 'Trail of Tears'. Before they were expelled, the Cherokee gained enough gold-mining experience to participate in later gold rushes in California in 1849 and Colorado in 1859. Cherokee gold miners gave the name to the town of Cherokee, California, as well as to a number of other geographic features in the California gold-mining region. It should be remembered that by this time, the Cherokee, known as the 'civilized tribe', were in many instances farming their lands and living in similar dwellings to the 'whites'. Indeed, some of the chiefs and large land owning Cherokee were slave owners. It should be noted that much of North Georgia had been, up until the late 18th. century, the lands of the Creek Nation: a fact underlined by the nearby historic 'Etowah Indian Mounds' being Muscogee Creek in origin and not Cherokee. Be that as it may, there is no escaping the fact that the 'theft' of the Cherokee lands and their forced march was a shameful episode in American history. The fact that the 'whites', in many instances, had themselves been cruelly displaced from their native lands and shipped to the Americas as indentured workers make it all the more shameful. Back to the present: the pristine nature of this community and the Cherokee name connection stir the emotions of Carol who has Cherokee ancestry on both sides of her family. Carol talks fondly of her childhood and finding numerous flint arrowheads (and Civil War relics) in the fields and woods surrounding her Grandparents small Dalton farm. Wish we had these same arrowheads now to display! Interestingly enough, my previous further west / north Georgia hometowns, Rome and Dalton, were both deeper into Cherokee lands back at that time than present day Cherokee County. Over the years, I have developed an interest in the strong Scottish-Indian connection in the Southeast. An interest heightened when I encountered the memorial plaque at Ross's Landing on the banks of the Tennessee River in Chattanooga, proclaiming John Ross, to be 7/8th. Scot, and the greatest of all Cherokee Chiefs! I am still researching early Georgia history and hope to create a Scottish-Indian blog in the near future. I will add a link here to same at a later date.
Alex and Carol, it was a pleasure working with you on the purchase of these beautiful lots. I know you will enjoy Lake Arrowhead, as I have for the past eight years. Great job on the blog, Alex!
ReplyDelete