Inland Lake: Difference between revisions

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* Faulk, Kent (May 29, 2006) "Inland Lake development opposed." ''Birmingham News''.
* Faulk, Kent (May 29, 2006) "Inland Lake development opposed." ''Birmingham News''.


[[Category:Birmingham Water Works]]
[[Category:Water supply]]
[[Category:Lakes]]
[[Category:Lakes]]
[[Category:Blount County]]
[[Category:Blount County]]
[[Category:Black Warrior River]]
[[Category:Black Warrior River]]

Revision as of 15:00, 29 May 2006

Inland Lake is a 7 1/2 mile long, 1,536 acre artificial lake on the Blackburn Fork of the Little Warrior River, in southeastern Blount County. The lake was created by a dam near Highway 75 northeast of Remlap in 1930 by the Birmingham Water Works in order to provide industrial water supplies to that section of the Birmingham District. It, and 2,200 acres of the surrounding land, is still owned by the Water Works. The lake, which contains approximately 21 billion gallons, is now a valuable source of clean drinking water. Current maximum withdrawal is 47 million gallons per day. A second pipeline is planned to increase the supply.

On June 17,1967 a 40 pound channel catfish was caught by Donald R. Cox in Inland Lake, still a state record.

In 2006 developer Gadson Woodall III proposed a a 3,500-acre gated residential community to be named Gadson's Retreat on his property near the southern shore of Inland Lake, near Holly Springs.

References

  • Faulk, Kent (May 29, 2006) "Inland Lake development opposed." Birmingham News.