Lake Norman Times Article
The following article was published in the Lake Norman Times on September 25, 2002.
In March of 2003, Duke Energy kindly provided us with an updated timeline.
To view the updated timeline, click here.
38
Years In the Making: Lake Norman
began with the Cowans Ford Dam,
dedicated 38 years ago this week.
By
Jimmy Autrey II
Lake Norman Times
Published September 25, 2002
Cowans
Ford Dam, which blocks the Catawba River to create Lake
Norman, was dedicated Sept. 29, 1964. With this date
in mind, we celebrate the 38th birthday of North Carolina's
largest manmade lake.
In
the spirit of celebration, let's take a look at some
notable dates leading up to and after Lake Norman's
creation.
A
Timeline
- April
30, 1904 Duke Power (as we know it) starts
up.
- Oct.
27, 1953 Norman A. Cocke Sr. is elected
fifth president of Duke Power. Lake Norman will later
be named after him.
- Oct.
4, 1956 Duke Power announces its intention
to build a nuclear reactor around Charlotte.
- May
15, 1957 Duke Power announces its plans
for the construction of Cowans Ford Hydro Station.
- Sept.
28, 1959 Construction starts on Cowans
Ford Dam. Hundreds of people turned out for a groundbreaking
ceremony.
- Sept.
1962 Lake Norman State Park in Troutman
is formed after Duke Power donates 1,328 acres of
land.
- Feb.
1963 Cowans Ford Dam fills.
- Sept.
30, 1963 Commercial operation begins at
Cowans Ford Hydro Station Units 1-3.
- Sept.
29, 1964 Cowans Ford Dam is officially
dedicated. (This date marks the end of Lake Norman's
construction.)
- March
1, 1965 Marshall Steam Station Unit 1 begins
commercial operation. The station was named after
Edward Carrington Marshall, a president of Duke Power
in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
- Nov.
17, 1969 Plans for the McGuire Nuclear
Station are announced. The station is to be named
after William Bulgin McGuire, president of Duke Power
from 1959 to 1971.
- Feb.
24, 1970 A site is chosen for McGuire Nuclear
Station. (A valentine from Duke Power?)
- April
1, 1971 A groundbreaking ceremony is held
at the future site of McGuire. (Duke Power ain't no
April Fool!)
- Sept.
12, 1981 McGuire Unit 1 puts out its first
kilowatt-hours of electricity. Unit 1 will begin commercial
operation Dec. 1 of that same year. Unit 2 will start
producing electricity in 1984.
- June
23, 1993 The Lake Norman Times hits newsstands
for the very first time. (We like to think it is now
a staple of life on the lake.)
- Spring
1999 The North Mecklenburg Chamber of Commerce
becomes known as the Lake Norman Chamber of Commerce.
- May
2002 A Web site is launched that presses
the question "Is there a monster in Lake Norman?"
Check out www.LakeNormanMonster.com
John
Campbell: A Reflection on Change
In
order to get a better sense of Lake Norman's impact
on the region, it is best to hear the facts from someone
who has been on the lake since Day One.
John
Campbell of Brawley School Road in Mooresville watched
as the lake was built and floods of people discovered
the area for the first time. That makes him qualified
to be one of Lake Norman's unofficial historians.
"The
lake now covers a part of four counties that was then
a neglected area," said Campbell. The four counties
that he refers to are Mecklenburg, Iredell, Lincoln
and Catawba.
Before
the lake's construction, little interest was paid to
the piece of land that now rests underneath the waters
of Lake Norman. There was very little going on in terms
of development before the lake, said Campbell. The people
who lived there were poor and usually uneducated.
"It
was mostly a lot of farmland," he said.
There
were once houses, churches, small businesses, roads,
gardens, trees and vehicles on the land that rests at
the bottom of the lake. These fixtures either had to
be destroyed or moved to other locations. Some things
were left untouched (including several cemeteries),
destined to rest underneath many feet of water.
"They
did a lot of clear cutting," said Campbell.
Campbell
said that he knew from the start that Lake Norman was
going to change the area in some major ways. That's
why he decided to open up a store called John's Trading
Post on the Brawley Peninsula. The store was built in
1964, right after the creation of the lake. The store
was built in an area that was previously known as Mayhewtown
(it was renamed Brawley Peninsula after the lake's construction).
"My
customers were a whole slice of society," said Campbell.
"On a given Saturday, I might have college presidents,
top lawyers and ordinary working people all mixing together."
Campbell
said that in the early days of the lake there were still
very few people who settled in the area. His store initially
had to struggle to keep afloat, but somehow the business
made it through the hard times.
"There
was not a lot of money at that time," said Campbell.
"Somehow it survived though."
Campbell's
store started making more and more money as families
started to make homes around the lake. In the lake's
early days, Campbell said that some wealthy people who
enjoyed water sports built summer homes.
"There
were a lot of break-ins in the beginning," said Campbell.
"Now it's really safe though."
Campbell
said that a lot of problems came from disruptive early
settlers in the area. He said that a lot of the people
who bought summer homes on the lake sent relatives with
questionable reputations to live on the lake. "There
were a lot of drunks that had family members that didn't
want them around Charlotte," he said.
Campbell
said that the face of the lake really started to change
in the mid-1970s, when I-77 was built. I-77 drew in
a lot of people to the area.
"Houses
got more permanent after that," said Campbell. "That
changed the culture of the community."
Campbell
said that there was no turning back after I-77 came
in. More and more people began to discover the lake,
as well as the opportunities available in Charlotte.
Soon people began to see Lake Norman as an ideal place
to live while they worked in Charlotte. Lake Norman
is also close to several interstates and airports, making
it appealing to businesses.
"It's
now a high class place to live," said Campbell. "It's
not a backward area anymore. It's going to develop whether
the powers that be want it to or not."
Campbell
said that he had predicted Lake Norman's growth early
on, but had not been able to buy up much land as an
investment. He had six children to support and had to
use most of his money on them.
Today
an acre of lakefront land can sell for over $1 million
in certain locations. Campbell said that he is not bitter
that he did not buy up a lot of the land that's being
sold now.
"I'm
still the luckiest man in the world," he said. "I've
got six children and they are all doing well. I was
able to put them all through school and they are all
healthy and happy."
Along
the way, Campbell sold John's Trading Post and opened
up the popular Mallard Head Golf Course on the Brawley
Peninsula.
Campbell
said that he is glad to live on the lake and that he
is thankful for all the blessings that the lake has
given him over the years. He looks forward to what the
future has in store for the area.
This
article is reprinted with permission of the Lake Norman
Times.
|