Vickery Creek
Big Creek | |
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Big Creek at entrance to Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, Roswell, Georgia | |
Basin features | |
River mouth | Chattahoochee River |
Vickery Creek (also known as "Big Creek") is a 26.5-mile-long (42.6 km)[1] stream in Forsyth and Fulton counties in Georgia. The creek mouth (34°00′18″N 84°20′56″W / 34.005°N 84.349°W) into the Chattahoochee River is located at the southern border of Roswell where State Route 9 crosses the river. Its source (34°11′24″N 84°08′31″W / 34.190°N 84.142°W) is located just north of the intersection of Georgia State Route 9 and Georgia State Route 20, in Forsyth County, about 1 mile directly south of downtown Cumming. People guarding waters and falls are there from when it opens to when it closes. Much of the land east of the creek and west of Grimes Bridge Road in Roswell forms the Vickery Creek unit of the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area.
Vickery Creek is named after a Cherokee woman named Sharlot Vickery who lived in present-day Roswell and owned much of the land around the creek. The creek was originally called Cedar Creek; however, the name was changed to Vickery some time after the arrival of Roswell King and family in 1834.[2]
The creek also became known as Big Creek at some point after the American Civil War.
Upstream of the covered bridge and Ivy Mill is a man-made waterfall, where some people come to swim and play. There are paths that lead upriver, including one that leads to a rock formation that has become a popular jumping spot.
Facts
- The creek has a history of flooding along the local bike path: the Greenway along Big Creek in Alpharetta near Mansell Road.
- Hog Wallow Creek is a major tributary that enters in Roswell, just north of the Chattahoochee River
- At the Greenway in Alpharetta this small river is known as Big Creek; and by Riverside Road in Roswell, where the major stream begins, it is known as Vickery Creek.
References
- Notes
- ↑ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed April 15, 2011
- ↑ Darlene M. Walsh (Editor),, ed. (1994). Roswell, A Pictorial History (2nd ed.). Roswell Historical Society. ISBN 0-9615854-2-0.
- Bibliography
- Darlene M. Walsh (Editor),, ed. (1994). Roswell, A Pictorial History (2nd ed.). Roswell Historical Society. pp. 16, 19, 87. ISBN 0-9615854-2-0.