Little Pigeon River | |
River | |
The mill dam of the Pigeon Forge Mill along the West Fork of the Little Pigeon River in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee.
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Country | United States |
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State | Tennessee |
Part of | Tennessee → Ohio → Mississippi |
Primary source | Middle Prong Little Pigeon River |
- location | below Mount Guyot in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee |
- elevation | 3,028 ft (923 m) |
- coordinates | 35°41′35″N 83°19′12″W / 35.69306°N 83.32000°W |
Secondary source | Porters Creek |
- location | near Charlies Bunion in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee |
- elevation | 4,680 ft (1,426 m) |
- coordinates | 35°38′50″N 83°21′47″W / 35.64722°N 83.36306°W |
Source confluence | |
- location | Greenbrier Cove in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee |
- elevation | 1,654 ft (504 m) |
- coordinates | 35°42′32″N 83°22′57″W / 35.70889°N 83.38250°W |
Mouth | French Broad River |
- location | near Sevierville, Tennessee |
- elevation | 860 ft (262 m) |
- coordinates | 35°55′51″N 83°35′43″W / 35.93083°N 83.59528°WCoordinates: 35°55′51″N 83°35′43″W / 35.93083°N 83.59528°W |
Length | 30 mi (48 km) |
Basin | 373 sq mi (966 km2) |
Discharge | for Sevierville, downstream from confluence with West Prong, 4.4 miles (7.1 km) above the mouth |
- average | 570 cu ft/s (16 m3/s) (mean for water years 1921–1981) |
- max | 55,000 cu ft/s (1,557 m3/s) February 1875 |
- min | 2.8 cu ft/s (0.1 m3/s) September 1925 |
The Little Pigeon River is a river located entirely within Sevier County, Tennessee. It rises from a series of streams which flow together on the dividing ridge between the states of Tennessee and North Carolina inside the boundary of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The river is subdivided with three separate tributaries: East, Middle, and West.
The East and Middle prongs are less notable divisions of the river, with the East Prong paralleled for most of its length by State Route 416, and the Middle Prong emerging from the Greenbrier area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The West Prong is far better known because it drains the major tourist towns of Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge. The confluence of the two forks is at Sevierville. From there the stream continues to flow northward, paralleled by State Route 66, until its confluence with the French Broad River just downstream from Douglas Dam.
Despite its name, it is not a tributary of the nearby Pigeon River, which flows into the French Broad well above Douglas Dam and the resultant reservoir.