$59,900 Sherwood Forest in Glenville, North Carolina

Price: $14
Type: Land
State: North Carolina  City: Glenville  Category: Land
Land in North Carolina
This ad is older than 2 months.
View similar ads: Land, Land in North Carolina

GENTILE LAYING PROPERTY WITH GREAT MOUNTAIN VIEWS (SOME TREE TRIMMING NEEDED) NICE HARD WOODS AND LEVEL YEAR ROUND ACCESS. VERY QUIET AND PEACEFUL, CAN BE PURCHASED IN SEPARATE LOTS OR ONE PIECE.
.40 ACRES $14,900, .76 ACRES $19,900, 2.00 ACRES $29,900, ALL TOGETHER 3.16 ACRES $59,900
Glenville was a town located in the Hamburg township of Jackson County, North Carolina. Prior to incorporationxxxx, it was named Hamburgh and later Hamburg, from which the township gets its name. The Hamburgh post office was established there in xxxx, but settlement began at least as early as xxxx. It was used as a fort in case of attack from the local native Cherokee people.
The town was destroyed in xxxx by Nantahala Power and Light after it built a hydroelectric dam, forming Lake Glenville on the Tuckasegee River the town was built next to. The area is still called Glenville however, and has United States Postal Service ZIP Code xxxx6, assigned mostly to the many vacation homes now built around the lake.
Spectacular Lake Glenville, home to numerous lake-front and lake-view developments, is the highest man-made mountain lake east of the Mississippi. Surrounded by mountains and woodlands, this six-mile-long lake boasts several beautiful waterfalls and numerous islands. Widely recognized as having pristine water, this lake offers boating, swimming and some of the best mountain-lake fishing in North Carolina.
Although Lake Glenville is a fine recreational asset, it was created in xxxx to be the reservoir for a hydroelectric facility. Power was urgently needed to manufacture aluminum for World War II bombers, so xxxx workers labored around the clock to complete the lake and dam. In xxxx, the power plant was named in honor of John Edward Sterling Thorpe, president of Nantahala Power and Light Company (Duke Power). Today, this facility still generates electricity for Cashiers and much of the Southeast.
Listing originally posted at http