LaPriel's Landing #3
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Rhea County, TN
- Watts Bar Lake7 min walk
- Yellow Creek Wildlife Management Area14 min drive
- Rhea Springs Recreation Area19 min drive
- Crossville, TN (CSV-Crossville Memorial)43 min drive
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Kitchen
Pet friendly
Free WiFi
Air conditioning
5.0 out of 5, Exceptional, (1)
The price is $92
per night
$126 total
includes taxes & fees
Dec 6 - Dec 7
About the neighborhood
About this property
LaPriel's Landing #3
Come enjoy LaPriel's Landing less than a mile from the water! This includes: 50 AMP Electrical Service, Water, and Sewer hookups provided. We're right in-between Knoxville & Chattanooga, TN. Only 1/2 mile away from our local Marina / Boat Launch. We're just 7 miles from Watt's Bar Nuclear Plant & 40 miles to Sequoyah. Less than 60 miles to Tennessee Aquarium in Chattanooga, or head North and we're 60 miles from Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, TN.
Spots 1 & 2 you can pull directly up the hill, past your spot, & back in. Depending on the length of your vehicle, if you've reserved spots 3 & 4, you'll need to pull in-front of the dark blue house, and back up the black top to your spot. Check-in time is 1:00 pm & check out is 10:00 am. Please feel free to e-mail us with any questions.
Spring City began as a stop along the Cincinnati Southern Railroad in the 1870s. The town was originally named Sulphur Springs, because of the mass amount of sulphur in the water. Sometime later it became "Rheaville," and later became incorporated with nearby Rhea Springs, and took on the name Rhea Springs. Due to an explosion, much of the town flooded or burnt, and the town relocated to its current location and was renamed Spring City, in honor of the original settlement, Sulphur Springs. The original location now lies at the bottom of a nearby section of Watts Bar Lake. Spring City thrived as a railroad shipping hub during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Its first railroad depot, a simple wooden building constructed in 1879, burned in 1892, and was replaced by a larger one.[5] This second depot was in turn replaced by the current depot, which was completed by the Southern Railway in 1909.[6]
The city received an economic boost in 1942 with the Tennessee Valley Authority's completion of Watts Bar Dam and its associated reservoir southeast of the town. That same year saw the completion of the Watts Bar Fossil Plant, TVA's first coal-fired plant. In 1973, TVA began building Watts Bar Nuclear Plant. Its first reactor, Watts Bar Unit 1, became active in 1996. The construction of the second reactor, Watts Bar Unit 2, was originally suspended in 1985, but resumed in 2007. It entered commercial operation in October 2016.
On August 22, 1955, 11 schoolchildren were killed, and many others injured, when their school bus was struck by a 100-car freight train at a track crossing in Spring City.
On July 28, 2016, a train hauling coal derailed by the train depot and museum due to a faulty wheel on one of the privately owned coal cars. There were no casualties. A lengthy cleanup followed, where both track crossings in town had to be closed while repairs were made and debris cleared.
Spots 1 & 2 you can pull directly up the hill, past your spot, & back in. Depending on the length of your vehicle, if you've reserved spots 3 & 4, you'll need to pull in-front of the dark blue house, and back up the black top to your spot. Check-in time is 1:00 pm & check out is 10:00 am. Please feel free to e-mail us with any questions.
Spring City began as a stop along the Cincinnati Southern Railroad in the 1870s. The town was originally named Sulphur Springs, because of the mass amount of sulphur in the water. Sometime later it became "Rheaville," and later became incorporated with nearby Rhea Springs, and took on the name Rhea Springs. Due to an explosion, much of the town flooded or burnt, and the town relocated to its current location and was renamed Spring City, in honor of the original settlement, Sulphur Springs. The original location now lies at the bottom of a nearby section of Watts Bar Lake. Spring City thrived as a railroad shipping hub during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Its first railroad depot, a simple wooden building constructed in 1879, burned in 1892, and was replaced by a larger one.[5] This second depot was in turn replaced by the current depot, which was completed by the Southern Railway in 1909.[6]
The city received an economic boost in 1942 with the Tennessee Valley Authority's completion of Watts Bar Dam and its associated reservoir southeast of the town. That same year saw the completion of the Watts Bar Fossil Plant, TVA's first coal-fired plant. In 1973, TVA began building Watts Bar Nuclear Plant. Its first reactor, Watts Bar Unit 1, became active in 1996. The construction of the second reactor, Watts Bar Unit 2, was originally suspended in 1985, but resumed in 2007. It entered commercial operation in October 2016.
On August 22, 1955, 11 schoolchildren were killed, and many others injured, when their school bus was struck by a 100-car freight train at a track crossing in Spring City.
On July 28, 2016, a train hauling coal derailed by the train depot and museum due to a faulty wheel on one of the privately owned coal cars. There were no casualties. A lengthy cleanup followed, where both track crossings in town had to be closed while repairs were made and debris cleared.
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