Lake James is the product of an effort in the early 1900s led by James B. Duke to create a system of dams and reservoirs on the Catawba River in North Carolina's Piedmont with the intention of electrifying the region. The reservoir was sited at the confluence of the Catawba River, which has its headwaters in the mountains near the unincorporated community of
Linville Falls (North Fork) and on the eastern slope of the
Eastern Continental Divide, and the
Linville River, which gets its start on the slopes of
Grandfather Mountain and carves the
Linville Gorge after tumbling over
Linville Falls north of the lake. The reservoir is also fed by several smaller flows, including Paddy's Creek (sometimes Paddy Creek), which lends it name to a campground, boat launch, and a portion of Lake James State Park that is home to a sandy beach swimming area. Work on the earthen works that created the reservoir began in 1916 and completion of the impoundment came in 1923. The flooding of the lake claimed a portion of the small farming community of Fonta Flora, which was spread between the fertile river valley and the surrounding low hills. In the century since the creation of the lake, local residents created a mythology about
Fonta Flora that includes claims it is possible to dive to buildings still standing under the waters of the lake and even that portions of those structures are visible when the lake's water level is low. However, there is little evidence any significant structures remained in the portion of the valley that was flooded. Today, the Fonta Flora name is memorialized or perpetuated in several ways in the area, including in branding of an eponymous brewery located in nearby
Morganton and with the
Fonta Flora State Trail, which follows the shore of Lake James in the area where the community once stood. The hiking and biking trail, which is still under construction, is intended to eventually connect Morganton to
Asheville. ==Development==