An Indian dugout canoe was found in the lake dating back nearly 4,400 years. Other artifacts have been found around the area dating as early as 8,000 B.C. The lake was once named "Scuppernong", an
Algonquian word which means "the place where magnolias grow".
Scuppernong grapes once grew abundantly on the lake's shores, which is the source of their name. Lake Phelps is named for Josiah Phelps, the first white man to enter its waters. Phelps and another colonial explorer, Benjamin Tarkington, were searching through what was then known as the Great Eastern Dismal or Great Alligator Dismal in 1755. Phelps and Tarkington were part of a group of hunters who entered the
swamps in search of
game and
farmland. The group had become discouraged and were about to leave when Tarkington scaled one of the many trees and spotted the lake a short distance away. Phelps went ahead and ran into the water. As the first in the water he was given the honor of naming the lake. The lake was established as a
North Carolina State Lake in 1929, and it is managed by the adjacent
Pettigrew State Park. ==Ecology==