Most People Have No Idea This Underwater City In Kentucky Even Exists
By Sarah McCosham|Published August 01, 2022
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Sarah McCosham
Author
I write like it's my job - because it is! I have a Master's in English and love words: crossword puzzles, Scrabble games, Wordle, and, of course, good, old-fashioned books.
I'm a writer and editor at OnlyInYourState, and a contributing writer at Cincinnati Magazine. I love the Great Outdoors and am endlessly awestruck by this beautiful country of ours. Coffee keeps me going, yoga keeps me sane, my kids keep me grounded, and my writing keeps me inspired.
Ghost towns in Kentucky? There are a few, including an abandoned mining site in Big South Fork, that will surely spark your imagination. But did you know there’s an underwater ghost town in Kentucky, too? And that this underwater city is located in one of the state’s most prized lakes? Today we’re going to share the story of Birmingham, Kentucky, a once-thriving community that’s now an underwater city just below the surface of Kentucky Lake.
Southwest Kentucky, within the area now known as Land Between the Lakes, is where the story begins. Birmingham was located on land owned by Thomas A. Grubbs in 1849, laid out and platted in 1853, and incorporated in 1860. Named after the town in England, Birmingham had a strong start, with a steel mill and timber business, and iron industry in the works.
By 1894 Birmingham had five churches, two schools, two hotels, four dry goods and general stores, three grocers, two millinery shops, two wagon and blacksmith shops, and a drug store. By 1929, the town was home to 600 residents.
And then, an announcement was made that would change the course of history for Birmingham, Kentucky.
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In 1938, the Tennessee Valley Authority announced the building of Kentucky Dam for the creation of Kentucky Lake, and Birmingham's residents were informed that they needed to relocate... just like that.
Today, the former town rests in peace beneath the waters of Kentucky Lake. Visitors to Birmingham Point Campground sometimes report miscellaneous odds and ends surfacing at the shore.
But for the most part, folks carry on with life, fishing and swimming in the waters of Kentucky Lake, completely unaware of what lies beneath these waters.