Summersville Lake State Park spans 177 acres (72 ha) of forested hills along the northern shore of Summersville Lake, a reservoir on the Gauley River.[1][2] As the largest lake in West Virginia, Summersville Lake covers 2,790 acres (1,130 ha) with over 60 miles (97 km) of shoreline at the summer pool water level.[3][4]
The park is situated near the eastern edge of U.S. Route 19 (US 19) and West Virginia Route 41 (WV 41), about 2.5 miles (4.0 km) south of Summersville.[1][5] Salmon Run, a nearby stream, flows parallel to US 19 and WV 41 and it joins Summersville Lake just west of Hughes Bridge, which carries US 19 and WV 41 over the lake.[1] Although the park borders the cliffs overlooking the lake,[1][5] it does not directly adjoin the shoreline, which is managed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE).[6]
The USACE constructed Summersville Lake between 1960 and 1966 to control flooding in an 803-square-mile (2,080 km2) area of the Gauley and Kanawha rivers' watershed.[3] President Lyndon B. Johnson dedicated the Summersville Lake and Dam on September 3, 1966.[4]
Park establishment and operation
In 2023, West Virginia Governor Jim Justice sent a bill to the West Virginia Legislature officially designating land along the northern shore of Summersville Lake as Summersville Lake State Park.[7] Governor Justice announced the bill and the plans to create the state park on August 6, 2023. [2][7] The West Virginia Legislature passed House Bill 214, and Governor Justice signed the bill to officially designate Summersville Lake State Park at the park site on August 11, 2023.[2][8]