Blackwater rivers are the haven of innumerable species, the keepers of our earliest recorded history, and the key to the health of our marshes, islands, and coastlines, but they’re under threat from mining, residential development, and pollution. Georgia author Taylor Brown pens a love letter to the rivers he grew up on, a call to keep them thriving for generations to come.

Story by Taylor Brown | Photos by Benjamin Galland


 
 

June 28 ,2022

grew up on the Georgia coast, a 100-mile-long stretch of salt marsh, sea islands, and maritime forest that extends from the historic ports and riverfront of Savannah to the wild horses and eroded mansions of Cumberland Island. As with most coasts, the outermost edge seems to garner the most attention, strung with storied islands such as Sapelo and Blackbeard, St. Simons and Jekyll — a coastal armada known for quartz-sand beaches, gothic oaks, historic lighthouses, and dolphin-favored waterways. But today I want to take you deeper; I want to take you upriver, inland, into the blackwater.

The world’s major blackwater rivers are found in two distinct parts of the world: the vast Amazon basin of South America; and the American South, where they coil through low-lying swamps and wetlands, their slow-moving waters stained tea-dark with the tannins of decaying vegetation. In contrast to their clearwater and whitewater counterparts, they are not only darker, but softer and more acidic. These are cryptic rivers, where your hand may disappear from view just inches beneath the surface, and it’s easy to imagine all manner of mysteries and monsters roaming the darkness underneath.

My childhood friends and I grew up boating, paddling, and fishing in such dark waters. Foremost for us was the mighty Altamaha, also known as the “Georgia’s Little Amazon” or the “Amazon of the South,” and we spent time on Georgia’s Satilla, Ogeechee, and St. Marys rivers, as well. I always thought these blackwater rivers were beautiful with their Coca-Cola waters and pale sandbars, the gnarled roots of cypress trees standing along the shorelines, everything slashed darkly with tide lines. Even the alligators that cruised their waters had a prehistoric beauty, telling us we were in a world older and deeper than we were accustomed to — and that, yes, there were still things in the world that would love to have us for supper.

But when I began to dig a little beneath the surface for my novel The River of Kings, I realized these blackwater rivers have a majesty and significance greater than I’d ever imagined, so much deeper than we were ever taught in school or even outside of it. For instance, I didn’t realize that Georgia’s Golden Isles were largely built by these rivers, their sediments deposited over eons to help create the line of barrier islands that buffer the mainland and marshes — the cradle of so much sea life — from the ravages of hurricanes. In large part, we can thank our blackwater rivers for the flotilla of islands we love so much, because their geological histories are so tightly interwoven.

What’s more, I came to learn that during the Pleistocene Epoch, the sea level was up to 100 feet higher than it is today, so our shoreline lay 80 miles farther inland. At one time, much of the Georgia coast was underwater, which is why you can still find the giant teeth of megalodon — sharks the size of school buses, weighing as much as 65 tons — along Georgia’s lowcountry rivers. In fact, the shark’s tooth is the state fossil of Georgia, and teeth the size of your entire hand are regularly found by blackwater scuba divers in the bed of the St. Marys River, just steps away from where I’m writing this at White Oak Conservation in Yulee, Florida.

As I uncovered story after story during my research, I was like a boy walking along the muddy banks of the river, looking for those shark’s teeth, and what I found was truly awe-inspiring. I felt that I’d stumbled upon buried treasure.

 
 
 

Rain at sunrise on the Altamaha River.

 
 

I learned that the first fortified European settlement in what would become the United States wasn’t founded by the Spanish in St. Augustine, as many believe. The first fortified European settlement in the New World was France’s Fort Caroline, founded in 1564 — a year before St. Augustine and more than four decades before Jamestown. For years, it was thought to have existed on the banks of the St. Johns River outside present-day Jacksonville, Florida, but many scholars, archaeologists, and historians now believe that Fort Caroline was located on either the Altamaha River or on the St. Marys.

There, an artist named Jacques Le Moyne created the first drawings we have of the flora, fauna, and native peoples of the New World. Here, along this river, may have been the location of that lost fort of Le Caroline, where peoples of the Old and New Worlds lived in close proximity, learning the strange and thrilling differences, and parallels, between each other’s cultures. It was a fraught and complex history, in which they traded, feasted, parlayed, and battled until a Spanish attack decimated the fort. One of the most important meetings of worlds in all of human history was perhaps within paddling distance of the nearest river access.

 
 
 

An alligator and cypress knees in the Okefenokee Swamp.

 
 
 

I learned that these blackwater rivers had been home to the Timucua and Guale at the time of European arrival — Native American peoples whose populations would be rapidly diminished by disease, war, assimilation, and enslavement. Single-masted sloops and double-masted schooners plied the blackwater in the age before steam, transporting cargo upstream and down. In fact, in 1805, a British warship sailed 12 miles up the St. Marys, where it found a Spanish pirate ship and two of its British prizes lashed broadside across the river. After an extended duel, the British succeeded in capturing all three vessels. That was just five miles downriver from where I now sit, near the Florida ghost town of Crandall. 

In the other direction lies the Okefenokee Swamp — often translated as the “Land of the Trembling Earth” and home to the headwaters of the St. Marys River. In the late 1800s, a group of former Confederate officers formed the Suwannee Canal Company with the intent to drain the swamp for cypress logging, turpentining, and, with the trees all felled, a vast array of croplands. They brought in steam shovels, gangs of convict labor, and veteran gold miners from the north Georgia hills, dredging a canal 12 miles through the halls of cypress, through malaria and snakebite and whole navies of alligators. But their shovels tore open dormant deep springs and the water flowed the wrong way, into the swamp instead of out. People called it “Jackson’s Folly,” after the man behind the project, Captain Harry Jackson. Today, the Suwannee Canal remains a liquid inroad to the interior of the Okefenokee, but thankfully, the rest of the swamp still stands.

I learned how the longleaf pines of Georgia were assembled into giant timber rafts the size of basketball courts and floated down to sawmills on the coast, where they were made into the masts of great sailing ships, naval stores, and timber used in the building of bridges, railroads, and sailing vessels. The raftsmen were known to sing chanteys and ballads as they worked their great 50-foot oars, swinging their rafts around dangerous bights and whirls and shoals with names like “Devil’s Elbow” and “Old Hell Bight.” It’s said that their songs could be heard echoing up and down the river — at least until a century ago, when most of the state’s virgin timber had been cut down, and their voices were heard no more.

 
 
 

The Little Satilla River.

 
 

During World War II, it was feared that German U-boats could navigate upstream on our rivers, sabotaging bridges or discharging commandos deep inside the heart of Georgia. Soldiers from the state defense forces were posted on the river bluffs. The German submarines cruised the coastal waters instead, once sinking the oil tankers SS Oklahoma and the Esso Baton Rouge off the coast of St. Simons in the early hours of April 8, 1942. Locals feared a German invasion of the Georgia coast. Rumors abounded of Nazi submariners coming ashore to buy bread and cigarettes, to meet spies, to watch the picture shows. Submarine-hunting blimps and the Civil Air Patrol were sent up to patrol our rivers and coastlines for the rest of the war.

I learned of the legendary cryptids of these lowcountry rivers, most notably the Altamaha-ha (aka “Altie”) — a two-finned version of the Loch Ness Monster that’s reportedly been sighted for more than 200 years. In fact, some of Jacques Le Moyne’s illustrations bear a strange resemblance to the creature. I myself thought I’d seen the fabled Altamaha-ha one afternoon on Stud Horse Creek when something large and unidentifiable crossed before the bow of my boat. My friends and I stared slack-jawed at the creature, only to realize it was a giant feral hog as it climbed out of the water on the far shore. A creature nearly as astounding, it seemed — especially after our boat grounded on a hidden shoal and we spent the night huddled around a meager campfire, surrounded by muddy hogzilla hoof prints, waiting for the tide to rise.

And I learned of a river creature nearly as mythic in scale as the Altamaha-ha, yet real: the sturgeon that have used these rivers as their breeding grounds for millennia. These “living fossils,” as they’re often called, can grow up to 14 feet long, weigh 800 pounds, and live to 80 to 90 years old. They come upriver to spawn in the spring, rest in watery caverns protected from the river’s pull in the summer, and they return to the sea in the fall. In the deep holes of our rivers, these real giants are still rumored to gather, armored and silent, like a fleet of submarines. They also produced some of the world’s greatest caviar until they were listed as endangered and a moratorium was placed on the sturgeon fisheries. A University of Georgia biologist told me that these prehistoric fish, some the size of torpedoes, would stack themselves like cordwood down in deep holes in the river. They were so big that when fishermen tied them up along the Darien waterfront, still alive, the entire floating dock would sway back and forth in the river. Howell Boone, a fisherman based out of McIntosh County who used to harvest sturgeon from the Altamaha River, told me tales of shipping caviar overnight to Ted Turner and Jane Fonda in Atlanta. Today, only about 1% remains of the Atlantic sturgeon’s historic numbers, which at one time were in the hundreds of thousands.

 
 

A train passes over the Altamaha River.

 

Our blackwater rivers remain a refuge for the osprey, bald eagle, whitetail deer, black bear, bobcat, raccoon, manatee, otter, beaver, gopher tortoise, alligator, indigo snake, and so many others. They remain a stopping ground for my favorite raptor, the swallow-tailed kite — one of nature’s supreme aerialists, known to spin and wheel and dance over the dark water, as if putting on an airshow, catching insects on the wing — and a stopover site for a vast menagerie of other avian migrants.

Though they don’t receive the attention of the sea islands and port cities, our blackwater rivers are the true lifeblood of the region. They remain the haven of innumerable species, the keepers of our earliest recorded history, and the key to the health of our marshes, islands, and coastlines.

There is such history here, human and natural, waiting along the banks, resting in the riverbeds.

Today, these rivers are under threat. In recent years, the St. Marys River alone has faced the threat of titanium mining near its headwaters in the Okefenokee Swamp, residential development along its banks, and even the establishment of a nearby spaceport. The Altamaha and Ogeechee rivers have been victims of repeated pulp and textile plant pollution violations, and Satilla advocates have been fighting a proposed landfill near its banks. All three rivers have made the Georgia Water Coalition’s “Dirty Dozen” list in recent years — an annual report of the state’s waterway health.

If you are reading this, you are in a position to help safeguard and preserve our blackwater rivers not only for yourselves, your children and grandchildren, and their children and grandchildren, but for the vast generations of flora and fauna to flourish beside them. In my opinion, it’s a sacred responsibility.

More and more, scientists are learning how interconnected we all are, all of the living creatures of our planet. More and more, their findings show the staggering intricacy of the web of life to which we’re joined. They’ve found that trees, even trees of different species, communicate with one another through their roots, sending nutrients to aid the sick and dying of their kind through the aid of mycelium, a network of tiny threads of fungi that run through the soil. 

Perhaps it’s no wonder that even a single 15-minute session of “forest bathing” — a phrase translated from the Japanese word shinrin-yoku and a fancy term for immersion in nature — has been found to have positive clinical effects, including blood pressure reduction, improvements in immune system function, and alleviation of depression, stress, and anxiety. Of course, I don’t need a study to prove the healing effects of drifting on a blackwater river with the sun shining down and the wide wings of a great blue heron unfolding as it takes flight before me and I hear the rush of air beneath his wings. I can think of little else better for body and soul than that.

 
 
 

The South Georgia Waterfall on the Little Satilla River.

 
 

We have a long history of thinking of ourselves as superior to the rest of the animal kingdom, as above and apart from the rest of the inhabitants of our planet. We think we are the most clever of creatures, having climbed to the top of the feeding order. We are the dominant species on this planet, and with that comes a great deal of responsibility — one that we have not always taken seriously. In many cases, we have been monstrously negligent. 

More and more, we are realizing that what is good for the rest of the planet is good for us. That the health of our own species is tied inextricably to the health of our natural world. And that we remove ourselves from the natural dynamics of this majestic planet at our peril. Peril to ourselves, to our fellow living creatures, and to the incredible gift of this world, with all of its majesty, its beauty, and its mysteries still to be unfolded.

If there’s a last thought I want to leave you with, it’s this: What is good for our blackwater rivers and the many residents who depend on them to survive  — avian and mammalian, aquatic and reptilian — is good for all of us. 

What is good for our rivers, my friends, is good for us all.

 
 
 

Taylor Brown takes in a sunrise on the Altamaha.

 
 

If you are interested in helping protect our blackwater rivers, become a member of your local riverkeeper organization. Examples include the Altamaha Riverkeeper, Satilla Riverkeeper, and St. Marys Riverkeeper.


 
 

Header image: Rifle Cut, Altamaha River

Taylor Brown is the author of the short story collection In the Season of Blood & Gold, as well as the novels Fallen Land (2016), The River of Kings (2017), Gods of Howl Mountain (2018), Pride of Eden (2020), and Wingwalkers (2022). You can find his work in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Garden & Gun, and many other publications.  He’s a recipient of the Montana Prize in Fiction, a three-time finalist for the Southern Book Prize, and was named the 2021 Georgia Author of the Year for Literary Fiction. He lives in Savannah and serves as editor-in-chief of BikeBound.com, a custom motorcycle publication. 

Ben Galland is a native of St. Simons Island, Georgia. He co-founded h2o creative group, a Brunswick, Georgia, marketing agency where he is the principal photographer. Photography and the outdoors are his passions, and when not shooting commercially, he can be found in the woods or on the river with a camera.

 

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