Magnet Fishing in Tennessee: TVA Lakes and River History
The TVA reservoir system covers most of Tennessee's major water, and these lakes have been heavily used for recreational boating since the 1940s — which means decades of dropped gear accumulating on the bottom. Civil War history along the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers is real, so report anything that looks like it…
Magnet fishing in Tennessee — quick info
Recommended Pull Force
Recommended Rope Length
Beginner Difficulty
Typical Water Conditions
Tennessee has the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers running through major population centers, with TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) operating a massive dam and reservoir system statewide. Nickajack, Chickamauga, and Kentucky Lake (shared with Kentucky) all have extensive recreational history. The Mississippi River forms the western border and adds a completely different environment — wide, deep, and powerful.
Is it legal? Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency doesn't specifically prohibit magnet fishing. TVA manages most of the state's major reservoirs and has its own access and use rules at public boat ramps and recreation areas — check TVA's site for specific lakes. Tennessee's Division of Archaeology covers any finds with historical significance, and Civil War artifacts are particularly likely in some waterways.
Best magnet fishing gear for Tennessee
Best magnet fishing spots in Tennessee
1. Chickamauga Lake (Chickamaugua Dam Access)
Chattanooga
This TVA lake sits right in the middle of Civil War country, and the dam area has been a consistent producer for magnet fishers — old hardware, chain sections, and occasionally military-era iron have come out of here. The shoreline access near the dam tailwaters is easy to reach with decent bank fishing spots and a paved lot nearby. Depth varies but the shallower edges near the boat ramps are where most people are pulling stuff up.
2. Chickamauga Lake (Chickamauga Dam Area)
Chattanooga
This TVA impoundment sits right in the middle of serious Civil War country, and the dam area access points are where most magnet fishers set up. People have pulled out old iron hardware, anchors, and enough miscellaneous submerged junk to keep you busy for a full afternoon. There's decent bank access near the dam tailwater and parking is straightforward off Amnicola Highway.
3. Cumberland River – Downtown Nashville Riverfront
Nashville
The Cumberland runs right through downtown Nashville, and the stretch near Riverfront Park has been throwing up old hardware, coins, and what people suspect are 19th-century bridge remnants for years. Access is straightforward — paved paths, decent parking nearby, and the riverbank is right there. Depth varies but the shallower edges near the old boat landings are where the interesting stuff tends to sit.
4. Cumberland River — Korean Veterans Memorial Bridge Area
Nashville
Downtown Nashville's Cumberland River stretch gets a ton of foot traffic, and that means decades of dropped, thrown, and discarded metal sitting on the bottom. People have pulled out everything from padlocks and chains to old tools and the occasional knife near the pedestrian bridge areas. Access is straightforward from Riverfront Park, and there's metered street parking close enough to make it practical.
5. Cumberland River Greenway (Downtown Riverfront)
Nashville
The stretch of the Cumberland running through downtown Nashville has been collecting junk since Nashville was a major supply hub in the Civil War era, and the urban pedestrian bridges and riverfront parks make access almost too easy. People have reportedly pulled firearms, coins, and old iron fittings from this stretch. Parking lots off 1st Avenue South and the Shelby Bottoms Greenway both give you walkable bank access.
6. Chickamauga Lake – Chickamauga Dam Area
Chattanooga
Chickamauga Lake sits right in the heart of one of the most heavily fought Civil War regions in the country, and the water near the dam and surrounding boat ramps has produced some genuinely old iron over the years — military hardware, tools, wagon fittings. TVA owns and manages the shoreline here, so stick to public access points and know the rules before you start pulling. The bottom is silty in spots but there are rocky shallower sections near the ramps where metal doesn't just disappear.
7. Tennessee River — Coolidge Park Riverbank
Chattanooga
The North Shore side of the Tennessee River near Coolidge Park is one of the more accessible urban magnet fishing spots in the state — paved paths, parking, and a gentle bank that doesn't require scrambling down a bluff. The river has Civil War history running through Chattanooga and the water here has seen boat traffic for well over a century, which means there's accumulated metal in the shallows. Chains, anchors, and unidentified iron chunks are the common finds.
8. Norris Lake (Norris Dam State Park)
Norris
Norris was the very first TVA dam project, finished in 1936, which means anything that was sitting in the Clinch and Powell river valleys when they flooded is still down there somewhere. The state park gives you legitimate public access to the shoreline in several spots, and the water clarity here is better than most TVA lakes so you can sometimes see what you're swinging for. Old farm equipment pieces, tools, and mid-century hardware are the typical finds.
9. Tennessee River – Ross's Landing
Chattanooga
Ross's Landing is a public park right on the Tennessee River waterfront in downtown Chattanooga, and the history here goes deep — Civil War ironworks, riverboat traffic, and decades of industrial use all left stuff in this stretch. The access is genuinely easy, with paved waterfront and multiple entry points along the park. People have pulled out old bolts, brackets, and unidentified iron chunks that look older than anything you'd find at a hardware store.
10. Norris Lake — Norris Dam State Park Shoreline
Norris
Norris was the first dam TVA ever built, which means this lake has been collecting sunken metal since the 1930s — old construction hardware, tools, and boat parts have all come up along the accessible shoreline near the state park. The park has parking, restrooms, and clear bank access that makes it one of the more beginner-friendly spots in the TVA system. Water is clear enough in spots to actually see what you're dragging up before it breaks the surface.
11. Tennessee River at Coolidge Park
Chattanooga
The pedestrian bridge and the Coolidge Park riverbank give you one of the most accessible stretches of the Tennessee River in the city, and the foot traffic over that bridge for the last hundred-plus years means things have been going into the water for a long time. The river bottom here is a mix of rock and silt and the depth drops off pretty fast from the bank. People fish this spot constantly so it gets hit often, but there's always more stuff settling in.
12. Norris Lake – Norris Dam State Park
Norris
Norris Dam was the very first dam TVA built, finished in 1936, and the lake behind it flooded a bunch of farmland and old community sites — which means there's stuff down there that's been sitting since the 1930s. The state park has public boat ramps and shoreline access, and the water near the dam structure itself tends to be where older material concentrates. Depth gets serious fast near the dam, so work the shallows around the ramp areas.
13. Duck River — Columbia City Park Access
Columbia
The Duck River through Columbia is one of the most biodiverse rivers in North America, which also means it's had people living, working, and losing things along it for a very long time. The city park access points give you a calm, wadeable stretch with a gravel bottom that's easier on gear than rocky riverbeds. Old farm tools and iron fittings are common finds, and the river isn't very deep at the access points.
14. Douglas Lake (Swann Bridge Area)
Dandridge
Douglas Lake is another TVA impoundment and the old Swann Bridge crossing near Dandridge is a classic magnet fishing target — bridges concentrate dropped and thrown objects over decades, and this one's been there long enough to accumulate. The lake level fluctuates pretty dramatically with TVA water management, which actually exposes bottom areas in the draw-down season that you can't reach any other time. Old bridge hardware, tools, and the occasional firearm have come up here.
15. Duck River – Columbia Access Area
Columbia
The Duck River is one of the most biodiverse rivers in North America, and the section around Columbia has old bridge crossings and mill sites that go back to the early 1800s. Public access points off Riverside Drive give you decent bank fishing without a lot of scrambling. The river isn't deep here — lots of wading-depth stretches — and the current keeps the bottom cleaner than silted-up lake spots.
16. Hiwassee River — Reliance Bridge
Reliance
This historic area in the Cherokee National Forest has an old steel truss bridge that's been dropping bolts, hardware, and debris into the Hiwassee for decades, and the river bottom near the bridge is genuinely interesting. It's a popular whitewater put-in spot, so there's also lost paddling gear and carabiners in the mix. Parking is right at the bridge and access to the bank is easy.
17. Hiwassee River (Reliance Access Area)
Reliance
The Hiwassee is a cleaner, faster-moving river than most TVA impoundments and the Reliance area has a public put-in and bank access that makes it easy to work. The current here moves finds around and piles things up in the slower eddies, which is where you want to focus. Old hardware, tools, and occasionally very old iron pieces show up because this valley has been settled and worked since the early 1800s.
18. Hiwassee River – Reliance Bridge
Reliance
The old Reliance area on the Hiwassee has a historic covered bridge nearby and a river that's seen logging, early industry, and heavy foot traffic for over a century. The put-in near the historic Reliance district gives you riverbank access without a lot of competition, and the rocky bottom near the old crossing points tends to hold older metal in the gaps rather than letting it sink into sediment. People have pulled out chain links, old tools, and the kind of anonymous iron that makes you wonder.
19. Kentucky Lake — Paris Landing State Park Pier Area
Buchanan
Kentucky Lake is massive — over 160,000 acres — and the Paris Landing area gives you a developed access point with a boat ramp, pier, and enough foot traffic history to mean lost gear is a real possibility in the shallow marina zone. The pier pilings alone tend to accumulate snagged fishing tackle, weights, and hooks, and heavier iron has been found in the boat ramp apron area. Parking is large and easy.
20. Kentucky Lake (Paris Landing State Park)
Buchanan
Kentucky Lake is massive — the largest TVA reservoir by surface area — and Paris Landing gives you state park access to the water with a boat ramp and shoreline access that most people just walk past without thinking about magnet fishing. The Tennessee River valley was heavily farmed and traveled before the impoundment, so there's a lot of old material sitting in the shallower cove areas. Old agricultural iron, vehicle parts, and anchors are common finds in this area.
21. Douglas Lake – Swann Bridge Area
Dandridge
Douglas Lake was filled in 1943 and the flooding covered a significant amount of farmland and old road infrastructure in Jefferson County. The area around the old Swann Bridge crossing is one of the better-known access spots, and low water years sometimes expose debris that's normally submerged. Parking is manageable off the county roads near the bridge remnants, and the lake bottom here is a mix of mud and old hardpan that holds metal well.
22. Clinch River — Oak Ridge Residential Access Below the Dam
Oak Ridge
The Clinch River below Melton Hill Dam has a stretch through Oak Ridge that's easy to access and has an interesting industrial history given the city itself was built for the Manhattan Project. Old iron fittings, cable, and various unidentified hardware turn up regularly in the stretch near the old residential bridge crossings. The bottom is a mix of gravel and silt and the current keeps it manageable.
23. Stones River (Cannon Boulevard Bridge Area)
Murfreesboro
The Stones River runs right through the area where the Battle of Stones River was fought in 1862 and 1863, and while you're not going to find battle relics sitting out in the open, there's a long history of human activity along this water. The Cannon Boulevard bridge and the greenway trails give you easy bank access and the river is shallow enough in many spots that you can see the bottom clearly. People have found old iron hardware, tools, and miscellaneous military-era metal near the older bridge crossings.
24. Red River – Springfield Boat Ramp
Springfield
The Red River up in Robertson County doesn't get nearly as much attention as the big TVA lakes, which is exactly why it's worth a trip. The Springfield area has an old downtown that dates back to the early 1800s, and the river crossing nearby saw regular traffic for well over a hundred years before modern bridges changed everything. The boat ramp gives easy bank access and the river is shallow enough that you're not throwing blindly into the dark.
25. Forked Deer River — Dyersburg City Park Bridge
Dyersburg
West Tennessee's Forked Deer River is slow, muddy, and full of agricultural history — old iron implements, fence posts, and bridge hardware have all shown up in the stretch near the Dyersburg city park. The low banks and slow current make this one of the more beginner-friendly river spots in the state, and you don't need to go far from the parking lot to get into productive water. It's not glamorous, but it produces.
26. Clinch River (below Norris Dam)
Lake City
The tailwater below Norris Dam on the Clinch River is a productive magnet fishing stretch partly because the TVA has been releasing water through that dam since 1936 and the current concentrates material in the slower bends below. There's a TVA public access area right below the dam with parking, and the riverbank is walkable for a good stretch. The mix of old valley material and more recent drops from decades of fishing and recreational use makes it worth the trip.
27. Kentucky Lake – Paris Landing State Park
Buchanan
Kentucky Lake is the largest TVA reservoir and Paris Landing gives you legit public access with a full boat ramp, paved parking, and a long stretch of accessible shoreline. The lake was completed in 1944 and the flooding covered a lot of low-lying river bottom that had seen steamboat traffic and small river communities. The shallower coves off the main park area are more productive than the deep main channel.
28. Watauga River — Siam Bridge Historic Crossing
Elizabethton
The Watauga River near Elizabethton has a long settlement history going back to the Watauga Association in the 1770s, and the old bridge crossing areas have been dropping metal into this river for a long time. It's a clear, relatively shallow river with good bank access near the historic bridge sites, and finds here have included old wrought iron pieces that predate the Civil War era. The setting is genuinely beautiful, which helps if you're coming up empty.
29. Watauga River (Siam Bridge Remnants Area)
Elizabethton
The Watauga River near Elizabethton runs through one of the oldest continuously settled areas in Tennessee, and the old bridge crossing sites along this stretch have been collecting dropped and thrown material for a very long time. There's public access along the riverside trail system and the water runs relatively clear in summer so you can spot shallow target zones before you swing. Old iron bridge hardware, farm tools, and occasionally pre-Civil War metal pieces have come up from this part of the river.
30. Elk River – Fayetteville Low-Water Bridge
Fayetteville
The low-water bridge crossing on the Elk River near Fayetteville is one of those spots that gets used constantly — by locals, by fishermen, by people just driving through — which means stuff has been dropping into this river at this crossing for generations. The concrete bridge structure gives you a solid place to stand and the river is clear and relatively shallow at normal levels. Lincoln County has a decent amount of Civil War-era history and the Elk River valley saw its share of movement during that period.
Magnet fishing in Tennessee — FAQ
Is magnet fishing legal in Tennessee?+
What happens if I find a Civil War artifact in a Tennessee waterway?+
Can I magnet fish in TVA reservoirs like Chickamauga or Nickajack?+
What pull force do I actually need for Tennessee rivers?+
How long of a rope do I need in Tennessee?+
Is the Mississippi River border a good spot to magnet fish?+
Do I need a permit to remove finds from Tennessee waterways?+
Here are some magnet fishing finds in Tennessee
Magnet fishing in Tennessee offers exciting opportunities to uncover a variety of treasures hidden beneath its rivers, lakes, and canals. Common finds include fishing gear like lures and hooks, discarded tools such as wrenches or knives, and coins or jewelry lost over time. In areas with historical significance, you might discover metal relics like old hardware or, with proper permits, artifacts from past eras. From urban waterways to rural lakes, magnet fishers often pull up unexpected items like bicycle parts, scrap metal, or even vintage collectibles. Always follow local regulations and share your finds with our community at Magnet Fishing Is Fun!
Looking for more magnet fishing spots near Tennessee? Check out our guides for Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, and Virginia — all neighbouring states with their own rivers, lakes, and access points worth exploring.
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