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Crossville, Tennessee
Breckenridge Lake Resort

245 Oak Park Circle
Crossville, Tennessee 38572
(931) 788–1873
Central Time

 

 

 


Open March 1 through October 31
High-Use Seasonal Period: May 20 through September 20

Sites: 25 Full / 40 Partial
Check in: noon to 7 PM
Check out: 11 AM
Maximum Electrical: 30 amps
Maximum RV Length: 40 ft.

Directions:
From I-40: Take the Crossville exit 317. Follow
US Hwy 127 south approximately 12.4 miles to Hillendale Road, turn right. From US Hwy 127 heading north: Go approximately 15 miles from Pikesville to Hillendale Road, turn left. Travel to end of the road (dead end), turn left, then turn immediate right onto Clint Lowe Drive. Continue to Breckenridge Rd. Turn right. Follow Breckenridge three-four blocks. Resort is on right.


Accommodations   Facilities and Amenities

RV sites only.
Notes: Pets must be leashed when not in your unit. No pets in rental units.



 

The resort offers a pavilion, shuffleboard, playground, horseshoes, volleyball, basketball, lake swimming, lake fishing, beach area, and boat ramp. Dump station.

Resort Profile

Tennessee’s Mountain Plateau is home to Breckenridge Lake Resort where guests are offered a variety of tourist attractions as well as a taste of the great outdoors. Not only is it situated midway between Knoxville, Nashville, and Chattanooga, but it’s just south of the Cumberland Mountain State Park and near the Catoosa Wildlife Management Area.

In Crossville, be sure to visit the Historic Homesteads Tower Museum in a stone tower built in the late 30’s. The tower was used as the administrative offices for 250 families involved in the Cumberland Homestead project when Franklin Roosevelt was president. The museum exhibits photographs, documents, and items from that era as well as a view of the original homesteads in the “Showplace of the New Deal.” Take a drive south to Pikeville and absorb the magnificent scenery in the 20,000-acre Fall Creek Falls State Resort Park where deep chasms and a 256-foot waterfall are just some of the park’s highlights.

If you’re interested in science and recent history, the hour’s drive east to Oak Ridge will be worthwhile. This city was built specifically for the personnel of the Clinton Engineer Works during World War II. The Works and their Manhattan Project were instrumental in the development of the first atomic bomb and the invention of the nuclear reactor. The only government-owned reactor that is regularly open to the public, it was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1966.

Nearby Knoxville has gained fame as the home of the University of Tennessee, host of the 1982 World’s Fair, and headquarters for the Tennessee Valley Authority. Today the TVA has 30,000 employees and oversees fifty dams.

A map of surface rocks, specimens of marine fossils and 12,000-year-old Native American artifacts are part of the Tennessee River Valley display at the Frank H. McClung Museum. Part of the University of Tennessee campus, the museum also contains earth science exhibits on ice age mammals.