[2] The Enoree rises in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains[1] in Greenville County about 2 mi (3 km) northwest of the town of Travelers Rest, and flows generally southeastwardly across the Piedmont region, through or along the boundaries of Spartanburg, Laurens, Union and Newberry Counties, past the communities of Taylors and Whitmire and through the Sumter National Forest.
[1] According to the Geographic Names Information System,[3] the Enoree River has also been known historically as: The name Enoree is thought to be derived from a Cherokee word meaning river of muscadines.
[citation needed] Linguist Blair A. Rudes alternatively suggested that the name Enoree derives from the Catawba word enuree, which has been translated as 'it is little crow'.
[4] Anthropologist John R. Swanton proposed that the river obtained its name from the Eno who possibly lived on or near it during the prehistoric era.
[5] A hydroelectric dam at Van Patton Shoals rapids provided power to nearby Woodruff from 1907 until its demolition in 1968.