Toccoa is a Stephens County mountain town defined by two outsized landmarks: a 186-foot waterfall on a college campus and a mountain where WWII paratroopers trained before D-Day. The waterfall is the tallest free-fall waterfall east of the Mississippi. The mountain became nationally known through the HBO series Band of Brothers, which depicted the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment’s training runs up and down its slopes in 1942. Tugaloo State Park on Lake Hartwell adds a lake option. Six attractions, 90 miles northeast of Atlanta.
Jump to: Toccoa Falls & Outdoors · WWII History & Heritage
Toccoa Falls & Outdoors
Toccoa Falls

Stephens County · Toccoa · Paid admission (small fee)
A 186-foot free-fall waterfall on the campus of Toccoa Falls College — taller than Niagara Falls (167 feet) and one of the highest free-fall waterfalls in the eastern US. The falls drop in a single unbroken curtain into a pool at the base of a narrow gorge. The college charges a small admission fee to access the trail, which is less than 5 minutes from the parking area. The falls were the site of the Toccoa Falls Dam disaster in 1977, which killed 39 people; a memorial near the site marks the event. Open daily.
Currahee Mountain

Stephens County · Toccoa · Free
A 1,736-foot mountain rising sharply above Toccoa — the site where the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division trained before the Normandy invasion in 1944. The regiment’s three-mile forced runs up the mountain (“three miles up, three miles down”) are depicted in the opening episode of the HBO series Band of Brothers (2001). The summit trail is 3 miles each way with 800 feet of elevation gain — accessible from the Currahee Mountain Road trailhead. The Cherokee word “Currahee” means “stand alone.” Free, open year-round.
Tugaloo State Park

Stephens County · Toccoa · Georgia State Parks admission
A 1,000-acre state park on a peninsula in Lake Hartwell — a 56,000-acre reservoir on the Georgia-South Carolina border, formed by the 1962 Hartwell Dam. The park has a swimming beach, boat launch, fishing piers, mini golf, and hiking trails along the lake shoreline. Cottages and tent and RV camping available. Georgia State Parks admission; annual ParkPass accepted. Located about 8 miles southeast of Toccoa.
WWII History & Heritage
Currahee Military Museum

Stephens County · Toccoa · Paid admission
A museum dedicated to the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment’s WWII training at Camp Toccoa (the Currahee Mountain base) and subsequent combat in Europe. Exhibits include uniforms, equipment, photographs, and personal accounts from the men who trained here before Normandy, Operation Market Garden, and the Battle of the Bulge. The museum covers the full arc of the regiment’s service as depicted in Stephen Ambrose’s Band of Brothers and the HBO adaptation. Located at 160 N. Alexander Street in downtown Toccoa.
Historic Toccoa Depot

Stephens County · Toccoa · Free (exterior)
The 1873 Toccoa railroad depot — a Queen Anne Victorian station building that was a key stop on the Blue Ridge Railroad. The depot has been restored and now functions as a community event space and museum. It sits adjacent to the active rail line through town. The exterior, platform, and surrounding depot district are free to visit. A short walk from downtown Toccoa.
Planning Notes
Getting there: Toccoa is 90 miles northeast of Atlanta via I-985 and US-365, or via GA-17 from Gainesville. From Clarkesville, 30 miles north on US-441.
Currahee hike logistics: The mountain trailhead on Currahee Mountain Road is outside of downtown; you’ll need a car. The 3-mile climb is moderately strenuous — plan 2–2.5 hours round trip. The summit has views across Stephens County on clear days.
Combining stops: Tallulah Gorge State Park is 30 miles south of Toccoa on US-441 — one of the best gorge hikes in Georgia. Clarkesville (Panther Creek Trail) is 30 miles southwest.