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Early Tennessee History

Date post: 06-Jan-2018
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Early explorations People began crossing the Appalachians in the 1700s. Long hunters came first – people who traveled long distances in search of food and furs. Daniel Boone – opened the Cumberland Gap and the Wilderness Road They returned with stories of the great land they had seen and inspired others to come west to settle.
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Early Tennessee History Long Hunters and Watauga
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Page 1: Early Tennessee History

Early Tennessee History

Long Hunters and Watauga

Page 2: Early Tennessee History

Early explorations

• People began crossing the Appalachians in the 1700s.

• Long hunters came first – people who traveled long distances in search of food and furs.– Daniel Boone – opened the Cumberland Gap and

the Wilderness Road– They returned with stories of the great land they

had seen and inspired others to come west to settle.

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Then came the settlers. . .

• William Bean – first English settler in Tennessee – the settlement around his home was called Watauga.

• Thomas Sharp Spencer – first English settler in Middle Tennessee – was one of the original settlers at Nashville.

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• Dr. Thomas Walker – surveyed the North Carolina-Virginia line in 1780 – this is now the northern border of Tennessee.

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Watauga

• William Bean was quickly followed by others who moved to upper East Tennessee.

• Among these was James Robertson, who would later be one of the founders of Nashville and Cumberland Furnace.

• The settlers created the Watauga Association – the first constitution written west of the Appalachians.

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Dealings with Indians

• The Watauga settlers had a few problems with Native Americans

• The Transylvania Purchase, 1775– Richard Henderson of North Carolina negotiated a

treaty with the Cherokee to purchase parts of Kentucky and northern Middle Tennessee.

– Cherokee chief Little Carpenter was involved in the negotiations.

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Richard Henderson Little Carpenter (Attakullakulla)

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– His son, Dragging Canoe, was not happy with the sale.

– He said that the land would be a “dark and bloody ground”, meaning that some of the Cherokee would fight the settlers.


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