TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES


The Founding of Tennessee

In 1606, following the settlement of the Virginia colony, King James I chartered the region as a British province. European immigration to the new world increased with each passing year and soon American real estate started becoming a worthy possession for British officials.
Sixty-six years and two royals later, King James II made a huge gift to eight of his friends in North America that was soon chartered as the British Province of Carolina. The "gift" included the lands over the Appalachians reaching to the Pacific Ocean, an area encompassing close to 150,000 square miles. There was no way for James II’s friends to realize just how expansive the gift was. In that era, no one even knew if there was an overland route to the Pacific Ocean.
In 1693, the King’s friends decided to equally split the province of Carolina into Northern and Southern territories with North Carolina laying claim to all lands west of its boundaries over the Appalachians – including the great valley beyond its crest.
Following the establishment of the 1763 Proclamation line that ran along the crest of the Appalachian mountains, British Lieutenant Henry Timberlake was sent to make an official visit to the Cherokee tribe as a token of friendship and, in the process, laid out the first working map of the region. Using native guides as interpreters,Timberlake first wrote the word "Tennessee" as a name for one of the regions on the map and, unknowingly, coined a term that would later become more than a name on a British chart.



As troubles began brewing with the Southeastern Indian tribes, Britain started trying to devise a management program to contain the problems to the western side of the Appalachians and sure up its claims on the coastal states. Rebellious settlers, however, began eyeing the western territory as a way to escape the growing feudalism in the British colonies and as a means to empower themselves economically.
In 1752, Daniel Boone, following an old Indian trading trail from Virginia, crossed through what would become known as Cumberland Gap. It took a while for word to get beyond the frontier outposts that a way through the mountains was found. While Boone returned and began clearing and building a trail that would allow wagons and caravans to pass, others had already been exploring the area and, in 1769, William Bean successfully crossed over the mountains on his own and settled on the Watauga River. Other families soon followed suit and a small settlement began springing up in the region.
Its population got a big push in numbers when James Robertson led his family and others over the mountains to the Bean Settlement. During the process, he became lost in treacherous terrain and almost led the families to their death. In desperation he turned his horse loose and started on foot in the direction he thought he should go. He eventually passed out and was discovered by some local hunters, who led them to Bean’s settlement.
Robertson’s refusal to give up and his success started his rise towards prominence in Tennessee and inspired others to follow his lead into the new territory. Next came names like Carter, Parker, Brown, Isaac Shelby, who would become the first governor of Kentucky, and, in 1772, John Xavier, (AKA Sevier) led his family into the region. The term "Watauga Association" was used by the region’s first settlers and the name became synonymous with the frontier outpost. The settlement was outside the legal reaches of North Carolina forcing the people to form a governmental body to oversee the village’s growing population.
The rogue colony drew up America’s a free and independently written Constitution called the "Articles of the Watauga Association" creating the first non-European civil government in American history.
The delegation of Wataugans met in assembly with thirteen members and used the laws of Virginia as a guide to formulate their government. They elected five commissioners, who settled all disputes, punish offenders, and generally perform all of the functions of county courts and administration.
The Watauga Association began growing in numbers and immigration to the settlement was becoming a steady stream.
Because of their growth, many in the assembly contacted the North Carolina Colony asking to be annexed as a county or other division. With the Revolutionary War threatening in the colonies, the Wataugans wanted to cast their fortunes with the state in hopes of securing protection. The request was approved by North Carolina and the Watuagan Association became known as the Washington District – the first such region named in honor of then Continental General George Washington. The Wataugans then voted themselves into being subject to taxes to help pay Revolutionary debts that would be incurred. At least, that is how it looked on paper. The petition passed by North Carolina was approved by the 113 Assemblymen on Aug. 22, 1776, but was soon forgotten.
Britain had been monitoring the situation and responded to the backwoodsmen by beginning a campaign to arm elements of the Cherokee and Creek Nations. The warriors armed by the British began an all out war against the backwoods colonies – forcing North Carolina to abandon the idea of helping them and focus on tightening their perimeters at the Appalachian mountains.
In 1777, a group of Wataugans unsuccessfully tried to purchase 20 million acres of land from the Cherokee in the Cumberland Mountains. Their failure, however, led to them returning and telling Wataugan leader James Robertson and Colonel James Donelson about their efforts. Robertson and Donelson came up with a plan to move their families to the new location and begin a new settlement.
In the fall of 1779, two separate expeditions left Fort Patrick Henry near present-day Kingsport and began their westward trek. Robertson led a party by land towards the Cumberlands and Donelson on his boat "Alexander" started down the river in December of that year with more than 30 other boats in tow.
Robertson made it first and began building a group of log cabins on a cedar bluff near a part of the river known as the Big Salt Lick. The Wataugan had also brought a herd of horses and cattle overland to help seed new farms in the region. When they arrived during the Winter of 1780, the Tennessee River was frozen and the party crossed over the ice with the animals to begin their settlement on the other side of the river.
Donelson arrived in the spring of that year and wasn’t too thrilled by what he found. He wrote in his diary:
"Though our prospects at present are dreary, we have found a few log cabins which have been built on a cedar bluff above the Lick by Captain Robertson and his Company."
The cabins on the bluff were the beginnings of the City of Nashville and, after the Donelson Party settled in their new home, attention was turned to forming a new government. Like the Wataugan situation, the Cumberland settlers knew they were part of North Carolina, but too far removed to expect any help or assistance. On May 1, 1780, a meeting was formally called to order at Fort Nashboro.
Two hundred and fifty-six men signed a document known as "The Cumberland Compact" with only one man having to "make his mark" – a sign that only one of the new settlers could not read and write. While the beginnings seemed romantic enough, the next three years would be spent in brutal combat with Native American tribes. On more than one occasion, men wanted to pull out and return to the Washington District, but Robertson and Donelson kept pushing for the settlers to stay and those who survived began building a flourishing settlement.
When the Revolutionary War ended in 1782, immigration to the region became a daily occurrence as veterans of the Continental Army took payment for their service in the form of real estate in the unsettled regions.
Although the Washington District had promised to burden itself with debt owed by North Carolina on the Revolution, the state didn’t take in enough in taxes to pay for the region and decided to relinquish its claims on the western territory. The settlements in the region were incensed by the move on North Carolina’s part. Among the angry settlers who felt slighted, was General John Sevier, who had served valiantly in the war as a North Carolina citizen. He and the Wataugans withdrew into their chambers in Jonesborough and decided it was time to assert their claim on the land they had tamed.
The result was the formation of the State of Franklin – named in honor of America’s greatest celebrity of the day Benjamin Franklin. It was also an effort to get Franklin to support their claims for statehood.
The Jonesborough delegation dispatched General William Cocke to Congress to seek recognition for the new state. Although he was turned away by the Congress, the Franklinites decided upon Greeneville as a capitol and, like their predecessors before them, adopted a Constitution and established laws governing the territory.
When the governor of North Carolina was informed of what Sevier and the others had done, he declared the act illegal and reclaimed the territory. Gen. John Sevier and the State of Franklin survived for four years, but a division had risen in that time that opposed Sevier and wanted to continue being a part of North Carolina.
Under the leadership of John Tipton, the "North Carolina loyalists" and Sevier would fight back and forth raiding each others courthouses and burning land transaction deeds and declaring each other’s rulings null and void. The Continental Congress quickly adopted a "hands-off" policy that allowed the settlers to decide their own fate and eventually the region fell back to North Carolina control.
While the battle was raging over Franklin’s claims, a group of settlers outside the district at the Holston and French Broad Rivers formed another association named the Government South of the Holston and French Broad Rivers. North Carolina’s reasserting of their claims on Franklin excluded this new government and called the settlers "intruders on the Indian Lands". James White and the others didn’t seem to care what North Carolina thought and adopted their Constitution and laws.
Sevier was the ultimate political survivor and, after escaping from a kangaroo court trying to convict him of sedition, he once again became a leading figure in the region. Sevier served in the North Carolina Assembly as a representative of the Washington District.
While the "Lost State of Franklin" became a part of American folklore, it also showed up Congress as being inept at matters beyond the boundaries of the original colonies. With westward migration becoming more and more attractive to many settlers trying to get away from the reinforcement of colonial laws, Congress began to see they were going to have to deal with statehood problems in the future.
In 1789, the ever changing minds of North Carolina’s assembly again ceded the land to the Federal Government. By this time, North Carolina felt it had used the western territory to its full advantage by paying Revolutionary debts to former soldiers with huge tracts of lands.
The Federal Government took over immediately and, in 1790, formed the "Territory South of the Ohio River". Along with a narrow strip ceded by South Carolina, the United States Government drew the boundaries of the territory and appointed William Blount as its Governor. Blount made his headquarters at Rocky Mount near Kingsport before moving South to the site of Knoxville.
In 1793, with proof that 5,000 male inhabitants had moved to the territory, Blount formed a legislature that begin the drive for statehood. Three years later on June 1, 1796, President George Washington signed the statehood proclamation for the state – making the region the first American territory to become a state.
After six tries at statehood, the name decided on for the seventh attempt wasn’t Franklin, Watauga, or Cumberland. It came from Timberlake’s 1763 map of the region. In fact, the easternmost boundary of the region was decided to be the British Proclamation Line established in the same year – one that separated the North Carolina colony from the new state of Tennessee.



Tennessee still remains the only state to have been governed and known under seven different names and forms of government. The name "Tennessee" has through the years been a topic of much debate. The majority of people have credited it to the Cherokee and say it came from a village by the name of Tanasi on the Little Tennessee River. Some have stated it was a Cherokee word meaning "big spoon" in reference to the Tennessee River.
Cherokee historians, however, say the word as it is written is not of Cherokee origin. They also point out that many villages throughout the Cherokee Nation were called Ta-na-si and pronounced do not sound like the word we use today.
As with De Soto’s misconception of the Apalachee tribe being "Aztec-like" rulers that earned them the honor of having the Appalachian Mountains named after them, Cherokee scholars say the word Tennessee is most likely a corruption of another Cherokee term. A State historical marker, however, sits on the bank Tellico Lake in Monroe County and points towards a village’s location underwater. It claims the Cherokee village to be the one where the state got its name. Through the years, that has become the accepted story. In any event, its first use is documented in the maps drawn by British Lieutenant Henry Timberlake. The British Proclamation line of 1763 is still the state boundary used today.
The Robertson and Donelson family settlement in Nashboro and the City they founded was eventually chosen as the State capitol. A historical fort was built on the Tennessee River in Nashville to honor those early settlers and today Fort Nashboro is one of the city’s most visited tourist attractions.
Across the state, Cherokee Chief John Ross would later found the City of Chattanooga and a new face would appear in Tennessee named Andrew Jackson who would help establish the Tennessee City of Memphis, which grew out of a French settlement established to trade with the Natives on the Mississippi River.
Tennessee’s southern boundary was, for a long time, located not far below Nashville. The land beyond it was held by the Chickasaw Nation. Following the War Between the States, the Chickasaw Tribal Council was given two options. They could adopt the slaves they held into their tribe and keep their land or grant them their freedom and relocate to the Oklahoma Indian territory. With Reconstruction promising to wreak havoc on the region, the Chickasaw sold their land interests and moved west. The southern boundary of Tennessee then moved to its current position.
While many of the documents mentioned in this story are on display in various locations and the Tennessee State Museum, including the statehood Proclamation signed by President George Washington, many colonial documents were lost through the years. One single act, however, is credited with destroying a majority of them.
Dr. J.G.M. Ramsey in the mid 19th Century had spent most of his life collecting the diaries, records, and other documents of Tennessee’s early history. Ramsey had been the leader of establishing the East Tennessee Historical Society – the first such institution in the state and later recognized one of the first in North America. The East Tennessean had amassed most of the original colonial documents at his home on the Tennessee River.
When Knoxville was captured by the Union Army in 1863, J.G.M. Ramsey, who was a Confederate supporter and an enemy of "Parson" Brownlow, had his home sought out by Union troops. Ramsey had got word that he and his family would be on the Union’s "Most Wanted" list and had fled to North Carolina for refuge.
The residence on the Tennessee River was put to the torch with most of Tennessee’s early colonial records still inside. The loss was incredible to state and American historians and the value of the documents considered priceless.
John Robertson and John Sevier would go on to become recognized as Tennessee’s founding fathers. Sevier’s service to America was never really recognized in Tennessee, but in Washington, D.C. a statue of Sevier stands in the capitol attesting to his influence in the American frontier. His efforts and those of Robertson in forming the Watauga Association were later written about by President Theodore Roosevelt in his book "The Winning of the West" where he stated:
"They were the first free men to establish a fresh and independent government on the North American continent."
Roosevelt went on to document the exploits of the early Tennesseans at the Revolutionary Battle of King’s Mountain and is credited with being the first to reestablish the state of Tennessee its proper place in the annals of early American history. His book led to a renewed interest in the state’s colonial history.
Sevier’s battles for statehood and the unsuccessful attempt in forming the State of Franklin had a profound affect on the Continental Congress. The controversy and ensuing battle led to Congress forming laws and policies that would ensure future territories would have the opportunity of joining the United States and he is credited with opening the eyes of American government to the possibility of national growth. The capitol of Franklin in Greeneville is now recognized with a state marker and the cabin where the State of Franklin started is preserved as a historic site in the City.
Although Tennessee is considered by many historians to be the true 14th state of America, the honor fell to Vermont, whose proclamation date was 1791. Kentucky officially became the 15th state a year later and Tennessee took its place as the 16th State.
Kentucky’s first Governor was Issac Shelby who, like Tennessee’s first Governor John Sevier, had helped found the Wataugan Association and fought in the Battle of Kings Mountain. The only justice for early Tennesseans in the statehood race was the fact that all three of the states didn’t show up on the American flag until early in the 19th Century.