Wonderful dendro geekery proves the European invasion of NA started in precisely 1021:
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"Thigpen's Trace"
THIGPEN TRACE “Thigpen Trace, the oldest military road in Georgia, was cut by James Thigpen to transport military supplies of Col. James Moore, former Carolina governor. It followed a well beaten trail of the Indians from the mountains to the sea in use before the era of the white man. Coming from South Carolina above the Broad River, along the Chattahoochee water divide to the Gulf of Mexico, it avoided all swamps and great rivers. The English claimed the territory as Carolina while the Spanish claimed it as Florida. Col. Moore led the English in an attack down Thigpen Trail and “made Carolina as safe as the conquest of the Spanish and Appalachee (Indians) can make it.” GHM 159-3 GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION 1956 Perhaps the most important road in North Carolina history, Thigpen's Trace is a road most have never heard about. It has a highway marker in Georgia but none in South Carolina, Virginia, and North Carolina. It dates back to 1704 and profo...
Squatters in Orange County in the 17th and 18th Centuries
Squatters in Orange County in the 17th and 18th Centuries In the 1740s there were two very hot properties in what would, in the 1750s, become Orange County, North Carolina. Those were the Haw Fields and the Forks of the Eno. They were attractive for different reasons; the Haw Fields for fecundity, and the Forks for transportation accessibility........probably. We'll deal with the Haw old fields another time. This note is about the forks of the Eno. We are only beginning to get a vague image of European settlement in what would become Orange County, NC. Until recently "settlement" was presumed to have begun with deed recording in Orange's parent counties; normally thought of as Johnston, Bladen, and Granville Counties. We know, though, that folks were making "tomahawk" claims on land in Carolina long before law came to town. We just don't know how many folks were in the area or where they were. They were, though, in the area, pr...
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