X 505.
Treaty of Dumplin Creek
THM, 136
Henry's Station– Between French Broad and Dumplin Creek (mouth of creek)
Maps– OM, HT, CA
Built 1783 after Hubbard deliberately killed a Cherokee (AT)
site of Treaty of Dumplin Creek 1785 with State of Franklin (OM)
The Great Indian
War Trail is located on the property
NATIVE
AMERICAN TRAILS
Animal trails crisscrossed the Tennessee region long
before the arrival of humans, and the same large game animals that created
the trails attracted prehistoric hunters. Early trails tended to follow
lines of least resistance, avoiding heavy undergrowth, rough ground, or
boggy places. In some instances, buffalo trails, such as the ones leading
into the great salt lick near the future Nashville, were up to four feet
wide and worn as much as two feet below ground level. However, most trails
in the wooded or mountainous parts of the state were eighteen- to
twenty-four-inches wide and required humans to travel in single file.
Although many trails had their origin as animal paths, Native Americans
made some high mountain trails. Above the fall lines of southern rivers,
numerous trails were a preferred route for travel. Below the fall line,
especially in more swampy areas and along the Mississippi, rivers were
used more than trails. On the trails, travelers would cross streams at
fords; if the water was too deep, they would use rafts, crude temporary
bark canoes, or coracles, a round bottomed craft made of skins stretched
over a sapling framework. On the larger rivers used for transportation,
large dugout canoes were the preferred craft.
Early Indians seldom widened or improved trails. The large network of
Indian trails, however, played a major role in allowing early European
exploration of the region and access for colonial trade and settlement.
These settlers, who later followed the paths with packhorses or wagons,
often broadened the way. Many of the Native American trails would become
the first roads of the territory and, later, routes of state highways.
Trade, war, and hunting propelled the creation of trails. By at least
2,500 years ago, trade networks brought copper from the Great Lakes
region, mica from the Appalachian Mountains, shells from the Atlantic and
Gulf coasts, and obsidian from the Rockies into the Tennessee region.
During the Mississippian period, traders may have come from as far away as
the Aztec cities of Mexico. The most important exchange routes were
between the seacoasts and the interior. Shells were especially prized on
the interior, while deerskins were desired on the coasts, and these were
traded regularly. Salt was another item of exchange, as noted by the
earliest explorers.
By the late 1600s British colonists had established a major trade in
deerskins with the Indians of the Tennessee region, focused most heavily
out of Charles Town (later Charleston), South Carolina. The British agents
traded guns and powder, woolen cloth, iron tools and kettles, dyes, beads,
and rum for deerskins and other animal pelts; the Indians depended on this
trade for desirable goods they did not manufacture themselves.
Archaeologist William Myer, in his "Indian Trails of the
Southeast," listed dozens of documented Indian trails within
Tennessee. Among the most important trails named and described by European
explorers was the Great Indian War Path, used for war and trade between
southern and northern tribes. It stretched from eastern Pennsylvania near
Philadelphia, down the Shenandoah Valley to the upper tributaries of the
Tennessee River, to the Chattanooga area and the Creek Indian country of
Alabama and Georgia. At Chattanooga, the path connected to trails in
Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia (U.S. Highway 11 partially follows this
trail). One branch of the trail crossed through the Cumberland Gap into
central Kentucky; another (the Catawba Trail) went along the French Broad
River over the mountains to the middle and lower Cherokee settlements of
the Carolinas. At the Little Tennessee River, another trail branched off
the Great War Path at the Overhill Cherokee towns and ran over the
mountains to Charleston.
In 1540 Hernando de Soto used the system of trails anchored by the Great
War Path to cross the Blue Ridge Mountains from the east. His expedition
picked up the trail along the French Broad, following it to the chiefdom
of Chiaha near present-day Dandridge and then south into north Georgia and
the chiefdom of Coosa. In 1567-68 the Pardo expedition followed Soto's
approach and visited towns on the French Broad, Holston, Tennessee, and
Little Tennessee Rivers. The Spanish built Fort San Pedro near Chiaha to
command the trails and defend their colony of Greater Florida. In 1756
Fort Loudoun was built on the Little Tennessee River at the junction of
the Charleston Road with the Great War Path in an effort by the British to
control Cherokee movements on the paths and waterways. In 1791 the U.S.
Army built Fort Southwest Point at the confluence of the Clinch and
Tennessee Rivers to monitor Indian travel on the trails and rivers.
Although the Great War Path system would be a major route for white and
black settlement of upper East Tennessee and into Kentucky and Middle
Tennessee, the Cherokees prevented settlement along the trail's lower
portions until the 1830s.
Another major trail ran from the Indian towns in the present-day Nashville
area to Chickasaw towns around Pontotoc, Mississippi, where it connected
to other trails traversing the South. Early white explorers regarded this
as a very ancient trail and called it the Old Chickasaw Trace; later
settlers adopted it for their own trade use with the Chickasaws and the
port of New Orleans. Eventually the trail became known as the Natchez
Trace, and in 1801, with Chickasaw approval, the federal government
authorized development of the trace into a national road. From the
Pontotoc towns, a trail ran through Ripley, Mississippi, to the Bolivar
area and on to the Chickasaw Bluffs at present-day Memphis. This trail was
referred to as the West Tennessee Chickasaw Trail and appears on maps as
early as 1718.
Among the important east-west trails described by Myers is the Cumberland
Trace, which diverged from the Great Indian War Path near present-day
Rockwood. Crossing the Cumberland Plateau on a route later followed by the
Tennessee Central Railroad, the trail passed the landmark Standing Stone
near Monterey and descended to the Cumberland River via one prong into the
Roaring River valley and by another prong down Flynn's Lick Creek. Fort
Blount was built near the Flynn's Lick-Cumberland River crossing in 1784
to protect the travel of settlers from war parties on the trace.
Ann
Toplovich, Tennessee Historical Society
Suggested Reading(s): William Myer, "Indian Trails of the
Southeast," Forty-second Report of the Bureau of American
Ethnology, 1924-1925 (1928).
See Also: CUMBERLAND GAP NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK; EARLY EXPLORATION; FORT
BLOUNT; FORT LOUDOUN; FORT SOUTHWEST POINT; FRENCH LICK; HISTORIC TRAILS;
NATCHEZ TRACE; OVERHILL CHEROKEES; PARDO EXPEDITION; SOTO EXPEDITION;
WALTON ROAD; WARRIORS PATH STATE PARK; WILDERNESS ROAD