Kentucky's settlers, as the American Revolutionary War …

Years: 1776 - 1776
June

Kentucky's settlers, as the American Revolutionary War began in the East, had become involved in a dispute about the region's sovereignty.

Richard Henderson, a judge and land speculator from North Carolina, has purchased much of Kentucky from the Cherokee in an illegal treaty.

Henderson intends to create a proprietary colony known as Transylvania, but many Kentucky settlers do not recognize Transylvania's authority over them.

In June 1776, these settlers select George Rogers Clark and John Gabriel Jones to deliver a petition to the Virginia General Assembly, asking Virginia to formally extend its boundaries to include Kentucky.

Clark and Jones travel the Wilderness Road to Williamsburg, where they persuade Governor Patrick Henry to create Kentucky County, Virginia.

Before the Revolution had been a leading land speculator in lands west of the Appalachians where Virginians, including George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, have sought control from Native Americans.

Clark has been given five hundred pounds (two hundred and thirty kilograms) of gunpowder to help defend the settlements and is appointed a major in the Kentucky County militia.

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