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EIGHTH GRADE Part Three: The First Europeans Go back nearly 500 years. As far as Europeans are concerned, the
There are a few things about de Soto's expedition that are important to remember. For one thing, he wasn’t alone. The other thing to remember about For a Tennessee History for Kids-style virtual tour of the De Soto National Memorial in Bradenton, Florida, click here. De Soto's army wasn't the only group of Spaniards who came through Tennessee during this era; there was another explorer named Juan Pardo who passed through with several hundred men about 25 years later. For the next 200 years, there was the occassional explorer, trader or missionary -- such as Englishmen James Needham and Gabriel Arthur, who came from the east, and Frenchmen Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet, who came south down the Mississippi River. But for the most part, few white people made their way into the land we now call Tennessee until the mid-1700s.
The biggest impact of European exploration was disease. When people began arriving in the New World they unwittingly brought with them illnesses from Europe that devastated Native American populations. De Soto's army was the first to notice this; diseases that they spread apparently wiped out entire villages, sometimes in advance of their arrival. This onslaught of disease was a problem for successive generations of Native Americans; in fact, we estimate that half of the Cherokee population died from smallpox in 1738 and 1739. When your eighth grade social studies textbook talks about the 1700s, it focuses on the development of the thirteen original colonies and their relationship to their Mother Country (England). While all this was taking place, Boone would not have won a spelling bee. There used to be a tree in In addition to being a long hunter, Boone was a trailblazer. Many of the “roads” that the settlers used to cross from east to west would today be classified as "foot trails," and some of them were originally blazed by Daniel Boone. The most famous of these was the "Wilderness Road" which crossed the mountains at the rather important area known as the Cumberland Gap. Today, when you look at a map, it might seem confusing that people would take this route to cross Tennessee. But back when there were no roads, no bridges, no cars, and no railroads, the Wilderness Road was much easier than going over the Cumberland Plateau (the direct route that Interstate 40 now takes).
The Cumberland Gap is now a national historic park. Click here to take a virtual tour of it. These explorers and long hunters were tough, because they had to be able to live off the land and defend themselves in case they got into a fight with Native Americans along the way. They had to keep from getting lost. They generally slept out in the open, regardless of the temperature – that is, unless they were able to hide in a cave or a hollow tree. They were also loners. After all, they lived in a time when there was no TV, no radio, and no telephone. Now remember that when white settlers first got here, these people and their land were still part of England (there was no United States yet). Meanwhile King George III had enough problems to deal with without a war against Native Americans. An Englishman named Henry Timberlake brought a few Cherokee leaders to meet with the king, and they had made a good impression on him. So in 1763, when the colonies were still part of England, King George ordered all white settlers to stay out of what was then known as “Indian country” -- everything west of the Appalachian Mountains. Only problem was, he couldn't enforce this law, and settlers came anyway. QUIZ
1) (TRUE OR FALSE) De Soto was escorted by a small army of 60 men. 2) What year did De Soto reportedly "discover" the Mississippi River? 3) What killed an estimate half of all Cherokee people in 1738 and 1739? 4) What is the name of the gap in the mountains that settlers moving west took to get from east to west Tennessee in the days before railroads? 5) (TRUE OR FALSE) King George III encouraged settlers to move west from Tennessee into North Carolina. 6) What is the name of the person who we believe to be the first permanent settler in Tennessee of English descent? For quiz answers, click here.
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All photographs taken by Bill Carey for THKF unless otherwise stated.









