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EIGHTH GRADE Part Five: New Nation and Statehood It's important to understand that the settlement of Tennessee was one of the reasons for the American Revolutionary War. After all, King George, in his Proclamation of 1763, ordered all British colonists to remain east of the Appalachians. Not only had people ignored this, they had even negotiated treaties with Native Americans and signed a self-government document known as the Watauga Association. This is important background for the important Revolutionary War battle that involved many Tennesseans – the Battle of Kings Mountain.
In 1780, a British army landed at Hearing about the threat, two men who lived in what is now northeast
But they were determined and brave, and most of them were armed with good hunting rifles. So they marched east from there and found the British army on a mountain that John Ferguson had decided to call
The men from Franklin to Southwest Territory to Tennessee
White people living in what we now call Tennessee celebrated the victory over the British in the Revolutionary War (although Native Americans didn't). When the war ended, the areas legally occupied by white settlers became part of the new state of North Carolina. ![]()
A replica of the capitol of the state of Franklin, in Greeneville
But not for long. In 1784, settlers living in what is now east Tennessee tried to form a state known as Franklin. They elected a legislature and a governor (John Sevier); wrote a constitution; and began going about the business of running their affairs (collecting taxes, holding courts, raising an army as needed against the hostile Native American tribes of the day). Had the state of North Carolina not been bitterly opposed to the formation of the new state, Franklin almost certainly would have been accepted into the union by the Continental Congress. But because of North Carolina's opposition, the proposal to accept Franklin failed to be approved by Congress. Franklin later ceased to exist, becoming a footnote in history and one of the more vivid examples of the failure of the short-lived American confederation government.
Click here to take a Tennessee History for Kids style journey through the state of Franklin.
After the U. S. Constitution was ratified, the place now called
Blount spent the next couple of years at In 1795, the people living in the
The Constitution was similar to the one the nation had just adopted. It called for three branches of government: an executive branch led by a governor; a judicial branch led by a Supreme Court; and a legislative branch consisting of a House and Senate.
This time, Congress approved statehood. Tennessee became the sixteenth state on June 1, 1796. Now it was time to elect a governor, and John Sevier was elected easily. This wasn’t a surprise. Sevier, often called “Nolichucky Jack,” was the hero of the Battle of Kings Mountain and of many battles with Native Americans (he later said that he took part in 35 battles with various tribes). Sevier would eventually be elected governor for six two-year terms, and he would also serve four terms in Congress.
QUIZ
1) ( For quiz answers, click here.
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All photographs taken by Bill Carey for THKF unless otherwise stated.








