The Great Wagon Road Map

The Great Wagon Road Map. The Great Wagon Road of the East Legends of America The heavily traveled Great Wagon Road was the primary route for the early settlement of the Southern United States, particularly the "backcountry".Although a wide variety of settlers traveled southward on the road, two dominant cultures emerged. The Great Wagon Road was the key supply line to the American resistance during the American Revolution, especially in the South

William Gowan/Gowin Family Information Great Wagon Road
William Gowan/Gowin Family Information Great Wagon Road from jg1758.blogspot.com

The Great Wagon Road (1731 to 1800) This map project on the Roads and Trails of Colonial America started by questioning what routes the immigrant ancestors used during their southern and western migrations Numerous towns had been established along the Great Wagon Road by the 1790s, and by the early 1800s, county courts appointed overseers responsible for maintaining the various road segments.

William Gowan/Gowin Family Information Great Wagon Road

The assumption was that our earliest immigrant ancestors were limited to the waterways which accessed the coast and an occasional Indian path. It clearly demonstrates the original route of the Great Wagon Road in accordance with our in-depth research beginning in Pennsylvania and traveling to North Carolina by the 1740 decade. The Great Wagon Road was the key supply line to the American resistance during the American Revolution, especially in the South

The Great Wagon Road Google My Maps. From THE WAY WE LIVED IN NORTH CAROLINA edited by Joe A It clearly demonstrates the original route of the Great Wagon Road in accordance with our in-depth research beginning in Pennsylvania and traveling to North Carolina by the 1740 decade.

Great Wagon Road, Migration Route. Jonathan Hager (1714-75), an immigrant from Westphalia, Germany, purchased 200 acres of land in Maryland—close to the Great Wagon Road—which he named Hager's Fancy. By Mark Anderson Moore, courtesy North Carolina Office of Archives and History, Raleigh