The Great Wagon Road Map

The Great Wagon Road Map. Great Philadelphia Wagon Road and Wilderness Road SchoolSocial (Click to view map.) The route that became the Great Wagon Road was originally a Native American hunting, trade, and war trail called the "Warrior's Path." In the mid-1700s European. Northern colonists searching for farmland began traveling the road in the 1720s, and thousands others followed suit during the mid-eighteenth century

The Great Wagon Road to the Southwest Historical Marker
The Great Wagon Road to the Southwest Historical Marker from www.hmdb.org

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 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 to the Southwest Historical Marker

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 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. 1751 Fry-Jefferson map depicting the Virginia Colony and surrounding provinces

MapGreat Wagon Road Colonial life, Jamestown colony, Presbyterian. On their map, the road ends at Wachovia (Wachaw), the Moravian settlement. European settlers began settling the Forks of the Yadkin area in the mid 1700s, following the Great Wagon Road south from Pennsylvania

Great Wagon Road, Migration Route. (Click to view map.) The route that became the Great Wagon Road was originally a Native American hunting, trade, and war trail called the "Warrior's Path." In the mid-1700s European. 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.