The American Revolution Moves West

The largest colony in British North America was the Province of Quebec, extending from the Atlantic seaboard to the Mississippi and south to the Ohio. A debate ensued regarding whether Indians should be supplied and enlisted to help crush the rebellion in the colonies. In 1776, George Rogers Clark was living in a remote part of Virginia and helped petition Virginia’s Assembly to declare this area, known as Kentucky, to be a separate county. The priority of the county was to establish a militia to defend against Indian attacks and Clark became the acting commander of the Kentucky militia. In March 1777, a decision was finally made, and orders were issued by Lord George Germaine, Secretary of State for the Colonies, to commence what would prove to be a ruthless frontier Indian war.

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses the American Revolution moving west, and why it still matters today.

Images courtesy of Library of Congress, University of Texas, National Portrait Gallery - Smithsonian Institution, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The New York Public Library, National Portrait Gallery (UK), Wikipedia.


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George Rogers Clark Leads Invasion of Illinois Country

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The Early Life of George Rogers Clark