Trans-Appalachia
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The area west of the Appalachian Mountains is a region known as trans-Appalachia.
[edit] First US inhabitants of the trans-Appalachia region
In the early 1800s Americans who wanted to find a better life in the wilderness traveled several main roads over the Appalachians. Those from New England followed the Mohawk Trail into western New York. The travelers from Philadelphia took Forbes' Road to Pittsburgh, where they could travel west on the Ohio River. From Baltimore, they went to Pittsburgh on Braddock's Road. Middle Atlantic settlers used Cumberland Road (the National Road). Southerners used either the Great Valley Road or the Richmond Road through the mountains to the Cumberland Gap. From there they could take the Wilderness Road north, into the Ohio Valley.
[edit] Famous Settlers of the trans-Appalachian region
- Daniel Boone who was hired by the Transylvania Company to cut the Wilderness Road.
- James Hall
[edit] Increasing trans-Appalachian populations
- By 1795, in Kentucky, 75,000
- By 1830, hundreds of thousands of settlers were in the region, which at that time consisted of Michigan Territory, and the new states of
- Between 1790 and 1810, around 98,000 slaves, along with their owners, moved west into the region south of the Ohio river (the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 had forbidden slavery in states north of the Ohio)