René
Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, the French explorer, traveled
through Ohio land in 1667 and is thought to have been the first
white person to see the Ohio River. Eighty years later, in 1747,
the Ohio Company of Virginia was organized to colonize the Ohio
River Valley, leading to the creation of the Ohio Land Company
two years later. Great Britain gained control of the region following
the French and Indian War in 1763 but lost it again in 1779.
The
establishment of Northwest Territory in 1787 marked the beginning
of a steady stream of migration. Scots-Irish from Virginia, Kentucky,
and Ohio settled mainly in Marietta in Washington County. New
Englanders and Revolutionary War soldiers, most of them from Massachusetts
and Ohio, arrived in that same area followed by Essex County,
New Jersey, people, who settled in Cincinnati in an area called
the Symmes Purchase. French immigrants settled in Gallipolis,
Gallia County, from 1790 through 1791. Additional Ohio migrations
occurred in 1796-97, settling in the Ohio Western Reserve. Others
from Ohio and Vermont settled in what became Geauga County three
years later. Clermont County was the new home of those from Maine
in 1796, the same year that emigrants from Scotland arrived in
Montgomery County. In 1796 the Refugee Tract was established in
Columbus for Canadians who sympathized with the American Revolution.
Three years later Ohio Territory was created, followed in 1800
by the first Ohio territorial census and the opening of the first
land offices at Marietta, Steubenville, Chillicothe, and Cincinnati.
The territory became a state in 1803.
The
influx of new settlers continued, with Germans and Welsh from
Ohio, plus additional migrations from Kentucky and Virginia. Statehood
was rapidly achieved in 1803. Three years later the United Society
of Believers of Christ's Second Appearing (Shakers) migrated to
Warren County. Germans settled in Brown and Tuscarawas counties
from 1814 through 1824. The opening of the Erie Canal in 1825
was an opportunity for those in the northeastern United States
to migrate to Ohio. The Mormons (see Church Records) arrived in
Ohio in 1831. English and Irish emigrated to Ohio for railroad
construction employment in the 1840s. By 1860, Ohio's extensive
railroad construction provided more miles of track than any other
state.
Ohio
was intensely involved with the abolitionist movement prior to
the Civil War having considerable activity in the Underground
Railroad along Lake Erie and the Ohio River. Following the Civil
War, the state gained national political power, producing seven
United States presidents. As an agricultural and industrial state,
some early industries were barrel-making and meat packing. The
American Federation of Labor formed there in the 1880s. The industrialization
and urbanization of Ohio brought new residents from eastern and
southern Europe and blacks from southern states. Mining became
increasingly important with products of coal, limestone, and salt.
Twelve
to fifteen thousand native inhabitants were said to have been
living in Ohio country when the first European settlers arrived.
The Miami lived in the western part of Ohio, and the Wyandotte
were in the northwest. The Huron, the Ottawa, and the Seneca were
also in the northwest. The Shawnee tribe was located in the lower
Scioto Valley, the Delaware in the Muskingum Valley, the Tuscarora
in the northeastern section of that valley, and the Mingo occupied
the east.
In
the mid-1700s, the French and the English began their long struggle
for possession of the region. The English victory was followed
by the battles of the American Revolution; the native inhabitants
of Ohio were tragically involved in both of these wars. When the
bloodshed was over between the two European factions, the contest
for the land began in earnest between white and native. By the
end of the Revolutionary War, still unwilling to give up their
domain, the natives struggled to maintain their lands for twelve
long years. In the summer of 1794, at the battle at Fallen Timbers,
Anthony Wayne and his well-trained troops totally defeated the
Native Americans of Ohio. The following year, in August of 1795,
a treaty was negotiated-the final step in taking away native home
lands. The last group of Native Americans left northwestern Ohio
in 1833.
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