| Hordes of early
German and Scotch-Irish settlers used what became known as the Great Wagon
Road to move from Pennsylvania southward through the Shenandoah Valley
through Virginia and the Carolinas to Georgia, a distance of about 800
miles. Beginning first as a buffalo trail, a great Indian Road (the Great
Warrior Path) ran north and south through the Shenandoah Valley, extending
from New York to the Carolinas. The mountain ranges to the West of the
Valley are the Alleghenies, and the ones to the east constitute the Blue
Ridge chain. The Second Treaty of Albany (1722) guaranteed use of the valley
trail to the Indians. At Salisbury, North Carolina, the Great Warrior Path
was joined by the Indian's "Great Trading Path." By the early 1740s, a
road beginning in Philadelphia (sometimes referred to as the Lancaster
Pike) connected the Pennsylvania communities of Lancaster, York, and Gettysburg.
The road then continued on to Chambersburg and Greencastle and southward
to Winchester. In 1744, the Indians agreed to relinquish the Valley route.
Both German and Scotch-Irish immigrants had already been following the
route into Virginia and on to South Carolina, and Georgia. After 1750 the
Piedmont areas of North Carolina and Georgia attracted new settlers. From
Winchester to Roanoke the Great Wagon Road and the Great Valley Road were
the same road, but at Roanoke, the Wagon Road went through the Staunton
Gap and on south to North Carolina and beyond whereas the Valley
Pike continued southwest to the Long Island of the Holston, now Kingsport.
The Boone Trail from the Shallow Ford of the Yadkin joined the road at
the Long Island of the Holston. |