Information for "Natchez Trace"

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Display titleNatchez Trace
Default sort keyNatchez Trace
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Page ID67493
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Page imageNatchezTraceSunken.jpg

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Page creatorDiltsGD (talk | contribs)
Date of page creation16:06, 24 July 2010
Latest editorBatsondl (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit14:46, 24 October 2023
Total number of edits92
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The Natchez Trace, "Old Natchez Trace" or "Chickasaw Trail" was a 450 mile (725 km) long trail connecting what were originally American Indian settlements on the Cumberland River (Nashville, Tennessee) and Tennessee River ("Wawmanona" Indian site near Florence, Alabama) with settlements near the Mississippi River (Natchez, Mississippi, Grand Villiage of the Natchez Indians). European colonists had used the old Indian trail since at least 1742. In 1796 a new section called the Maysville Turnpike extended the Natchez Trace 275 miles (440 km) from Nashville, Tennessee to Maysville, Kentucky where it connected with Zane's Trace which continued through Ohio to Wheeling, West Virginia. This made it possible to go overland from the east coast to the Mississippi River. After the trace was upgraded to a road in 1801, the same could be done in a wagon for the first time. The Trace declined in importance after 1816 when rival roads and steamboats grabbed much of its traffic.
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