Information for "Gist's Trace"

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Display titleGist's Trace
Default sort keyGist's Trace
Page length (in bytes)3,356
Page ID163800
Page content languageen - English
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Page imageMonongahela River.jpg

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Page creatorMyrasueharris (talk | contribs)
Date of page creation16:43, 9 May 2014
Latest editorBatsondl (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit14:31, 16 October 2023
Total number of edits29
Total number of distinct authors5
Recent number of edits (within past 90 days)0
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The early road known as Gist's Trace (also known as "Memacolin's Path") was first blazed by a Maryland frontiersman named Thomas Cresap and the Delaware Indian Chief, Memacolin. Mr. Cresap surveyed the terrain while Memacolin took charge of the physical labor needed to break the trail. They worked on the trail in 1749 and 1750. The road (or trace) takes its name from Christopher Gist (1706-1759), one of the first white explorers of that area but it has also been called Nemacolin's path and Braddock's road. Christopher Gist was born in Maryland to Richard and Zipporah Gist. Richard Gist was a formally trained surveyor and his son, Christopher followed in those footsteps. Christopher Gist is said to have provided the English and the colonists with the first descriptions of what was then called the "Ohio Country". During the French and Indian War he accompanied George Washington as Mr. Washington traveled the trail into the Ohio Country on a mission for the colonies. That failed mission was to negotiate a settlement of sorts with the French military. Mr. Gist eventually owned land near the present day city of Uniontown, Pennsylvania which he named "Gist's Plantation". He was instrumental in the beginning of a small town there.
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