Information for "Old Cherokee Path"

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Display titleOld Cherokee Path
Default sort keyOld Cherokee Path
Page length (in bytes)15,798
Page ID90632
Page content languageen - English
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Page imageOld Cherokee Path.png

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Page creatorDiltsGD (talk | contribs)
Date of page creation15:24, 5 April 2011
Latest editorTegnosis (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit00:33, 20 August 2025
Total number of edits73
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The Old Cherokee Path connected the Lower Cherokee Indian villages, in particular Tugaloo just southwest of the Savannah River in what is now Georgia (but also villages in South Carolina), with several Indian trails, especially the Great Indian Warpath or Great Valley Road as it was called in Virginia. Tugaloo, Georgia was at a nexus of several other Indian trails. The Great Valley Road was one of the most significant settler migration routes in America. The Old Cherokee Path was not fully opened to European settlers until the Cherokee were forced out of South Carolina and part of Georgia in 1777 during the American Revolutionary War after the Cherokee sided with the British in that war. The Old Cherokee Path began in Stephens County, Georgia and ended in Washington County, Virginia. The length of the trail was about 150 miles (241 km).[1]
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