Pequot Path: Difference between revisions

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=== External links  ===
=== External links  ===


*[http://qb.mindhenge.org/PostRoad.html On the Trail of Benjamin Franklin: The Lower Boston Post Road]
*[http://qb.mindhenge.org/PostRoad.html On the Trail of Benjamin Franklin: The Lower Boston Post Road] (accessed 17 October 2014).
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Post_Road Boston Post Road] in ''Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia'' (accessed 17 October 2014).
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Post_Road Boston Post Road] in ''Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia'' (accessed 17 October 2014).



Revision as of 11:37, 17 October 2014

United States go to Migration go to Trails and Roads Gotoarrow.png Rhode Island Gotoarrow.png Pequot Path

Did an ancestor travel the Pequot Path of Rhode Island? Learn about this settler migration route, its transportation history, and find related genealogy sources.

Background History[edit | edit source]

New England Migration Routes.png

The Pequot Path was part of an American Indian trail that was widened by European colonists into a wagon road from Providence to Westerly in Rhode Island.[1] This path was part of a chain of shorter roads that formed the lower fork of the Boston Post Road connecting from Boston to Providence (Old Roebuck Road) to Westerly (Pequot Path) to New Haven, Connecticut to New York City. The long route from Boston to New York to Charleston, South Carolina was also known as the King's Highway from the 1750s to about 1780.

External links[edit | edit source]

Sources[edit | edit source]

  1. Frederic J. Wood, The Turnpikes of New England and the Evolution of the Same Through England, Virginia, and Maryland (Boston: Marshall Jones, 1919), 25. Internet Archive version online.