Fort Moore-Charleston Trail: Difference between revisions

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''[[United States Genealogy|United State[[Category:Migration routes]]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.pn[[Category:Migration routes]]]  [[United States Migration Internal|Migratio[[Category:Migration routes]]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.pn[[Category:Migration routes]]]  [[US Migration Trails and Roads|Trails and Road[[Category:Migration routes]]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.pn[[Category:Migration routes]]]  [[Fort_Moore-Charleston_Trail|Fort Moore-Charleston Trail]]''  
''[[United States Genealogy|United States]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]  [[United States Migration Internal|Migration]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]  [[US Migration Trails and Roads|Trails and Roads]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]  [[Fort_Moore-Charleston_Trail|Fort Moore-Charleston Trail]]''  


[[Image:Fort Moore-Charleston Trail.png|border|right|380px]]The '''Fort Moore-Charleston Trail''' connected the colonial [[South Carolina Genealogy|South Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] seaport of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charleston,_South_Carolina Charlesto[[Category:Migration routes]] with [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Fort Moor[[Category:Migration routes]] guarding trade on the South Carolina side of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_River Savannah Rive[[Category:Migration routes]] across from [[Georgi[[Category:Migration routes]]]'s subsequent colony of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augusta,_Georgia August[[Category:Migration routes]]. Charleston was the largest European settlement in South Carolina, its capital, its main trade connection to Europe, on the [[King's Highway|King's Highwa[[Category:Migration routes]]], and the start of several other trails. In 1716 Fort Moore was completed at the site of an Indian village that became the important fur trading center of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Savannah Tow[[Category:Migration routes]] (New Windsor Township after 1737), the primary pelt trading center with Charleston. The Fort-Moore-Charleston trail likely opened at that time. Many other trails also converged on this town just below the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_line fall lin[[Category:Migration routes]], and later on the town of Augusta across the river in Georgia. The Fort Moore-Charleston Trail began in [[Charleston County, South Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] and ended in [[Aiken County, South Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]]. The length of the trail was about 144 miles (232 km).<ref name="HBG">''Handybook for Genealogists: United States of America, 10th ed.'' (Draper, Utah: Everton Pub., 2002), 849. ({{FHL|1049485|item|disp=FHL Book 973 D27e 2002}}). [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50140092 WorldCat entry.]</ref>  
[[Image:Fort Moore-Charleston Trail.png|border|right|380px]]The '''Fort Moore-Charleston Trail''' connected the colonial [[South Carolina Genealogy|South Carolina]] seaport of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charleston,_South_Carolina Charleston] with [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Fort Moore] guarding trade on the South Carolina side of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_River Savannah River] across from [[Georgia]]'s subsequent colony of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augusta,_Georgia Augusta]. Charleston was the largest European settlement in South Carolina, its capital, its main trade connection to Europe, on the [[King's Highway|King's Highway]], and the start of several other trails. In 1716 Fort Moore was completed at the site of an Indian village that became the important fur trading center of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Savannah Town] (New Windsor Township after 1737), the primary pelt trading center with Charleston. The Fort-Moore-Charleston trail likely opened at that time. Many other trails also converged on this town just below the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_line fall line], and later on the town of Augusta across the river in Georgia. The Fort Moore-Charleston Trail began in [[Charleston County, South Carolina]] and ended in [[Aiken County, South Carolina]]. The length of the trail was about 144 miles (232 km).<ref name="HBG">''Handybook for Genealogists: United States of America, 10th ed.'' (Draper, Utah: Everton Pub., 2002), 849. ({{FHL|1049485|item|disp=FHL Book 973 D27e 2002}}). [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50140092 WorldCat entry.]</ref>  


=== Historical Background  ===
=== Historical Background  ===


[[Charleston County, South Carolina|Charlesto[[Category:Migration routes]]] was founded in 1670 by English and African immigrants from the Caribbean island of [[Barbados Genealogy|Barbado[[Category:Migration routes]]]. It became the largest city and capital of the South Carolina colony. Many trails and roads radiated out from Charleston.  
[[Charleston County, South Carolina|Charleston]] was founded in 1670 by English and African immigrants from the Caribbean island of [[Barbados Genealogy|Barbados]]. It became the largest city and capital of the South Carolina colony. Many trails and roads radiated out from Charleston.  


The Westo Indians were the first known residents of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Savannah Tow[[Category:Migration routes]], South Carolina, observed there as early as the 1670s. However, they were replaced by [[Shawnee Indians|Shawnee (Savannah) Indian[[Category:Migration routes]]] because of a 1679-1680 trade war. This town became important to the South Carolina colony because it was a prosperous center for the western fur and deer skin trade. Pack trains of animal furs and skins arrived from the Appalachian (Blue Ridge) Mountains and beyond. Savannah Town was just below the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_line fall lin[[Category:Migration routes]], the farthest upriver an ocean-going boat could reach. Iron and manufactured goods were traded for the pelts. Skins from Savannah Town were shipped by boat to Charleston and from there to Europe. In 1715-1716 South Carolina built and garrisoned [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Fort Moor[[Category:Migration routes]] on the Savannah River to protect this trade from attacks by hostile Indians, [[New Spain|Spanish]], or [[New France|French]], and presumably about this time opened the Fort Moore-Charleston Trail. In 1730 the area was incorporated as [[New Windsor Township, South Carolina|New Windso[[Category:Migration routes]]] Parish and Township. In 1737 about 200 [[Switzerland|Swis[[Category:Migration routes]]] from the Canton of Appenzell settled the area.<ref name="Aug">Wikipedia contributors, "Savannah Town, South Carolina," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Moore,_South_Carolina (accessed 12 April 2011).</ref>  
The Westo Indians were the first known residents of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Savannah Town], South Carolina, observed there as early as the 1670s. However, they were replaced by [[Shawnee Indians|Shawnee (Savannah) Indians]] because of a 1679-1680 trade war. This town became important to the South Carolina colony because it was a prosperous center for the western fur and deer skin trade. Pack trains of animal furs and skins arrived from the Appalachian (Blue Ridge) Mountains and beyond. Savannah Town was just below the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_line fall line], the farthest upriver an ocean-going boat could reach. Iron and manufactured goods were traded for the pelts. Skins from Savannah Town were shipped by boat to Charleston and from there to Europe. In 1715-1716 South Carolina built and garrisoned [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina Fort Moore] on the Savannah River to protect this trade from attacks by hostile Indians, [[New Spain|Spanish]], or [[New France|French]], and presumably about this time opened the Fort Moore-Charleston Trail. In 1730 the area was incorporated as [[New Windsor Township, South Carolina|New Windsor]] Parish and Township. In 1737 about 200 [[Switzerland|Swiss]] from the Canton of Appenzell settled the area.<ref name="Aug">Wikipedia contributors, "Savannah Town, South Carolina," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Moore,_South_Carolina (accessed 12 April 2011).</ref>  


As a western pelt trading center, many Indian trails converged on this area. An old Indian trading trail called the [[Occaneechi Path]] stretched from the former Indian village at New Windsor toward Camden, South Carolina, then north to Charlotte, North Carolina, and beyond to Petersburg, Virginia. The [[Lower Creek Trading Path]] extended from Savannah Town/New Windsor into the mountains all the way to Clarksdale, Mississippi on the Mississippi River. The [[Cisca and St. Augustine Trail]] (or Nickajack Trail) connected the Cumberland River at Nashville, Tennessee to the Savannah River at New Windsor, South Carolina to St. Augustine, Florida on the Atlantic Ocean.  
As a western pelt trading center, many Indian trails converged on this area. An old Indian trading trail called the [[Occaneechi Path]] stretched from the former Indian village at New Windsor toward Camden, South Carolina, then north to Charlotte, North Carolina, and beyond to Petersburg, Virginia. The [[Lower Creek Trading Path]] extended from Savannah Town/New Windsor into the mountains all the way to Clarksdale, Mississippi on the Mississippi River. The [[Cisca and St. Augustine Trail]] (or Nickajack Trail) connected the Cumberland River at Nashville, Tennessee to the Savannah River at New Windsor, South Carolina to St. Augustine, Florida on the Atlantic Ocean.  
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Sometime around 1735 white settlers began using the Camden to New Windsor part of the Occaneechi Path as part of the overlapping [[Fall Line Road]]. Settlers from as far away as Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania may have started appearing in Aiken County via this route. Likewise, the [[Great Valley Road]] through Virginia to Tennessee had a south fork extension that partly overlapped the Occaneechi Path and Fall Line Road and may have brought settlers from as far away as Pennsylvania to Aiken County by about the 1740s.  
Sometime around 1735 white settlers began using the Camden to New Windsor part of the Occaneechi Path as part of the overlapping [[Fall Line Road]]. Settlers from as far away as Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania may have started appearing in Aiken County via this route. Likewise, the [[Great Valley Road]] through Virginia to Tennessee had a south fork extension that partly overlapped the Occaneechi Path and Fall Line Road and may have brought settlers from as far away as Pennsylvania to Aiken County by about the 1740s.  


In 1735 [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Augusta,_Georgia Augusta, Georgi[[Category:Migration routes]] was founded five miles upriver from Fort Moore by British colonists coming up the Savannah River from Savannah, Georgia. The citizens of Augusta did what they could to deflect the fur and skin trade from Savannah/New Windsor, South Carolina to their Georgia city and their seaport at Savannah, Georgia. In 1740 a ferry service began between the two rival towns of New Windsor and Augusta. However, New Windsor declined in importance. By 1765 the town was abandoned and Fort Moore was closed.<ref name="Aug" />  
In 1735 [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Augusta,_Georgia Augusta, Georgia] was founded five miles upriver from Fort Moore by British colonists coming up the Savannah River from Savannah, Georgia. The citizens of Augusta did what they could to deflect the fur and skin trade from Savannah/New Windsor, South Carolina to their Georgia city and their seaport at Savannah, Georgia. In 1740 a ferry service began between the two rival towns of New Windsor and Augusta. However, New Windsor declined in importance. By 1765 the town was abandoned and Fort Moore was closed.<ref name="Aug" />  


As roads developed in America settlers were attracted to nearby communities because the roads provided access to markets. They could sell their products at distant markets, and buy products made far away. If an ancestor settled near a road, you may be able to trace back to a place of origin on a connecting highway.  
As roads developed in America settlers were attracted to nearby communities because the roads provided access to markets. They could sell their products at distant markets, and buy products made far away. If an ancestor settled near a road, you may be able to trace back to a place of origin on a connecting highway.  
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The first European colonists settled in counties along this trail (north to south) as follows:<ref>South Carolina - The Counties, http://www.carolana.com/SC/Counties/sc_counties_alphabetical_order.html (accessed 7 April 2011).</ref>  
The first European colonists settled in counties along this trail (north to south) as follows:<ref>South Carolina - The Counties, http://www.carolana.com/SC/Counties/sc_counties_alphabetical_order.html (accessed 7 April 2011).</ref>  


:*[[Charleston County, South Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] 1670 by English and African Barbadians  
:*[[Charleston County, South Carolina]] 1670 by English and African Barbadians  
:*[[Dorchester County, South Carolina|Dorcheste[[Category:Migration routes]]] 1696 by New Englanders from Massachusetts  
:*[[Dorchester County, South Carolina|Dorchester]] 1696 by New Englanders from Massachusetts  
:*[[Colleton County, South Carolina|Colleto[[Category:Migration routes]]] 1682 by English, and French Huguenots  
:*[[Colleton County, South Carolina|Colleton]] 1682 by English, and French Huguenots  
:*[[Bamberg County, South Carolina|Bamber[[Category:Migration routes]]] 1750s by French Huguenots, and Scots-Irish (that is Ulster Irish)  
:*[[Bamberg County, South Carolina|Bamberg]] 1750s by French Huguenots, and Scots-Irish (that is Ulster Irish)  
:*[[Barnwell County, South Carolina|Barnwell]] 1740s by Swiss/Palatines, and Scots-Irish  
:*[[Barnwell County, South Carolina|Barnwell]] 1740s by Swiss/Palatines, and Scots-Irish  
:*[[Aiken County, South Carolina|Aike[[Category:Migration routes]]] 1715 by British military garrison, 1737 by Swiss/Palatines, and French Huguenots  
:*[[Aiken County, South Carolina|Aiken]] 1715 by British military garrison, 1737 by Swiss/Palatines, and French Huguenots  
:*[[Richmond County, Georgi[[Category:Migration routes]]] 1735 by British colonists from Savannah, Georgia
:*[[Richmond County, Georgia]] 1735 by British colonists from Savannah, Georgia


'''Connecting trails.''' The Fort Moore-Charleston Trail linked to other trails at each end.<ref>''Handybook for Genealogists: United States of America, 10th ed.'' (Draper, Utah: Everton Pub., 2002), 847-61. ({{FHL|1049485|item|disp=FHL Book 973 D27e 2002}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50140092 WorldCat entry.], and William E. Myer, ''Indian Trails of the Southeast''. (Nashville, Tenn.: Blue and Gray Press, 1971), 12-14, and the book's pocket map "The Trail System of the Southeastern United States in the early Colonial Period" (1923). ({{FHL|54678|item|disp=FHL Book 970.1 M992i}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1523234 WorldCat entr[[Category:Migration routes]].</ref>  
'''Connecting trails.''' The Fort Moore-Charleston Trail linked to other trails at each end.<ref>''Handybook for Genealogists: United States of America, 10th ed.'' (Draper, Utah: Everton Pub., 2002), 847-61. ({{FHL|1049485|item|disp=FHL Book 973 D27e 2002}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50140092 WorldCat entry.], and William E. Myer, ''Indian Trails of the Southeast''. (Nashville, Tenn.: Blue and Gray Press, 1971), 12-14, and the book's pocket map "The Trail System of the Southeastern United States in the early Colonial Period" (1923). ({{FHL|54678|item|disp=FHL Book 970.1 M992i}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1523234 WorldCat entry].</ref>  


The migration pathways connected at the ''south'' end in [[Charleston County, South Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] included:  
The migration pathways connected at the ''south'' end in [[Charleston County, South Carolina]] included:  


:*the Atlantic Ocean 1670  
:*the Atlantic Ocean 1670  
:*[[Fort_Moore-Charleston_Trail|Fort Moore-Charleston Trail]] about 1716  
:*[[Fort_Moore-Charleston_Trail|Fort Moore-Charleston Trail]] about 1716  
:*[[Camden-Charleston Path|Camden-Charleston Path]] 1732  
:*[[Camden-Charleston Path|Camden-Charleston Path]] 1732  
:*[[King's Highwa[[Category:Migration routes]]] built 1732-1735 in SC<ref>"South Carolina Counties and Parishes - 1740" in ''The Royal Colony of South Carolina'' at http://www.carolana.com/SC/Royal_Colony/sc_royal_colony_counties_parishes_1740.html (accessed 22 April 2011).</ref>  
:*[[King's Highway]] built 1732-1735 in SC<ref>"South Carolina Counties and Parishes - 1740" in ''The Royal Colony of South Carolina'' at http://www.carolana.com/SC/Royal_Colony/sc_royal_colony_counties_parishes_1740.html (accessed 22 April 2011).</ref>  
:*[[Charleston-Savannah Trail]] late 1730s  
:*[[Charleston-Savannah Trail]] late 1730s  
:*[[Secondary Coast Road]] late 1730s or early 1740s
:*[[Secondary Coast Road]] late 1730s or early 1740s
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:*[[Charleston-Ft. Charlotte Trail|Charleston-Ft. Charlotte Trail]] about 1765  
:*[[Charleston-Ft. Charlotte Trail|Charleston-Ft. Charlotte Trail]] about 1765  


The migration routes connected at the ''north'' end in [[Aiken County, South Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]], or in Augusta, [[Richmond County, Georgia Genealogy|Richmond, Georgi[[Category:Migration routes]]] included:  
The migration routes connected at the ''north'' end in [[Aiken County, South Carolina]], or in Augusta, [[Richmond County, Georgia Genealogy|Richmond, Georgia]] included:  


:*Savannah River pre-historic  
:*Savannah River pre-historic  
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'''''in Colleton County, SC:'''''  
'''''in Colleton County, SC:'''''  


*Evelyn McDaniel Frazier Bryan, ''Colleton County, S.C.: a History of the First 160 Years, 1670-1830'' (Jacksonville, Florida: Florentine Press, 1993) ({{FHL|697866|item|disp=FHL Book 975.795 H2b}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/29658563 WorldCat entr[[Category:Migration routes]].
*Evelyn McDaniel Frazier Bryan, ''Colleton County, S.C.: a History of the First 160 Years, 1670-1830'' (Jacksonville, Florida: Florentine Press, 1993) ({{FHL|697866|item|disp=FHL Book 975.795 H2b}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/29658563 WorldCat entry].


'''''in Aiken County, SC:'''''  
'''''in Aiken County, SC:'''''  


*Gasper Loren Toole, ''Ninety Years in Aiken County: Memoirs of Aiken County and Its People'' (Charleston?, S.C.: s.n., 1959) ({{FHL|66488|item|disp=FHL Book 975.775 H2t; Film 1425280 Item 3}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3363918 WorldCat entr[[Category:Migration routes]].  
*Gasper Loren Toole, ''Ninety Years in Aiken County: Memoirs of Aiken County and Its People'' (Charleston?, S.C.: s.n., 1959) ({{FHL|66488|item|disp=FHL Book 975.775 H2t; Film 1425280 Item 3}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3363918 WorldCat entry].  
*Harold S. Maness, ''Forgotten Outpost: Fort Moore and Savannah Town, 1685-1765'' (Beech Island, South Carolina&nbsp;: Beech Island Historical Society, c1986) ({{FHL|964651|item|disp=FHL Book 975.775 H2mh}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/13527831 WorldCat entr[[Category:Migration routes]].
*Harold S. Maness, ''Forgotten Outpost: Fort Moore and Savannah Town, 1685-1765'' (Beech Island, South Carolina&nbsp;: Beech Island Historical Society, c1986) ({{FHL|964651|item|disp=FHL Book 975.775 H2mh}}) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/13527831 WorldCat entry].


=== External Links  ===
=== External Links  ===
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*Wikipedia contributors, "Savannah Town, South Carolina," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina (accessed 12 April 2011).  
*Wikipedia contributors, "Savannah Town, South Carolina," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina (accessed 12 April 2011).  
*Wikipedia contributors, "Augusta, Georgia," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augusta,_Georgia (accessed 12 April 2011).  
*Wikipedia contributors, "Augusta, Georgia," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augusta,_Georgia (accessed 12 April 2011).  
*[http://files.usgwarchives.net/ga/history/earlytrails.txt Georgia History Early Trail[[Category:Migration routes]] describes westward migration on and route of the Lower Cherokee Traders' Path and other routes through Georgia.  
*[http://files.usgwarchives.net/ga/history/earlytrails.txt Georgia History Early Trails] describes westward migration on and route of the Lower Cherokee Traders' Path and other routes through Georgia.  
*Wikipedia contributors, "Fall line," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_line (accessed 12 April 2011).
*Wikipedia contributors, "Fall line," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'', http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_line (accessed 12 April 2011).


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{{reflist}} {{Georgia|Georgia}}{{South Carolina|South Carolina}}  
{{reflist}} {{Georgia|Georgia}}{{South Carolina|South Carolina}}  
<div></div>  
<div></div>  
[[Category:Migration_Route[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:US_Migration_Trails_and_Road[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:South_Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Charleston_County,_South_Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Dorchester_County,_South_Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Colleton_County,_South_Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Bamberg_County,_South_Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Barnwell_County,_South_Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Aiken_County,_South_Carolin[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Georgi[[Category:Migration routes]]] [[Category:Richmond_County,_Georgi[[Category:Migration routes]]]
[[Category:Migration_Routes]] [[Category:US_Migration_Trails_and_Roads]] [[Category:South_Carolina]] [[Category:Charleston_County,_South_Carolina]] [[Category:Dorchester_County,_South_Carolina]] [[Category:Colleton_County,_South_Carolina]] [[Category:Bamberg_County,_South_Carolina]] [[Category:Barnwell_County,_South_Carolina]] [[Category:Aiken_County,_South_Carolina]] [[Category:Georgia]] [[Category:Richmond_County,_Georgia]]

Revision as of 22:59, 25 October 2015

United States  Gotoarrow.png  Migration  Gotoarrow.png  Trails and Roads  Gotoarrow.png  Fort Moore-Charleston Trail

Fort Moore-Charleston Trail.png

The Fort Moore-Charleston Trail connected the colonial South Carolina seaport of Charleston with Fort Moore guarding trade on the South Carolina side of the Savannah River across from Georgia's subsequent colony of Augusta. Charleston was the largest European settlement in South Carolina, its capital, its main trade connection to Europe, on the King's Highway, and the start of several other trails. In 1716 Fort Moore was completed at the site of an Indian village that became the important fur trading center of Savannah Town (New Windsor Township after 1737), the primary pelt trading center with Charleston. The Fort-Moore-Charleston trail likely opened at that time. Many other trails also converged on this town just below the fall line, and later on the town of Augusta across the river in Georgia. The Fort Moore-Charleston Trail began in Charleston County, South Carolina and ended in Aiken County, South Carolina. The length of the trail was about 144 miles (232 km).[1]

Historical Background[edit | edit source]

Charleston was founded in 1670 by English and African immigrants from the Caribbean island of Barbados. It became the largest city and capital of the South Carolina colony. Many trails and roads radiated out from Charleston.

The Westo Indians were the first known residents of Savannah Town, South Carolina, observed there as early as the 1670s. However, they were replaced by Shawnee (Savannah) Indians because of a 1679-1680 trade war. This town became important to the South Carolina colony because it was a prosperous center for the western fur and deer skin trade. Pack trains of animal furs and skins arrived from the Appalachian (Blue Ridge) Mountains and beyond. Savannah Town was just below the fall line, the farthest upriver an ocean-going boat could reach. Iron and manufactured goods were traded for the pelts. Skins from Savannah Town were shipped by boat to Charleston and from there to Europe. In 1715-1716 South Carolina built and garrisoned Fort Moore on the Savannah River to protect this trade from attacks by hostile Indians, Spanish, or French, and presumably about this time opened the Fort Moore-Charleston Trail. In 1730 the area was incorporated as New Windsor Parish and Township. In 1737 about 200 Swiss from the Canton of Appenzell settled the area.[2]

As a western pelt trading center, many Indian trails converged on this area. An old Indian trading trail called the Occaneechi Path stretched from the former Indian village at New Windsor toward Camden, South Carolina, then north to Charlotte, North Carolina, and beyond to Petersburg, Virginia. The Lower Creek Trading Path extended from Savannah Town/New Windsor into the mountains all the way to Clarksdale, Mississippi on the Mississippi River. The Cisca and St. Augustine Trail (or Nickajack Trail) connected the Cumberland River at Nashville, Tennessee to the Savannah River at New Windsor, South Carolina to St. Augustine, Florida on the Atlantic Ocean.

Sometime around 1735 white settlers began using the Camden to New Windsor part of the Occaneechi Path as part of the overlapping Fall Line Road. Settlers from as far away as Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania may have started appearing in Aiken County via this route. Likewise, the Great Valley Road through Virginia to Tennessee had a south fork extension that partly overlapped the Occaneechi Path and Fall Line Road and may have brought settlers from as far away as Pennsylvania to Aiken County by about the 1740s.

In 1735 Augusta, Georgia was founded five miles upriver from Fort Moore by British colonists coming up the Savannah River from Savannah, Georgia. The citizens of Augusta did what they could to deflect the fur and skin trade from Savannah/New Windsor, South Carolina to their Georgia city and their seaport at Savannah, Georgia. In 1740 a ferry service began between the two rival towns of New Windsor and Augusta. However, New Windsor declined in importance. By 1765 the town was abandoned and Fort Moore was closed.[2]

As roads developed in America settlers were attracted to nearby communities because the roads provided access to markets. They could sell their products at distant markets, and buy products made far away. If an ancestor settled near a road, you may be able to trace back to a place of origin on a connecting highway.

Route[edit | edit source]

The first European colonists settled in counties along this trail (north to south) as follows:[3]

Connecting trails. The Fort Moore-Charleston Trail linked to other trails at each end.[4]

The migration pathways connected at the south end in Charleston County, South Carolina included:

The migration routes connected at the north end in Aiken County, South Carolina, or in Augusta, Richmond, Georgia included:

Modern parallels. The modern roads that roughly match the old Fort Moore-Charleston Trail start in Charleston, South Carolina. From Charleston, take Interstate-26 northwest to Exit 187. Turn south on SC-27 toward Ridgeville. Turn west onto US-78 to the Barnwell-Aiken County border where the road forks left and becomes US-278 into Augusta, Georgia.

Settlers and Records[edit | edit source]

The first European settlers in Aiken County either came up the Savannah River or Fort Moore-Charleston Trail starting about 1716. Around 1735 white settlers may have started arriving via the Fall Line Road. Many other trails converged here but most were Indian trails and were most likely used by fur trappers and traders rather than by settlers coming to the area. However, in later years whites settlers could have used all these trails for coming to or leaving the area.

No complete list of settlers who used the Fort Moore-Charleston Trail is known to exist. Nevertheless, local and county histories along that trail may reveal pioneer settlers who arrived after 1777 and therefore who were the most likely candidates to have traveled the Fort Moore-Charleston Trail.

For partial lists of early settlers who may  have used the Fort Moore-Charleston Trail, see histories like:

in Colleton County, SC:

  • Evelyn McDaniel Frazier Bryan, Colleton County, S.C.: a History of the First 160 Years, 1670-1830 (Jacksonville, Florida: Florentine Press, 1993) (FHL Book 975.795 H2b) WorldCat entry.

in Aiken County, SC:

External Links[edit | edit source]

Sources[edit | edit source]

  1. Handybook for Genealogists: United States of America, 10th ed. (Draper, Utah: Everton Pub., 2002), 849. (FHL Book 973 D27e 2002). WorldCat entry.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Wikipedia contributors, "Savannah Town, South Carolina," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Moore,_South_Carolina (accessed 12 April 2011).
  3. South Carolina - The Counties, http://www.carolana.com/SC/Counties/sc_counties_alphabetical_order.html (accessed 7 April 2011).
  4. Handybook for Genealogists: United States of America, 10th ed. (Draper, Utah: Everton Pub., 2002), 847-61. (FHL Book 973 D27e 2002) WorldCat entry., and William E. Myer, Indian Trails of the Southeast. (Nashville, Tenn.: Blue and Gray Press, 1971), 12-14, and the book's pocket map "The Trail System of the Southeastern United States in the early Colonial Period" (1923). (FHL Book 970.1 M992i) WorldCat entry.
  5. "South Carolina Counties and Parishes - 1740" in The Royal Colony of South Carolina at http://www.carolana.com/SC/Royal_Colony/sc_royal_colony_counties_parishes_1740.html (accessed 22 April 2011).