Richard Henderson

 
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Richard Henderson

(American pioneer)

Richard Henderson (1734–1785) was an American pioneer/ merchant who attempted to create a colony called Transylvania just as the American Revolutionary War was starting.

Early life

Henderson was born in Hanover County, Virginia. In 1762, he moved to Granville County, North Carolina, studied law, was admitted to the bar, practiced law, and in 1769 was appointed judge of the Superior Court. After the Declaration of Independence (1776) and the organization of the state government in North Carolina, he was reelected judge, but was prevented from accepting that position by his participation in a scheme organized under the name of the Transylvania Land Company.

In company of amed wilderness explorers

In 1759, young James Robertson accompanied the famed explorer Daniel Boone on his third expedition to lands beyond the Blue Ridge Mountains. The party discovered the "Old Fields" (lands previously cultivated by generations of Native Americans) along the Watauga River valley at present day Elizabethton, Tennessee. Robertson planted the Old Fields with corn while Boone continued on northward to Kentucky.

Robertson returned to North Carolina, and married Charlotte Reeves in 1767. He later became involved with the Regulator movement and banded together a group of settlers to return to the Watauga River, which they believed to be in Virginia. In 1772, the pioneers who had settled in Northeast Tennessee (along the Watauga River, the Doe River, the Holston River, the Nolichucky River, and Carter Valley) met at Sycamore Shoals to establish an independent regional government known as the Watauga Association.

However, in 1772, surveyors placed the land officially within the domain of the Cherokee tribe, who required negotiation of a lease with the settlers. Tragedy struck as the lease was being celebrated, when a Cherokee warrior was murdered by a white man. Robertson's skillful diplomacy made peace with the irate Native Americans, who threatened to expel the settlers by force if necessary.

The Transylvania Purchase at Sycamore Shoals

In 1775, Henderson gathered chiefs of the Cherokee Indians and negotiated the Treaty of Watauga at Sycamore Shoals at present day Elizabethton, Tennessee, during which time he purchased all the land lying between the Cumberland River, the Cumberland Mountains, and the Kentucky River, and situated south of the Ohio River. The land thus delineated encompassed an area half as large as the present state of Kentucky. In order to facilitate settlement, Henderson hired Daniel Boone, who had hunted extensively in Kentucky, to blaze the Wilderness Road through the Cumberland Gap and into the Transylvania land purchase.

The colony was organized by Henderson and his associates into a political community, with president, legislature, and judges. However, Henderson purchased lands that were already claimed by Virginia, and the Virginia General Assembly disallowed the transaction. Henderson and his partners instead received a grant of 12 square miles (31 km²), on the Ohio River below the mouth of Green River.

In 1779, Judge Henderson was appointed one of six commissioners to run the line between Virginia and North Carolina into Powell's valley. He settled in North Carolina, where he practiced farming on a large scale. He served as a militia colonel in the Revolutionary War and was elected to the North Carolina General Assembly from Granville County. One of his sons was Leonard Henderson.

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