The Jacob Brown Grant Deeds, also known more simply as the Nolichucky Grants, were transactions for the sale of land by the Cherokee Nation to Jacob Brown. The transaction occurred at Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga River on March 25, 1775. The Jacob Brown grants were for two large tracts along the Nolichucky River some of which had been previously leased from the Cherokee.
The grants are located along the Nolichucky River in what is now East Tennessee. The land is adjacent to the Charles Roberson or Watauga Grant made by the Cherokee a few days earlier.
The Nolichucky Grants were two of five property transactions made near present-day Elizabethton, Tennessee at the Sycamore Shoals of the Watauga River, collectively known as The Watauga Treaties. The Path Grant Deed was for lands in East Tennessee and Southwest Virginia needed by Richard Henderson & Co to permit free passage into Kentucky and the property of the Great Grant Deed. That transaction was concluded a few days earlier on March 17, 1775. The Charles Roberson Grant Deed and two Jacob Brown Grant Deeds clarified ownership of existing settlements.
Among the first agreements between Native Americans and the European settlers were the Watauga Treaties, which resulted in the Jacob Brown Deeds. The Watauga treaties were the beginning of the American westward expansion. Jacob Brown was a visionary who saw that providing land to colonial settlers would enable them to escape the confines of the British Crown.
It is noted on the Tennessee Historical Marker in Greene County that in 1771 Jacob Brown came to the Nolichucky River and set up tents on the northern bank. From this location he conducted trade with the Cherokee. [1] In 1772 he leased a tract of ground on the Nolichucky from the Cherokee. The consideration was said to be a horse load of goods. [2] The exact boundaries of the lease is not known. [1]
The lands on the Nolichucky were the fertile alluvial soil drained by the creeks flowing from the mountains. The valleys provided abundant game.
Although Jacob Brown was in fact one of the thirteen original commissioners of the Watauga Association [3] it was because of the large lease that his properties were not included in the Charles Robertson Watauga Grant negotiated on March 19, 1775 at Sycamore Shoals. Brown had previously made a deed of conveyance to parts of the leased land to others, including one Richard Trivillian. [1]
The lease is a term of legal art where by one party is granted the use of the property of another. The lease is a document stating the description of the property and the consideration paid. There is no permanent record of the Jacob Brown lease. Since there was no government through which there could be judicial enforcement, the concept is murky. Being a matter of law the formality of the term lease was not fully comprehended by the Cherokee but for the price paid they agreed not to bother Jacob Brown or those others settled upon the lands in question. The Cherokee in question did not have villages within roughly ninety five miles. However, they held aboriginal title and claimed the lands for hunting.
The Royal Proclamation of 1763 also had a bearing. Under the proclamation Jacob Brown was prohibited from purchasing lands beyond the mountain barrier. This prohibition and questions of sovereignty are described in the Great Grant Deed.
In March 1775 there was a gathering at Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga River of some 600 settlers and 1,200 Cherokee to transact the sale of lands. The lands sold by the Cherokee to the Richard Henderson & Co are described in the Path Grant Deed and the Great Grant Deed. These lands were north of the Holston River in East Tennessee and Southwest Virginia and in Central Kentucky between the Cumberland and Kentucky rivers. The Holston river was generally taken to be the border between Virginia and North Carolina. [4]
Taking advantage of the gathering, on March 25, 1775, 8 days after the signing of the Great Grant, [5] [6] [ which? ] Jacob Brown negotiated with the Cherokee to sell outright in Fee Simple the lands along the Nolichucky watershed in addition to and including that for which he held leases. [7] The consideration in addition to the previous lease payment was 10 shillings. [8] The Revolution against the Crown of England was underway and the prohibitions of the royal Proclamation of 1763 were seemingly no longer valid. The deed texts have survived. [9]
This indenture, made the 25th day of March 1775, between Oconostota, chief warrior and head prince, the Tenesay Warrior and Bread Slave Catcher, Attakillakulla, and Chehnesley, Cherokee chiefs of Middle and Lower settlements, of the one part, and Jacob Brown, of Nonachuchy, of the other part – consideration ten shillings- a certain tract or parcel of land lying on Nonachuchy River, as follows: Beginning at the mouth of a creek called Great Limestone, running up the meanders of said creek and the main fork of the creek to the ridge that divides Wataugah and Nonachuchy, joining the Wataugah purchase, from thence up the dividing ridge that divides the waters of the Nonachuchy and Wataugah, and thence to the head of Indian Creek, where it joins the Iron Mountain, thence down the said mountain to Nonachuchy River, thence across said river including the creeks of said river, thence down the side of the Nonachuchy Mountain against the mouth of Great Limestone, thence to the beginning.
In the presence of
Samuel Crawford | Oconostota | |
Jesse Denham | The Tenesay Warrior | |
Moses Crawford | The Bread Slave Catcher | |
Zachary Isbell | Attacullaculla | |
Chenesley |
Witness the Warriors – Thomas Bulla, Joseph Vann, Richard Henderson
A tract of land lying on Nonachuchy River, below the mouth of Big Limestone, on both sides of said river, bounded as follows, joining the rest of said Brown's purchase. Beginning on the south side of said river, below the old fields that lie below the said Limestone, on the north side of Nonachuchy Mountain, at a large rock; thence north 32 deg. West to the mouth of Camp Creek, on the south side of said river; thence across said river; thence north-west to the dividing ridge between Lick Creek and Watauga or Holston; thence up the dividing ridge to the rest of said Brown's land; thence down the main fork of Big Limestone to its mouth; thence crossing the river a straight course to Nonachuchy Mountain; thence down the said mountain to the beginning.
None of those shown as witnesses appear on the Path Grant Deed or the Charles Roberson Grant deed. Shown as "Witness the warriors" were Joseph Vann and Richard Henderson, both of whom were present at the signing of the Path Grant Deed and the Great Grant Deed. Richard Henderson was the purchaser of both properties and Joseph Vann, who was titled Linquester, was the official translator for the Crown and considered trustworthy by both parties. Joseph Vann who was noted present on the Path Grant Deed and the great Grant deeds as well was a half Indian and had served as interpreter for Cameron the British Agent to the Cherokee. [10]
The presence of Henderson and Vann yield credence to the belief that the Brown Grants were drawn and signed at Sycamore Shoals. In the diary of Richard Henderson, [11] for the date of March 25, 1775 there is no mention of his presence under an oak tree on the Nolichucky that was some twenty miles to the southwest of Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga River.
Thus, the caption on the Tennessee Historical Marker noted above commemorating Jacob Brown likely confuses the event of the lease trading in 1772 and the purchase trading in March 1775. It was the bargaining for the lease of the Nolichucky property in 1772 with the Cherokee that likely took place under the Big Oak Tree near Jacob Brown's trading post. The Warrant #652 drawn by John Carter on April 22, 1779 some four years after the deed was signed, indicated the treaty was held on the property at the mouth of Cherokee Creek.
The Jacob Brown Grant Deed was somewhat hastily drawn-up, after learning of the other successful transactions, especially that of the Charles Robertson grant, there was not time for an accurate survey while all the parties were assembled and in the mood for business. Thus a description for the property was developed based on geographical features of mountains, creeks, the Nolichucky River and a watershed. This procedure for formally describing North Carolina boundaries was the approved method at the time. [12]
Generally, the Jacob Brown properties that include both parcel #1 and parcel #2 are bounded on the north by the ridgeline including the present day Fodder Stack and the highpoint Chimney Top Mountain ridge. This ridgeline separates the drainage of the Holston river on the north from the Nolichucky river on the South. The grant southern boundary are the mountains defining the Tennessee/ North Carolina border and separating the drainage of the Nolichucky river from that of the French Broad river. On the eastern extremity the boundary is the ridge crest that defines the watershed between the Nolichucky and the Watauga rivers extended southward from a point near the present day Boone Dam to the readily definable point of the head of Indian Creek that is today Sam's Gap. On the west the grant line definition is not so clearly defined but can be taken as a line northward from the high point on the state line above the present day Hot Springs NC northward to the western end of the aforementioned Chimney Top ridge line.
The Great Grant Deed article indicates that the entire proceedings at Sycamore Shoals were likely transactions by sellers with no right to sell and buyers with no right to buy. In the Jacob Brown transactions that statement turned out to be only half true. The Cherokee were certainly the aboriginal owners of the property along the Nolichucky. [13] The royal proclamation of King George on October 3, 1763 prohibited settlement of the lands west of the Alleghenies. [14] [15] Such lands were considered to be Indian lands but not subject to sale to British crown colonists.
There was a controversy that grew out of the Great Grant but directly affected Jacob Brown. In anticipation of the various land transactions eventually made at Sycamore Shoals, North Carolina Governor Martin issued a proclamation in February 1775 in opposition. [16] [ which? ] Subsequently, in accord with Virginia and the voices of the Watauga settlers demanding clarification of the boundaries, North Carolina nullified the Transylvania Colony and asserted sovereignty over the western territory. That western territory was declared to be the Washington district and included all of what is now Tennessee. This action formally transpired in November 1777. [17] [18] Along with the Great Grant and the Henderson Memorial to the commission, the Jacob Brown and Watauga Grants of 1775 were ignored by the Virginia and North Carolina commissioners who were negotiating with the Cherokee at the Treaty of Long Island in July 1777. [19]
Thus in a negative turn of events, the Jacob Brown purchases were found to be null and void.
To put subsequent events in context, it should be remembered that by July 1777, there was a war of revolution in process. The large tracts of the Great Grant and the Path Grant were mostly the business of Virginia with North Carolina being secondary. As noted in the Great Grant Deed, the serious inquiry that took place in the form of hearings and formal proceedings with depositions and evidence were conducted by Virginia. The formal nullification by Virginia was finally made in December 1778.
At the Treaty Of Long Island on July 20, 1777, Col Avery, the commissioner from North Carolina, responding to a speech by the Old Raven of Chota, also known as Savanooko otherwise Coronok, lectured the Cherokee and the settlers on the problems of the sovereign resulting from the out of other treaty dealings for land. The sales and leasing of land beyond the existing treaty bounds resulted in war and bloodshed of settlers and Cherokee. Part of the treaty understanding must be that all such transactions beyond the new boundary to be established must cease. [20] Although payment for the lands in question had been made previously and sometimes more than once, and although some of the commissioners declared no other payment should be made, Col Christian pronounced a payment for the Cherokee hunting grounds of 200 breeding cattle and 100 sheep. Thus, with cattle, the need to hunt was reduced. [21] Thus it was that Jacob Brown lost title to much of the lands previously purchased at the Watauga Treaty of March 1775.
Since the purpose of the treaty by the sovereign North Carolina was to create peace and establish a border, it was not the intent to take away the settled lands the treaty was meant to protect. Thus it was that on November 27, 1778, one John Carter of Washington County now securely a part of North Carolina, issued the – via Wikisource.noted above to the county surveyor to survey a tract of 640 acres on the Nolichucky River at the mouth of Cherokee Creek. Subsequently, the county surveyor surveyed the land and prepared– via Wikisource.. [22] The survey resulted in Grant 790 from North Carolina for the noted 640 acres.
Jacob Brown was recipient of two other grants by North Carolina. The first, also in 1779 was recorded as Grant 995 for 640 acres. [23] The second was somewhat later for 200 acres entered as Grant 1156. [24] The total of all the grants by North Carolina to Jacob Brown was 1,480 acres. The three properties were adjacent and along the Nolichucky river. Thus it was that Jacob Brown obtained formal title to the lands he had settled on the Nolichucky River.
At a much later date, on May 6, 1784 Jacob Brown petitioned the State of North Carolina for the reimbursement of money paid by him to the Cherokee in 1775 for property that was effectively taken by North Carolina and sold to the same people to whom he sold the property but was never paid. [25] – via Wikisource.
Jacob Brown Petition to the North Carolina Assembly
May 10, 1784
To the honorable the General assembly of the State of North Carolina
The memorial of Jacob Brown humbly showeth that in the year 1775 your memorialist for the valuable consideration of nearly two thousand pounds specie purchased of the Cherokee Indians a large tract of country adjoining the waters of Nole Chucky; part of which be at different periods sold out to persons desirous of becoming adventurers and settling there, with a desire of reimbursement himself by such sales for the monies he had actually expended in effecting the purchase; but to his great loss And disappointment on the Assembly passing an act granting a right of preemption to the first improvers of the land in that county Those persons who had before purchased of your memorialist not only actually refused to pay him the consideration money back but entered the lands by them formerly purchased of your memorialist in the land office of the state. These together with many other unhappy circumstances oblige your memorialist to make application to your honorable body, and to request you will be pleased to submit the consideration of this matter to aforementioned when he does not doubt to be able to represent his case through them to the assembly In such a point of occur, as to induce the legislature to take same action for his relief and the promise And your petition shall Pray
May 6, 1784 Jacob Brown
Brown was by then knowledgeable of the petition of Richard Henderson and the subsequent grant of 1783 by North Carolina of 200,000 acres as acknowledgement for his leadership and actions in pioneering the opening of the territory. Unlike the situation described in the Great Grant Deed the petition of Jacob Brown was received by the North Carolina Assembly but refused.
Elizabethton is a city in, and the county seat of Carter County, Tennessee, United States. Elizabethton is the historical site of the first independent American government located west of both the Eastern Continental Divide and the original Thirteen Colonies.
The Transylvania Colony, also referred to as the Transylvania Purchase or the Henderson Purchase, was a short-lived, extra-legal colony founded in early 1775 by North Carolina land speculator Richard Henderson, who formed and controlled the Transylvania Company. Henderson and his investors had reached an agreement to purchase a vast tract of Cherokee lands west of the southern and central Appalachian Mountains through the acceptance of the Treaty of Sycamore Shoals with most leading Cherokee chieftains then controlling these lands. In exchange for the land the tribes received goods worth, according to the estimates of some scholars, about 10,000 British pounds. To further complicate matters, this frontier land was also claimed by the Virginia Colony and a southern portion by Province of North Carolina.
The Territory South of the River Ohio, more commonly known as the Southwest Territory, was an organized incorporated territory of the United States that existed from May 26, 1790, until June 1, 1796, when it was admitted to the United States as the State of Tennessee. The Southwest Territory was created by the Southwest Ordinance from lands of the Washington District that had been ceded to the U.S. federal government by North Carolina. The territory's lone governor was William Blount.
Liberty! The Saga of Sycamore Shoals, formerly known as The Wataugans, is an outdoor historical drama that takes place in Elizabethton, Tennessee, at the Sycamore Shoals Historic Area. Designated the official outdoor drama of the state of Tennessee, it is presented by the Friends of Sycamore Shoals every June each night of the first four weekends. Employing a mixed cast of volunteering professional and amateur local actors and re-enactors engaged through an open casting call, Liberty depicts the early history of the area that is now northeast Tennessee.
John Sevier was an American soldier, frontiersman, and politician, and one of the founding fathers of the State of Tennessee. A member of the Democratic-Republican Party, he played a leading role in Tennessee's pre-statehood period, both militarily and politically, and he was elected the state's first governor in 1796. He served as a colonel of the Washington District Regiment in the Battle of Kings Mountain in 1780, and he commanded the frontier militia in dozens of battles against the Cherokee in the 1780s and 1790s.
James Robertson was an American explorer, soldier and Indian agent, and one of the founding fathers of what became the State of Tennessee. An early companion of explorer Daniel Boone, Robertson helped establish the Watauga Association in the early 1770s, and to defend Fort Watauga from an attack by Cherokee in 1776. In 1779, he co-founded what is now Nashville, and was instrumental in the settlement of Middle Tennessee. He served as a brigadier general in the Southwest Territory militia in the early 1790s, and as an Indian Commissioner in later life.
The Overmountain Men were American frontiersmen from west of the Blue Ridge Mountains which are the leading edge of the Appalachian Mountains, who took part in the American Revolutionary War. While they were present at multiple engagements in the war's southern campaign, they are best known for their role in the American victory at the Battle of Kings Mountain in 1780. The term "overmountain" arose because their settlements were west of, or "over", the Blue Ridge, which was the primary geographical boundary dividing several of the 13 American states from the Native American lands to the west. The Overmountain Men hailed from parts of Virginia, North Carolina, and what is now Tennessee and Kentucky.
The Watauga Association was a semi-autonomous government created in 1772 by frontier settlers living along the Watauga River in what is now Elizabethton, Tennessee. Although it lasted only a few years, the Watauga Association provided a basis for what later developed into the state of Tennessee and likely influenced other western frontier governments in the trans-Appalachian region. North Carolina annexed the Watauga settlement area, by then known as the Washington District, in November 1776. Within a year, the area was placed under a county government, becoming Washington County, North Carolina, in November 1777. This area covers the present day Washington County, Carter County, and other areas now located in the northeast part of the state of Tennessee.
Richard Henderson was an American jurist, land speculator and politician who was best known for attempting to create the Transylvania Colony in frontier Kentucky. Henderson County and its seat Henderson, Kentucky are named for him. He also sold land to an early settlement that went on to become Nashville, Tennessee.
The Sycamore Shoals of the Watauga River, usually shortened to Sycamore Shoals, is a rocky stretch of river rapids along the Watauga River in Elizabethton, Tennessee. Archeological excavations have found Native Americans lived near the shoals since prehistoric times, and Cherokees gathered there. As Europeans began settling the Trans-Appalachian frontier, the shoals proved strategic militarily, as well as shaped the economies of Tennessee and Kentucky. Today, the shoals are protected as a National Historic Landmark and are maintained as part of Sycamore Shoals State Historic Park.
The Treaty of Lochaber was signed in South Carolina on 18 October 1770 by British representative John Stuart and the Cherokee people, fixing the boundary for the western limit of the colonial frontier settlements of Virginia and North Carolina.
Fort Watauga, also known as Fort Caswell, was a fortification located in the Watauga River's Sycamore Shoals near modern-day Elizabethton, Tennessee. It was constructed from 1775 to 1776 by the Watauga Association, a semi-autonomous government founded by American settlers living near the river, to defend the settlers against attacks from British-allied Indians. The fort was originally named Fort Caswell after the governor of North Carolina, Richard Caswell.
David Crockett Birthplace State Park is a state park in Greene County, Tennessee, United States. Situated along the Nolichucky River, the park consists of 105 acres (0.42 km2) centered on the traditional birthplace of legendary Tennessee frontiersman, soldier, and politician Davy Crockett (1786-1836). The park includes a replica of Crockett's birth cabin, a museum, and a large campground.
Sycamore Shoals State Historic Park is a state park located in Elizabethton, in the U.S. state of Tennessee. The park consists of 70 acres (28.3 ha) situated along the Sycamore Shoals of the Watauga River, a National Historic Landmark where a series of events critical to the establishment of the states of Tennessee and Kentucky, and the settlement of the Trans-Appalachian frontier in general, took place. Along with the historic shoals, the park includes a visitor center and museum, the reconstructed Fort Watauga, the Carter House and Sabine Hill . For over a thousand years before the arrival of European explorers, Sycamore Shoals and adjacent lands had been inhabited by Native Americans. The first permanent European settlers arrived in 1770, and established the Watauga Association—one of the first written constitutional governments west of the Appalachian Mountains—in 1772. Richard Henderson and Daniel Boone negotiated the Treaty of Sycamore Shoals in 1775, which saw the sale of millions of acres of Cherokee lands in Kentucky and Tennessee and led to the building of the Wilderness Road. During the American Revolution, Sycamore Shoals was both the site of Fort Watauga, where part of a Cherokee invasion was thwarted in 1776, and the mustering ground for the Overmountain Men in 1780.
The Cherokee have participated in over forty treaties in the past three hundred years.
The Washington District of North Carolina was in a remote area west of the Appalachian Mountains, officially existing for only a short period, although it had been self-proclaimed and functioning as an independent governing entity since the spring of 1775. The district was the bureaucratic successor to the Watauga Association, a group of Virginian settlers that colonized the area in 1769, originally believing themselves to be in trans-Appalachian Virginia territory. When the settlement's application to be united with Virginia was denied, they asked North Carolina to annex the settlement, which occurred in November, 1776.
The Path Grant Deed is a document regarded as a first step toward the American westward migration across the Appalachian Mountains, resulting from negotiations at Sycamore Shoals in March 1775. The land acquired within the boundaries of the Path Grant allowed Daniel Boone to develop the Wilderness Road free from attack or claims by the Cherokee. The Path Grant was recorded on November 15, 1794, by the Hawkins County, Tennessee registrar in Deed Book #1, pages 147-151
The Great Grant Deed, also known as The Great Grant, was a transaction for the sale of property by the Cherokee Nation to Richard Henderson and Company. The grant is also known as the Louisa purchase or the Transylvania purchase. The transaction occurred at Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga River on March 17, 1775. The Great Grant was for lands forming Henderson's new Transylvania Colony comprising much of what is now the state of Kentucky.
The Charles Robertson Grant, also known more simply as the Watauga Grant, was a transaction for the sale of land by the Cherokee Nation to Charles Robertson. The transaction occurred at Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga River on March 19, 1775. The Charles Robertson Grant was for a large tract in what is now East Tennessee and Western North Carolina, some of which had been previously leased from the Cherokee.
The following is a timeline of the history of the US state of Tennessee.