Fort Dobbs was an 18th-century fort in the Yadkin–Pee Dee River Basin region of the Province of North Carolina, near what is now Statesville in Iredell County. Used for frontier defense during and after the French and Indian War, the fort was built to protect the American settlers of the western frontier of North Carolina, and served as a vital outpost for soldiers. Fort Dobbs' primary structure was a blockhouse with log walls, surrounded by a shallow ditch, and by 1759, a palisade. It was intended to provide protection from French-allied Native Americans such as the Shawnee raids into western North Carolina.
Fort Dobbs | |
Nearest city | Statesville, North Carolina |
---|---|
Coordinates | 35°49′18″N 80°53′42″W / 35.82167°N 80.89500°W |
Area | 9.5 acres (3.8 ha; 0.0148 sq mi) |
Built | 1755–1756 |
Architect | Arthur Dobbs, Hugh Waddell |
Architectural style | Log blockhouse |
MPS | Iredell County MRA (AD) |
NRHP reference No. | 70000458[1] |
Added to NRHP | September 15, 1970 |
The fort's name honored Arthur Dobbs, the Royal Governor of North Carolina from 1755 to 1765, who played a role in designing the fort and authorized its construction. Between 1756 and 1761, the fort was garrisoned by a variable number of soldiers, many of whom were sent to fight in Pennsylvania and the Ohio River Valley during the French and Indian War. On February 27, 1760, the fort was the site of an engagement between Cherokee warriors and Provincial soldiers that ended in a victory for the Provincials.
Fort Dobbs was abandoned in March, 1761, and disappeared from the landscape. Archaeology and historical research led to the discovery of the fort's exact location and probable appearance. The site on which the fort sat is now operated by North Carolina's Division of State Historic Sites and Properties as Fort Dobbs State Historic Site. The reconstruction of the fort was completed on September 21, 2019.[3]
Background
editSettlement of the Carolina back-country
editIn 1747, approximately 100 men of suitable age to serve in the colonial militia lived in North Carolina west of present-day Hillsborough. Within three years, North Carolina's frontier population increased, driven by the immigration of Scots-Irish, England, and German settlers traveling from Pennsylvania on the Great Wagon Road.[4] By 1754, six western counties—Orange, Granville, Johnston, Cumberland, Anson, and Rowan—held around 22,000 residents out of the colony's total population of 65,000.[5]
Construction
editIn 1755, Governor Arthur Dobbs ordered the construction of a fortified log structure for the protection of settlers in Rowan County from French-allied Native American attacks. [6] Dobbs stated in a letter on August 24, 1755, to the Board of Trade that the fort was needed "to assist the back settlers and be a retreat to them as it was beyond the well settled Country, only straggling settlements behind them, and if I had placed [Waddell's garrison] beyond the Settlements without a fortification they might be exposed, and be no retreat for the Settlers, and the Indians might pass them and murder the Inhabitants, and retire before they durst go to give them notice".[7][8] The new frontier settlements required regular protection. Furthermore, Governor Dobbs was concerned for his own investments, as he owned more than 200,000 acres (81,000 ha; 310 sq mi) of land on the Rocky River, approximately 15 miles (24 km) south of the Fourth Creek Meeting House.[9][10]
The North Carolina Legislature set aside a sum of £1000 for the construction of the fort in October 1755.[11] Provincial soldiers, known by the shortened name "Provincials", were soldiers raised, clothed, and paid by the individual thirteen colonies, although they were at various times armed and supplied by the Crown.[12] The total cost of the fort was only £1,000.[13] By comparison, Fort Stanwix in New York, begun in 1758 in a then-modern star fort style, cost £60,000 to erect,[14] while the construction of Fort Prince George in South Carolina cost that province's House of Commons £3,000.[15]
Dobbs likely had a role in designing the fort, as he had designed at least one other fort in North Carolina, as well as a number of structures in Ireland.[16][17] Hugh Waddell, who had close ties to Governor Dobbs and commanded the "Frontier Company" of Provincial soldiers in 1755, oversaw construction of the fort. The land on which the fort was located was a part of a 560-acre (230 ha; 0.88 sq mi) tract owned first by one James Oliphant, then by a Fergus Sloan. Part of the same tract was used for the Fourth Creek Congregation Meeting House (so named because the settlement was on the fourth creek one would pass traveling west on the South Yadkin River from Salisbury) in 1755, which was the principal structure around which the modern city of Statesville was founded.[9] After construction was completed, it was the only military installation on the colonial frontier between Virginia and South Carolina.[18]
Description and effectiveness
editBy October 1756, Waddell had substantially completed construction on the fort. Francis Brown and future governor Richard Caswell, commissioners appointed by Dobbs to inspect frontier defenses,[19] wrote the following report to the North Carolina General Assembly on December 21, 1756:
[Brown and Caswell] had likewise viewed the State of Fort Dobbs and found it to be a good and Substantial Building of the Dimentions [sic] following (that is to say) The Oblong Square fifty three feet by forty, the opposite Angles Twenty four feet and Twenty-Two In height Twenty four and a half feet as by the Plan annexed Appears, The Thickness of the Walls which are made of Oak Logs regularly Diminished from sixteen Inches to Six, it contains three floors and there may be discharged from each floor at one and the same time about one hundred Musketts [sic] the same is beautifully scituated [sic] in the fork of Fourth Creek a Branch of the Yadkin River. And that they also found under Command of Capt Hugh Waddel Forty six Effective men Officers and Soldiers as by the List to the said Report Annexed Appears the same being sworn to by the said Capt in their Presence the said Officers and Soldiers Appearing well and in good Spirits.[20]
The commissioners generally found the defenses of the rest of the North Carolina frontier to be inadequate.[21] In 1756, the North Carolina General Assembly petitioned King George II for assistance, stating that the frontier remained in a relatively defenseless state. The address to the king further noted that after the fall of Fort Oswego to the French and their native allies in that year, the legislators did not believe that Fort Dobbs would provide a substantial defensive advantage.[21] Settlers west of the Yadkin River were subjected to regular attacks so that between 1756 and 1759, even after the construction of Fort Dobbs, the population of settlers in the area declined from approximately 1,500 to 800.
In 1759, Waddell ordered six swivel guns for use Of Fort Dobbs. Oral tradition in Iredell County holds that two such swivel guns were mounted at Fort Dobbs, but evidence of the exact quantity present at the fort has not been conclusively established.[22][23]
Use and conflict
editEarly uses
editBetween 1756 and 1760, Fort Dobbs was used as a base of operations for Provincial soldiers.[24] Dobbs also employed Waddell and the fort to conduct diplomacy with the province's native neighbors. The governor gave specific instructions on July 18, 1756, in a letter sent from New Bern to Waddell and two other men, stating:
I have given Orders to make you or any two of You a Commission as often as Necessary to go and make complaints to the Chief Sachims of the Cherokee and Catauba Nations when any Murders Robberies or Depredations are made by any of their People upon the English and to know whether it is done by their Orders or Allowance and if not to give up the Delinquents if Known or then when not Known that they should give Strict Orders to their Hnnters [sic] and warriors not to rob Kill or abuse the English Planters their Bretheren and Destroy their Horses cows Swine or Corn and if they should afterwards do it that the English their Bretheren would be Obliged to repell force with force and in Case they dont own to what Nation they belong that they will be treated as other Indian Nations in alliance with our Enemies the French who are now Spiriting them up to make war against us.[25]
In addition to warning nearby natives against attacking settlers in the Carolinas, Dobbs also charged Waddell with attempting to keep peace with the Catawba. In one instance, Dobbs instructed Waddell to turn over a settler who had killed a Catawba hunter in order to placate the hunter's tribesmen, in the event assurances that the settler would be brought to justice under the province's laws did not persuade the Catawba to remain friendly with North Carolina.[25]
In 1756, Dobbs also approved the construction of another fort, this time in lands claimed by the Catawba, as well as both Carolinas, near modern-day Fort Mill, South Carolina. Workmen under Waddell's command began construction in 1756, but in 1757, Catawba leaders, influenced by South Carolina Governor William Lyttelton, informed North Carolina's government that they no longer wished for this second fort to be built, and construction of the second fort was permanently halted.[26]
The fort's garrison fluctuated yearly. Initially, a 50-man company under Captain Waddell manned the fort. The colony raised two fifty-man companies in 1756 for service on the frontier; Waddell's was to build the Catawba Fort, while Captain Andrew Bailey's garrisoned Fort Dobbs. With construction of the Catawba fort halted In mid-1757, Waddell's 50-man company was added to the garrison. 1758 saw all of North Carolina's troops sent to Pennsylvania to participate in the Forbes Campaign. The fort was garrisoned by two 30-man companies at the outbreak of the Anglo-Cherokee War in 1759. By the time of the February, 1760 attack on the fort, only one 30-man company was serving at Fort Dobbs.
Decline and fall of Anglo-Cherokee relations
editDuring the Anglo-Cherokee War of 1759–1761, the fort served as the base for a soldiers tasked with repelling Cherokee raids in the western portion of the province. The Anglo-Cherokee War began in 1759 after the capture of Fort Duquesne by the British and their native allies, including the Cherokee. The Cherokee had felt slighted by General Forbes's inept diplomacy. The Cherokee wished to be treated as allies, while Forbes treated them like enlisted soldiers. Additionally, as many as 40 Cherokee were murdered by Virginia militia in the area around modern-day Roanoke, Virginia.[27] Some of the Virginians attempted to sell the massacred Cherokee warriors' scalps to the government of Virginia as the scalps of Shawnee warriors (for which the Virginian Assembly had set a bounty), an act that infuriated the Cherokee.[28] When they returned home, the Lower Settlement Cherokee discovered that settlers encroached well beyond the border established between Cherokee and South Carolina that had been set by the 1747 treaty at Long Cane Creek (west of modern-day Greenwood, South Carolina). This elevated Cherokee concern that vital hunting grounds would be permanently lost.[29]
In addition to the murders in Virginia, settlers in both North and South Carolina murdered Cherokee men and women. In one instance, a North Carolina hunter named Hamilton and his friend encountered two Cherokee hunters on Brushy Mountain (Brushy Mountains, North Carolina). Hamilton invited the Cherokee to camp with him. While they slept, Hamilton and his friend butchered the Cherokee hunters with axes. They then murdered a white settler, then claimed they killed the two responsible Cherokee.[30]
All the while, a few pro-French Cherokee leaders pushed for violent actions against American settlers, despite the opposition of several Cherokee leaders.[31]
War comes to Fourth Creek
editIn order to obtain justice for their brethren murdered in late 1758 and early 1759, Cherokee warriors attacked settlements on the Yadkin and Catawba Rivers against the wishes of Cherokee leaders such as Attakullakulla. In April and May, 1759, as many as 40 men, women and children were killed, and many scalped. Several lived in the Fourth Creek Settlement, within 10 miles of Fort Dobbs.[32] This violence damaged peace talks between Attakullakulla and South Carolina governor William Lyttelton, who considered the territory west of the Yadkin River in North Carolina to be within South Carolina's sphere of influence.[33] The violence committed by the Cherokee against American settlers continued, which in turn caused the colonial authorities to seek better relations with the Creek and Catawba nations.[34] The Catawba, who were allied to the provinces of North and South Carolina, were only able to provide minimal assistance to the settlers, as that tribe had been decimated by smallpox in 1759 and early 1760.[35]
All remaining goodwill was lost between Lyttelton's government in Charleston, the North Carolinan government, and the pro-peace Cherokee when Lyttelton ordered the detention of several peace delegations led by headmen Oconostota, Tistoe, and "Round O", despite having previously guaranteed them safe passage. Lyttelton had the delegations shackled, put under armed guard, and secured them at Fort Prince George.[36] A peace arrangement was agreed upon in December, 1759, although the Cherokee agreed under duress, and the pro-war faction of the Cherokee did not obey its terms. Several of the signatories for the Cherokee intended to disavow their promises as soon as they were able, in order to seek retribution for the capture of their peace delegations.[37]
Full-blown war broke out across the Carolina frontier by January, 1760. Ensigns Coytmore and Bell of Fort Prince George, along with some soldiers, raped several Cherokee women in Estatoe, including the wife of Seroweh, a pro-peace leader. Between January and February, 1760, more than 77 settlers on the Carolina frontier were killed by Cherokee war parties, and the settlement boundaries of North Carolina had been effectively pushed back by more than 100 miles.[38] Many of the Cherokee captives held at Fort Prince George were murdered in their jail cells in mid-February, 1760 after an attempt was made to rescue them. Coytmore, the commanding officer of that fort who was much maligned by the Cherokee, was killed.[39] Lyttelton, who was soon appointed Governor of Jamaica, requested assistance from Dobbs, but North Carolina's militia could not be convinced to serve outside of its home province due to long-standing custom.[40]
Battle
editThe fort's sole engagement occurred when a band of Cherokee warriors attacked on the night of February 27, 1760. Waddell described the action in an official report to the Governor on February 29, 1760:
For several days I observed that a small party of Indians were constantly about the fort, I sent out several small parties after them to no purpose, the evening before last between 8 and 9 o'clock I found by the dogs making an uncommon noise there must be a party nigh a spring which we sometimes use. As my garrison is but small, and I was apprehensive it might be a scheme to draw out the garrison, I took out Captain Bailie who with myself and party made up ten; we had not marched 300 yards from the fort when we were attacked by at least 60 or 70 Indians. I had given my party orders not to fire until I gave the word, which they punctually observed: we received the Indians [sic] fire: when I perceived they had almost all fired, I ordered my party to fire which we did not further than 12 steps each loaded with a bullet and seven buck shot, they had nothing to cover them as they were advancing either to tomahawk or make us prisoners: they found the fire very hot from so small a number which a good deal confused them; I then ordered my party to retreat, as I found the instant our skirmish began another party had attacked the fort, upon our reinforcing the garrison the Indians were soon repulsed with I am sure a considerable loss, from what I myself saw as well as those I can confide in they could not have had less than 10 or 12 killed or wounded, and I believe they have taken six of my horses to carry off their wounded ... On my side I had 2 men wounded one of whom I am afraid will die as he is scalped, the other is in a way of recovery and one boy killed near the fort whom they durst not advance to scalp. I expected they would have paid me another visit last night, as they attack all fortifications by night, but they did not like their reception.[41]
At around the same time as this attack occurred, Cherokee war parties attacked Fort Loudoun, Fort Prince George, and Ninety-Six, South Carolina.[38] After this wave, Cherokee war parties continued to threaten Bethabara in the Wachovia Tract, Salisbury, and other settlements in the Yadkin, Catawba, Dan River, and Broad river basins.[42] The threat to the western Piedmont prevented North Carolina from sending troops outside of the colony.
The frontier became quiet in May, 1760. Colonel Archibald Montgomerie, 11th Earl of Eglinton led a force of 1737 British Soldiers on a punitive campaign against the Cherokee. Hampered by South Carolina's unwillingness to assist, his troops slowly made their way west, attacking and burning 10 Cherokee Towns between June 2 and 3rd. He sought to negotiate a peace with the Cherokee, but was undermined by a local trader. On July 24, Montgomerie's troops began their march north, and were defeated three days later in the Battle of Echoee Pass.
The following year, in 1761, North Carolina's General Assembly voted to raise a regiment of 500 soldiers. These men were to join Virginia Provincials in south western Virginia for a joint campaign against the Cherokee Overhill Towns. Simultaneously, Lt Col. James Grant, 4th of Ballindalloch led a force of nearly 2800 British and South Carolina Provincial Soldiers, and Native American Allies in a second attack of the Cherokee Middle Settlements. Grant's campaign burned 18 Cherokee towns between June 10 and July 3, 1761. The homes and food of approximately 5,000 Cherokee men, women, and children were destroyed.[43]
Largely recruited and waiting in Salisbury by July, the North Carolina Provincial Regiment did not receive their uniforms and weapons until September while at Fort Dobbs. The troops finally joined Virginians at the Long Island (Tennessee) in October, 1761. However, the destruction of Grant's Campaign forced the Cherokee to sue for peace, making the second invasion pointless.[44]
Post-war history
editWith the Anglo-Cherokee War ended, North Carolina refused to fund troops to garrison Fort Dobbs. Walter Lindsay, a local militia captain, served as caretaker for the fort. He and his assistants ensured the fort and its stockpile of arms were maintained for use should the need arise. As time passed, the frontier of North Carolina continued to push westward. On March 7, 1764, the North Carolina General Assembly's Committee on Public Claims recommended to Governor Dobbs that stores and supplies be removed from the fort to spare the government further expense in upkeep.[45] In 1766, the fort was described as rotting and collapsing.[46]
Site preservation and archaeology
editThe Fort Dobbs site, facing Fort Dobbs Road; note the "cellar", meaning the depression in the center of the site. Archaeological exploration of the site first occurred in 1847, when a group of local residents attempted to locate a rumored original cannon on the site. Evidence of this dig was discovered in the 21st century in a later archaeological study.[47] In 1909, local residents established the Fort Dobbs Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. That same year, the owners of the parcel of land on which the Fort Dobbs site was located donated 1,000 square feet (93 m2) containing the fort's remains to the Fort Dobbs Chapter. By 1910, the Chapter erected a stone marker at the site, and in 1915, it purchased the 10 acres of land surrounding the original donated parcel. In 1969, the North Carolina General Assembly appropriated $15,000 to purchase the property, to be matched by funds raised locally by the Iredell County Historical Society; these purchases were made in 1971 and 1973. By 1976, the land was opened as a historic site.[48]
By 2006, archaeologists and historical researchers had determined the exact location of Fort Dobbs, and had located the post-hole foundations of the former log structure. Excavation began in 1967, and by 1968, the site of the fort was confirmed. In 1967, Stanley South, an archaeologist and proponent of processual archaeology, discovered that by overlaying a transparency depicting a survey of the Fort Dobbs site done in the mid-18th-century on a modern aerial photograph, evidence of the surveyed lines could still be discerned in the modern terrain. Additionally, excavations revealed a moat that surrounded the blockhouse, as well as trash in the moat contemporary with the fort.[49] Early archaeological work concentrated specifically on the moat and a depression called the "cellar", which South believed served as a storage space in the middle of the fort grounds, and which later researchers believe was directly underneath the blockhouse.[50] Archaeological work has unearthed evidence of a palisade surrounding the blockhouse, in a similar fashion to other French and Indian War-era forts such as Fort Shirley near Heath, Massachusetts, and Fort Prince George.[51]
In 2006, a researcher affiliated with East Carolina University, Lawrence Babits, presented a study and a reconstruction plan that has been accepted by the Friends of Fort Dobbs, the 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that supports the site, and the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources.[52] In his plan, Babits postulated that Dobbs most likely played a role in designing the fort, basing the design on forts with which Dobbs had first-hand experience as an administrator in Scotland, such as Bernera Barracks near Glenelg and Ruthven Barracks near Kingussie.[53] From these comparisons, the contemporary description of the fort, and the soil record, Babits concluded that the "opposite angles" described by Francis Brown in 1756 actually referred to "flankers", or square wooden structures attached to the corner of the fort that would have allowed defending soldiers to shoot into the flank of any attacking forces surrounding the building.[54]
Historic site
editThe State of North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources maintains and operates the area as Fort Dobbs State Historic Site. The visitor center, located in a log cabin constructed from parts of local, 19th-century log structures, features displays about both the colonial fort and the French and Indian War period.[55] Outdoor trails lead visitors through the excavated ruins of the fort. Events, including many living history demonstrations, are held throughout the year at the fort.[56] The Fort Dobbs site remains the only historic site in the state related to the French and Indian War.[57]
Between 2016 and 2019, Fort Dobbs was reconstructed following a fundraising campaign by the Friends of Fort Dobbs, a non profit organization which supports Fort Dobbs State Historic Site. The Grand Opening on September 21, 2019, was attended by nearly 2000 visitors. The replica is fully furnished to appear as though soldiers walked out just before visitors walked in.
Yearly attendance at the site is about 20,000 people. The staff offers guided tours year round, Tuesday - Saturday. Several times a year, the site hosts living history events exploring the lives of the soldiers, civilians, and Native Americans whose lives crossed on the hilltop more than two and a half centuries ago.
See also
edit- Colonial American military history
- Fort Johnston (North Carolina) – contemporary colonial North Carolina fort
- French and Indian Wars
- Rowan County Regiment
References
editFootnotes
edit- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ "A Compleat map of North Carolina from an actual survey". North Carolina Maps. UNC Digital Collections. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
- ^ "Grand Opening of Fort Dobbs". fortdobbs.org. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
- ^ Ramsey 1964, p. 23.
- ^ Lefler & Powell 1973, p. 218.
- ^ Lefler & Powell 1973, pp. 142–43.
- ^ Miller 2011, p. 26.
- ^ Saunders 1887, p. 357, Letter from Arthur Dobbs to the Board of Trade of Great Britain, August 24, 1755
- ^ a b Ramsey 1964, pp. 194–95.
- ^ Clarke 1957, p. 120, noting that Dobbs had approximately 75 families on his lands, of which between 30 and 40 were Scotch–Irish, and 22 were German or Swiss.
- ^ Waddell 1890, p. 31.
- ^ Brumwell 2002, pp. 23–24.
- ^ Saunders 1887, p. 572, Letter from Arthur Dobbs to the Board of Trade of Great Britain, March 15, 1756
- ^ Greene 1925, pp. 604–08.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, pp. 12–13.
- ^ Babits & Pecoraro 2008, pp. 3, 15.
- ^ Saunders 1887, pp. 597–98, Letter from Arthur Dobbs to John Campbell, Earl of Loudoun, July 10, 1756
- ^ Walbert, David. "8.2 Fort Dobbs and the French and Indian War in North Carolina". LearnNC.org. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Education. Archived from the original on November 5, 2012. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
- ^ Saunders 1887, p. xlviii, Preface to Volume 5
- ^ Saunders 1887, p. 849, Minutes of the Lower House of the North Carolina General Assembly, May 20, 1757
- ^ a b Saunders 1887, p. xlix, Preface to Volume 5
- ^ Keever 1976, p. 57.
- ^ Babits & Pecoraro 2008, pp. 17.
- ^ Branch 1996, p. 459.
- ^ a b Saunders 1887, pp. 604–05, Letter of Arthur Dobbs to Hugh Waddell, [Alexander Osborne], and Colonel Alexander of July 18, 1756
- ^ Cashion 1996, p. 104.
- ^ Journal Concerning a march that Capt. Robert Wade took to the New River in search of Indians, Saturday 12th August 1758.
- ^ Perdue 1985, pp. 32–33.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, pp. 17–18.
- ^ Sam Wyly to Governor Lyttleton. January 14, 1759. Lyttleton Papers. Clement Library, University of Michigan at Ann Arbor
- ^ Oliphant 2001, pp. 72–78.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, pp. 72–73.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, p. 76.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, pp. 77–87.
- ^ Lee 2011, pp. 79–80.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, pp. 102–04, 109.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, p. 109.
- ^ a b Oliphant 2001, pp. 110–11.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, p. 111.
- ^ Oliphant 2001, p. 112.
- ^ Ramsey 1964, p. 197.
- ^ Lee 2011, p. 80.
- ^ Anderson 2006, p. 402.
- ^ Maass 2013, pp. 112–16.
- ^ Clark 1907, p. 839, Report by the Committee of both Houses of the North Carolina General Assembly concerning public claims of March 7, 1764
- ^ Lefler & Powell 1973, p. 149.
- ^ Babits & Pecoraro 2008, p. 47.
- ^ McCullough 2001, pp. 56–57.
- ^ South 2005, pp. 191–92.
- ^ Babits & Pecoraro 2008, pp. 50–51.
- ^ Coe 2006, pp. 73–74.
- ^ "Archaeology". Fort Dobbs website. Friends of Fort Dobbs, Inc. Archived from the original on January 3, 2013. Retrieved December 5, 2012.
- ^ Babits & Pecoraro 2008, pp. 21–26.
- ^ Babits & Pecoraro 2008, pp. 230–34, Appendix II, "Reconstructing Fort Dobbs"
- ^ "Hours, Daily Programs, Facilities". Fort Dobbs website. Friends of Fort Dobbs, Inc. Archived from the original on November 24, 2011. Retrieved February 6, 2012.
- ^ McCullough, Gary (November 10, 2012). "Fort Dobbs shows life on early frontier". Raleigh News & Observer. Archived from the original on May 18, 2013. Retrieved December 5, 2012.
- ^ "Public Hearing on Fort Dobbs, Commissioners Want Further Input from Supporters, Opponents". Charlotte Observer. January 23, 2005. p. 2J.
Bibliography
edit- Anderson, William (2006). "Etchoe, Battle of". In Powell, William S (ed.). Encyclopedia of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-3071-0.
- Babits, Lawrence E.; Pecoraro, Tiffany A. (2008). Fort Dobbs, 1756–1763: Iredell County, North Carolina : final archaeological report. Greenville, NC: East Carolina University. OCLC 240386230.
- Branch, Paul (2006). "Fort Dobbs". In Powell, William S (ed.). Encyclopedia of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-3071-0.
- Brumwell, Stephen (2002). Redcoats: The British Soldier and War in the Americas, 1755–1763. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-67538-3.
- Cashion, Jerry C. (1996). "Waddell, Hugh". In Powell, William S (ed.). Dictionary of North Carolina Biography. Vol. 6 (T–Z). Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-6699-3.
- Clark, Walter, ed. (1907). Colonial and State Records of North Carolina. Vol. 22. Raleigh, NC: State of North Carolina. OCLC 1969836.
- Clarke, Desmond, ed. (1957). Arthur Dobbs, Esquire, 1689–1765: Surveyor-General of Ireland, Prospector and Governor of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780783720784. OCLC 192097083.
- Coe, Michael (2006). The Line of Forts: Historical Archaeology on the Colonial Frontier of Massachusetts. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England. ISBN 978-1-58465-542-8.
- Draper, Lyman Copeland (1998). The Life of Daniel Boone. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-0979-5.
- Greene, Nelson (1925). History of the Mohawk Valley: Gateway to the West 1614–1925: Covering the Six Counties of Schenectady, Schoharie, Montgomery, Fulton, Herkimer, and Oneida. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co. OCLC 2495714.
- Keever, Homer (1976). Iredell, Piedmont County. Statesville, NC: Iredell County Bicentennial Commission. OCLC 3187215.
- Lee, E. Lawrence (2011). Indian Wars in North Carolina: 1663–1763. Raleigh, NC: Office of Archives and History, NC Dept. of Cultural Resources. ISBN 978-0-86526-084-9.
- Lefler, Hugh T.; Powell, William S. (1973). Colonial North Carolina: A History. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 0-684-13536-1.
- Lofaro, Michael (2010). Daniel Boone: An American Life. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-2278-6.
- McCullough, Gary L. (2001). North Carolina's State Historic Sites. Winston-Salem, NC: John F. Blair. ISBN 0-89587-241-2.
- MacDonald, James M. (2006). Politics of the Personal in the Old North State: Griffith Rutherford in Revolutionary North Carolina (PDF) (Ph.D.). Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College. OCLC 75633820. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 23, 2010. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
- Maass, John R. (2013). The French and Indian War in North Carolina: The Spreading Flames of War. Charleston, SC: McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-1-60949-887-0.
- Miller, David W. (2011). The Taking of American Indian Lands in the Southeast: A History of Territorial Cessions and Forced Relocation, 1607–1840. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-6277-3.
- Nester, William R. (2000). The First Global War: Britain, France, and the Fate of North America, 1756–1775. Westport, CT: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-96771-9.
- Oliphant, John (2001). Peace and War on the Anglo-Cherokee Frontier, 1756–1763. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-2637-3.
- Perdue, Theda (1985). Native Carolinians: The Indians of North Carolina. Raleigh, NC: Division of Archives and History, N.C. Dept. of Cultural Resources. ISBN 0-86526-217-9.
- Ramsey, Robert (1964). Carolina Cradle: Settlement of the Northwest Carolina Frontier, 1747–1762. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4189-1.
- Saunders, William L., ed. (1887). Colonial and State Records of North Carolina. Vol. 5. Raleigh, NC: P. M. Hale, Printer to the State. OCLC 1969836.
- South, Stanley A. (2005). An Archaeological Evolution. New York: Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. ISBN 0-387-23401-2.
- Tortora, Daniel J. (2015). Carolina in Crisis: Cherokees, Colonists, and Slaves in the American Southeast, 1756–1763. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-2122-7.
- Waddell, Alfred (1890). A Colonial Officer and His Times, 1754–1773: A Biographical Sketch of Hugh Waddell. Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton Co. OCLC 16153240.
External links
edit- Friends of Fort Dobbs, Inc.
- North Carolina State Historic Sites page
- North Carolina History Project, "Fort Dobbs"