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Kentucky's Road to Statehood (Hardcover, New)
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Kentucky's Road to Statehood (Hardcover, New)
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On June 1,1792, Kentucky became the fifteenth state in the new
nation and the first west of the Alleghenies. Lowell Harrison
reviews the tangled and protracted process by which Virginia's
westernmost territory achieved statehood. By the early 1780s,
survival of the Kentucky settlements, so uncertain only a few years
earlier, was assured. The end of the American Revolution curtailed
British support for Indian raids, and thousands of settlers sought
a better life in the "Eden of the West." They swarmed through
Cumberland Gap and down the Ohio River, cleared the land for crops,
and established towns. The division of sprawling Kentucky County
into three counties in 1780 indicated its rapid growth, and that
growth accelerated during the following decade. With population
increase came sentiment for separation from Virginia. Such demands
had been voiced earlier, but a definite separation movement began
in 1784 when a convention -- the first of ten such -- met in
Danville. Not until April 1792 was a constitution finally drafted
under which the Commonwealth of Kentucky could enter the Union.
While most Kentuckians favored separation, they differed over how
and when and on what terms it should occur. Three factions
struggled to control the movement, but their goals and methods
shifted with changing circumstances. This confusing situation was
made more complex by the presence of the exotic James Wilkinson and
the "Spanish Conspiracy" he fomented. Harrison addresses many
questions about the convoluted process of statehood: why separation
was desired, why it was so difficult to achieve, what type of
government the 1792 constitution established, and how Governor
Isaac Shelby and the first General Assembly implemented it. His
engaging account, which includes the text of the first
constitution, will be treasured by all Kentuckians.
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