Former county in Virginia, United States
37°37′N
83°27′W
/
37.617°N 83.450°W
/
37.617; -83.450
Kentucky County
(aka
Kentucke County
), later the
District of Kentucky
, was formed by the
Commonwealth
of
Virginia
from the western portion (beyond the
Big Sandy River
and
Cumberland Mountains
) of
Fincastle County
effective 1777.
[2]
The name of the county was taken from a Native American place name that came to be associated with a river in east central Kentucky, and gave the
Kentucky River
its name. During the almost four years of Kentucky County's existence, its
seat of government
was Harrodstown (then also known as Oldtown, later renamed
Harrodsburg
).
[3]
The entire existence of Kentucky County was in the context of the
Western theater of the American Revolutionary War
. Except for the old French settlements in Illinois country, Kentucky was the western theater, and several major battles of the War occurred during its existence including the
siege of Boonesborough
,
siege of Logan's Fort
, and
Bird's invasion of Kentucky
. Other events include the invalidation of Transylvania Colony and the survey of Walker's Line, Kentucky's southern boundary. The Cherokee-American Wars were initiated in Kentucky in 1776 by disgruntled Cherokee. General George Rogers Clark conducted his famous Illinois Campaign from his base at the Falls of the Ohio in 1778?79. During its 4 years, the population of Kentucky County rose from about 300 to a little less than 1000 in 1780.
In the Land Act of May 3, 1779, the Virginia General Assembly allocated the Military District in Kentucky County. What had been necessity became policy: Virginian Revolutionary War veterans as well as veterans from the French and Indian War and Lord Dunmore's War, would receive land grants in lieu of pay for their service in either the Virginia militia or the Continental Army. The District was defined to lie between the Green River and the Carolina line stretching from the Tennessee and Ohio Rivers in the west and tapering to a point near the Cumberland Gap in the southeast. Most of it except a wedge adjacent to the Cumberland Mountains, lies in the geographic region of the Pennyroyal, and occupied over 35% of the land area of Kentucky County. Legitimate claims held under the Transylvania colony were excluded from allocation, as well as the grant to Richard Henderson along the Green River. The District remained a separate area when Kentucky County was divided into subsidiary counties in 1780. Later, in 1784, Virginia allocated another district north of the Ohio River, because it was afraid that the Kentucky district was inadequate. Claims resulted in a warrant for a specified number of acres depending on the soldier's rank and length of service. A claim was validated by building a cabin and planting corn. A survey establishing the bounds would be made, and a patent thereafter issued. In December 1795, an act of the Kentucky Legislature required military claims to be presented before January 1796 or become void (although the Act was amended several times to grant extensions). Thereafter, unclaimed areas of the Military District were open to general settlement.
Kentucky County was abolished effective November 1, 1780, when it was divided into
Fayette
,
Jefferson
, and
Lincoln
counties.
[2]
Afterward, these counties and those set off from them later in that decade were designated collectively as the
District of Kentucky
by the
Virginia House of Delegates
. March 7, 1789, the Virginia General Assembly officially changed the spelling of Kentucke to Kentucky. The counties of the district frequently petitioned both the Virginia legislature and the
Continental Congress
seeking
statehood
. Finally successful, the
Commonwealth of Kentucky
was admitted to the
United States
as the 15th state in 1792.
[4]
The capital was moved from Harrodsburg to
Frankfort
that same year.
Militia officers
The county militia was organized as follows:
[5]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
External links
[
edit
]