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History of Cumberland County
(taken from excepts of History of Cumberland County by J.W. Wells)
Settlement of Kentucky
Although white people, mostly Scots-Irish and German were in Kentucky as early as 1674,
Kentucky did not become a recognizable governmental landscape until after the
Revolutionary War. At the close of that war, some 30,000 souls made their home in
Kentucky. On December 31, 1776 the Virginia Legislature organized Kentucky as the Kentucky
County of Virginia, which it remained until 1780 when it was divided into three counties:
Jefferson, Fayette, and Lincoln. Before its admission as a state on June 1, 1792, six more
counties were named.
The Long Hunters
Some of the first visitors to Kentucky, in about 1770, were the Long Hunters, so named
because their hunting expeditions into the wilderness of Kentucky that often took a year
or more. The known names of these hunters were: James Knox, Richard Knox, William Allen,
Josiah Drake, Obadiah Terrell, John Rains, Uriah Stone, Henry Smith, Edward Cowan,
Christopher Stoph, Humphrey Hogan, Cassius Brooks, Robert Crocket, James Graham, John
Montgomery, Abraham Bledsoe, Richard and Henry Skaggs, David Linch, Kasper Mansco, Billy
Russell, Joshua Horton, William Baker and two men named Hughs. While not all of the Long
Hunters came to Cumberland County, many of them did and their descendants have made their
home here for generations.
Daniel Boone
Daniel Boone and his brother explored Kentucky from July of 1770 to
March of 1771 and Daniel later brought his family here to live. J.W. Wells, in his
History of Cumberland County, states, "In the northern part of the present territory
of Cumberland County, on Buck Branch, now owned by L.C. Allen, near a small sulphur
spring, he carved his name and date on a slate rock, to wit.: 'D.BOON 1771' noting
that Boone was one of the first white men in the area."
First Land Titles
The first title to the land of Cumberland County within its present limits was given
by the Iroquois Indians and signed at Ft. Stanwix, New York in 1768. A second was
signed by the Cherokee on March 17, 1775 to Col. Richard Henderson of North
Carolina, at Sycamore Shoals for "a satisfactory consideration of merchandise."
Confusion Over Titles
In the dim period between 1763 when the State of Virginia enacted the Military
Bounty Warrant Law, forty cents per acre, few records remain. Due to laxity in
recording the land ownership, over 3,000 land controversies were settled in 1779 in
the state. One of those land controversies during this time period whose dispute was
lost was that of Daniel Boone, who then moved his family on to Missouri.
The two Commissioners for Cumberland and adjoining territory in 1782 were Nathan
Montgomery and William Casey.
CUMBERLAND COUNTY was organized in 1798 when it became Kentucky's thirty-second
county. At the time it was a very large county encompassing what are now parts of
Metcalfe, Monroe, Russell, Wayne and Clinton Counties. The Walker line further
confused things, as some farms which were believed to have been located in Kentucky
actually ended up in Tennessee. Cumberland County received its name from the
Cumberland River which flows through the county from end to end.
War of 1812
Kentucky, and particularly Cumberland County, were well represented in the War of
1812 and the Battle of New Orleans as the Kentucky and Tennessee riflemen were known
for their marksmanship and tenacity. During America's stand on the river Raisin,
just south of Detroit, January 8, 1815 Cumberland Countians played their biggest
role. Fifty-nine names of settlers in Cumberland County are known to have played a
part, mostly under David McNair.
Civil War
During the Civil War, Cumberland County men were taken up into the 5th Kentucky
Cavalry USA and CSA, 3rd Regiment Kentucky Volunteer Infantry USA, 15th Volunteer
Infantry USA, and Home Guards, as well as other units. Col. David R. Haggard who
organized the 5th Kentucky Cavalry USA, was from Burkesville, KY, the Cumberland
County seat, and was joined by nearly 789 fellow Cumberland Countians. Some were
lost in skirmishes and battles at Burkesville, Gallatin, Monroe Cross Roads, North
Carolina, Adairville, Millers Grove, and Sweet Water, Georgia.
From Wells':"The 3rd Regiment Kentucky Volunteer Infantry was organized at Camp Dick
Robinson in October, 1861. Its first line of march was from camp to Lexington, Camp
Dick Robinson, Rock Castle, Crab Orchard, Somerset, Wayne County, Pulaski, and on
November 19 to Columbia, where sickness and death of many of the soldiers held it
there until January 7, 1862, when the ablest ones marched to the mouth of Renox
Creek near Burkesville, Cumberland County. There they camped until January 16, '62,
when the 300 men marched to Russell County, trebling their strength, embarked on a
steamboat for Nashville, Tennessee. During the four years of war this regiment
covered most of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Georgia, engaging in 22 of the heaviest
battles of the Civil War."
The 16th Kentucky Volunteer Infantry wintered in southern Kentucky in 1862. At that
time Cumberland County was overrun by guerrillas from Tennessee. At Marrowbone, the
16th engaged the guerrillas.
Tom Keeton of the Home Guard skirmished with the Rebels at Brownwood in Lawsons
Bottom and on the opposite side of the Cumberland River at Irish Bottom. Keeton then
chased Champ Ferguson's forces up Crocus Creek and out up Puncheon Creek with
Ferguson firing at Keeton's men over his shoulder.
John Hunt Morgan camped with part of his army at Salt Lick Bend and stripped the
country of most of its food stuffs. He also stayed at Pleasant Hill near Whites
Bottom for three weeks and stripped the county of its products. The teacher at
Pleasant Hill adjourned school for the duration of the school year due to the fear
of John Hunt Morgan.
In 1865 General Lyons entered into Cumberland County, having burned 28 county seats
along his way. On December 23, he burned the Campbellsville Court House and on
January 3, 1865, came into the town of Burkesville and robbed all the stores, took
all the best horses and supplied his men with food from stores and smokehouses. He
took the benches of the Cumberland County Courthouse and split them into kindling
wood and set fire to the building. Fortunately, it was after all the records were
removed. These records, going back to the formation of the county survived until a
courthouse fire in 1933, in whichall would have been destroyed had it not been for
the fact that some were safely in storage at another building nearby.
Other Wars
All wars subsequent to the Civil War have seen volunteers from Cumberland County and
Cumberland County women have shared in the grief of losing loved ones and the joy of
having them returned to them safely.
Churches
The earliest church in Cumberland County on record was of a Christian Church under
the leadership of David Haggard, it was noted in August 1800. The first church of
that denomination was built in 1836 and was two stories high, the upper room used
for a school room and a Masonic Lodge and the lower floor used for the church. Some
of the early ministers were: Newton Mulkey, William Sweeney, John Emerson, William
P. Clark, and Raccoon John Smith. In 1848 a Brother Clark had the greatest meeting
on record with the addition of 104 members.
The Baptists
Although not officially recorded, the Baptists claim the honor of being the pioneer
church, with William Hickman preaching in Kentucky (then Fincastle County, Virginia)
in 1776. Lewis Craig established a church at Lancaster, KY in 1781, but the Baptists
in "a constant stream, poured into Kentucky" after the signing of the Treaty of
Paris in 1783.
Oldest Church
The oldest church in the county is the log house on Casey's Fork of Marrowbone built
in 1802. Salem Church dates back to July 9, 1808 and has kept a continuous record to
1945 (and beyond) except for 1809-1822. Black slaves belonged to the church in the
early days and attended with their masters, as it was against Kentucky laws to
preach to blacks unless one or more whites were present.
Transportation
The people of Cumberland County never voted to approve a railroad in their county
and until the 1960s many of the roads in Cumberland County were in poor shape and
impassable in poor weather. Many relied upon the Cumberland River as their highway
until the construction of Dale Hollow Dam in the 1940s or on horse and wagon on the
winding roads of the area. Today, most streets, roads, and highways are in good
condition and allow of easy travel at 55mph. The area has become famous for its
rural environ, proud history, excellent sports fishing, hiking and camping. It hosts
thousands of tourists in the summer season and is the proud location of the new Dale
Hollow Resort Park operated by the Kentucky State Parks.
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