
Gaines Trace - Wikipedia
The Gaines Trace was a road in the Mississippi Territory. It was constructed in 1811 and 1812 from the Tennessee River (opposite the Elk River's mouth) to Cotton Gin Port on the upper …
Cotton Gin Port Chickasaw Indians at the Port
Gaines Trace was laid out as an early road along the Chickasaw trail that crossed the Tombigbee at the cotton gin. In 1816, the Chickasaws ceded their territory East of the Tombigbee and …
Gaines Trace - The Historical Marker Database
2021年5月24日 · It is located on the Gaines Trace Road which was surveyed by E. P. Gaines in 1807, at the request of President Thomas Jefferson. Gaines Trace was a major route for …
Gaine's Trace - FamilySearch
2018年3月16日 · The Gaines Trace was a road in the Mississippi Territory. It was constructed in 1811 and 1812 from the Tennessee River (opposite the Elk River's mouth) near present day …
Early Roads and Routes in Alabama circa 1800-1839
2021年4月22日 · Gaines Road, – The Gaines Trace was a road in the Mississippi Territory. It was constructed in 1811 and 1812 from the Tennessee River (opposite the Elk River’s mouth) to …
Russellville - The Historical Marker Database
2022年7月10日 · Edmund Pendleton Gaines began work on the road that would bear his name on December 26, 1807. Gaines' Trace extended from Melton's Bluff, at the head of the Elk River …
Early Roads / One of the South's First Railroads 1832 Historical …
2009年8月23日 · Tennessee Street along the north side of the square was originally part of Gaines’ Trace, a horse path laid out in 1807 under the direction of Capt. Edmund Pendleton …
Cotton Gin Port - swroadsigns.com
Gaines Trace was opened as a road connecting Cotton Gin Port on the Tombigbee to Colbert’s Ferry on the Tennessee in 1810, surveyed along an old Chickasaw trail. The town was …
Gaines Trace - Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias
The Gaines Trace was a road in the Mississippi Territory. It was constructed in 1811 and 1812 from the Tennessee River (near Muscle Shoals) to Cotton Gin Port on the upper Tombigbee …
Cotton Gin Port abandoned port on the Upper Tombigbee River
The Port had long been a stopping place for adventurers, rowdies, and petty villains along the Trace. One of the South's most infamous desperadoes, noted for horse theft, robbery, and …
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