Episode Details
Back to EpisodesKentucky Was Never an Empty Wilderness
Episode 5517
Published 3 weeks, 1 day ago
Description
In this episode, we explore kentucky was never an empty wilderness. Welcome to today's deep dive. I'm so glad you're joining us because Well today's journey is gonna Completely shatter how you view the American frontier. Oh, absolutely It really changes everything right because you know when you look at a map of the United States We kind of tend to picture these these clean neat borders drawn in permanent ink like the frontier was just this quiet empty place waiting to be discovered a blank slate exactly a blank slate where pioneers just arrived built some cabins and politely started a state. It feels very orderly. But then you look at Kentucky. Yeah, that's where the neat lines completely fall apart. They really do. It's like those ink lines were drawn during a massive earthquake right over top of ancient ruins while people were literally fighting over the pen. It is a great way to put it. Thanks. So today in the 1700s describe it as an empty wilderness. Like, where did everybody go? What's fascinating here is how indirect European contact completely reshaped the landscape long before a single European settler actually set foot there. What do you mean? Well, they were pushed out by a massive geopolitical proxy war fueled by international commerce. The Beaver Wars in the 1600s. The Beaver Wars? Yeah. The Iroquois Confederacy, who lived far to the northeast, acquired advanced firearms from Dutch and English traders. And the Iroquois wanted an absolute monopoly on the European fur trade, which was incredibly lucrative. So because their own territories were getting overhunted, they just used their new guns to aggressively expand? Exactly. They launched an invasion of the Ohio Valley to secure a massive beaver hunting ground. And the source notes, they pushed out the local tribes, the Shawnee, the Cherokee, the Chickasaw. So this conflict