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    • 1783

      • In 1783, the Ohio Country became unorganized U.S. territory under the Treaty of Paris that officially ended the American Revolutionary War and became one of the first American frontier regions of the United States. Several of the original U.S. states had overlapping claims to portions of it, based on historical royal and colonial charters.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio_Country
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ohio_CountryOhio Country - Wikipedia

    In 1783, the Ohio Country became unorganized U.S. territory under the Treaty of Paris that officially ended the American Revolutionary War and became one of the first American frontier regions of the United States.

  3. The history of Ohio as a state began when the Northwest Territory was divided in 1800, and the remainder reorganized for admission to the union on March 1, 1803, as the 17th state of the United States.

  4. Mar 31, 2023 · It had been called The Ohio Country: part of the Northwest Territory, a huge tract of land the U.S. won from the British in the Revolutionary War. Before that, this land was home to Indigenous people who had been here for thousands of years.

  5. The Ohio Country served as a critical battleground for both British and French colonial ambitions due to its rich resources and strategic location. The competition for control over fur trade routes heightened tensions, as each power sought to expand their territory.

  6. In the 1720s, a number of Native American groups began to migrate into the Ohio Country from the east, driven by pressure from encroaching European colonists. By 1724, Delaware Indians had established the village of Kittanning on the Allegheny River in present-day western Pennsylvania.

  7. Apr 3, 2018 · By the 1740s, Native groups had settled throughout the Ohio Country, not just in the upper Ohio Valley, and the patterns on the landscape reflected the shifting power dynamics of the trans-Appalachian West as well as the genesis of a new confederacy of Natives who referred to themselves as the "Ohio Indians."

  8. When looking at the history of Ohio, sometimes we’re tempted to start sometime around 1803 when Ohio officially became a state. There are a few problems with this, though, such as how it completely ignores the period of time from 1787 to 1803 when the area was part of The Northwest Territory.

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