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    • New York fur traders

      • The first Europeans to penetrate the wilderness surrounding the Upper Ohio River Valley was a small group of New York fur traders. The year was 1692 and soon, others would follow. Pushing inland from Britain’s coastal colonies, land hungry Europeans displaced native peoples who were continually forced westward.
      bellacresborough.org/history/Early Days on the Upper Ohio River-2.pdf
  1. In the 17th century, the French were the first modern Europeans to explore what became known as Ohio Country. [13] In 1663, it became part of New France, a royal province of French Empire, and northeastern Ohio was further explored by Robert La Salle in 1669. [14]

  2. Mar 23, 2023 · Its history dates back to the early 17th century, when European explorers and settlers first arrived in the area. Between 1607 and 1803, the Ohio Valley played a significant role in the...

    • Peter Paccone
  3. Apr 6, 2017 · Native Americans had been braving the Ohio wilderness for thousands of years, but the first Europeans to set foot in Ohio weren't exactly charmed by it. French and English explorers came and went, even setting up trading posts in Ohio as early as the 1660's, but nobody was willing to actually live here.

  4. The first Europeans arrived in the Ohio Valley in the 17th century. [1] In all likelihood, it was French. [2] Further explorations will follow notably in 1682. [3]

  5. Early History of the Upper Ohio River Valley. By Neil Elvick. The earliest European exploration of what was to become the Great Northwest Territory of the United States was done by the French in the 17th century, and this land, called New France, was claimed for the Sun King, Louis XIV of France.

  6. Legend has it that on July 4, 1773 a baby boy was born to the Roth family, the first european child born in what would become Ohio. The community here prospered for several years, until the American Patriots began forcing the native tribes into the northwestern regions of the Ohio Country.

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  8. Sep 8, 2019 · French coureur de bois, or “woods runners,” and English “long hunters” began to cross the Appalachians and make their way along the Great Lakes in the late 1600s. When they reached the Ohio River...

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