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  Clark, George Rogers
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationIndependent  
 
NameGeorge Rogers Clark
Address
, Kentucky , United States
EmailNone
WebsiteNone
Born November 09, 1752
DiedFebruary 13, 1818 (65 years)
ContributorThomas Walker
Last ModifedThomas Walker
Dec 15, 2005 09:54pm
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InfoGeorge Rogers Clark (November 9, 1752 – February 13, 1818) was the preeminent American military leader on the northwestern frontier during the American Revolutionary War. Clark was once regarded as one of the great American military heroes—hailed as the conqueror of the Northwest Territory at the apex of his fame—but his star has since faded considerably. He is now sometimes confused with his younger brother William of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

George Rogers Clark was born in Albemarle County, Virginia, not far from the home of young Thomas Jefferson. Clark attended Donald Robertson's school with James Madison and John Taylor of Carolina, eventually becoming a farmer and surveyor.

In 1772, as a twenty-year old surveyor, Clark made his first trip into what would become Kentucky, one of thousands of settlers entering the area as a result of the Treaty of Fort Stanwix of 1768. Indians living in the Ohio Country had not been party to that treaty, which ceded their Kentucky hunting grounds. The violence that resulted eventually culminated in Lord Dunmore's War, in which Clark played a small role.

During the Revolutionary War, the Kentucky settlements (then part of Virginia) were at war with Indians in Ohio, particularly the Shawnee, Mingo, and Wyandot. Working on behalf of Virginia, Clark helped to raise a militia and to organize the defense of the region. He was selected as a delegate to the Virginia Convention and managed to obtain supplies of ammunition there that he used to repel attacks on Harrodsburg, Kentucky in 1777. After sending spies into the Illinois Country, he developed a plan to capture it. Receiving support from Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson, Clark was promoted to lieutenant colonel and given authority to raise troops to carry out the plan.

In 1778, Clark led 175 volunteers from Fort Pitt to begin the secret mission. Clark traveled down the Ohio River along the northern border of Kentucky to the Falls of the Ohio with his troops and many families who joined the military convoy for security and protection from Indian reprisals. On May 27, 1778, Clark chose an island he named Corn Island to set up camp at the falls. This marks the founding of the settlement later to be named Louisville.

On June 24, 1778, Clark and his troops landed at the abandoned Fort Massac in Illinois. Seeking to surprise the British soldiers occupying Fort Kaskaskia, they walked overland and arrived in the night on July 4. They captured the fort and city without firing a shot. Clark resupplied and intended to hold the fort. He sent the French Priest Father Pierre Gibault to Fort Sackville located near the city of Vincennes, Indiana to influence and secure the inhabitants of Vincennes and secure Fort Sackville. Clark then placed Capt. Leonard Helm in command of Fort Sackville.

Early in 1779, Clark received word from Fort Sackville that the Lieutenant Governor of Canada, Henry Hamilton, had retaken that outpost for Great Britain. On February 5, Clark led 170 volunteers from Fort Kaskaskia 210 miles over "drownded country" in the dead of winter in 18 days to capture Fort Sackville from Hamilton. Upon arrival at Fort Sackville on February 23, Clark ordered all of the company's flags out to give the illusion of not 200 men, but 600 men. He then opened fire upon the surprised soldiers and threatened to storm the fort and give no quarter. Hamilton formally surrendered on February 25.

Clark's ultimate goal during the Revolutionary War was to seize the British stronghold of Fort Detroit and claim all lands west of the Appalachians for the American Revolutionaries (or perhaps for Virginia), but he could never recruit enough men to make the attempt. (The Kentucky militiamen generally preferred to defend their homes by staying closer to Kentucky, rather than making a long and potentially perilous expedition to Detroit.) However, Clark's capture of Governor Hamilton and occupation of the Illinois Country helped to reduce British effectiveness in the Northwest Territory.

At the Treaty of Paris (1783) that ended the Revolutionary War, Great Britain ceded the Northwest Territory to the United States. Many traditional accounts credit Clark's efforts with winning that vast territory. However, historians now question whether Clark's "conquest" played any significant role in the treaty negotiations. He led an unsuccessful expedition against the Wabash Indians in 1786.

After the American Revolution, Clark became the principal surveyor for the land west of the Appalachians. He was also consulted with regards to Indian activities in Ohio and helped negotiate the Treaty of Fort McIntosh in 1785. Clark had financed the majority of his campaigns with his own funds. He was never able to obtain full repayment from Virginia or the United States Congress. He lived for awhile by himself in a small cabin on part of the 8,049 acres (c 3,260 hectares) of land granted him in 1783 by the Virginia Legislature in what is now Clarksville, Indiana, but was injured in a fireplace accident. He lived out the rest of his life at Locust Grove farm, just a short distance from Louisville, Kentucky with his sister and brother-in-law. He died of a stroke at the age of 63 still attempting to repay men and merchants from his military campaigns.

On May 23, 1928, President Calvin Coolidge ordered a memorial to George Rogers Clark to be erected in Vincennes. Completed in 1933, the George Rogers Clark Memorial stands on what was then believed to be the site of Fort Sackville, and is now the George Rogers Clark National Historical Park.

Other statues of Clark can be found in:

Fort Massac, Illinois, placed by the Daughters of the American Revolution in the early 1900s.
Louisville, Kentucky at its Belvedere park, next to the wharf on the Ohio River.
Springfield, Ohio at the site of the Battle of Piqua.
Places named for Clark include:

Clark County, Kentucky, which is the home of George Rogers Clark High School.
Clark County, Ohio, which is the home of Clark State Community College.
Clarksville, Tennessee
Clarksville, Indiana
George Rogers Clark Memorial Bridge (Second Street Bridge) spanning between Louisville and southern Indiana.

First Appeared on a United tates Postage Stamp in 1929.
Vote totals for elections in which was nominated for the Hall of Fame for Great Americans (1900-1965): 1900-19, 1905-20, 1910-25, 1915-21, 1920-23, 1925-39, 1930-28, 1935-46, 1940-41, 1945-17, 1950-3, 1955-17, 1960-4, 1965-1.

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