Timeline of Kentucky history


This is a timeline of Kentucky history.

Early history

Seven Years War / French and Indian War

  • 1754 The Piqua, of the Shawnee nation, abandoned, "place of blue licks" - or Little Pict Town as the European traders called it. This may also have been the town that the Wyandot referred to as Kentucky or "Meadow" and so the name for the nearby river came to serve as the name for the whole area. Eskppakithiki was probably the last permanent non-European town in the area that became Kentucky; later European-American settlers called the well-kept farmlands around the stockaded village location the "Indian Old Fields."
  • 1767 Daniel Boone led his first band of hunters as far west as what is now Floyd County, Kentucky and hunted along the Big Sandy River.
  • 1769 Judge Richard Henderson financed a venture proposed by John Finley to find the Cherokees' Warriors Path through a gap in the Cumberland Mountains; Finley convinced his friend to lead a hunting party on a long hunt in Kentucky, including John Stewart, Boone's brother-in-law; they cleared a trail through the Cumberland Gap; on December 22, a Shawnee war party confiscated their store of pelts, warning them not to return, but Daniel Boone, his brother Squire and John Stewart remained in Kentucky for two more years, exploring and hunting - tales of these exploits drew the attention of easterners eager for new lands to settle.

Lord Dunmore's War

Revolutionary War

Between the wars

Post Civil War period

Twentieth century

Twenty-first century