- Ebenezer Zane
Ebenezer Zane (1747-1811) was an American pioneer, road builder and land speculator. Born in what is now
Moorefield ,West Virginia (which was then in the state ofVirginia ), Zane established the settlement known asFort Henry in Wheeling, Virginia (present dayWest Virginia ) on theOhio River . Zane is also famous for blazing the trail known asZane's Trace .Family
Ebenezer Zane was one of six children born to William Andrew Zane and his wife, Nancy Ann Nolan. He had four brothers, Silas (born 1745), Andrew (born 1749), Jonathan (born about 1750), and Isaac (born 1753), and one sister, Elizabeth "Betty" (born 1759). Ebenezer Zane married Elizabeth McCulloch.
At Fort Henry
Zane headed west with his brothers Silas and Jonathan Zane from Moorefield and established
Fort Henry in 1769. From 1777 to 1782, during theAmerican Revolution , Zane and his brothers defended Fort Henry against Native American attacks. Zane's sister Elizabeth was celebrated for her courage during one of these Native American attacks: she ran out of the fortress walls to retrieve a badly needed keg of powder.Ebenezer Zane began his military career under British rule. He served as a disbursing officer under Lord Dunmore. Zane later became a colonel in the Virginia colonial militia. In 1788, he served as a western delegate to the
Virginia Ratifying Convention and voted in favor of ratification of theUnited States Constitution .Building Zane's Trace
Following the war in 1796, Zane obtained permission and funds from the
United States Congress to build a road through theNorthwest Territory . In exchange for his work, Congress granted Zane tracts of land in the areas where the road intersected the Muskingum, Hocking, and Scioto rivers.When
Zane's Trace was completed, it crossed what is now the state ofOhio from Wheeling, Virginia toMaysville ,Kentucky . Although the road was a rudimentary path and at first suitable only for travel by foot or horseback (not by wagon), the state of Ohio undertook improvements in the early 1800s. It was the only major road in Ohio until the War of 1812. See the entry onZane's Trace for more information.Zanesville, Ohio was named in his honor. He was a maternal ancestor of authorZane Grey who was born there. Ebenezer Zane died of jaundice in 1811.References
* [http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=427 Ohio History Central]
* [http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/Z/Zane-Ebe.html AllRefer Encyclopedia]
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