- Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665
The Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665 is a historic civil engineering landmark, as designated by the
American Society of Civil Engineers . It was a brainchild of KingCharles II of England to mark the boundaries of various English North American colonies. It was intended to stretch from theAtlantic Ocean to thePacific Ocean , but in reality it was only surveyed from the Atlantic to theMississippi River . It would later to be said of the project:"The boundary Charles II envisioned was one of the most grandiose in history. To decree an imaginary geographic straight line, 3,000 miles long, as a boundary across an unknown continent that he didn't even own was the height of royal pomposity."cite web|url=http://live.asce.org/hh/index.mxml?lid=143|publisher=American Society of Civil Engineers|title=Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665|accessdate=2008-03-22]
The survey was done along the 36° 30' North
latitude . It was to mark the boundary between the colonies ofVirginia andNorth Carolina . It was done in five stages, using cadastral and geodeticsurveying , being one of the first attempts to mark a boundary so long that it had to be concerned with the arc of the planetEarth . The boundary line would eventually mark the border betweenKentucky andTennessee , as the surveying was not completed in 1819, well after the United States gained its independence from the British Empire.An aberration in the line occurs on the Virginia/Tennessee border, due to the surveyor
Peter Jefferson , father ofThomas Jefferson , continually moving north of the designated latitude. There are three theories on the reason for this: [ [http://www.washcova.com/resources/history.php A Brief History of Washington County, Virginia] , Washington County, Virginia website (accessed March 22, 2008)]
# The surveyor was drunk.
# Iron deposits in the mountains interfered with compass readings.
# People who lived in Tennessee exerted influence over the location of the line.The extension of the line occurred in 1779 and 1780, to where the line would first cross the
Cumberland River . From there Virginia hired Thomas Walker to survey the line to theMississippi River . Walker did this, but did not do a perfect job due to dense virgin forest, mountainous terrain, and rough riverbeds. In 1821 the state of Tennessee did a survey of the line, to determine the true border between Kentucky and Tennessee, but was not resolved due to Kentucky not participating. A joint survey by the two states, commanded by Austin P. Cox and Benjamin Pebbles ran from January 9 to October 20, 1859. They started a 320-mile survey from the New Madrid Bend of the Mississippi River to theCumberland Gap . Every five miles a 3-foot high stone slab was placed to mark the boundary. [Kleber, John E. "The Kentucky Encyclopedia". (University Press of Kentucky). pg.102-103.]The line would later be reused to mark the boundary, north of which slavery could not be practiced, established in the
Missouri Compromise of 1820.A marker at the
Cumberland Gap National Historical Park denotes where the boundaries of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia intersect. It also marks how far west an English colonist was allowed to reside. [cite web|url=http://www.tnhistoryforkids.org/places/cumberland_gap|publisher=Tennesse History for Kids, Inc.|title=Cumberland Gap|accessdate=2008-03-22] Its exact location is N 36'36.045, W 83'40.518. [cite web|url=http://www.waypoint.org/gps4-kn.htm|publisher=FAR laboratories|title=International GPS waypoint registry (Kentucky)]References
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