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  1. Elections in Tennessee. Tennessee's representation increased from 3 seats to 6 as a result of the 1810 census. Its elections were held April 1–2, 1813, after the term began but before Congress's first meeting. Incumbent re-elected. Incumbent re-elected.

  2. Tennessee is one of the 50 states of the United States. What is now Tennessee was initially part of North Carolina, and later part of the Southwest Territory. It was admitted to the Union on June 1, 1796, as the 16th state. Tennessee earned the nickname "The Volunteer State" during the War of 1812, when many Tennesseans helped with the war ...

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  4. Aug 30, 2022 · View 1813 Historical Tennessee Counties on Google Maps. County boundaries change over time: this historical Google Maps tool contains the full dataset from the Newberry Atlas, helping to ensure you are searching in the correct county for the years you are researching.

  5. Government. v. t. e. The 1813 Tennessee gubernatorial election was held between 5 and 6 August 1813 in order to elect the Governor of Tennessee. Democratic-Republican nominee and incumbent Governor Willie Blount was re-elected nearly unanimously as he ran unopposed. [1]

  6. This map is much the same as "Tennessee" published in Carey and Lea's American Atlas in 1822. Like that map, it includes border text with information about the state below the map and on a separate appendix sheet. It has 52 counties, each colored separately. Many rivers are given, as are mountain ranges. Southeastern Tennessee has "Cherokee Lands" and Ross's. Roads through central and eastern ...

  7. By 1813, how-ever, the date of the fourth edition, the map underwent a transfor-mation, including the change of the name to "Tennessee." Carey's Minor Atlases (1802, 1806, 1810) appear to be variations of the Pocket Atlases, with the Tennessee maps remaining the same. The map "Tennessee" appearing first in Arrowsmith and Lewis'

  8. teva.contentdm.oclc.org › digital › collectionCONTENTdm - OCLC

    This beautifully colored map of Tennessee constructed by John Melish from the surveys of John Strothers following the War of 1812. Shows early county lines and Indian boundaries prior to Jackson's Treaty and other cessions of Indian land after the war, along with some statistical and geological remarks. Western Tennessee is still Chickasaw territory, and the southeastern corner of the state is ...

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