State of Franklin

The State of Franklin (also the Free Republic of Franklin or the State of Frankland) was a part of the United States of America that wanted to become a U.S. state. The proposed state was located in what is now the eastern part of Tennessee.[1]

The State of Franklin (Frankland)
  • Extra-Legal States and Territories
  • Historic Regions of the United States
August 1784 – December 1788

The state of Franklin highlighted on a map of Tennessee
CapitalProvisional

Jonesborough, August 1784 – December 1785
Permanent

Greeneville, December 1785 – 1788
Area
  Coordinates36°10′N 82°49′W
History
Government
  TypeRepublic / Organized, extralegal territory
"Governor" (President) 
 December 1784  December 1788
President/Governor Col. John Sevier
Speaker of the Senate 
 December 1784  December 1788
Landon Carter
 Speaker of the House
August 1784 – June 1785
William Cage
 Speaker of the House
June 1785 – December 1788
Col. Joseph Hardin
LegislatureCongress of Greeneville
 Upper house
Senate
 Lower House
House of Representatives
Historical erapost American Revolution
 North Carolina cedes the Washington District to federal government
April 1784
 Secedes from North Carolina and blocks federal government claims; Franklin proclaimed
August 23 1784
 Petition for Frankland statehood sent to Congress
May 16, 1785
 Provisional name changed to "Franklin"
December 24, 1785
 Disbanded; and re-acquired by North Carolina
March–September 1788 1788
 Area is designated part of the Southwest Territory
1790
Political subdivisionsCounties
Preceded by
Succeeded by
North Carolina
North Carolina
Today part ofEast Tennessee, United States

References

  1. Arthur, John Preston (1914); [sic] "History of Western North Carolina – Chapter VI – The State of Franklin"; John Preston Arthur; 1914; (HTML by Jeffrey C. Weaver); October 1998. Retrieved from New River.
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