Fort Dobbs was an 18th-century fort in the Yadkin–Pee Dee River Basin region of the Province of North Carolina. It was built to protect the American settlers of the western portion of what was then Rowan County, and served as a vital outpost for soldiers, traders, and colonial officials. On February 27, 1760, the fort was the site of an engagement between Cherokee warriors and Provincial soldiers that ended in a victory for the Provincials. The name honors Arthur Dobbs, the Royal Governor of N.C. from 1755 to 1765, who played a role in designing the fort and authorized its construction.
About Fort Dobbs (North Carolina) in brief

In 1756, the North Carolina Legislature set aside a sum of £1000 for the construction of a fortified log structure for the protection of settlers inRowan County from French and French-allied Native American attacks. By 1754, six western counties—Orange, Granville, Johnston, Cumberland, Anson, and Rowan—held around 22,000 residents out of the colony’s total population of 65,000. Within three years, most of North. Carolina’s population increase, driven mainly by the immigration of Scots-Irish and German settlers traveling from Pennsylvania on the Great Wagon Road, was occurring in seven western counties created after 1740. The new frontier settlements required regular protection. The total cost of theFort Stanwix in New York, begun in 1758 in a then-modern star fort style, cost £60,000 to erect. The construction of Fort Prince George in South Carolina cost that province’s House of Commons £3,000 in 1759. The same tract of land was used for the Fourth Creek Meeting House, which was the principal structure around which the modern city of Statesville was founded, and was the birthplace of James Oliphant, then a member of Fergus Sloan’s Congregation of the Free Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The land was a part of a 560-acre tract owned by one James Olphant.
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