Long Island of the Holston: Where the Frontier Converged

First in a 12-part monthly series to commemorate Sullivan County’s role in the 250th birthday of the United States of America

Before Sullivan County existed, before Tennessee had a name, there was Long Island of the Holston. Lying along a broad bend of the Holston River near present-day Kingsport, the island and its surrounding flats formed one of the most important crossroads in the southern Appalachian frontier. By the 1770s, Long Island was not simply a geographic feature—it was a place where Native diplomacy, European migration, and Revolutionary politics converged.

For centuries, Long Island served as a sacred Cherokee council ground. Its location along the Holston River made it a natural hub for travel, trade, and negotiation. Indigenous routes followed the river valley, linking the interior Southeast with mountain passes to the east. Long before American independence, this place already carried regional importance.

When European settlement accelerated in the mid-18th century, newcomers followed existing paths. Many arrived through the long migration chain beginning on the Philadelphia Wagon Road, which generally followed the Great Indian Warriors’ Path. German and Scots-Irish families moved south through the Shenandoah Valley, some turning towards the Carolina backcountry and others continuing west toward the Holston Valley. These settlers brought expectations of permanent farms, enforceable land titles, churches, and courts. Settlers moved through Sapling Grove—Evan Shelby’s frontier settlement and “way station” on the tract that later became Bristol.

Long Island marked a threshold. Beyond it, settlement thinned, and uncertainty increased. Daniel Boone often traveled the Holston Valley while journeying between Virginia, North Carolina, and Kentucky.  Boone did not settle here, but he knew the river crossings well. For Boone and countless others, Long Island represented the point where established society gave way to risk and opportunity.

By the mid-1770s, Long Island had become a pressure point. British officials, seeking to destabilize the frontier during the Revolutionary War, encouraged Cherokee resistance to westward expansion. At the same time, settlers continued crossing treaty lines, often ahead of legal authority. Diplomacy, land hunger, and imperial strategy collided along the river.

In 1776, while independence was debated in Philadelphia, uncertainty ruled the Holston Valley. Messages warning of violence passed through Long Island. Cherokee leaders, traders, militia officers, and settlers moved through the same corridor carrying competing visions for the land’s future. Here, independence was not abstract—it was inseparable from survival.

The significance of Long Island lies in how directly national decisions shaped local outcomes. Treaties negotiated on this ground determined whether families upstream and downstream would remain or be forced to move.

The following year, the Treaty of Long Island of Holston would open vast areas to American settlement, permanently reshaping the region. But in 1776, that future was not yet assured. Long Island remained a place of negotiation and fragile balance.

As America approaches its 250th anniversary, Long Island of the Holston reminds us that the nation’s founding unfolded not only in capitals, but at contested crossroads where geography made history unavoidable.

Next in the series: February 2026 | 2 of 12 — From Fort Robinson to Fort Patrick Henry: Building a Defense Network in the Holston Valley

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