CCD
HISTORY 201 - History of United States 1
Ohio Company
organization formed (1747) to extend settlements of Virginia westward. The
members were mostly Virginia planters interested in land speculation and the fur
trade. A royal charter (1749) granted the members 200,000 acres around the forks
of the Ohio River, and in 1750 the company employed Christopher Gist to explore the Ohio
valley. The first organized group to develop the region W of the Alleghenies,
the company embarked on vigorous British colonial activity. The company’s
colonizing activities, however, were viewed by the French as a challenge to
their claim to this region. The immediate rivalry helped to bring on the final
French and Indian War. Later the Ohio Company merged its interests with another
land company, but the American Revolution obstructed its plans.
See K. P. Bailey, The Ohio Company of Virginia and the Westward Movement,
1748–1792 (1939); A. P. James, The Ohio Company (1959).
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002
Columbia University Press