The newly formed United States had little…
April 1788 CE
Eager to develop additional lands, the new government had decided to pay veterans of the Revolution with warrants for land in the Northwest Territory, which had been organized under federal authority in 1787 by the Northwest Ordinance.
Competing states had agreed to end their claims to the lands; Pennsylvania and Virginia had received some lands in a settlement.
Arthur St. Clair had been appointed by the president as governor of the new territory.
The newly formed Ohio Company of Associates, organized by General Rufus Putnam, had supported provisions in the ordinance to allow veterans to use their warrants to purchase the land.
They bought one and a half million acres (sixty-one hundred square kilometers) of land from Congress.
On April 7, 1788, 48 men of the Ohio Company of Associates, led by General Putnam, arrive at the confluence of the Muskingum and Ohio rivers.
The site is on the east side of the Muskingum River, across from Fort Harmar, a military outpost built three years prior.
Bringing with them the first government sanctioned by the US for this area, they establish the first permanent United States settlement in the Northwest Territory.