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Walton War

Walton War
Date1804–1818
Location
Result North Carolinian victory
Territorial
changes
Orphan Strip becomes part of North Carolina
Belligerents
Georgia  North Carolina  South Carolina
Commanders and leaders
John Milledge (1804–1806)
Jared Irwin (1806–1809)
David Brydie Mitchell (1809–1813)
Peter Early (1813–1815)
David Brydie Mitchell (1815–1817)
William Rabun (1817–1818)  Surrendered
North Carolina James Turner (1804–1805)
North Carolina Nathaniel Alexander (1805–1807)
North Carolina Benjamin Williams (1807–1808)
North Carolina David Stone (1808–1810)
North Carolina Benjamin Smith (1810–1811)
North Carolina William Hawkins (1811–1814)
North Carolina William Miller (1814–1817)
North Carolina John Branch (1817–1818)
South Carolina Paul Hamilton (1804–1806)
South Carolina Charles Pinckney (1806–1808)
South Carolina John Drayton (1808–1810)
South Carolina Henry Middleton (1810–1812)
South Carolina Joseph Alston (1812–1814)
South Carolina David Rogerson Williams (1814–1816)
South Carolina Andrew Pickens (1816–1818)  Surrendered
Strength

Georgia National Guard

North Carolina National Guard

South Carolina National Guard

Casualties and losses
None 1 killed None

The Walton War was an 1804 boundary dispute between the U.S. states of North Carolina and Georgia over the twelve-mile-wide strip of land called the Orphan Strip.[1] The Orphan Strip was given to Georgia in 1802. Georgia and North Carolina thus had a shared border. Problems arose when Georgia established Walton County in the small piece of land, because the state boundaries had never been clarified, and it was unclear as to whether the Orphan Strip was part of North Carolina or Georgia.[2]

The Walton War remained a dispute primarily between the settlers and the Walton County government until John Havner, a North Carolinian constable, was killed and North Carolina's Buncombe County called in the militia.[3] By calling in the militia, North Carolina effectively asserted authority over the territory, causing the Walton County government to fail. In 1807, after two years of dispute, a joint commission confirmed that the Orphan Strip belonged to North Carolina, at which point North Carolina extended full amnesty to previous supporters of Walton County.[2] The Walton War officially ended in 1811 when Georgia's own survey reiterated the 1807 commission's findings, and North Carolina took full responsibility for governing the Orphan Strip.[3]

  1. ^ Clarence A. "Cal" Carpenter: The Walton War and Tales of the Great Smoky Mts., Copple House Books, Lakemont, Ga., 1979, 191 pp.
  2. ^ a b McKown, Harry. "December 1804: Walton War". University of North Carolina Libraries. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Martin, Jonathan. "The Walton War". North Carolina History Project. Retrieved May 20, 2012.