0:00 / 29:28

About This Episode

Live recording of Dockters Without Borders from April 13, 2026 on RKCM Internet Radio.

Show Notes

In this history-focused episode of Dockters Without Borders, the father-and-son hosting duo continues their deep dive into early Tennessee history, examining the rise and fall of the State of Franklin — the ambitious but short-lived attempt by settlers west of the Appalachian Mountains to form their own state from North Carolina's western territories. Along the way, they explore family genealogy tied to the American Revolution, the military genius of the Cherokee leader Dragging Canoe, and how the failure of the State of Franklin ultimately shaped the process by which territories became states under the U.S. Constitution.

Topics Covered

  • Overview of the State of Franklin and its origins in the post-Revolutionary War southwest territories
  • The Watauga Association (1772) as a precursor to organized self-governance over the Appalachians
  • Demographic shifts: settlers pouring into East and Middle Tennessee after the 1783 Treaty of Paris
  • Family history and the story of ancestor William Keeble — Valley Forge veteran, Yorktown officer, and unfortunate card player
  • Arthur Campbell's grand vision of a larger Appalachian state versus John Sevier's more limited 12-county proposal
  • Dragging Canoe and the Chickamauga resistance: asymmetric warfare and the ongoing threat to frontier settlements
  • Benjamin Franklin's refusal to endorse the state named in his honor, and Congress's refusal to recognize it
  • The collapse of the State of Franklin (~1790) and its legacy: the Southwest Territory, the shift from the Articles of Confederation to the Constitution, and Tennessee's 1796 statehood

Notable Moments

  • Dragging Canoe's prophecy: The hosts highlighted a quote in which Dragging Canoe warned fellow Cherokee leaders that white settlers would never stop taking land — a prediction the hosts acknowledged as tragically accurate and "clairvoyant."
  • Dragging Canoe as military genius: "I honestly think Dragging Canoe is one of the greatest military commanders that this country has ever produced, even though he was on the other side." His ability to project force across East Tennessee on horseback was compared to George Washington's own asymmetric tactics.
  • Why the State of Franklin failed: It was too decentralized to tax, raise a militia, deliver mail, or guarantee settlers' safety — illustrating the tension between Appalachian independence and the practical need for governance.
  • Tennessee's foundational role: The hosts emphasized that the story of how raw frontier land legally becomes a U.S. state "can't be told without Tennessee" — from the Watauga Compact to the Southwest Territory to statehood in 1796.
  • Related podcast mention: One of the hosts co-produces a Winston Churchill podcast called Churchill, The Finest Half Hour, available on Spotify.

Tune in to Dockters Without Borders on RKCM Internet Radio — community radio, for the community, by the community. Episode date: April 13, 2026.