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Dunham Families of TennesseeA Dunham/Dunam family appeared at Fort Nashborough (later Nashville, Tennessee) in the spring of 1780. Two of these Dunham men, both named John, and probably John Sr. and John Jr., signed the Cumberland Compact there in May 1780. [1] The Dunham men had come with Colonel Donelson from the Virginia/North Carolina area which included the land between the Watauga and Nollichucky Rivers.
It appears the John Dunham, Sr. returned to Washington Co., but John Dunham, Jr. and Joseph Dunham remained in the Cumberland settlement and their land became known as Dunham’s Station. That area can be identified today because it is the site of the Belle Meade Plantation, an historic restoration which is open to the public. NOTE: Two spellings of the surname are used in this document; Dunam and Dunham. Many of the local history books used the Dunam spelling, but the original Cumberland Compact signatures of John Dunham Sr. and John Dunham Jr. used the spelling DUNHAM. Until further research can help to identify the origin of this Dunham family, I have begun this line of Dunhams with the hypothetical father 1 Dunham who would have been born say about 1705-1710.
References: 1. Henderson, Archibald, Conquest of the Old Southwest, The Century Co. Publisher, 1920 Chapter XII-XIV 2. 1776 Petition of the Inhabitants of Washington District to the Hon. the Provincial Congress of North Carolina 3. Op Cit., Henderson
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