[5] Turner, The Frontier in American History, p. 1.

[6] See [Chapter Two].

[7] Quoted by Ray Allen Billington in his introduction to Turner, Frontier and Section, p. 5.

[8] Pennsylvania Archives, Second Series, III, 217-218, 518-522.

[9] This pride was notably demonstrated in the insistence of the Fair Play settlers that a stand be made at Fort Augusta following the Great Runaway. Previous to this, they had pleaded for support for "our Common Cause" in the defense of this frontier. Pennsylvania Archives, Second Series, III, 217.

[10] Pennsylvania Archives, Second Series, X, 27-31, 417, and Fifth Series, II, 29-35.

[11] Quoted in Clinton Rossiter, The First American Revolution (New York, 1956), pp. 4-5.

[12] Turner, The Frontier in American History, p. 37.

[13] Ibid.

[14] See also, George D. Wolf, "The Tiadaghton Question," The Lock Haven Review, Series I, No. 5 (1963), 61-71.