The area of far western Virginia and eastern Kentucky supported large
Archaic Native American populations. The first known Europeans to enter what is present-day Lee County were a party of Spanish explorers, Juan de Villalobos and Francisco de Silvera, sent by
Hernando de Soto in 1540, in search of gold. The county was formed after the American Revolutionary War in 1792 from
Russell County. It was named for
Light Horse Harry Lee, the
Governor of Virginia from 1791 to 1794, who was famous for his exploits as a leader of light cavalry during the war. He was the father of
Robert E. Lee, later a West Point graduate and career U.S. Army officer who became the
General in Chief of the Armies of the Confederate States during the
American Civil War. Lee County was the final front on the Kentucky Trace, now known as the
Wilderness Road and
The Trail of the Lonesome Pine. During the 1780s and 1790s, fortified buildings called "
stations" were built along the trail for shelter from Indian raids as the settlers followed
Daniel Boone's path into the Kentucky frontier. The stations in Lee County were
Yoakum Station at present-day
Dryden, west to Powell River and Station Creek at today's
Rocky Station, then to
Mump's Fort at
Jonesville, followed by
Prist Station, Martin's Station at Rose Hill,
Chadwell Station at
Chadwell Gap,
Owen Station at
Ewing, and finally
Gibson Station, which still bears its original name. One of the largest early landowners was Revolutionary War officer and explorer
Joseph Martin, after whom
Martin's Station and Martin's Creek at
Rose Hill are named. Due to his rank of command, Martin had been awarded some in a land grant after the war. He divided the land and sold it as a speculator. Rose Hill was established in 1832 as the first federally recognized post office in Lee County. In 1814, parts of Lee, Russell, and
Washington counties were combined to form
Scott County. In 1856, parts of Lee, Russell, and Scott counties were combined to form
Wise County, named after the last governor of Virginia before the Civil War. ==Economy==