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Saturday 9 February 2013

Daniel Boone

Daniel Boone was an American frontiersman and explorer who is best known for his role in the westward expansion of the United States during the late 18th century

Daniel Boone was born in Pennsylvania on November 2, 1734 into a family of Quakers - his father had come to the colonies from England in 1713 and settled in Pennsylvania. 

Later the Boone family left the Quakers and relocated to the Yadkin River Valley of North Carolina. It seems that Mr. Boone’s children kept marrying outside their faith and sometimes a child would be on the way before the actual marriage ceremony.

Boone received his first rifle at the age of 12. He was trained by locals, both Europeans and Native Americans. One tale that became part of his image was of calmly shooting down a panther as it attempted to pounce on him.


Unfinished portrait by Chester Harding 1820 Wikipedia Commons Public Domain

Daniel Boone married Rebecca Bryan (January 9, 1739 – March 18, 1813) in Yadkin River, North Carolina on August 14, 1756.  Rebecca was nearly as tall as her husband and was very attractive with black hair and dark eyes.

He did have a daughter named Jemima, but what many historians now agree on is Jemima was actually fathered by Daniel’s brother Ned. Boone knew this but brought Jemima up as his own along with the many other children he and Rebecca had together. It seems that the relationship started between Rebecca and the brother as Boone had been away a couple of years on one of his hunting trips.


Two of his sons were killed by Native Americans. One was tortured to death as a warning for settlers to leave Kentucky, which under Daniel’s protest, was heeded. And two of his daughters were kidnapped by an Indian war party. Boone was able to get the girls back and scare the war party off.

Boone was captured by Native American groups several times. In 1775 he was taken and adopted by a Shawnee Chief, who gave him the name, Shel-tow-ee, meaning “Big Turtle” because he carried a large pack and moved very slow. Boone stayed with the Shawnees for five months before escaping and riding a stolen horse 160 miles back to Fort Boonesborough. By this time his family had returned to North Carolina thinking he was dead.

Boone cleared a forest path called the Wilderness Road in 1775. The Wilderness Road was a trail that led from what is now eastern Virginia to the region that would later become Kentucky. Boone and a group of axmen carved out this path through the dense wilderness, making it possible for settlers to travel westward into Kentucky and beyond. This trail played a crucial role in the westward expansion of the United States, allowing for the migration of pioneers and settlers into the frontier regions of Kentucky and Tennessee. It became one of the main routes for early American pioneers heading into the western frontier during the late 18th century.

Boone is often associated with Kentucky, where he helped establish Boonesborough, one of the first American settlements west of the Appalachian Mountains. He played a significant role in the early history of the state.

George Caleb Bingham's Daniel Boone Escorting Settlers through the Cumberland Gap (1851–52) 
 
Boone wasn't just a hunter, trapper, guide, and adventurer. He saw military action in the American Revolution, French and Indian War, and many other Indian conflicts such as Dunmore's War. In his lifetime he was a tavern owner, surveyor, land speculator, legislator, horse trader, and slave owner.

Daniel Boone is often depicted wearing a coonskin cap. However, there is no evidence that Boone actually liked coonskin caps. In fact, he is reported to have said that he found them to be unstylish and instead donned hats made from beaver.

Boone spent his final years living in Missouri. He moved there in 1799 when it was still part of Spanish Louisiana. There he was appointed as “judge and jury” as well as military leader of the Femme Osage district.

This engraving by Alonzo Chappel (circa 1861) depicts an elderly Boone hunting in Missouri.

Before the end of the 18th century, more than 200,000 European people migrated to Kentucky by following the route marked by Boone.

Daniel Boone died September 26, 1820. He and his wife Rebecca Boone were buried on Tuque Creek in Missouri. In 1845 they were reburied in the Frankfort Cemetery in Kentucky.

Sources http://historyiselementary.blogspot.co.uk/,
http://www.ushistoryjournal.com

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