Daniel
Boone was a famous American pioneer, best
known for exploring and settling Kentucky.
Daniel was born on October 22, 1734 near
present-day Reading, Pennsylvania. He was
the son of a Quaker weaver and blacksmith
and had 10 brothers and sisters
From
an early age, Daniel loved exploring. He
was said to have made friends with the local
Indians as a boy and was given a rifle by
his father when he was 12, with which he
killed his first bear. He quickly learned
to shoot and was an expert hunter and marksman.
At age 15, his family began a year-round
voyage to rural North Carolina. At the age
of 19, he left his family to participate
in the French and Indian War. As a soldier
in the war, he heard stories of the untamed
wilderness in the west. Nevertheless, after
the war, Boone returned home and married
Rebecca Bryan. Together, Daniel and Rebecca
would have ten children. Always the explorer,
Daniel would leave his wife and family for
months at a time exploring the wilderness
on the edge of the Pennsylvania frontier.
He would support his family by selling the
animals he shot at market. As settlement
increased in the region, competition for
available game became stiff. Boone soon fell
into debt and was taken to court several
times by his creditors. He then moved his
family to Yadkin, North Carolina - on the
edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
During
a hunting trip in 1767, Boone first stepped
foot in Kentucky. In 1769, he set out with
three other frontiersman to explore the land.
On June 7 of that year, Boone and the frontiersman
passed the Cumberland Gap, a gap in the Appalachian
Mountains that rests at the intersection
of Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee. The
men next trekked west where they saw the
falls of the Ohio River near modern-day Louisville
before heading back to Yadkin. Boone returned
to Kentucky with his family in 1773 with
the intentions of starting a settlement.
When part of his party was captured and killed
by local Indians, the settlement was abandoned.
The massacre was the beginning of what came
to be known as Lord Dunmore's War, a violent
struggle between settlers and Shawnee Indians.
In 1774, after the Battle of Point Pleasant,
the Shawnee's were forced to relinquish their
lands in Kentucky and West Virginia.
In
1775, Boone was hired as trailblazer by Richard
Henderson, a prominent judge who wished to
start a settlement in Kentucky called Transylvania.
Boone blazed what came to be known as Wilderness
Road, a path through the Cumberland Gap into
central Kentucky. Boone and about 30 workers
carved and marked the path from the Cumberland
Gap to the Kentucky River where he established
the settlement of Boonesborough. Wilderness
Road was steep and rough, and could only
be traversed by foot or by horseback. Thousands
of settlers descending upon the region would
use the Wilderness Road. In September of
that year, Boone brought his family to live
in Boonesborough, where there was an abundance
of "salt licks." Previously, salt could only
be obtained via the West Indies. Despite
the constant threat of Indian attacks, Boone
and his family remained at Boonesborough.
In 1776, however, local Indians captured his
daughter and two other girls. Boone and a group
of settlers caught up with the Indians and
ambushed them, rescuing the girls. The episode
would be dramatized in the famous novel by
James Fenimore Cooper, The Last of the
Mohicans.
Boone
would eventually be captured by Shawnee Indians,
who adopted them into their tribe. Meanwhile,
his wife and family figured him for dead
and moved to North Carolina. In 1779, Boone
returned to North Carolina and brought his
family back to Kentucky, establishing a new
settlement known as Boone's Station. Boone
then began making money by finding plots
of land for new settlers. He next fought
in Ohio Country during the Revolutionary
War and then settled near Limestone, Kentucky,
where he was named to the Virginia State
Assembly (at the time Kentucky was claimed
by Virginia). In Limestone, he kept a tavern
and worked as a surveyor, horse trader, and
land speculator. He even owned even slaves
and had a chronicle made of his adventures.
In 1795, however, Daniel and his wife made
the decision to move back to Kentucky after
a series of failed land speculation deals
and mounting debts. Boone's extensive land
claims in Kentucky were never properly registered,
and he left the territory he explored with
no land. Some of his claims were later restored
by the U.S. Government in 1814, in honor
of his service tot he nation.
In
1799, Daniel and Rebecca moved to Missouri
in the company of his children and grandchildren.
Rebecca died in 1813 and Daniel died on September
26, 1820 and was buried next to Rebecca. Today,
Daniel Boone remains an iconic figure in American
history. Today, a scenic highway and national
forest are named in his honor in Kentucky.
In addition, the National Boy Scouts were originally
called the Sons of Daniel Boone.
More than any other man, Daniel
Boone was responsible for the exploration and
settlement of Kentucky. His grandfather came
from England to America in 1717. His father
was a weaver and blacksmith, and he raised
livestock in the country near Reading, Pennsylvania.
Daniel was born there on November 2, 1734.