Life & Times of Col. Daniel Boone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about Life & Times of Col. Daniel Boone.

Life & Times of Col. Daniel Boone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about Life & Times of Col. Daniel Boone.

[Footnote 6:  John H. Wheeler.  “Historical Sketches of North Carolina.”]

[Footnote 7:  The children by this marriage were nine in number. Sons: James, born in 1756, Israel, Jesse, Daniel, and Nathan. Daughters:  Susan, Jemima, Lavinia, and Rebecca.  The eldest, James, was killed, as will appear in our subsequent narrative, by the Indians, in 1773; and Israel fell in the battle of Blue Licks, May 17th, 1782.  In 1846, Nathan, a captain in the United States service, was the only surviving son.]

CHAPTER III.

The Seven Years’ War—­Cherokee war—­Period of Boone’s first long excursions to the West—­Extract from Wheeler’s History of Tennessee—­Indian accounts of the western country—­Indian traders—­Their reports—­Western travelers—­Doherty—­Adair—­Proceedings of the traders—­Hunters—­Scotch traders—­Hunters accompany the traders to the West—­Their reports concerning the country—­Other adventurers—­Dr. Walker’s expedition—­Settlements in South-western Virginia—­Indian hostilities—­Pendleton purchase—­Dr. Walker’s second expedition—­Hunting company of Walker and others—­Boone travels with them—­Curious monument left by him.

The reader will recollect that the period referred to in the last chapter, comprehended the latter years of the celebrated Seven Years’ War.  During the chief portion of this period, the neighboring Colony of Virginia suffered all the horrors of Indian war on its western frontier—­horrors from which even the ability, courage, and patriotism of Washington were for a long time unable to protect them.  The war was virtually terminated by the campaign of 1759, when Quebec was taken.  The next year Canada was ceded to England; and a Cherokee war, which had disturbed the border setters of North Carolina, was terminated.  Daniel Boone’s biographers all agree that it was about this time when he first began to make long excursions toward the West; but it is difficult to fix exactly the date of his first long journey through the woods in this direction.  It is generally dated in 1771 or 1772, We now make a quotation from Ramsay’s Annals of Tennessee, which shows, beyond the possibility of a doubt, that he hunted on the Wataga River in 1760, and renders it probable that he was in the West at an earlier date.  Our readers will excuse the length of this quotation, as the first part of it gives so graphic a picture of the hunter and pioneer life of the times of Daniel Boone, and also shows what had been done by others in western explorations before Boone’s expeditions commenced.

“The Colonists of the Carolinas and of Virginia had been steadily advancing to the West, and we have traced their approaches in the direction of our eastern boundary,[8] to the base of the great Appalachian range.”

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Life & Times of Col. Daniel Boone from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.