Daniel Boone

Daniel Boone

by Reuben Gold Thwaites
Daniel Boone
Daniel Boone

Daniel Boone

by Reuben Gold Thwaites

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Overview

Daniel Boone by Reuben Gold Thwaites, author of “Father Marquette,” “The Colonies, 1492-1750,” “Down Historic Waterways,” “Afloat on the Ohio,” etc.; Editor of “The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents,” “Chronicles of Border Warfare,” “Wisconsin Historical Collections,” etc.

Ancestry and Training; The Nimrod of the Yadkin; Life on the Border; Red Man against White Man; Kentucky Reached at Last; Alone in the Wilderness; Predecessors and Contemporaries; The Hero of Clinch Valley; The Settlement of Kentucky; Two Years of Darkness; The Siege of Boonesborough; Soldier and Statesman; Kentucky’s Path of Thorns; In the Kanawha Valley; A Serene Old Age

Preface
Poets, historians, and orators have for a hundred years sung the praises of Daniel Boone as the typical backwoodsman of the trans-Alleghany region. Despite popular belief, he was not really the founder of Kentucky. Other explorers and hunters had been there long before him; he himself was piloted through Cumberland Gap by John Finley; and his was not even the first permanent settlement in Kentucky, for Harrodsburg preceded it by nearly a year; his services in defense of the West, during nearly a half century of border warfare, were not comparable to those of George Rogers Clark or Benjamin Logan; as a commonwealth builder he was surpassed by several. Nevertheless, Boone’s picturesque career possesses a romantic and even pathetic interest that can never fail to charm the student of history. He was great as a hunter, explorer, surveyor, and land-pilot--probably he found few equals as a rifleman; no man on the border knew Indians more thoroughly or fought them more skilfully than he; his life was filled to the brim with perilous adventures. He was not a man of affairs, he did not understand the art of money-getting, and he lost his lands because, although a surveyor, he was careless of legal forms of entry. He fled before the advance of the civilization which he had ushered in: from Pennsylvania, wandering with his parents to North Carolina in search of broader lands; thence into Kentucky because the Carolina borders were crowded; then to the Kanawha Valley, for the reason that Kentucky was being settled too fast to suit his fancy; lastly to far-off Missouri, in order, as he said, to get “elbow room.” Experiences similar to his have made misanthropes of many another man--like Clark, for instance; but the temperament of this honest, silent, nature-loving man only mellowed with age; his closing years were radiant with the sunshine of serene content and the dimly appreciated consciousness of world-wide fame; and he died full of years, in heart a simple hunter to the last--although he had also served with credit as magistrate, soldier, and legislator. At his death the Constitutional Convention of Missouri went into mourning for twenty days, and the State of Kentucky claimed his bones, and has erected over them a suitable monument.

There have been published many lives of Boone, but none of them in recent years. Had the late Dr. Lyman Copeland Draper, of Wisconsin, ever written the huge biography for which he gathered materials throughout a lifetime of laborious collection, those volumes--there were to be several--would doubtless have uttered the last possible word concerning the famous Kentucky pioneer. Draper’s manuscript, however, never advanced beyond a few chapters; but the raw materials which he gathered for this work, and for many others of like character, are now in the library of the Wisconsin State Historical Society, available to all scholars. From this almost inexhaustible treasure-house the present writer has obtained the bulk of his information, and has had the advantage of being able to consult numerous critical notes made by his dear and learned friend. Continued…

Product Details

BN ID: 2940014787468
Publisher: Denise Henry
Publication date: 06/05/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 132 KB
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