Daniel Boone was an American explorer best known for his exploration and settlement of what is now Kentucky
@Pioneer, Career and Personal Life
Daniel Boone was an American explorer best known for his exploration and settlement of what is now Kentucky
Daniel Boone born at
On 14 August 1756 he married Rebecca Bryan, a neighbor whom he had started courting in 1753. The couple went on to have ten children. In spite of having little formal education, Rebecca was a very resourceful and talented woman. She was an experienced community midwife, leather tanner, sharpshooter and linen-maker. She was also a kind-hearted woman who took in the orphaned children of her deceased relatives and raised them along with her own.
Daniel Boone lived a long, happy and adventurous life and died of natural causes at his home in Femme Osage Creek, Missouri, on 26 September 1820 at the age of 85.
Daniel Boone was born on 2 November 1734 in a log cabin in Exeter Township, near Reading, Pennsylvania. He was of English and Welsh ancestry, and his family had migrated to America from England. His father, Squire Boone, worked primarily as a weaver and a blacksmith, and came from a Quaker family. His mother Sarah Morgan also came from a family of Quakers. Daniel was the sixth of eleven children.
Daniel Boone spent his early years on the edge of the Pennsylvania frontier where he learned to hunt as a young boy. He was just 12 when he started using a rifle and would venture into the forests to hunt for food to feed his large family.
He became a very skilled hunter and is said to have shot a panther through the heart as it leaped at him. Even though the validity of the claim is questioned, the story undoubtedly added to his image as a fearless individual.
From a young age he was more interested exploring the woods and roaming the wilderness than in receiving a formal education. Even though he was tutored at home by some family members, he did not receive much formal schooling. However, he loved to read, and the ‘Bible’ and ‘Gulliver's Travels’ were his favorites.
Daniel Boone grew up to become a wagoner and a blacksmith. He joined General Edward Braddock, commander in chief of British forces in North America, as a wagoner in 1755. During the French and Indian War, he participated in Braddock's attempt to capture Fort Duquesne.
During this time he became acquainted with John Findley, a hunter, and through his interaction with him, learned about the Kentucky wilderness which greatly influenced him.
The Battle of the Monongahela was a fateful one for him as the British forces were badly defeated and the baggage wagons were assaulted by the Indian troops. Boone narrowly escaped death and fled for his life on horseback.
On returning home he got married and settled into a domestic life. Soon his family grew to include several children. During this time, he worked as a market hunter and trapper, collecting pelts for the fur trade.
Often he would embark on long hunting expeditions into the wilderness, some of which would last months. He accumulated hundreds of deer skins, and also hunted beavers and otters for fur.