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.
Cox, and fifteen others, and came into the valley since known as Carter’s Valley, in Hawkins County, Tennessee.  They hunted eighteen mouths upon Clinch and Powell’s Rivers.  Wallen’s Creek and Wallen’s Ridge received their name from the leader of the company; as also did the station which they erected in the present Lee County, Virginia, the name of Wallen’s station.  They penetrated as far north as Laurel Mountain, in Kentucky, where they terminated their journey, having met with a body of Indians, whom they supposed to be Shawnees.  At the head of one of the companies that visited the West this year ’came Daniel Boon, from the Yadkin, in North Carolina, and traveled with them as low as the place where Abingdon now stands, and there left them.’

“This is the first time the advent of Daniel Boon to the western wilds has been mentioned by historians, or by the several biographers of that distinguished pioneer and hunter.  There is reason, however, to believe that he had hunted upon Watauga earlier.  The writer is indebted to N. Gammon, Esq., formerly of Jonesboro, now a citizen of Knoxville, for the following inscription, still to be seen upon a beech tree, standing in sight and east of the present stage-road, leading from Jonesboro to Blountsville, and in the valley of Boon’s Creek, a tributary of Watauga:” 

D. Boon
CillED A. Bar On
Tree
in ThE
yEAR
1760

“Boon was eighty-six years old when he died, which was September, 1820.  He was thus twenty-six years old when the inscription was made.  When he left the company of hunters in 1761, as mentioned above by Haywood, it is probable that he did so to revisit the theatre of a former hunt upon the creek that still bears his name, and where his camp is still pointed out near its banks.  It is not improbable, indeed, that he belonged to, or accompanied, the party of Doctor Walker, on his first, or certainly on his second, tour of exploration in 1760.  The inscription is sufficient authority, as this writer conceives, to date the arrival of Boon in Tennessee as early as its date, 1760, thus preceding the permanent settlement of the country nearly ten years.”

It will be observed that the historian in this extract, spells Boon without the final e, following the orthography of the hunter, in his inscription on the tree.  This orthography Boone used at a later period, as we shall show.  But the present received mode of spelling the name is the one which we have adopted in this work.

On a subsequent page of Wheeler’s history, we find the following memorandum: 

“Daniel Boone, who still lived on the Yadkin, though he had previously hunted on the Western waters, came again this year to explore the country, being employed for this purpose by Henderson & Company.  With him came Samuel Callaway, his kinsman, and the ancestor of the respectable family of that name, pioneers of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Missouri.  Callaway was at the side of Boon when, approaching the spurs of the Cumberland Mountain, and in view of the vast herds of buffalo grazing in the valleys between them, he exclaimed, ’I am richer than the man mentioned in Scripture, who owned the cattle on a thousand hills; I own the wild beasts of more than a thousand valleys.’”

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