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.

As the earth was dug up, it was thrown over the wall of the fort, in the face of the besieging commander.  Duquesne was thus informed that his design had been discovered; and being convinced of the futility of any further attempts of that kind he discontinued his mining operations, and once more renewed the attack upon the Station in the manner of a regular Indian siege.  His success, however, was no better than it had been before; the loss appeared to be all upon his side; his stock of provisions was nearly exhausted; having for nine days tried the bravery of his savage force, and tasked his own ingenuity to its utmost, he raised the siege, and abandoned the grand object of the expedition.

During this siege, “the most formidable,” says Mr. Marshall, “that had ever taken place in Kentucky from the number of Indians, the skill of the commanders, and the fierce countenances and savage dispositions of the warriors,” only two men belonging to the Station were killed, and four others wounded.

Duquesne lost thirty-seven men, and had many wounded, who, according to the invariable usage of the Indians, were immediately borne from the scene of action.

Boonesborough was never again disturbed by any formidable body of Indians.  New Stations were springing up every year between it and the Ohio River, and to pass beyond these for the purpose of striking a blow at an older and stronger enemy, was a piece of folly of which the Indians were never known to be guilty.

During Boone’s captivity among the Shawnees, his family, supposing that he had been killed, had left the Station and returned to their relatives and friends in North Carolina; and as early in the autumn as he could well leave, the brave and hardy warrior started to move them out again to Kentucky.  He returned to the settlement with them early the next summer, and set a good example to his companions by industriously cultivating his farm, and volunteering his assistance, whenever it seemed needed, to the many immigrants who were now pouring into the country, and erecting new Stations in the neighborhood of Boonesborough.  He was a good as well as a great man in his sphere, says Mr. Gallagher, (our chief authority for the foregoing incidents); and for his many and important services in the early settlements of Kentucky, he well deserved the title of Patriarch which was bestowed upon him during his life, and all the praises that have been sung to his memory since his death.[38]

[Footnote 36:  “Life of Daniel Boone.”]

[Footnote 37:  Gallagher.]

[Footnote 38:  W.D.  Gallagher, in “Hesperian.”]

CHAPTER XIII.

Captain Boone tried by court-martial—­Honorably acquitted and promoted—­Loses a large sum of money—­His losses by lawsuits and disputes about land—­Defeat of Colonel Rogers’s party—­Colonel Bowman’s expedition to Chillicothe—­Arrival near the town—­Colonel Logan attacks the town—­Ordered by Colonel Bowman to retreat—­Failure of the expedition—­Consequences to Bowman and to Logan.

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