Excerpt from Boone: A Biography. Addressing a large force of Indians and British officers and militia assembled in Ohio in August of to attack the American settlements in Kentucky, Simon Girty spoke with a particular passion:. They are planting fruit trees and plowing the lands where, not long since, were the canebrakes and clover field. Was there a voice in the trees of the forest, or articulate sounds in the gurgling water, every part of this country would call on you to choose among these ruthless invaders, who are laying it waste. Unless you rise in the majesty of your might and exterminate their whole race, you may bid adieu to the hunting grounds of your fathers, to the delicious flesh of the animals with which they abounded—and to the skins with which you were once enabled to purchase your clothing and your rum. By the Shawnees and Mingoes and Delawares and Wyandottes knew it was now or never.
The battlefield ghosts of Blue Licks-Kentucky - Southern Spirit Guide
Through this occupational interest, Boone first learned the easy routes to the area. Boone was captured by Shawnee warriors in He escaped and alerted Boonesborough that the Shawnee were planning an attack. Blue Licks, a Shawnee victory over the Patriots, was one of the last battles of the Revolutionary War, coming after the main fighting ended in October After his death, he was frequently the subject of heroic tall tales and works of fiction. His adventures—real and legendary—were influential in creating the archetypal frontier hero of American folklore.
During the American Revolution, pioneers from western Pennsylvania southward fought two wars simultaneously. Besides supplying troops to the Continental forces, they fought off Indian attacks as fierce as any by Redcoats in the East. Their grim defense prevented Indian incursions into the interior of the former colonies even as war-weary backcountry riflemen finally witnessed the surrender of the army of Lord Charles Cornwallis at Yorktown, Virginia, on October 17, With arms and incitement from the British in Canada, the Indians fought on without letup. Meanwhile, Americans in the East halted even the scant assistance they had been sending west.
Daniel Boone was a hunter, fur trapper and trailblazing American frontiersman whose name is synonymous with the exploration and settlement of Kentucky. Boone became a living legend, thanks in large part to writer John Filson, who mythologized his adventures in the American frontier. His parents, Squire and Sarah, had 11 children in total, with Boone being the sixth.