Daniel Boone – North American Explorer
I have never been lost, but I will admit to being confused for several weeks.”
~ Daniel Boone~
Before Washington began to fight the battles of the Revolution in the east, Daniel Boone and other famous hunters were fighting bears and Indians in what was then called the west.
By that war in the woods, these brave and hardy men helped us to get possession of that part of the country.
Daniel Boone was born in Pennsylvania.
His father moved to North Carolina, and Daniel helped him cut down the trees round their log cabin in the forest.
He plowed the land, which was thick with stumps, hoed the corn that grew up among those stumps, and then,—as there was no mill near,—he pounded it into meal for “johnny-cake.”
He learned how to handle a gun quite as soon as he did a hoe.
The unfortunate deer or coon that saw young Boone coming toward him knew that he had seen his best days, and that he would soon have the whole Boone family sitting round him at the dinner-table.
When Daniel had grown to manhood, he wandered off with his gun on his shoulder, and crossing the mountains, entered what is now the state of Tennessee.
That whole country was then a wilderness, full of savage beasts and still more savage Indians; and Boone had many a sharp fight with both.
D. Boon killed a bar on (this) tree in the year 1760.
More than a hundred and thirty years ago, he cut these words on a beech-tree, still standing in Eastern Tennessee,—”D. Boon killed a bar on (this) tree in the year 1760.”
You will see if you examine the tree, on which the words can still be read, that Boone could not spell very well; but he could what was considered more important then and that was to shoot to kill.
The tree is still standing on the banks of Boone’s Creek, near Jonesboro, Washington County, Tennessee.
Nine years after he cut his name on that tree, Boone, with a few companions, went to a new part of the country.
It was called Kentucky. There he saw buffalo, deer, bears, and wolves enough to satisfy the best hunter in America.
This region was a kind of No Man’s Land, because, though many tribes of Native Americans roamed over it, none of them pretended to own it. These bands of Indians were always fighting and trying to drive each other out, so Kentucky was often called the “Dark and Bloody Ground.”
Wilderness Road
In 1775 Boone, with a party of thirty men, chopped a path through the forest from the mountains of Eastern Tennessee to the Kentucky River, a distance of about two hundred miles. This was the first path in that part of the country leading to the great west.
It was called the “Wilderness Road.” Over that road, which thousands of emigrants traveled afterward, Boone took his family, with other settlers, to the Kentucky River.
There they built a fort called Boonesboro’.
That fort was a great protection to all the first settlers in Kentucky. In fact, it is hard to see how the state could have grown up without it. So in one way, we can say with truth that Daniel Boone, the hunter, fighter, and road-maker, was a state-builder besides.
Boone’s daughter kidnapped
One day Boone’s young daughter was out, with two other girls, in a canoe on the river. Suddenly some Indians pounced on them and carried them off.
One of the girls, as she went along, broke off twigs from the bushes, so that her friends might be able to follow her track through the woods.
An Indian caught her doing it, and told her that he would kill her if she did not instantly stop. Then she slyly tore off small bits of her dress, and dropped a piece from time to time.
Boone and his men followed the Indians like bloodhounds.
They picked up the bits of dress, and so easily found which way the savages had gone. They came up with the Indians just as they were sitting down round a fire to eat their supper.
Creeping toward them behind the trees as softly as a cat creeps up behind a mouse, Boone and his men aimed their rifles and fired.
Two of the Indians fell dead, the rest ran for their lives, and the girls were carried back in safety to the fort.
Boone Captured by Indians
Boone himself was caught and carried off by the Indians.
They respected his courage so much that they would not kill him, but decided to adopt him; that is take him into the tribe as one of their own people, or make an Indian of him.
They pulled out all his hair except one long lock, called the “scalp-lock,” which they left to grow in Indian fashion.
The squaws and girls braided bright feathers in this lock, so that Boone looked quite gay. Then the Indians took him down to a river. There they stripped him, and scrubbed him with all their might, to get his white blood out, as they said.
Next, they painted his face in stripes with red and yellow clay, so that he looked, as they thought, handsomer than he ever had before in his life.
When all had been done, and they were satisfied with the appearance of their new Indian, they sat down to a great feast, and made merry.
Later in life
Boone lived to be a very old man. He had owned a good deal of land in the west, but he had lost possession of it. When Kentucky began to fill up with people and the game was killed off, Boone moved across the Mississippi into Missouri. He said that he went because he wanted “more elbow room” and a chance to hunt buffalo again.
He now begged the state of Kentucky to give him a small piece of land, where, as he said, he could “lay his bones.”
The people of that state generously helped him to get nearly a thousand acres; but he appears to have soon lost possession of it.
If he actually did lose it, then this brave old hunter, who had opened up the way for such a multitude of emigrants to get farms at the west, died without owning a piece of ground big enough for a grave. He is buried in Frankfort, Kentucky, within sight of the river on which he built his fort at Boonesboro’.
In Summary
Daniel Boone, a famous hunter from North Carolina, opened up a road through the forest, from the mountains of Eastern Tennessee to the Kentucky River. It was called the “Wilderness Road,” and over it thousands of emigrants went into Kentucky to settle. Boone, with others, built the fort at Boonesboro’, Kentucky, and went there to live.
That fort protected the settlers against the Indians, and so helped that part of the country to grow until it became the state of Kentucky.
Other Daniel Boone Activities
- 10 Facts about Daniel Boone and Fun Hands-on Apothecary Salve
- What Did Daniel Boone Wear And Easy Fringe Shirt Activity for Kids
- Daniel Boone Explorer Black Bear Unit Study and Fun Edible Bear Poop
- Amazing Daniel Boone Explorer Lapbook and Fun Hands-on Unit Study
- Learn About Daniel Boone Hunting With a Fun Deer Unit Study & Notebooking Pages
- Daniel Boone Facts For Kids About Colonial Life and Fun Kids’ Games (DIY Button Whirligig)
- Free Fun Daniel Boone Quotes for Beginning Cursive Copywork
- Make a Fun and Easy Salt Dough Daniel Boone Wilderness Road Map
- 6 Facts About When And Where Was Daniel Boone Born And Edible Log Cabin
- Daniel Boone Activities Cooking Easy and Delicious Johnny Cakes on the Trail
- Daniel Boone Exploration DIY Easy Compass Activity and Survival Ideas
- 30 Fun Resources for Learning About Daniel Boone
Free Daniel Boone Lapbook & Unit Study
Look below at these ideas for studying about Daniel Boone and about the colonial/frontier time periods.
LANGUAGE ART IDEAS
Read this short story Daniel Boone’s Dear from American Folklore. Use it to write a longer story or rewrite it.
Read the Obituary on Daniel Boone and describe an American Folk Hero.
Copywork. Grab some quotes about Daniel Boone for copywork.
LIFE DURING THE COLONIAL PERIOD AND ON THE FRONTIER
Daniel Boone’s father was a blacksmith. Read about the different jobs during the colonial period.
Learn about the food eaten during the colonial period.
Grab a huge 205 page free download about Women on the Frontier. I have not read all the way through it, but it has some great pictures and stories. Sometimes in teaching my sons about explorers, I overlook just how resourceful woman had to be too. This .pdf is a nice reminder full of stories.
Free lesson plan for directions on making a colonial recipe, an activity for quilting and dyeing fabrics with household fruits and vegetables.
GEOGRAPHY IDEAS
Research the history of Pennsylvania.
Research the history of the state of Kentucky.
Research about the Appalachian Mountains.
Read about the Appalachian Mountains here in the free .pdf publication.
Free Maps of the Cumberland Gap Area/Wilderness Road.
WILDERNESS SURVIVAL SKILLS
Fire Starting with Glasses Check out the cool YouTube video on how to burn and make fire with eyeglasses. Is it science or fun?
Fire Starting with Sticks. YouTube video.
Learn about how to tan deer hides and small fur skins.
EVENTS DURING THE LIFE OF DANIEL BOOONE.
Grab my other lapbooks.
French and Indian War Lapbook
Grab my free French and Indian lapbook.
American Revolutionary War.
Grab my free American Revolution War lapbook.
HANDS-ON ACTIVITIES
(Pic. attribution: megahowto)
- Build a Fort. Really cool project for those that take their fort building serious.
- Make a Fringed Hunting Shirt. It is important to be sure we teach our kids accurate clothing of the time period. So this site has a very helpful .pdf with pictures that explains how it was done. Click on Fringe on the American Hunting Shirt pdf.
(Pic. Attribution: vaporofcolor)
- Also as shown from the picture above, you can make an easy fringed shirt.
- Look at this site to show the large lapels on Daniel Boone’s clothing. Lots of good pictures here to show time period clothing and their history.
- Play games children would have played while living on the frontier.
- How to build a log cabin diorama– YouTube video.
- Grab a free minibook at Practical Pages. Nadene has a page about a spinning wheel to describe the steps on how to spin. Click on Old Times Colonies.
FREE MEDIA
History of the Early American West – The Frontier (part 1) Time: 14:13 – YouTube. Here is the description: In this mini-documentary, historian Darren R. Reid (University of Edinburgh) explores the development of the frontier in the years leading up to the American Revolution. From Daniel Boone’s exploration of Kentucky in 1769 to the outbreak of Dunmore’s War in 1774, this video is the perfect introduction to the early American west.
A History of the Early American West – The Frontier (part 2) Time: 10:41
Watch National Geographic: Appalachian Trail on Netflix. 50 minutes. “National Geographic straps on the boots to explore the splendors of the Appalachian Trail, the longest marked trail in the United States.”
BOOKS AND MORE FUN RESOURCES
How to Get the Free Lapbook 15 page download
Finally, how to grab the free lapbook and coloring pages. It’s a subscriber freebie.
That means when you sign up to follow me, you get access my subscribers library and this freebie.
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Krista Miller says
Hi Tina, Love ALL of your resources.. I have been using many of them over the last two years with my 2nd and 4th grade students, and with two of my own children. I really appreciate everything you are sharing with us! Thanks so much!
Tina Robertson says
Hi Krista,
Well THANK YOU!! So glad to hear that and I sure enjoy making them. I think I do need some more American history for sure too..
So glad your bunch loves them as much as mine do. Thanks for being here and loved hearing from you.
Linda Deavours says
Excellent
Tina Robertson says
Thank you Linda and thank you for following :o)
Julia says
Love your materials. I’m disappointed that you didn’t include any of his time in MIssouri, where he died.
Tina Robertson says
Hi Julia,
Thanks, yes there is always more to add about his adventurous life for sure.
Thanks for being here.