HEROES AND HUNTERS OF THE WEST

THE
WOUNDED PIONEER.
Daniel Boone.
In all notices of border life, the name of Daniel Boone appears first—as the
hero and the father of the west. In him were united those qualities which make
the accomplished frontiersman—daring, activity, and circumspection, while he was
fitted beyond most of his contemporary borderers to lead and command.
Daniel Boone was born either in Virginia or Pennsylvania, and at an early age
settled in North Carolina, upon the banks of the Yadkin. In 1767, James Findley,
the first white man who ever visited Kentucky, returned to the settlements of
North Carolina, and gave such a glowing account of that wilderness, that Boone
determined to venture into it, on a hunting expedition. Accordingly, in 1769,
accompanied by Findley and four others, he commenced his journey. Kentucky was
found to be all that the first adventurer had represented, and the hunters had
fine sport. The country was uninhabited, but, during certain seasons, parties of
the northern and southern Indians visited it upon hunting expeditions. These
parties frequently engaged in fierce conflicts, and hence the beautiful region
was known as the “dark and bloody ground.”
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Earl
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