Long ago, most people in the United States of America didn’t really think about going to the west. Well, except for Daniel Boone. Who is he? This man is known for many things including being apart of the French and Indian war. Daniel’s journey to the west was inspired because of his love for the wilderness and thrill for adventure. First, here’s some background information on Daniel Boone before his journey. Daniel Boone was born by Quakers near Reading, Pennsylvania in 1734. At a young age he became fascinated with hunting and the wilderness. The wilderness was like his second home, he spent days wandering through the woods watching birds. Boone didn’t attend school, so he was taught to read and write by his older brother’s wife. In …show more content…
During the war he joined British Major General Edward Braddock on his march to attack Fort Duquesne. During the trip he was told about a place where the Indians would hunt, they called it “Kentucke”. Before they could reach the fort they were overpowered and Boone got a horse and escaped. While returning to North Carolina, he kept dreaming about “Kentucke”. In 1769 John Fidler, a trader who worked alongside Boone during the attack of Fort Duquesne, asked him to accompany him on a trip to Kentucky. Boone accepted it and joined John’s journey with four others. They built a base and spent several months down there hunting and exploring the great big wilderness. “For a man so in love with the wilderness,
Kentucky was a paradise to Daniel Boone” (“Daniel Boone In Kentucky” ExploreSouthernHistory.com. Dale Cox. Web. 16 May, 2018). Several months into the expedition, him and John were captured by the Shawnee tribe. The indians took all of their belongings and set them free. One thing was given to them, a warning to never return. He disregarded the warning and stayed in Kentucky for two more years. In 1771 he returned home to North
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Henderson’s plan was to establish a new colony called Transylvania. Boone couldn’t blaze the trail all by himself, so thirty one axe men (including his brother and son-in-law) joined him. Even though it seemed easy, there were difficulties. The path was too narrow for a wagon. The task was to combine many trails into one continuous route by clearing underbrush and overhanging foliage. On their trip they avoided going through Troublesome Creek, which had plagued previous travelers. About twenty miles from the Cumberland Gap, the men and him rested at Martin’s Station. Just before reaching their settlement site in late March, the group was attacked by the Shawnee tribe. It seems that Boone has bad luck, when it comes to being in Kentucky. Him or his family is always getting attacked by indians. Most of his men escaped and a few were killed or injured. It wasn’t until April, when they finally reached the south side of the Kentucky River. The trail became known as the Wilderness Road, the roughest, most disagreeable road on the