__
|
_Howard BOONE _______|
| |
| |__
|
_Canfield (Bud) BOONE , Col._|
| (1948 - 2001) |
| | __
| | |
| |_(gail) _____________|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Chris BOONE
|
| __
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |__
| |
|_Linda K. ___________________|
|
| __
| |
|_____________________|
|
|__
[1278] living - details excluded
________________________
|
_____________________|
| |
| |________________________
|
_Mary CARTER ________|
| |
| | ________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| |________________________
|
|
|--Daniel BOONE
|
| _George BOONE III_______+
| | (1666 - 1744) m 1689
| _Squire BOONE , Sr___|
| | (1696 - 1765) m 1720|
| | |_Mary Milton MAUGRIDGE _+
| | (1668 - 1740) m 1689
|_Jonathan BOONE _____|
|
| _Edward MORGAN _________
| | (1670 - ....) m 1686
|_Sarah MORGAN _______|
(1700 - 1777) m 1720|
|_Elizabeth _____________
(1670 - ....) m 1686
_Squire BOONE , Sr____________________+
| (1696 - 1765) m 1720
_Edward BOONE _______|
| (.... - 1780) m 1758|
| |_Sarah MORGAN ________________________+
| (1700 - 1777) m 1720
_George BOONE _______|
| (1767 - 1841) m 1793|
| | _Joseph BRYAN , Sr____________________+
| | | (1720 - 1804)
| |_Martha BRYAN _______|
| (1740 - ....) m 1758|
| |_Aylee (Alice, Alee, Alyle) LINVILLE _+
| (1722 - 1807)
|
|--Daniel BOONE
| (1796 - 1879)
| ______________________________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |______________________________________
| |
|_Patty HAZELRIGG ____|
m 1793 |
| ______________________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|______________________________________
_Squire BOONE , Sr____________________+
| (1696 - 1765) m 1720
_Daniel BOONE , Col._|
| (1734 - 1820) m 1756|
| |_Sarah MORGAN ________________________+
| (1700 - 1777) m 1720
_Daniel Morgan BOONE _|
| (1769 - 1839) m 1800 |
| | _Joseph BRYAN , Sr____________________+
| | | (1720 - 1804)
| |_Rebecca Ann BRYAN __|
| (1739 - 1813) m 1756|
| |_Aylee (Alice, Alee, Alyle) LINVILLE _+
| (1722 - 1807)
|
|--Daniel BOONE
| (1809 - ....)
| ______________________________________
| |
| _John LEWIS _________|
| | (1766 - ....) m 1786|
| | |______________________________________
| |
|_Sarah Griffin LEWIS _|
(1786 - 1850) m 1800 |
| ______________________________________
| |
|_Elizabeth HARVIE ___|
(1768 - ....) m 1786|
|______________________________________
_John BOONE _________+
| (1701 - 1785)
_Benjamin BOONE _____|
| |
| |_____________________
|
_William BOONE ______|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Daniel BOONE , Capt.
| (1842 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Sarah HOWARD _______|
|
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
[516]
http://www.rootsweb.com/~orgenweb/pioneerbios.html
From "History of Central Oregon," published 1906
Biographical Sketches of Lake County, pg. 909
Transcribed by: Sherrain Glenn
Daniel Boone was born December 28, 1842, in Lincoln county, Tennessee, the son of William and Sarah (Howard) Boone, both of English descent and the former a native of North Carolina. The father was a soldier in the War of 1812, and although still almost a boy, was with General Jackson at the battle of New Orleans. William Boone was the son of Benjamin Boone, who was the son of John Boone, the latter being a brother of Squire Boone, the father of Daniel Boone, the famous Kentucky pathfinder. This branch of the family is descended from George Boone, who came from England and who was an early pioneer of Pennsylvania.
Daniel Boone grew to manhoood on a farm in his native state, and at the age of sixteen was graduated from the Darnell College, of Marshall county, Tennessee. At the age of seventeen he went to Washington county, Arkansas, and on May 27, 1861, enlisted in the confederate army under General McCullough. He was the youngest member of Company I, but was soon made captain of his company. He served in Arkansas until the battle of Elkhorn, or Pea Ridge, when his company was transferred to Corinth, Mississippi. Captain Boone participated in the battles of Iuka. Corinth and the siege of Port Hudson, as well as numerous skirmishes, and was finally returned to Arkansas. He was involved in the battle of Prairie Grove, in the latter state, and later was sent to Mississippi. He was under General Dick Taylor against General Banks in the Red River campaign, during which he was in two hardly contested battles. Returning again to Arkansas, Mr. Boone fought his last battle with General Price at Saline river. During his military service Mr. Boone was wounded numerous times though, fortunately, never very seriously, and his army record is one of bravery and attention to duty.
Following the war our subject taught school for three years in Washington county, Arkansas. He was married June 24, 1868, to Millie Dodson, also a native of Tennessee. He was a merchant and farmer in Washing county for sixteen years, and then brought his family to Modoc county, California, Mainly for the benefit of his own and his family's health, which was very poor in their home state. They arrived in the Surprise valley, California, in the spring of 1884, but soon afterward Mr. Boone came on to Big valley, Lake county, Oregon, and purchased land. He was joined by his family in 1890. He was engaged in the cattle and mule raising business for a number of years in Warner valley, and in 1898 he gave his land and stock to his son and he accepted the position of postmaster at Plush. Here he also started a small store, which he managed in connection with the postoffice, and before many years he had a stock of general merchandise on hand and was doing a good and profitable business. He has recently sold out his store at Plush, but expects soon to engage in business at Lakeview.
Mr. and Mrs. Boone have been parents of nine children, as follows: Erin and Veva, who fell victims of scarlet fever in the Surprise valley, California; Dr. Eugene D. Boone, a graduate from the Missouri Medical College, and now a practicing physician and surgeon at Caldwel, Idaho; J. Early, E. Marvin and George P. Boone, partners in the stock business in Warner valley, Oregon; Mirth and Mayfield Boone.
_George BOONE II_____+
| (1646 - 1706) m 1665
_George BOONE III_______|
| (1666 - 1744) m 1689 |
| |_Sarah (Mary) UPPEY _
| (1646 - ....) m 1665
_Squire BOONE , Sr___|
| (1696 - 1765) m 1720|
| | _John MOGRIDGE ______+
| | | (1630 - 1700)
| |_Mary Milton MAUGRIDGE _|
| (1668 - 1740) m 1689 |
| |_Mary MILTON ________
| (.... - 1697)
|
|--Daniel BOONE , Col.
| (1734 - 1820)
| _____________________
| |
| _Edward MORGAN _________|
| | (1670 - ....) m 1686 |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Sarah MORGAN _______|
(1700 - 1777) m 1720|
| _____________________
| |
|_Elizabeth _____________|
(1670 - ....) m 1686 |
|_____________________
[27]
The records of the Exeter Monthly Meeting show that Daniel, son of Squire and Sarah Boone, was born "8-22-1734"; this being Julian or Old Style of reckoning time, the first month of the year being March, the eighth month would be October, making the date of his birth October 22, 1734, same as shown in his Bible
------------------
About 3 miles south of the home of George Boone III, in Oley Township, Pennsylvania, his son Squire Boone built a log cabin around a large fireplace. Later he built a two-story stone house around the same chimney and fireplace, using part of the log cabin foundation for his stone house. On this Boone homestead in Berks County, Pennsylvania, Daniel Boone was born October 22, 1734, and it was here that he lived until 1750 when the family moved to North Carolina, settling in Rowan County on the Yadkin River.
------------------
Franklin County, Frankfort Cemetery
215 E. Main St., Frankfort ; (502) 227-2403
Although the Boones were originally buried in Missouri, where they had lived the last years of their lives, their remains were moved to Kentucky in 1845; a monument was placed over their graves in 1862
--------------------
Daniel Boone and Rebecca buried near Jemima's farm on land of cousin David Bryan, sp.Mary Power, son of James Bryan and Rebecca Enochs, grandson of Morgan Bryan and Martha Strode, near present Marthasville, Warren County on Teuque Creek, MO. He reserved half an acre near his house for a graveyard.
--------------------
Dr. John Jones, a son of Giles Jones, a native of Wales. Dr. John Jones was Daniel Boone's physician during his declining years and was the source of much information concerning the pioneer.
ref: "Some Boone Descendants and Kindred of the St. Charles District", by Lillian Hays Oliver, p. 191
--------------------
In the fall of 1799, having lost his land in Kentucky because of claim-jumpers, Daniel decided to accept the invitation of Zenon Trudeau, the Spanish Lieutenant Governor of Upper Louisiana, and move farther west, having received favorable reports of this new territory from his son, Daniel Morgan Boone, who had been sent ahead the previous year to look over the land. As a further inducement to lure Boone to Upper Louisiana, Zenon Trudeau had promised generous land grants not only to Daniel but also the the families he would bring with him.
In October 1799, Daniel Boone came to the region known as the St. Charles District, an area having no definite limits but extending from the Missouri River on the south to the British possessions on the north and from the Mississippi River on the east to the Pacific ocean on the west (a) With him came four of his children - Susannah Boone Hays, Jemima Boone Callaway, Daniel Morgan Boone and Nathan Boone - and his brother Squire Boone. All eventually received Spanish Land Grants. Daniel received grant number 1646 - 850 acres; Nathan Boone received grant 1794 - 680 acres; Daniel Morgan Boone received grant number 20 - 510 acres; William Hays grant 1670 - 680.56 acres. All of these were in the Femme Osage District; Squire Boone received 700 acres of land on the Cuivre River.
Here in Missouri, as in Kentucky, he hunted, trapped, explored, fought Indians, and unfortunately continued to be plagued by land troubles, for when the United States purchased Louisiana, it refused to recognize the Trudeau-Boone agreement, though finally in 1813 Congress did pass a bill confirming Boone's Spanish title to 1,000 arpents of land -- not the 10,000 originally promised him.(b)
(a) "Pioneer Families of Missouri", by Bryan and Rose
(b) American State Papers, Vol. II, page 396
Daniel Boone (1734-1820) served as captain, major, and lieutenant-colonel in the Kentucky troops. Was a patriot and member of the Virginia House of Burgesses from Fayette County, Ky., 1781.
Missouri became the 24th state on August 10, 1821
At the time of Daniel's death he was living with his daughter, Jemima (Boone) Callaway about a mile from the cemetery. His wife, Rebecca had died seven years before and he stayed near her grave. He used to visit and sit in the cemetery for hours to be near her. Daniel rode his horse to his son, Nathan Boone's home the day before he died. He became ill there and the Doctor was called but he died at Nathan's that night. He was brought back to Jemima's home in Marthasville and laid out in the barn. They used the barn instead of the house because so many people wanted to come to pay their respects. His funeral was held at the barn and his body was buried near his wife Rebecca. The bodies were later exhumed and moved to Frankfort, KY
One of the nation's most historic routes, the Daniel Boone Wilderness Trail was blazed by the legendary frontiersman in 1775 from Long Island of the Holston at what is now Kingsport, TN, through the Cumberland Gap of Virginia and into Kentucky. It would become the route for hundreds of thousands of settlers of the western frontier.
Colonel Richard Henderson, a Superior Court judge of North Carolina formed the Transylvania Company and solicited the assistance of Boone in negotiating with the Indians and blazing the trail. The Cherokee sold the land between the Cumberland and Kentucky rivers for 5 tons of serviceable goods. Final negotiations were held at Sycamore Shoals (now Elizabethton, TN), an ancient Cherokee treaty ground on the southern bank of the Watauga River, about 15 miles southeast of Long Island on the Holston, a sacred area to the Indians. After the agreement, Boone left for Long Island on the Holston to rendezvous with 30 armed and mounted axmen, among them his brother Squire, and son-in-law William Hays.
On March 10, 1775, Boone led his trail blazers from Long Island to cut the trail through some 200 miles of wilderness northwest through the Cumberland Gap and into Kentucky
http://www.danielboonetrail.com/html/boonetrailbio.html
Tazewell County, VA
Boone Cabin-Fort (1767 - 1768). Built by Daniel Boone. Later the site of the Harman House, used as Tazewell County's first courthouse in 1800. A farmhouse now occupies the site.
http://www.geocities.com/naforts/vasowest.html#taze
-------------
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/HNS/Boone/chronology.html
1750 Family leaves Pennsylvania for the western country; Boone engages in his first "long hunt."
1751 Family settles in Rowan County, North Carolina, on the Yadkin River; Boone takes up hunting as his business.
1755 French and Indian War begins; Boone with Braddock's army during the disastrous defeat near Pittsburgh.
1756 Marries Rebecca Bryan on August 14; they soon settle in Rowan County.
1759 During the Cherokee War, family flees to Culpeper County, Virginia.
1760 Boone first crosses the Blue Ridge during his winter hunt.
1762 The Boones return to Rowan County.
1765 Boone explores the Florida country with an eye to moving there.
1766 Family moves to a site farther west, near present Wilkesboro, North Carolina.
1767 Reaches Kentucky and hunts along the Big Sandy River.
1768 Regulator rebellion in North Carolina
1769 With five others leaves for a long hunt in Kentucky on May 1; captured by Shawnees on December 22.
1771 Boone returns home after two years in Kentucky.
1773 Boone leads party of family and friends to Kentucky, but they are turned back at Cumberland Gap by an Indian attack that kills his eldest son, James, on October 9.
1774 Sent by Virginia authorities to warn Kentucky surveyors of pending war with Shawnees; leads defense of Clinch River settlements during Dunmore's War.
1775 For the Transylvania Company, leads party cutting the Wilderness Road to Kentucky; founds Boonesborough in the face of Shawnee attacks; brings family to Kentucky.
1776 Leads rescue of daughter Jemima and Callaway girls from Shawnees in July; copy of Declaration of Independence reaches Boonesborough in August.
1778 Boone and his men captured by Shawnees while making salt on February 9; he escapes in June; siege of Boonesborough, September 7-18; rejoins Rebecca and children, who had returned to North Carolina.
1779 Leads large party of emigrants to Kentucky in September; settles Boone's Station, north of the Kentucky River.
1780 Participates in attack on Shawnee towns in Ohio; brother Edward killed by Shawnees in October.
1781 Takes elected seat in Virginia assembly in April; captured by invading British forces in June, but soon released.
1782 One of the commanding officers at the Kentuckians' defeat by Indians at the Blue Licks, where son Israel is killed, August 19; in command of a company that attacks Shawnee towns in November.
1783 Relocates family to Limestone, on the Ohio River; takes up tavern keeping, surveying, and land speculating.
1784 The Adventures of Col. Daniel Boon by John Filson published on Boon's fiftieth birthday.
1786 Commands an attack on Shawnee towns in October.
1787 Helps negotiate prisoner exchange with Shawnees at Limestone in August; takes seat in Virginia assembly in October.
1789 With Rebecca and youngest children leaves Limestone and relocates at Point Pleasant, farther up the Ohio River.
1791 Serves once again in the Virginia assembly; wins contract to supply militia companies in western Virginia.
1792 Dispute over supply contracts leads to his abandonment of business and return to full-time hunting; with Rebecca, soon moves to a cabin near present Charleston, West Virginia.
1795 To be nearer family, relocates to a cabin on Brushy Fork in Kentucky.
1797 Son Daniel Morgan Boone scouts land in Spanish Missouri; governor invites Boones to emigrate.
1798 Kentucky assembly names county after Boone; Mason County issues warrant for his arrest for debt; leaves Brushy Fork for a cabin at the mouth of the Little Sandy River on the Ohio.
1799 Leads extended family from Kentucky to Femme Osage country in Missouri; appointed "syndic" of district by Spanish governor.
1803 Seriously injured in hunting accident; relocates with Rebecca to cabin on the farm of son Nathan; Louisiana Purchase.
1806 Appears before the Federal Land Commission, seeking confirmation of his Spanish land grant.
1809 Gets word of rejection of his Spanish land grant; works on petitions to Congress.
1813 Rebecca dies March 18.
1814 Congress grants Boone a tract of Missouri land.
1820 Dies on September 26; buried near Rebecca in the cemetery near Jemima's farm.
1845 A delegation from Kentucky disinters the Boone graves and reburies remains in Frankfort, Kentucky
----------
DANIEL BOONE RIFLE
I'd seen a posting sometime ago about a rifle given by Daniel Boone to a Van Bibber [' Tice, if I recall correctly] so recently I made an inquiry about it's existence and below is the reply I received from the Director of Public Information.
Mr. Harvey,
We do have this rifle in the collection of the West Virginia State Museum. The artifact is currently on display in the Governor's Mansion.
The Mansion is open for limited tours on Thursdays and Fridays. You will need reservations, which you can make by calling (304) 558-4839.
If Thursdays and Fridays aren't convenient, we may be able to make special arrangements. Just let me know if that's the case and I'll see what I can arrange.
Thanks for your interest!
Ginny Painter
Director of Public Information
West Virginia Division of Culture and History
The Cultural Center
1900 Kanawha Boulevard, East Charleston, WV 25305-0300
Earl Harvey
Van Bibber Pioneers E-Newsletter
Vol. 6 No. 10 - August 2003
_George BOONE III_______+
| (1666 - 1744) m 1689
_Squire BOONE , Sr____________________|
| (1696 - 1765) m 1720 |
| |_Mary Milton MAUGRIDGE _+
| (1668 - 1740) m 1689
_Daniel BOONE , Col._|
| (1734 - 1820) m 1756|
| | _Edward MORGAN _________
| | | (1670 - ....) m 1686
| |_Sarah MORGAN ________________________|
| (1700 - 1777) m 1720 |
| |_Elizabeth _____________
| (1670 - ....) m 1686
|
|--Daniel Morgan BOONE
| (1769 - 1839)
| _Morgan BRYAN , Sr______+
| | (1671 - 1763) m 1719
| _Joseph BRYAN , Sr____________________|
| | (1720 - 1804) |
| | |_Martha STRODE _________+
| | (.... - 1747) m 1719
|_Rebecca Ann BRYAN __|
(1739 - 1813) m 1756|
| _John LINVILLE _________+
| | (1680 - ....)
|_Aylee (Alice, Alee, Alyle) LINVILLE _|
(1722 - 1807) |
|_Ann ___________________
[35]
http://www.genealogy.com/famousfolks/danielb/d0/i0000001.htm#i7
[372]
They had the following children:
Daniel Morgan Boone was born in Yadkin, Wilkes Davidson, Nc 23 DEC 1769. Daniel died 15 JUL 1839 in Westport, Jackson, Mo, at 69 years of age. His body was interred in Hays-Boone Cem, Kansas City, Clay Co, Missouri. He married Sarah Griffin Lewis in St. Charles, Missouri, 2 MAR 1800.
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Deborah BOONE
____ - ____
Father: George BOONE IV
Mother: Deborah HOWELL
_George BOONE II_____+
| (1646 - 1706) m 1665
_George BOONE III_______|
| (1666 - 1744) m 1689 |
| |_Sarah (Mary) UPPEY _
| (1646 - ....) m 1665
_George BOONE IV_____|
| (1690 - 1753) |
| | _John MOGRIDGE ______+
| | | (1630 - 1700)
| |_Mary Milton MAUGRIDGE _|
| (1668 - 1740) m 1689 |
| |_Mary MILTON ________
| (.... - 1697)
|
|--Deborah BOONE
|
| _____________________
| |
| ________________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Deborah HOWELL _____|
|
| _____________________
| |
|________________________|
|
|_____________________
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Delinda BOONE
[372]
3 Feb 1802 - 18 Sep 1877
Father: Nathan BOONE , Capt.
Mother: Olive VAN BIBBER
Family 1
: Reverand James CRAIG
_Squire BOONE , Sr____________________+
| (1696 - 1765) m 1720
_Daniel BOONE , Col._________________|
| (1734 - 1820) m 1756 |
| |_Sarah MORGAN ________________________+
| (1700 - 1777) m 1720
_Nathan BOONE , Capt._|
| (1781 - 1856) m 1799 |
| | _Joseph BRYAN , Sr____________________+
| | | (1720 - 1804)
| |_Rebecca Ann BRYAN __________________|
| (1739 - 1813) m 1756 |
| |_Aylee (Alice, Alee, Alyle) LINVILLE _+
| (1722 - 1807)
|
|--Delinda BOONE
| (1802 - 1877)
| _Peter VAN BIBBER , Sr._______________+
| | (1695 - 1769)
| _Peter VAN BIBBER , Jr.______________|
| | (.... - 1796) m 1756 |
| | |_Anna GOODING ________________________
| | (1696 - 1732)
|_Olive VAN BIBBER ____|
(1783 - 1858) m 1799 |
| _James BOUNDS , Sr____________________+
| |
|_Marguery (Major Or Marjory) BOUNDS _|
(1740 - 1844) m 1756 |
|_Ann DYKES ___________________________+
M i Daniel Boone Craig was born about 1816.
M ii Nathan Boone Craig was born about 1818.
M iii James Craig Jr..
M iv Leonard Craig was born 1822.
M v Lionel Craig was born about 1824.
F vi Nancy Lucas Craig was born 1826 and died 1899.
M vii Clinton Craig was born 1828. He died 1865 in Unmarried.
F viii Lura Craig was born 1832 and died 1918.
M ix Edward Milton Craig was born 1834. He died 1876.
M x Jesse Craig was born about 1814.
F xi Jane Craig was born 17 Mar 1831 and died 9 Sep 1903.
F xii Minerva Craig was born about 1812.
F xiii Martha Ann Craig.
F xiv Elizabeth Craig was born about 1810.
F xv Emma Craig was born about 1808.
F xvi Melcina Craig was born about 1808.
M xvii James Craig Jr. was born about 1820.
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Dianne BOONE
____ - ____
Father: Benjamin BOONE
Mother: Ann FARMER
_George BOONE II_____+
| (1646 - 1706) m 1665
_George BOONE III_______|
| (1666 - 1744) m 1689 |
| |_Sarah (Mary) UPPEY _
| (1646 - ....) m 1665
_Benjamin BOONE _____|
| (1706 - 1762) m 1726|
| | _John MOGRIDGE ______+
| | | (1630 - 1700)
| |_Mary Milton MAUGRIDGE _|
| (1668 - 1740) m 1689 |
| |_Mary MILTON ________
| (.... - 1697)
|
|--Dianne BOONE
|
| _____________________
| |
| ________________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Ann FARMER _________|
m 1726 |
| _____________________
| |
|________________________|
|
|_____________________
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