Abstract

BOOK REVIEWS Boone: A Biography, by Robert Morgan. Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2007. 538 pp. $29.95 cloth, $18.95 paper. ACCLAIMED NOVELIST ROBERT MORGAN’S BIOGRAPHY OF DANIEL BOONE is undeniably a labor of love. “Many boys, both old and young, feel a connection with Boone,” writes Morgan, “but growing up in the mountains of western North Carolina in the 1940s and 1950s . . . I may have felt the kinship more literally than most” (xx). That sense of connection spills over onto every page and propels the often gripping portrayal of what this mythical frontiersman was up against. Yet it also leads the author to overstate the ways in which Boone foreshadowed later historical developments. Boone’s life brought together many features of early American society, which Morgan presents in great detail. Born in 1734 to pious Quaker parents in Pennsylvania, Boone quickly displayed an ability to shoot a gun and a dislike for farm work. When he was fifteen, his family relocated to the Yadkin River Valley in North Carolina, in part because his father had a falling out with the local Quaker meeting, in part because cheap land beckoned. The move to the Southern backcountry afforded Boone the opportunity to develop his skills as a hunter, and by the time he turned twenty years old, he had developed a reputation as an expert marksman, trapper, and woodsman. Following a short stint as a teamster and blacksmith in Edward Braddock’s disastrous Monongahela campaign in the Seven Years’ War, Boone returned to the Yadkin River Valley and married Rebecca Bryan, who would give birth to ten children in the decades to come. With a growing family to support, Boone made increasingly long hunting and scouting forays. In 1765, he journeyed to Florida, while two years later he made his first expedition to the territory that would eventually become the state of Kentucky. The latter trip proved crucial because it helped bring him to the attention of the Transylvania Company, which had purchased large tracts of land from the Cherokees. In 1775, Boone accordingly led a Transylvania Company-sponsored crew across the Cumberland Gap. In so doing, Boone pioneered the Wilderness Road, which facilitated the movement of approximately 200,000 Euro-Americans into Bluegrass Country. 352 Mississippi Quarterly During the American Revolution, Boone fought on the patriot side, fought off charges of treason, was captured by Shawnees, and made a dramatic escape after four months of captivity. In consequence of Boone’sgrowingreputation,Virginianshonoredhimwithlegislativeand militia officer posts. In 1784, schoolmaster John Filson wrote the first account of the frontiersman’s exploits, The Adventures of Col. Daniel Boon[sic], the publication of which helped make Boone an international legend. Legendary status did not prevent Boone from getting involved in land disputes and speculation, however, and by the end of the century, lawsuits brought against Boone resulted in at least one warrant for his arrest. In response, Boone took his family to Missouri in 1799, where he lived out the last two decades of his life as an aging hunter and family patriarch. Some of the most effective sections of Morgan’s biography are those that portray the toil and vicissitudes of eighteenth-century frontier life. The author notes, for instance, that a successful deer kill required a hunter to exert tremendous energy transporting game. If he was lucky, he had a horse that could tote upwards of two hundred pounds of supplies and carcasses. Without a pack animal, the hunter used an Indian technique called “hoppusing,” by which the slaughtered beast “was strapped over the hunter’s shoulders by strips of hide called tugs” (56). Back in camp, the tough outer skin of the buck had to be scraped and shaved by repeatedly rubbing it across a “staking-board” (100). Pliant, soft hides were then folded together and packed tightly for the long journey home. Even if a great collection of hides had been secured and prepared, Euro-American hunters risked Indian encounters and the loss of their haul. In one 1769-70 venture, Boone and a companion were surprised by a party of Shawnees, who proceeded to take all of the accumulated hides and furs, as well...

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.