<h3 class="p6">CHAPTER II<br/> THE NIMROD OF THE YADKIN</h3>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The lofty barrier of the Alleghany Mountains
was of itself sufficient to prevent the
pioneers of Pennsylvania from wandering
far westward. Moreover, the Indians beyond
these hills were fiercer than those with
whom the Quakers were familiar; their occasional
raids to the eastward, through the
mountain passes, won for them a reputation
which did not incline the border farmers to
cultivate their further acquaintance. To the
southwest, however, there were few obstacles
to the spread of settlement. For several
hundred miles the Appalachians run in parallel
ranges from northeast to southwest—from
Pennsylvania, through Virginia, West
Virginia, the Carolinas, and east Tennessee,
until at last they degenerate into scattered
foot-hills upon the Georgia plain. Through
the long, deep troughs between these ranges—notably
in the famous Valley of Virginia
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</SPAN></span>
between the Blue Ridge and the Alleghanies—Pennsylvanians
freely wandered into the
south and southwest, whenever possessed by
thirst for new and broader lands. Hostile
Indians sometimes penetrated these great
valleys and brought misery in their train;
but the work of pioneering along this path
was less arduous than had the western mountains
been scaled at a time when the colonists
were still few and weak.</p>
<p>Between the years 1732 and 1750, numerous
groups of Pennsylvanians—Germans
and Irish largely, with many Quakers among
them—had been wending their way through
the mountain troughs, and gradually pushing
forward the line of settlement, until now it
had reached the upper waters of the Yadkin
River, in the northwest corner of North
Carolina. Trials abundant fell to their lot;
but the soil of the valleys was unusually fertile,
game was abundant, the climate mild,
the country beautiful, and life in general upon
the new frontier, although rough, such as to
appeal to the borderers as a thing desirable.
The glowing reports of each new group attracted
others. Thus was the wilderness
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</SPAN></span>
tamed by a steady stream of immigration
from the older lands of the northern colonies,
while not a few penetrated to this Arcadia
through the passes of the Blue Ridge,
from eastern Virginia and the Carolinas.</p>
<p>Squire and Sarah Boone, of Oley, now
possessed eleven children, some of whom
were married and settled within this neighborhood
which consisted so largely of the
Boones and their relatives. The choicest
lands of eastern Pennsylvania had at last
been located. The outlook for the younger
Boones, who soon would need new homesteads,
did not appear encouraging. The
fame of the Yadkin Valley, five hundred
miles southwestward, had reached Oley, and
thither, in the spring of 1750, the majority
of the Boones, after selling their lands and
surplus stock, bravely took up the line of
march.<SPAN name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</SPAN></p>
<p>With the women and children stowed in
canvas-covered wagons, the men and boys
riding their horses at front and rear, and
driving the lagging cattle, the picturesque
little caravan slowly found its way to the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</SPAN></span>
ford at Harper's Ferry, thence up the
beautiful valley of the Shenandoah. By
night they pitched their camps beside some
gurgling spring, gathered the animals within
the circle of the wagons, and, with sentinel
posted against possible surprises by
Indians, sat around the blazing fire to discuss
the experiences of the day—Daniel,
as the hunter for the party, doubtless having
the most interesting adventures of
them all.</p>
<p>Tradition has it that the Boones tarried
by the way, for a year or more, on Linnville
Creek, six miles north of Harrisonburg, in
Rockingham County, Va. In any event,
they appear to have resumed their journey
by the autumn of 1751. Pushing on through
the Valley of Virginia—an undulating,
heavily forested table-land from three to
ten miles in width—they forded the upper
waters of numerous rivers, some of which,
according to the tilt of the land, flow eastward
and southeastward toward the Atlantic,
and others westward and southwestward
toward the Ohio. This is one of the fairest
and most salubrious regions in America; but
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</SPAN></span>
they did not again stop until the promised
land of the Yadkin was reached.</p>
<p>The country was before them, to choose
from it practically what they would. Between
the Yadkin and the Catawba there was
a broad expanse of elevated prairie, yielding
a luxuriant growth of grass, while the bottoms
skirting the numerous streams were
thick-grown to canebrake. Here were abundant
meadows for the cattle, fish and game
and wild fruits in quantity quite exceeding
young Daniel's previous experience, a well-tempered
climate, and to the westward a
mountain-range which cast long afternoon
shadows over the plain and spoke eloquently
of untamed dominions beyond. Out of this
land of plenty Squire Boone chose a claim at
Buffalo Lick, where Dutchman's Creek joins
with the North Fork of Yadkin.</p>
<p>Daniel was now a lad of eighteen. Nominally,
he helped in the working of his father's
farm and in the family smithy; actually,
he was more often in the woods with
his long rifle. At first, buffaloes were so
plenty that a party of three or four men,
with dogs, could kill from ten to twenty in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</SPAN></span>
a day; but soon the sluggish animals receded
before the advance of white men, hiding
themselves behind the mountain wall. An
ordinary hunter could slaughter four or five
deer in a day; in the autumn, he might from
sunrise to sunset shoot enough bears to provide
over a ton of bear-bacon for winter use;
wild turkeys were easy prey; beavers, otters,
and muskrats abounded; while wolves, panthers,
and wildcats overran the country.
Overcome by his passion for the chase, our
young Nimrod soon began to spend months
at a time in the woods, especially in autumn
and winter. He found also more profit in
this occupation than at either the forge or
the plow; for at their nearest market town,
Salisbury, twenty miles away, good prices
were paid for skins, which were regularly
shipped thence to the towns upon the Atlantic
coast.</p>
<p>The Catawba Indians lived about sixty
miles distant, and the Cherokees still farther.
These tribesmen not infrequently visited the
thinly scattered settlement on the Yadkin,
seeking trade with the whites, with whom
they were as yet on good terms. They were,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</SPAN></span>
however, now and then raided by Northern
Indians, particularly the Shawnese, who, collecting
in the Valley of Virginia, swept down
upon them with fury; sometimes also committing
depredations upon the whites who
had befriended their tribal enemies, and who
unfortunately had staked their farms in the
old-time war-path of the marauders.</p>
<p>In the year 1754, the entire American
border, from the Yadkin to the St. Lawrence,
became deeply concerned in the Indian question.
France and England had long been
rivals for the mastery of the North American
continent lying west of the Alleghanies.
France had established a weak chain of posts
upon the upper Great Lakes, and down the
Mississippi River to New Orleans, thus connecting
Canada with Louisiana. In the Valley
of the Ohio, however, without which the
French could not long hold the Western
country, there was a protracted rivalry between
French and English fur-traders, each
seeking to supplant the intruding foreigner.
This led to the outbreak of the French and
Indian War, which was waged vigorously for
five years, until New France fell, and the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</SPAN></span>
English obtained control of all Canada and
that portion of the continent lying between
the Atlantic Ocean and the Mississippi.</p>
<p>As early as 1748, backwoodsmen from
Pennsylvania had made a small settlement
on New River, just west of the Alleghanies—a
settlement which the Boones must have visited,
as it lay upon the road to the Yadkin;
and in the same season several adventurous
Virginians hunted and made land-claims in
Kentucky and Tennessee. In the following
year there was formed for Western fur trading
and colonizing purposes, the Ohio Company,
composed of wealthy Virginians,
among them two brothers of George Washington.
In 1753 French soldiers built a little
log fort on French Creek, a tributary of the
Alleghany; and, despite Virginia's protest,
delivered by young Major Washington, were
planning to erect another at the forks of the
Ohio, where Pittsburg now is. Thither
Washington went, in the succeeding year,
with a body of Virginia militiamen, to construct
an English stockade at the forks; but
the French defeated him in the Great Meadows
hard by and themselves erected the fort.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</SPAN></span>
It is thought by some writers that young
Boone, then twenty years of age, served in
the Pennsylvania militia which protected the
frontier from the Indian forays which succeeded
this episode. A year later (1755) the
inexperienced General Braddock, fresh from
England, set out, with Washington upon his
staff, to teach a lesson to these Frenchmen
who had intruded upon land claimed by the
colony of Virginia.</p>
<p>In Braddock's little army were a hundred
North Carolina frontiersmen, under Captain
Hugh Waddell; their wagoner and blacksmith
was Daniel Boone. His was one of
those heavily laden baggage-wagons which,
history tells us, greatly impeded the progress
of the English, and contributed not a little
to the terrible disaster which overtook the
column in the ravine of Turtle Creek, only
a few miles from Pittsburg. The baggage-train
was the center of a fierce attack from
Indians, led by French officers, and many
drivers were killed. Young Boone, however,
cut the traces of his team, and mounting a
horse, fortunately escaped by flight. Behind
him the Indian allies of the French, now unchecked,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</SPAN></span>
laid waste the panic-stricken frontiers
of Pennsylvania and Virginia. But the
Yadkin, which Boone soon reached, was as
yet unscarred; the Northern tribes were
busied in the tide of intercolonial warfare,
and the Catawbas and Cherokees thus far
remained steadfast to their old-time promises
of peace.</p>
<p>Daniel was now a man, full-grown. He
had brought home with him not only some
knowledge of what war meant, but his imagination
had become heated by a new passion—the
desire to explore as well as to hunt.
While upon the campaign he had fallen in
with another adventurous soul, John Finley
by name, who fired his heart with strange
tales of lands and game to the west of the
mountains. Finley was a Scotch-Irishman
of roving tendencies, who had emigrated to
Pennsylvania and joined a colony of his compatriots.
As early as 1752 he had become a
fur-trader. In the course of his rambles
many perilous adventures befell him in the
Kentucky wilds, into which he had penetrated
as far as the Falls of the Ohio, where
Louisville is now built. Hurrying, with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</SPAN></span>
other woodsmen, to Braddock's support, he
enrolled himself under George Croghan, a famous
trader to the Indians. But the expert
services of Croghan and his men, who, well
understanding the methods of savages upon
the war-path, offered to serve as scouts, were
coldly rejected by Braddock, who soon had
occasion to regret that he had not taken their
advice.</p>
<p>Finley found in the Yadkin wagoner a
kindred spirit, and suggested to him with
eagerness a method of reaching Kentucky by
following the trail of the buffaloes and the
Shawnese, northwestward through Cumberland
Gap. To reach this hunter's paradise,
to which Finley had pointed the way, was
now Boone's daily dream.</p>
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