<h3 class="p6">CHAPTER III<br/> LIFE ON THE BORDER</h3>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was many years before Daniel Boone
realized his dream of reaching Kentucky.
Such an expedition into the far-off wilderness
could not be lightly undertaken; its
hardships and dangers were innumerable;
and the way thither from the forks of the
Yadkin was not as easily found, through this
perplexing tangle of valleys and mountains,
as Finley had supposed. His own route had
doubtless been over the Ohio Company's pass
from the upper waters of the Potomac to a
tributary of the Monongahela.</p>
<p>Another reason caused Daniel long to
linger near his home. A half-dozen years
before the Boones reached the Yadkin country
there had located here a group of several
related families, the Bryans, originally
from Ireland. Pennsylvanians at first, they
had, as neighbors crowded them, drifted
southwestward into the Valley of Virginia;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</SPAN></span>
and finally, keeping well ahead of other settlers,
established themselves at the forks of
the Yadkin. They took kindly to the Boones,
the two groups intermarried, and both were
in due course pioneers of Kentucky. Rebecca,
the daughter of Joseph Bryan, was
fifteen years of age when Daniel first read
his fate in her shining black eyes. In the
spring following his return from Braddock's
slaughter-pen he led her to the altar, the
ceremony being performed by old Squire
Boone—farmer, weaver, blacksmith, and now
justice of the peace for Rowan County.</p>
<p>An historian of the border, who had studied
well the family traditions, thus describes
Daniel and Rebecca at the time when they
set forth together upon the journey of life:
"Behold that young man, exhibiting such unusual
firmness and energy of character, five
feet eight inches in height, with broad chest
and shoulders, his form gradually tapering
downward to his extremities; his hair moderately
black; blue eyes arched with yellowish
eyebrows; his lips thin, with a mouth
peculiarly wide; a countenance fair and
ruddy, with a nose a little bordering on the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</SPAN></span>
Roman order. Such was Daniel Boone, now
past twenty-one, presenting altogether a noble,
manly, prepossessing appearance....
Rebecca Bryan, whose brow had now been
fanned by the breezes of seventeen summers,
was, like Rebecca of old, 'very fair to look
upon,' with jet-black hair and eyes, complexion
rather dark, and something over the common
size of her sex; her whole demeanor
expressive of her childlike artlessness, pleasing
in her address, and unaffectedly kind in
all her deportment. Never was there a more
gentle, affectionate, forbearing creature than
this same fair youthful bride of the Yadkin."
In the annals of the frontier, as elsewhere,
all brides are fair and grooms are manly;
but, allowing for the natural enthusiasm of
hero-worshipers, we may, from the abundance
of testimony to that effect, at least conclude
that Daniel and Rebecca Boone were a
well-favored couple, fit to rear a family of
sturdy borderers.</p>
<p>It was neither the day nor the place for
expensive trousseaus and wedding journeys.
After a hilarious wedding-feast, Boone and
his wife, with scanty equipment, immediately
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</SPAN></span>
commenced their hard task of winning a livelihood
from the soil and the forest. At first
occupying a rude log cabin in his father's
yard, they soon afterward acquired some
level land of their own, lying upon Sugar
Tree, a tributary of Dutchman's Creek, in
the Bryan settlement, a few miles north of
Squire Boone's. All of this neighborhood
lies within what is now Davie County, still
one of the richest farming districts in North
Carolina. Save when driven out by Indian
alarms and forays, they here lived quietly
for many years.</p>
<p>The pioneers in the then back country,
along the eastern foot-hills of the Alleghanies,
led a rough, primitive life, such as is
hardly possible to-day, when there is no longer
any frontier within the United States, and
but few districts are so isolated as to be more
than two or three days' journey from a railway.
Most of them, however, had been bred,
as were the Boones and the Bryans, to the
rude experiences of the border. With slight
knowledge of books, they were accustomed
to living in the simplest manner, and from
childhood were inured to the hardships and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</SPAN></span>
privations incident to great distance from
the centers of settlement; they possessed the
virtues of hospitality and neighborliness, and
were hardy, rugged, honest-hearted folk, admirably
suited to their self-appointed task
of forcing back the walls of savagery, in
order that civilization might cover the land.
We may well honor them for the great service
that they rendered to mankind.</p>
<p>The dress of a backwoodsman like Daniel
Boone was a combination of Indian and civilized
attire. A long hunting-shirt, of coarse
cloth or of dressed deerskins, sometimes with
an ornamental collar, was his principal garment;
drawers and leggings of like material
were worn; the feet were encased in moccasins
of deerskin—soft and pliant, but cold
in winter, even when stuffed with deer's hair
or dry leaves, and so spongy as to be no
protection against wet feet, which made
every hunter an early victim to rheumatism.
Hanging from the belt, which girt the hunting-shirt,
were the powder-horn, bullet-pouch,
scalping-knife, and tomahawk; while
the breast of the shirt served as a generous
pocket for food when the hunter or warrior
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</SPAN></span>
was upon the trail. For head-covering, the
favorite was a soft cap of coonskin, with the
bushy tail dangling behind; but Boone himself
despised this gear, and always wore a
hat. The women wore huge sunbonnets and
loose gowns of home-made cloth; they generally
went barefoot in summer, but wore moccasins
in winter.</p>
<p>Daniel Boone's cabin was a simple box of
logs, reared in "cob-house" style, the chinks
stuffed with moss and clay, with a door and
perhaps but a single window. Probably there
was but one room below, with a low attic
under the rafters, reached by a ladder. A
great outside chimney, built either of rough
stones or of small logs, coated on the inside
with clay mortar and carefully chinked with
the same, was built against one end of this
rude house. In the fireplace, large enough
for logs five or six feet in length, there was
a crane from which was hung the iron pot
in which the young wife cooked simple meals
of corn-mush, pumpkins, squashes, beans,
potatoes, and pork, or wild meat of many
kinds, fresh and dried; in a bake-kettle, laid
upon the live coals, she made the bread and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</SPAN></span>
corn pone, or fried her steaks, which added
variety to the fare.</p>
<p>Dishes and other utensils were few—some
pewter plates, forks, and spoons; wooden
bowls and trenchers, with gourds and hard-shelled
squashes for drinking-mugs. For
knife, Boone doubtless used his belt-weapon,
and scorned the crock plates, now slowly
creeping into the valley, as calculated to dull
its edge. Over the fireplace deer's horns
served as rests for his gun. Into the log
wall were driven great wooden pegs, hanging
from which flitches of dried and smoked
bacon, venison, and bear's-meat mingled
freely with the family's scanty wardrobe.</p>
<p>With her cooking and rude mending, her
moccasin-making, her distaff and loom for
making cloths, her occasional plying of the
hoe in the small vegetable patch, and her
ever-present care of the children and dairy,
Rebecca Boone was abundantly occupied.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i001" id="i001"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i001.jpg" width-obs="410" height-obs="550" alt="Powder-horn and Kettle" /> <p class="caption">BOONE'S POWDER-HORN AND BAKE-KETTLE.</p> <p class="caption s08">In possession of Wisconsin State Historical Society. The horn once
belonged to Daniel's brother Israel, and bears the initials "I B".</p>
</div>
<p>In these early years of married life Daniel
proved a good husbandman, planting and
garnering his crops with regularity, and pasturing
a few scrawny cattle and swine upon
the wild lands adjoining his farm. Doubtless
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</SPAN></span>
at times he did smithy-work for the
neighbors and took a hand at the loom, as
had his father and grandfather before him.
Sometimes he was engaged with his wagon
in the caravans which each autumn found
their way from the Yadkin and the other
mountain valleys down to the Atlantic
cities, carrying furs to market; it was as
yet too early in the history of the back
country for the cattle-raisers to send their
animals to the coast. In the Valley of Virginia,
hemmed in upon the east by the Blue
Ridge, packhorses were alone used in this
traffic, for the mountain paths were rough
and narrow; but wagons could be utilized
in the more southern districts. The caravans
brought back to the pioneers salt, iron,
cloths, and a few other manufactured goods.
This annual expedition over, Boone was free
to go upon long hunts in the forest, where
he cured great stores of meat for his family
and prepared the furs for market.</p>
<p>The backwoodsmen of the Yadkin had
few machines to assist them in their labor,
and these were of the simplest sort. Practically,
every settler was his own mechanic—although
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</SPAN></span>
some men became, in certain lines,
more expert than their neighbors, and to
them fell such work for the entire settlement.
Grinding corn into meal, or cracking it into
hominy, were, as usual with primitive peoples,
tasks involving the most machinery.
Rude mortars and pestles, some of the latter
ingeniously worked by means of springy
"sweeps," were commonly seen; a device
something like a nutmeg-grater was often
used when the corn was soft; two circular
millstones, worked by hand, were effective,
and there were some operated by water-power.</p>
<p>Medicine was at a crude stage, many of
the so-called cures being as old as Egypt,
while others were borrowed from the Indians.
The borderers firmly believed in the
existence of witches; bad dreams, eclipses of
the sun, the howling of dogs, and the croaking
of ravens, were sure to bring disasters
in their train.</p>
<p>Their sports laid stress on physical accomplishments—great
strength, dexterity
with the rifle, hunting, imitating the calls of
wild birds and beasts, throwing the tomahawk,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</SPAN></span>
running, jumping, wrestling, dancing,
and horse-racing; they were also fond, as
they gathered around one another's great
fireplaces in the long winter evenings, of
story-telling and dramatic recitation. Some
of the wealthier members of this primitive
society owned negro slaves, to whom, sometimes,
they were cruel, freely using the whip
upon both women and men. Indeed, in their
own frequent quarrels fierce brutality was
sometimes used, adversaries in a fist-fight
being occasionally maimed or otherwise disfigured
for life.</p>
<p>There was, for a long time, "neither law
nor gospel" upon this far-away frontier.
Justices of the peace had small authority.
Preachers were at first unknown. Many of
the borderers were Presbyterians, and others
Quakers; but under such social conditions
these were little else than names. Nevertheless,
there was a sound public sentiment
among these rude, isolated people, who were
a law unto themselves. They respected and
honored candor, honesty, hospitality, regular
habits, and good behavior generally; and
very severe were the punishments with which
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</SPAN></span>
they visited offenders. If a man acted as
a coward in time of war, shirked his full
measure of duty to the public, failed to care
for his family, was careless about his debts,
stole from his neighbors, was needlessly profane,
or failed to treat women respectfully,
he was either shunned by his fellows or
forced to leave the settlement.</p>
<p>Amid such surroundings and of such stuff
was Daniel Boone in the days when he was
living uneventfully in the valley of the Yadkin
as farmer, blacksmith, wagoner, and
hunter, before the Indian wars and his explorations
west of the long-shadowed mountain-range
made of him a popular hero.</p>
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