<h3 class="p6">CHAPTER VII<br/> PREDECESSORS AND CONTEMPORARIES</h3>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The reader of this narrative has, of
course, already discovered that Daniel Boone
was neither the original white explorer of
Kentucky nor the first white hunter within
its limits. Many others had been there before
him. It will be worth our while at this
point to take a hasty review of some of the
previous expeditions which had made the
"dark and bloody ground" known to the
world.</p>
<p>Probably none of the several Spanish explorations
of the sixteenth century along the
Mississippi River and through the Gulf
States had touched Kentucky. But during
the seventeenth century both the French in
Canada and the English on the Atlantic tidewater
came to have fairly accurate notions
of the country lying immediately to the south
of the Ohio River. As early as 1650 Governor
Berkeley, of Virginia, made a vain attempt
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</SPAN></span>
to cross the Alleghany barrier in
search of the Mississippi, concerning which
he had heard from Indians; and we know
that at the same time the French, especially
the Jesuit missionaries, were looking eagerly
in that direction. A few years later Colonel
Abraham Wood, of Virginia, discovered
streams which poured into the Ohio and the
Mississippi. Just a century before Boone's
great hunt, John Lederer, also of Virginia,
explored for a considerable distance beyond
the mountains. The following year Thomas
Batts and his party proclaimed King Charles
II upon New River, the upper waters of the
Great Kanawha—twelve months before La
Salle took possession of all Western waters
for the French king, and nineteen before
Marquette and Joliet discovered the Mississippi.</p>
<p>There is a tradition that in 1678, only
five years after the voyage of Marquette and
Joliet, a party of New Englanders ventured
into the Western wilderness as far as New
Mexico. The later French expeditions of
La Salle, Hennepin, and D'Iberville are well
known. Several Englishmen traded with Indians
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</SPAN></span>
upon the Mississippi before the close
of the seventeenth century; by 1719 the English
were so numerous that Governor Keith,
of Pennsylvania, suggested that four forts
be built for their protection in the Wabash
and Illinois countries. We hear of a French
expedition investigating Big Bone Lick, in
Kentucky, in 1735; and other visits were successively
made by bands of their compatriots
until the downfall of New France, over a
quarter of a century later. In 1742 John
Howard and Peter Salling, of Virginia, were
exploring in Kentucky; six years after them
Dr. Thomas Walker made a notable expedition
through the same country; and two years
after that Washington's backwoods friend,
Christopher Gist, was on the site of Louisville
selecting lands for the Ohio Company,
which had a large grant upon the Ohio
River.</p>
<p>Henceforward, border chronicles abound
with reports of the adventures of English
fur-traders, hunters, and land-viewers, all
along the Ohio River and tributary waters
above Louisville. Among these early adventurers
was our friend Finley, whose experiences
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</SPAN></span>
in Kentucky dated from 1752, and
who piloted Boone to the promised land
through the gateway of Cumberland Gap.
The subsequent Indian wars, with the expeditions
into the upper Ohio Valley by Generals
Braddock, Forbes, and Bouquet, made
the country still better known; and settlers
were soon rushing in by scores, although as
yet none of them appear to have made clearings
within Kentucky itself.</p>
<p>Officers and soldiers who had served in
the French and Indian War were given liberal
grants of land in the West. Washington
had not only his own grant, as the principal
officer upon the southwest frontier, but
was agent for a number of fellow-soldiers,
and in 1767 went to the Ohio River to select
and survey claims. At the very time when
Boone was engaged upon his fruitless expedition
down the Big Sandy, Washington was
making the first surveys in Kentucky on both
the Little and Big Sandy. Again, in 1770,
when Boone was exploring the Kentucky
wilderness, Washington was surveying extensive
tracts along the Ohio and the Great
Kanawha, and planning for a large colony
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</SPAN></span>
upon his own lands. The outbreak of the
Revolution caused the great man to turn his
attention from the over-mountain region to
the defense of his country. Had he been left
to carry out his plans, he would doubtless
have won fame as the most energetic of
Western pioneers.</p>
<p>It will be remembered that when Boone
and his companions passed through Cumberland
Gap in the early summer of 1769, they
found the well-worn trail of other hunters
who had preceded them from the settlements.
The men of the Yadkin Valley were not the
only persons seeking game in Kentucky that
year. At about the time when Boone was
bidding farewell to his family, Hancock
and Richard Taylor, Abraham Hempinstall,
and one Barbour, frontiersmen of the same
type, started from their homes in Orange
County, Va., to explore the valleys of the
Ohio and Mississippi. They descended from
Pittsburg in a boat, explored Kentucky, and
proceeded into Arkansas, where they camped
and hunted during the following winter.
The next year two of them traveled eastward
to Florida, and thence northwardly to their
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</SPAN></span>
homes; the others stayed in Arkansas for
another year, and returned by sea from New
Orleans to New York.</p>
<p>Simultaneously with the expeditions of
Boone and the Taylors, a party of twenty or
more adventurous hunters and explorers was
formed in the New River region, in the Valley
of Virginia. They set out in June
(1769), piloted by Uriah Stone, who had been
in Kentucky three years before. Entering
by way of the now familiar Cumberland Gap,
these men had experiences quite similar to
those of Boone and his comrades. At some
of the Kentucky salt-licks they found herds
of buffaloes numbering up in the thousands—at
one lick a hundred acres were densely
massed with these bulky animals, who exhibited
no fear until the wind blew from the
hunters toward them, and then they would
"dash wildly away in large droves and disappear."
Like Boone's party, they also were
the victims of Cherokees, who plundered
their camps, and after leaving them some
guns and a little ammunition, ordered them
out of the country. The New River party
being large, however, some of their number
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</SPAN></span>
were deputed to go to the settlements and
bring back fresh supplies, so that they could
finish their hunt. After further adventures
with Indians half of the hunters returned
home; while the others wandered into Tennessee
and as far as the Ozark Mountains,
finally reaching New River through Georgia
and the Carolinas. Another Virginian,
named John McCulloch, who courted the
perils of exploration, was in Kentucky in the
summer of 1769 with a white man-servant
and a negro. He visited the site of Terre
Haute, Ind., and went by canoe to Natchez
and New Orleans, and at length reached
Philadelphia by sea.</p>
<p>But the most famous of all the expeditions
of the period was that of the "Long
Hunters," as they have come to be known in
Western history. Inspired by the favorable
reports of Stone and others, about forty of
the most noted and successful hunters of
New River and Holston Valleys formed, in
the summer of 1770, a company for hunting
and trapping to the west of Cumberland
Mountains. Under the leadership of two of
the best woodsmen of the region, Joseph
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</SPAN></span>
Drake and Henry Skaggs, and including several
of Stone's party, they set out in early
autumn fully prepared for meeting Indians
and living on game. Each man took with
him three packhorses, rifles, ammunition,
traps, dogs, blankets, and salt, and was
dressed in the deerskin costume of the times.</p>
<p>Pushing on through Cumberland Gap, the
adventurers were soon in the heart of Kentucky.
In accordance with custom, they visited
some of the best licks—a few of which
were probably first seen by them—for here
wild beasts were always to be found in profusion.
At Knob Licks they beheld from
an eminence which overlooked the springs
"what they estimated at largely over a thousand
animals, including buffaloe, elk, bear,
and deer, with many wild turkies scattered
among them—all quite restless, some playing,
and others busily employed in licking the
earth; but at length they took flight and
bounded away all in one direction, so that in
the brief space of a couple of minutes not
an animal was to be seen." Within an area
of many acres, the animals had eaten the
salty earth to a depth of several feet.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Successful in a high degree, the party
ceased operations in February, and had completed
preparations for sending a large shipment
of skins, furs, and "jerk" to the settlements,
when, in their temporary absence,
roving Cherokees robbed them of much of
their stores and spoiled the greater part of
the remainder. "Fifteen hundred skins
gone to ruination!" was the legend which
one of them carved upon the bark of a neighboring
tree, a record to which were appended
the initials of each member of the party. A
series of disasters followed, in the course of
which two men were carried off by Indians
and never again seen, and others fled for home.
Those remaining, having still much ammunition
and the horses, continued their hunt,
chiefly upon the Green and Cumberland Rivers,
and in due time brought together another
store of peltries, almost as extensive as
that despoiled by the savages.</p>
<p>Not long after the robbery, when the
Long Hunters were upon Green River, one
of the parties into which the band was divided
were going into camp for the night,
when a singular noise was heard proceeding
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</SPAN></span>
from a considerable distance in the forest.
The leader, Caspar Mausker, commanded
silence on the part of his comrades, and himself
crept cautiously from tree to tree in the
direction of the sound. Imagine his surprise
and amusement to find "a man bare-headed,
stretched flat upon his back on a deerskin
spread on the ground, singing merrily at the
top of his voice!" The singer was our hero,
Daniel Boone, who, regardless of possible
Indian neighbors, was thus enjoying himself
while awaiting Squire's belated return to
camp. Like most woodsmen of his day and
ours, Boone was fond of singing, in his rude
way, as well as of relating tales of stirring
adventure. In such manner were many
hours whiled away around the camp-fires of
wilderness hunters.</p>
<p>The Boones at once joined and spent some
time with the Long Hunters, no doubt delighted
at this opportunity of once more
mingling with men of their kind. Among
their amusements was that of naming rivers,
creeks, and hills after members of the party;
many of these names are still preserved upon
the map of Kentucky. At one time they discovered
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</SPAN></span>
that some French hunters from the
Illinois country had recently visited a lick to
kill buffaloes for their tongues and tallow,
which they had loaded into a keel-boat and
taken down the Cumberland. In after years
one of the Long Hunters declared that this
wholesale slaughter was so great "that one
could walk for several hundred yards in and
around the lick on buffaloes' skulls and
bones, with which the whole flat around the
lick was bleached."</p>
<p>It was not until August that the Long
Hunters returned to their homes, after a
profitable absence of eleven months. But
the Boone brothers left their comrades in
March and headed for the Yadkin, with
horses now well laden with spoils of the
chase. They were deeply in debt for their
latest supplies, but were returning in light
heart, cheered with the prospect of settling
their accounts and being able to revisit Kentucky
in good condition. But in Powell's
Valley, near Cumberland Gap, where they
might well have supposed that small chance
of danger remained, they were suddenly set
upon by a war party of Northern Indians
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</SPAN></span>
who had been raiding the white settlers as
well as their Southern foes, the Cherokees
and Catawbas. Roughly handled and robbed
of their packs, the unfortunate hunters
reached the Yadkin in no happy frame of
mind. Daniel had been absent for two years,
and was now poorer than when he left home.
He used to say, however, in after years, that
having at last seen Kentucky, his ideal of
an earthly paradise, that served as solace for
his woes.</p>
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