This two-part tale features reminiscences in the legendary frontiersman's own words and a profile of his entire life, with exciting accounts of blazing the Wilderness Road and serving as a militiaman during the Revolutionary War.
I love autobiographies because you get to see real history through the eyes of someone who lived it. Daniel Boone was the 5th great grandpa of one of my best friends so it was a little extra special read. I really had no idea that the Natives gave whites their own trail of tears, tomahawking women, children, and the elderly…
I think this should be a required read in school to give a balanced perspective to the one sided “white men are all evil” that is so often erroneously pushed. The truth was both sides were “savages”, each side fighting for territory and the desire for a better life.
Learning a bit about Daniel Boone was great. Details were certainly sparse, besides each and every hostile encounter with the Indians, but it was equally revealing to see which details Boone himself thought important to share. What wasn't so great were the incongruous birth and death dates that Francis Lister Hawks provided: 1746 (birth) and 1818 (death), but then he said Boone was "in his eighty-fourth year" when he died. When in fact multiple records show that Boone was actually born in 1734 and died in 1820 at the age of 85. Hopefully the other facts and stories were correct .... (at least he got Boone's birthplace correct)
This is a wonderful Historical account of Daniel Boone both by a memoir by Mr. Boone himself in a chronological diary style..obviously covering only certain events... and part two of the book "The Adventures of Daniel Boone by Francis Lister Hawks which follows the life of Daniel Boone from birth to death and a lot in between! I really enjoyed and learned so much history by reading this and may I say that it would be perfect for a student of History or just a History buff! Not too long to get boring it is well covered in just 126 pages.
A 2-part combination: first about ten pages of autobiography by Daniel Boone himself, written sometime before his death in 1820; and then about 100 pages of biographical summary written in 1844. Both are excellent. Interesting that both Boone and Crockett left young wives and small children for 6 months to 2 years at a time to 'do their thing.' My question is, how did these women and children survive, when out in the wilds in a small cabin with no food, no security against the many Indians, outlaws and renegades, and no means to grow and harvest any crops?