FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   >>  
, but the Cherokees were the most important. They had conquered the other tribes and ruled the land. Henderson sent Boone to ask the Cherokees to meet him at Sycamore Shoals in what is now Tennessee. Twelve hundred Indian men, women, and children came to the meeting place. Henderson had all his trading goods spread out. There were yards and yards of red cloth. There were hundreds of bright new guns. There were beads and pins and little mirrors for the women. Henderson's company had paid a great deal of money for the trading goods. The Indians were like children about the business of trading land for goods. They loved the bright-colored trinkets. But they knew nothing about the value of land. Although they had their own lawyer, they traded Kentucky to Henderson for a tiny part of what it was worth. The Cherokees warned the white men of savage Indians who came hunting from the west and the north. They told Henderson he might have trouble settling the land. Boone did not go with Henderson to Sycamore Shoals. He waited near Cumberland Gap with thirty men. When Henderson sent word that he had bought Kentucky, Boone spoke one word to his men. "Start!" he said. The men began to make the famous Wilderness Road that was to lead to Kentucky. Later it would be traveled by settlers with their horses, wagons, and cattle. Just now Boone's men chose the shortest and easiest way over the mountains and through the woods. They followed Indian trails and buffalo paths. They swung their axes. They cut down trees. They crossed streams. Daniel Boone worked as hard as anyone. And all the time he kept a sharp lookout for unfriendly Indians. The men did not stop until they reached the banks of the Kentucky River. Here they began to build a fort. Boone knew that the Shawnees and other Indian tribes would not admit that Henderson had bought Kentucky. When Henderson came to the settlement, he said, "We will call this place Boonesborough. It is right to name it for the man who led us here." Boone went back to get his family. Some of his children had grown up and married before the Boones set out for Kentucky the first time. Thirteen-year-old Jemima was his last unmarried daughter. She and her mother were the first white women to stand on the bank of the Kentucky River. The Rescue One Sunday afternoon, Jemima and two other girls went for a canoe ride on the Kentucky River at Boonesborough. They knew they should not
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   >>  



Top keywords:
Henderson
 
Kentucky
 
Indian
 

trading

 

children

 
Indians
 
Cherokees
 

Jemima

 

bright

 

bought


Sycamore

 
tribes
 

Shoals

 

Boonesborough

 
lookout
 

reached

 

unfriendly

 

Daniel

 

buffalo

 

mountains


trails

 

worked

 

streams

 

crossed

 

daughter

 
mother
 
unmarried
 

Thirteen

 
afternoon
 

Rescue


Sunday

 

Boones

 

settlement

 

married

 

family

 
Shawnees
 

Cumberland

 

business

 

mirrors

 

company


colored

 

lawyer

 
traded
 

Although

 

trinkets

 
conquered
 
important
 

Tennessee

 

Twelve

 
hundreds