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  3. A disgraced British officer impersonates Daniel Boone to attempt to turn things his way with the Indians.

    No. Overall
    No. In Season
    Title
    Directed By
    1
    1
    "Ken-Tuck-E"
    George Marshall
    2
    2
    "Tekawitha McLeod"
    3
    3
    "My Brother's Keeper"
    4
    4
    "The Family Fluellen"
    Byron Paul
  4. The Imposter: Directed by William Wiard. With Fess Parker, Ed Ames, Patricia Blair, Lloyd Bochner. Mingo, with the help of Rebecca and a backwoodsman, dresses up like a British major in order to steal a shipment of rapid-fire rifles that could be used for the Revolutionary War.

    • (37)
    • Adventure, Western
    • William Wiard
    • 1968-01-18
    • Who Was Daniel Boone?
    • Early Life
    • French and Indian War
    • Cumberland Gap
    • Wife and Children
    • Death and Legacy
    • TV Show

    Daniel Boone left home on a military expedition during the French and Indian War, and in 1769 Boone led an expedition that discovered a trail to the west through the Cumberland Gap. In 1775, he settled an area he called Boonesborough in Kentucky, where he faced Indian resistance. Boone died in Femme Osage Creek, Missouri, in 1820.

    Boone was born on November 2, 1734, in a log cabin in Exeter Township, near Reading, Pennsylvania. His father, Squire Boone, Sr., was a Quakerblacksmith and weaver who met his wife, Sarah Morgan, in Pennsylvania after he emigrated from England. Boone, the couple's sixth child, received little formal education. Boone learned how to read and write fr...

    In 1755, Boone left home on a military expedition that was part of the French and Indian War. He served as a wagoner for Brigadier General Edward Braddock during his army's calamitous defeat at Turtle Creek, near modern-day Pittsburgh. A skilled survivor, Daniel Boone saved his own life by escaping the French and Indian ambush on horseback. In 1767...

    In May 1769, Boone led another expedition with John Finley, a teamster Boone had marched with during the French and Indian War, and four other men. Under Boone's leadership, the team of explorers discovered a trail to the far west through the Cumberland Gap. The trail would become the means by which settlers would access the frontier. Boone took hi...

    In August 1756, Boone wed Rebecca Bryan, and the couple set up stakes in the Yadkin Valley. Over a 24-year period, the couple would have 10 children together. At first, Boone found himself content with what he described as the perfect ingredients to a happy life: "A good gun, a good horse and a good wife." But adventure stories Boone had heard from...

    On September 26, 1820, Boone died of natural causes at his home in Femme Osage Creek, Missouri. He was 85 years old. More than two decades after his death, his body was exhumed and reburied in Kentucky. Regardless of the folklore surrounding his figure, Boone indeed existed and is still remembered as one of the greatest woodsmen in American history...

    The legend surrounding Boone was so popular in American culture that NBC launched an action-adventure TV show about him in 1964, starring actor Fess Parker as Boone and lasting six seasons. An earlier TV show on Boone, played by Dewey Martin, was made by The Walt Disney Company in 1960.

    • Randal Rust
    • Daniel Boone, the Long Hunter. When he was about 16, the family moved to North Carolina Colony and he went on his first “long hunt” in the Blue Ridge Mountains with his friend, 13-year-old Henry Miller, who worked as an apprentice to Squire Boone.
    • Boone at the Battle of the Monongahela. Despite his affection for hunting, he joined the North Carolina Militia and was part of the failed expedition led by General Edward Braddock during the French and Indian War.
    • Daniel Boone’s Children and Marriage. Boone went home to the Yadkin Valley, where he met Rebecca Bryan. The two of them were married on August 14, 1756. They would go on to have a large family of their own of 10 — six sons and four daughters — which expanded further to take care of 8 more children of relatives who were killed or died over the years.
    • Anglo-Cherokee War. In late 1758, the Virginia Militia attacked and killed some Cherokee warriors who were returning to their homes after fighting against the French.
  5. Mar 4, 2010 · Daniel Boone was an early American frontiersman who gained fame for his hunting and trailblazing expeditions through the Cumberland Gap, a natural pass through the Appalachian Mountains of ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Daniel_BooneDaniel Boone - Wikipedia

    Signature. Daniel Boone (November 2 [ O.S. October 22], 1734 – September 26, 1820) was an American pioneer and frontiersman whose exploits made him one of the first folk heroes of the United States. He became famous for his exploration and settlement of Kentucky, which was then beyond the western borders of the Thirteen Colonies.

  7. Daniel Boone – Season 1, Episode 7. A British officer (Michael Rennie) captures Boone then impersonates him to win Indian allies.

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