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  1. Richard Callaway

    Richard Callaway

    American politician

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  1. Richard Callaway (June 14, 1717 – November 8, 1780) was an American frontiersman, military officer, politician, and hunter who was one of the first white settlers in modern-day Kentucky. Born in Essex County, Virginia, Callaway joined Daniel Boone in 1775 in marking the Wilderness Road into central Kentucky, becoming one of the founders of ...

    • The Call of The Wild
    • The Trail to Kanta-Ke
    • Call of The West
    • Boonesborough
    • Siege of Boonesborough

    Born in Berk’s County, Pennsylvania, on November 2, 1734, Daniel was the sixth of Squire and Sarah Boone’s 11 children. His Quaker grandfather had come to Penn’s colony in 1713 in search of religious freedom. But Squire Boone, angered when chastised by the Exeter Meeting of Friends for allowing two of his children to marry outside the church, left ...

    In the spring of 1768, an Irish peddler arrived at the Boone cabin seeking shelter. It was old John Findley, who 13 years earlier had regaled young Boone during Braddock’s march with tales of the fabled Kanta-ke. Boone planned a long hunt with Findley to this American Eden, and enlisted his younger brother, Squire; his brother-in-law, John Stewart;...

    Kentucky was also causing excitement among the land jobbers and capitalists on the eastern seaboard. Their surveyors were soon hazarding the perilous Ohio River route to mark out parcels of land in Kentucky for future development. George Washington had his surveying parties mark off ten thousand acres for him, despite the Crown’s prohibition of set...

    On April 1, 1775, Boone and his men began construction of Fort Boonesborough near a salt lick some 60 yards south of the Kentucky River. The northern Indians attacked the work parties, killing four and wounding another, and the fort was only saved by the timely arrival of Henderson with reinforcements. The new fort was saved, but not Henderson’s Tr...

    Blackfish’s Shawnees retaliated, taking a heavy toll on the three Kentucky outposts—butchering cattle, destroying crops and holding the settlers as virtual captives inside their fragile stockades. On April 24, 1777, the Shawnees ambushed several men outside the fort and Boone, rushing to their rescue, went down with a shattered ankle. He was saved ...

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  3. Richard Callaway (June 14, 1717 – November 8, 1780) was an American frontiersman, military officer, politician, and hunter who was one of the first white settlers in modern-day Kentucky. Born in Essex County, Virginia, Callaway joined Daniel Boone in 1775 in marking the Wilderness Road into central Kentucky, becoming one of the founders of ...

  4. Richard Callaway came to Kentucky with Daniel Boone. He was a founding father of Kentucky.https://linktr.ee/KyhistorypodSources:The Kentucky EncyclopediaLibr...

    • Oct 24, 2020
    • 654
    • Kentucky History Channel
  5. Jul 29, 2022 · Compare DNA and explore genealogy for Richard Callaway born 1717 Caroline, Virginia died 1780 Boonesborough, Madison, Kentucky, United States including ancestors + descendants + 2 photos + 9 genealogist comments + DNA connections + more in the free family tree community.

    • June 14, 1717
    • March 8, 1780
  6. A true story in Virginia and Kentucky history. On July 14, 1776, while paddling a canoe, Daniel Boone 's daughter Jemima Boone and Elizabeth and Frances, daughters of Colonel Richard Callaway, were kidnapped by a Cherokee-Shawnee raiding party. Floyd was a member of Daniel Boone 's party that rescued the three girls.

  7. September 8-20, 1778 at Boonesboro, Kentucky. Battle Summary. The Siege of Boonesborough was an attack on the Kentucky settlement of Boonesborough was led by Chief Blackfish, a Shawnee leader allied to the British. Months before the battle, Blackfish had captured and adopted Daniel Boone, the founder of Boonesborough.

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