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Boone Family History & Genealogy

22,426 biographies and 57 photos with the Boone last name. Discover the family history, nationality, origin and common names of Boone family members.

Boone Last Name History & Origin

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History

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Name Origin

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Spellings & Pronunciations

Boon, Bohn

Nationality & Ethnicity

England and Germany

Famous People named Boone

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Early Boones

These are the earliest records we have of the Boone family.

Daniel Boone
Daniel Boone was born on November 2, 1734. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Daniel Boone.
Israel Boone was born on January 25, 1759 in North Carolina USA. Israel was baptized on August 19, 1782 at Blue Licks, Fayette County, KIentucky. Israel Boone died at age 23 years old on August 19, 1782 in Kentucky U.S.A., and was buried at Boone’s Station, Athens-Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Israel Boone.
Jeremiah Boone was born on February 29, 1760 at Berks County Pennsylvania, and died at age 72 years old on June 10, 1832 at Lawrence County, IN. Jeremiah Boone was buried in October 1832 at Boone Cemetery, Indian Creek, Lawrence County, Indiana. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Jeremiah Boone.
Jemima Boone Callaway
Jemima's parents were frontiersman Daniel Boone (1734 - 1820) and Rebecca Ann "Becky" Bryan Boone (1739 - 1813). She had siblings James, Israel, Susannah, Levinga, Rebecca, Daniel Morgan, Jesse, William, and Nathaniel. Jemima married Flanders Isham Callaway (1752- 1829) and they had children, Sarah " Sally", Minerva, John, James, Frances, Susannah, Tabitha, Larkin, Elizabeth, and Daniel (named for his grandfather). A story from her life and neighbors "the Callaway girls" has often been told. It is summarized in Wikipedia: "Three girls were captured by a Cherokee-Shawnee raiding party on July 14, 1776 and rescued three days later by Daniel Boone and his party, celebrated for their success. The incident was portrayed in 19th-century literature and paintings: James Fenimore Cooper created a fictionalized version of the episode in his novel The Last of the Mohicans (1826) and Charles Ferdinand Wimar painted The Abduction of Boone's Daughter by the Indians (c. 1855)." See G-G-Granddaughter Donates Boone Tomahawk for a brief article that appeared in 1963 when a memento of this kidnapping was donated to the Daniel Boone Shrine Association. In comparison to this exciting "adventure", life seems to have settled down for Jemima after she married and started to produce so many children. One of those children, Captain James Callaway, had a confrontation with Native Americans and lost his life. His father, Flanders, had to recover his son's body. A detailed account of this event can be found in an article which appeared in 1930 at Death of Captain James Callaway
Mary "Polly" Boone Tribble
Mary "Polly" (Boone) Tribble was born on April 2, 1776 at Rowan, North Carolina, USA, and died at age 55 years old on September 14, 1831 in Richmond, Kentucky United States. Mary Tribble was buried on September 14, 1831 in Richmond Cemetery, Richmond. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Mary "Polly" Boone Tribble.
Nathaniel Boone Ii
Nathaniel Boone Ii was born on March 2, 1781 at Boones Station, Fayette, Kentucky, United States to Daniel Boone. He married Olive (VanBibber) Boone, and had a child John Colter Boone. Nathaniel Boone died at age 75 years old on October 16, 1856 in Ash Grove, Greene County, Missouri United States, and was buried in October 1856 in Ashgrove Family Cemetery,, Mississippi US. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Nathaniel Boone Ii.
Benningsen Boone was born on May 6, 1807. He was married to Elizabeth Will, and had children Daniel Will Boone, Julianna Boone, Mary Boone, William Boone, Atticus Boone, and Benningsen Boone Jr.. Benningsen Boone died at age 67 years old in 1874, and was buried at Boone Cemetary,Grand Tower,ILL. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Benningsen Boone.
Allen Boone
Allen Boone was born on February 1, 1812. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Allen Boone.
James Boone of Australia was born in 1826, and died at age 51 years old in 1877.
Daniel Will Boone was born on November 9, 1830 in Grand Tower, Jackson County, Illinois United States to Elizabeth Will and Benningsen Boone, and has siblings Julianna Boone, Mary Boone, William Boone, Atticus Boone, and Benningsen Boone Jr.. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Daniel Will Boone.
Julianna (BOONE) Hiess was born on November 20, 1834 in Grand Tower, Jackson County, Illinois United States to Elizabeth Will and Benningsen Boone, and had siblings Daniel Will Boone, Mary Boone, William Boone, Atticus Boone, and Benningsen Boone Jr.. Julianna Hiess married William Hiess, and died at age 25 years old on January 10, 1860. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Julianna Boone.
Hannah Boone of Beechworth Australia was born in 1836, and died at age 52 years old in 1888 in Beechworth.

Boone Family Photos

Discover Boone family photos shared by the community. These photos contain people and places related to the Boone last name.

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Boone Family Tree

Discover the most common names, oldest records and life expectancy of people with the last name Boone.

Most Common First Names

Updated Boone Biographies

Elvin L Boone was born on February 24, 1936, and died at age 61 years old on June 2, 1997. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Elvin L Boone.
Kelly R Boone of Reno, Washoe County, NV was born on August 10, 1958 to Robert Boone. Kelly Boone died at age 40 years old on March 7, 1999.
Robert Boone was born on June 18, 1913, and was the father of Kelly R Boone. Robert Boone died at age 78 years old on December 23, 1991. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Robert Boone.
Joseph David Boone
Joseph David Boone of Los Angeles, California United States was born on June 6, 1871 in Paducah, KY, and died at age 79 years old on April 28, 1951 in Los Angeles, CA.
Jessie W Boone of Mill Spring, Polk County, NC was born on May 4, 1912, and died at age 80 years old on August 13, 1992.
Daniel Boone
Daniel Boone was born on November 2, 1734. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Daniel Boone.
Rev Joseph Everhart Boone
Joseph Everhart Boone of Atlanta, Fulton County, GA was born on September 19, 1922 in Cedartown, Comté de Polk County, and died at age 83 years old on July 14, 2006 in Atlanta, Comté de Fulton County. Joseph Boone was buried at Lincoln Cemetery 2275 Joseph E. Boone Blvd NW, in Atlanta, Fulton County.
Jarvis R Boone of Chester, Orange County, NY was born on June 16, 1925, and died at age 74 years old on August 11, 1999.
Rayn T Boone
Rayn T Boone of Eugene, Lane County, OR was born on April 27, 1981, and died at age 26 years old on February 8, 2008.
Frederick Boone Jr. was born on August 13, 1922, and died at age 61 years old in November 1983. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Frederick Boone Jr. .
Clifford M Boone Jr. was born on December 15, 1941, and died at age 58 years old on May 11, 2000. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Clifford M Boone Jr. .
Lola M Boone of Wilmer, Mobile County, AL was born on March 19, 1908, and died at age 85 years old in January 1994.
Julianne's father is James Edward Kopecky and her mother is Stella Louise Roehe. Julianne wasn't given a middle name. She married Mark Paxson Boone on September 16, 1990 in Travis county, Texas. They had at least one child, Derek James Boone. She is a lifelong resident of Texas who has lived in Pflugerville, Texas; Austin, Texas; Rosenberg, Texas; and Houston, Texas.
Harold L Boone Jr. was born on November 24, 1967, and died at age 28 years old on February 21, 1996. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Harold L Boone Jr. .
Etienne Boone Jr. was born on July 23, 1963, and died at age 40 years old on September 20, 2003. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Etienne Boone Jr. .
Willie L Boone of Bay City, Matagorda County, TX was born on August 11, 1920, and died at age 72 years old on March 25, 1993.
Willie B Boone of El Dorado, Union County, AR was born on April 11, 1918, and died at age 82 years old on July 10, 2000.
Willie Boone of Tyler, Smith County, Texas was born on June 4, 1911, and died at age 73 years old in March 1985.
Willie L Boone of Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee was born on August 7, 1907, and died at age 78 years old in September 1985.
Willie J Boone of Miami, Miami-Dade County, FL was born on December 5, 1927, and died at age 66 years old on November 28, 1994.

Popular Boone Biographies

Daniel Boone
Daniel Boone was born on November 2, 1734. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Daniel Boone.
Wilma Jane (Boone) Gibson
Wilma Jane (Boone) Gibson was born to Robert William Boone Sr. and Dellena Belle (Johnston) Boone. Wilma Gibson married Emery M. Gibson, and has a child Constance Ann Gibson. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Wilma Jane (Boone) Gibson.
Robert William Boone, Jr.
Robert William Boone Jr. was born to Robert William Boone Sr. and Dellena Bella (Johnston) Boone. Robert Boone was in a relationship with Edna Grace (Gordon) Boone, and has children Bonnie Belle Boone and Robert William Boone, Iii. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Robert William Boone, Jr..
Rayn T Boone
Rayn T Boone of Eugene, Lane County, OR was born on April 27, 1981, and died at age 26 years old on February 8, 2008.
Shirley Boone
Singer Pat Boone's wife of 64 years, Shirley Boone, has died at the age of 84. People reports that Boone died "peacefully" on Friday morning (Jan. 11) at the couples' Beverly Hills home. She had been suffering complications from vasculitis, which she had contracted in 2018. Her husband and their four daughters Cherry, Lindy, Debby and Laury were by her bedside singing hymns when she died. Pat Boone tells People he believes he will reunite with his high school sweetheart soon. “We lived a wonderful, blessed life together for 65 years. I’ve parted with my better half for a little while… but we don’t die, we just move on to another place, and today was moving day,” he says. “She’s changed her address is all and moved to a different mansion that I expect to join her in one day.” “I’m very confident of that,” Boone states. “That took the sting out of what happened today because we know we’re gonna be together again and have a whole new beginning.” Charles Eugene "Pat" Boone met Shirley Lee Foley when they were teenagers. Her father was the legendary country singer Red Foley, and her mother was singer Judy Martin. The couple married in November of 1953, when both were just 19 years old. Pat Boone would go on to a singing career that included a stint on Motown's subsidiary country label, Hitsville, from 1974 until the label closed in 1977, releasing singles including "Indiana Girl." His run there included an album titled Texas Woman in 1976. The couple's third daughter, Debby, would go on to a recording career that scored several country hits, including two No. 1 singles: "You Light Up My Life" in 1977 and "Are You on the Road to Lovin' Me Again" in 1980. In addition to being a loving wife and mother, as well as a grandmother and great-grandmother, Shirley Boone was an author, singer, humanitarian and founder of a billion-dollar Christian ministry. Pat Boone attributed their marital longevity to their shared faith. “We didn’t have the perfect marriage, but it helps to marry a magnificent woman,” he reflects. “You make your commitments to God and each other, and in troubled times, you hang on to the commitment to God, and to your kids. You see the problems through and you find you’re stronger because of it.”
Sarah (Boone) Bloom
Sarah (Boone) Bloom was born in 1837, and died at age 68 years old in 1905. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Sarah (Boone) Bloom.
Beulah Bea Boone was born to Charles Howard Boone and Lydia May Conley, and is the mother of Lloyd Keith Farrell. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Beulah Bea Boone.
Anna (Hunkins) Boone
Anna (Hunkins) Boone was born on May 27, 1929. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Anna (Hunkins) Boone.
Jemima Boone Callaway
Jemima's parents were frontiersman Daniel Boone (1734 - 1820) and Rebecca Ann "Becky" Bryan Boone (1739 - 1813). She had siblings James, Israel, Susannah, Levinga, Rebecca, Daniel Morgan, Jesse, William, and Nathaniel. Jemima married Flanders Isham Callaway (1752- 1829) and they had children, Sarah " Sally", Minerva, John, James, Frances, Susannah, Tabitha, Larkin, Elizabeth, and Daniel (named for his grandfather). A story from her life and neighbors "the Callaway girls" has often been told. It is summarized in Wikipedia: "Three girls were captured by a Cherokee-Shawnee raiding party on July 14, 1776 and rescued three days later by Daniel Boone and his party, celebrated for their success. The incident was portrayed in 19th-century literature and paintings: James Fenimore Cooper created a fictionalized version of the episode in his novel The Last of the Mohicans (1826) and Charles Ferdinand Wimar painted The Abduction of Boone's Daughter by the Indians (c. 1855)." See G-G-Granddaughter Donates Boone Tomahawk for a brief article that appeared in 1963 when a memento of this kidnapping was donated to the Daniel Boone Shrine Association. In comparison to this exciting "adventure", life seems to have settled down for Jemima after she married and started to produce so many children. One of those children, Captain James Callaway, had a confrontation with Native Americans and lost his life. His father, Flanders, had to recover his son's body. A detailed account of this event can be found in an article which appeared in 1930 at Death of Captain James Callaway
Ruth C (Elliott) Boone
Ruth Charlotte (Elliott) Boone of Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA was born on June 4, 1921, and died at age 88 years old on October 8, 2009.
Lola M Boone of Wilmer, Mobile County, AL was born on March 19, 1908, and died at age 85 years old in January 1994.
Roy Boone
Roy Boone was born circa 1891. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Roy Boone.
John C. Boone
John C. Boone was born on December 5, 1895. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember John C. Boone.
Julianne's father is James Edward Kopecky and her mother is Stella Louise Roehe. Julianne wasn't given a middle name. She married Mark Paxson Boone on September 16, 1990 in Travis county, Texas. They had at least one child, Derek James Boone. She is a lifelong resident of Texas who has lived in Pflugerville, Texas; Austin, Texas; Rosenberg, Texas; and Houston, Texas.
Elvin L Boone was born on February 24, 1936, and died at age 61 years old on June 2, 1997. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Elvin L Boone.
Jeremiah Boone was born on February 29, 1760 at Berks County Pennsylvania, and died at age 72 years old on June 10, 1832 at Lawrence County, IN. Jeremiah Boone was buried in October 1832 at Boone Cemetery, Indian Creek, Lawrence County, Indiana. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Jeremiah Boone.
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Georgia A. (Abshire) Boone.
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Elise Mae Boone .
Susan Elaine Boone of 5306 Webster Ln, in Owensboro, Daviess County, Kentucky United States was born on February 2, 1955 at Owensboro-Daviess County Hospital in Owensboro. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Susan Elaine Boone.

Boone Death Records & Life Expectancy

The average age of a Boone family member is 71.0 years old according to our database of 18,100 people with the last name Boone that have a birth and death date listed.

Life Expectancy

71.0 years

Oldest Boones

These are the longest-lived members of the Boone family on AncientFaces.

Mary A Boone of Leitchfield, Grayson County, KY was born on February 10, 1887, and died at age 114 years old on May 13, 2001.
114 years
Kary Boone was born on August 16, 1843, and died at age 114 years old in September 1957. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kary Boone.
114 years
Pearlie Boone of Greenville, Greenville County, South Carolina was born on July 19, 1898, and died at age 108 years old on March 23, 2007.
108 years
Maude B Boone of Jacksonville, Cherokee County, TX was born on August 3, 1895, and died at age 107 years old on January 28, 2003.
107 years
Ora Boone of West Union, Adams County, Ohio was born on January 7, 1879, and died at age 108 years old in April 1987.
108 years
Mora Evelyn Boone of Bryan, Brazos County, Texas was born on December 23, 1901, and died at age 106 years old on December 11, 2008.
106 years
Mygnone Amazon Boone of Longview, Gregg County, Texas was born on May 7, 1904, and died at age 106 years old on July 2, 2010.
106 years
Mary Stella Boone of Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky was born on December 6, 1905, and died at age 105 years old on March 13, 2011.
105 years
Marion Boone of Port Republic, Calvert County, Maryland was born on July 27, 1879, and died at age 106 years old in July 1985.
105 years
Chaney Boone of Frametown, Braxton County, WV was born on October 15, 1891, and died at age 105 years old on April 25, 1997.
105 years
Beulah J Boone of Rocky Mount, Nash County, NC was born on October 6, 1902, and died at age 105 years old on May 16, 2008.
105 years
Gertie Boone of Portsmouth, Portsmouth City County, Virginia was born on April 10, 1876, and died at age 104 years old in March 1981.
104 years
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This is a story that my uncle told me at my grandma's funeral. Pretty much the only fact that I have right now is that my grandfather Oscar Boone along with his parents Louis and Mary Boone and 2 brothers Dominic and Ferdinand are shown on a passenger list for the Lapland returning from Antwerp,Belgium in June 1912 just 2 months after Titanic sank. Now the rest is just hearsay but given what we know about Titanic I really wouldn't be surprised if its true.

Louis and Mary Boone immigrated to the United States in the 1890s (1894-1896 period) and naturally since they didn't have much money they couldn't bring all their belongings over with them at that time so they were going to have them sent over later. Well from what I hear, their belongings were supposed to be sent over on the Titanic, so I assume Titanic was going to go back to Belgium on her second voyage since she'd already been only a couple days out from New York when she sunk. So Mary and Lous their young sons (Alice wasn't born until 1915) set out for Belgium (on a currently unknown ship) to retreive their things. I'd known for couple years that the family went back to Belgium, but I'd always thought that it was so the children could meet the family that didn't come over. Not that they'd be going over there to retreive belongings that were meant to be on the Titanic.

I fell in love with Titanic when I first saw the James Cameron movie "Titanic" (more specifically I fell in love with Leonardo DiCaprio/Jack Dawson!) But never in my wildest dreams would I have thought that I could have even the slightest connection to what was once called "The ship of dreams!"

What makes me think that it could really be true even to an extent is that the ship that brought my family back from Belgium in June of 1912, Red Star Line's Lapland, was hired by the White Star Line in April 1912 to return the Titanic crew to England after being held in New York for questioning about that fateful night. Now we can't find records of when the family left the U.S.A. if they indeed went to retrieve belongings that means they left after hearing about the Titanic sinking. I just found out that the Lapland was hired to return the crew a few days ago and now I can't stop wondering "could my family have left and returned on the Lapland? Could they have met the surviving crew of Titanic?" Unfortunatly for me my grandpa Boone was 29 years older than grandma and all the Boone's that would know of this are all gone so I may never have answers to any of those questions.

If its not true then it was finding out all this other info that I would've known had I not been researching it. If it is true then I thank god that the stuff wasn't on the Titanic that April night because whatever they were haveing sent to them meant enough to Louis and Mary that they'd wait 10 years to see their things again.

Anyway thats my story. I don't how much is true.
Inscriptions on the Battle of Blue Licks Memorial, including a list of participant names.

Front of Memorial Monument:

"This monument, the gift of a grateful commonwealth, commemorates the
heroic pioneers who, in defence of Kentucky, here fought and fell in the Battle of
Blue Licks, August 19, 1782."

Colonel-Commandant
John Todd, killed

Lieutenant-Colonels
Daniel Boone
Stephen Trigg, killed

Majors
Edward Bulger
Silas Harlan

Captains
John Allison
John Beasley, captured
John Bulger, killed
John Gordon, killed
Samuel Johnson
Joseph Kincaid, killed [Kinkead]
Gabriel Madison, killed
William McBride, killed
Clough Overton, killed
Robert Patterson

Lieutenants
William Gilvins, killed [Givins]
Thomas Hinson, killed
John Kennedy, killed
James McGuire, killed
Barnett Rogers, killed

Ensign
John Murtry, captured [McMurtry]
Joseph Lindsey, killed

"So valiantly did our small party fight, to the memory of those who
unfortunately fell in the Battle, enough of Honour cannot be paid."
Daniel Boone
Monument dedicated August 19, 1928

Right side of Monument

"The men who fought in the Battle of the Blue Licks were as well qualified
from experience to face the Indians as any body of men that were ever
collected.
Robert Patterson

Privates who were killed:

Charles Black [Clarence]
Samuel Brannon
Israel Boone
James Brown, surveyor
Esau Corn
Hugh Cunningham
John Douglass [Douglas]
William Eades [Eads]
Charles Ferguson
Ezekiel Field [Fields]
John Folley
Daniel Foster
John Fry
Little James Graham
Jervis Green
Daniel Greggs [Gregg]
Francis Harper
Matthew Harper
William Harris
James Ledgewood, captured and killed [Ledgerwood]
Francis McBride
Isaac McCracken
Andrew McConnell
Henry Miller
Gilbert Marshall
John Nelson
John Nutt
John O'Neal
Drury Polley [Polly]
John Price
William Robertson
Matthias Rose [Matthew]
James Smith
William Smith
John Stapleton
William Stephens
Val Stern
John Stevenson
William Stewart
Richard Tomlinson
John Wilson [1]
Israel Wilson
John Wilson [2]
Matthew Wylie
William Shannon [ensign]
Archibald Woods
Thomas Farrier
John Jolly
Joseph Oldfield

Ottawas and Chippawas

Back Side of Monument

No names

Shawnees and Delawares

"To the unknown heroes who took part in the Battle of Blue Licks."

Bottom of Monument

This "Last Battle of the Revolution" was fought between 182 Kentuckians,
commanded by Colonel John Todd, on the American side, and about 240 Indians
and Canadians, commanded by Captain William Caldwell, on the British side."

Left Side of Monument

Wyandots and Mingoes

"They advanced in the divisions in good order and gave us a volley and
stood to it very well for some time."

Captain William Caldwell


Privates who escaped:

William Barbee
Samuel Boone
Squire Boone, Jr., wounded
Jerry Craig
George Corn
William Field
Whitfield Craig
Edward Graham
Thomas Gist
James Graham
Squire Grant
Benjamin Hayden
Peter Harget
James M. January
James Kincaid
Wainright Lea
James McBride
William May
James McCullough
Andrew Morgan
James Morgan, captured, but escaped
John Morgan
Benjamin Netherland
John Pitman
James Ray
Aaron Reynolds
James Rose
Lewis Rose, captured
Abraham Scholl
Joseph Scholl
Peter Scholl
Samuel Scott
John Smith
Andrew Steele
Jacob Stevens
Thomas Stevenson
Jacob Stucker
James Swart
Henry Wilson
James Twyman [Stephen]
Jesse Yokum, captured [Yocum]
James Elijah Woods, captured
Robert Scott
George Smith
Bartlett Searcy
John Searcy
Samuel Shortridge......NOTE 1
William Shott [Short]
Edmond Singleton
Anthony Sowdusky
Josiah Wilson
John Sumner [Summer]
Samuel Woods
John Hambleton
John Hart
James Hays
James Harrod
Henry Higgins
John Hinch
Charles Hunter
Jacob Hunter
Ephraim January
William Lam
John Little
James McConnell
Mordecai Morgan
Henry Nixon
James Norton
Matthew Patterson
John Peake
Alexander Penlin
Robert Poague
Elisha Pruett
Andrew Rule
Thomas Akers
William Aldridge
Elijah Allen
James Allen
Abraham Bowman
Thomas Brooker
James Colburn, wounded
Jacob Coffean
Joseph Collins
Edward Corn
William Custer
Richard Davis
Theodorus Davis
Peter Dierly
Thomas Ficklin
Henry French
Henry Grider
Jeremiah Gullian

Small Monument to the left of large one:

This memorial was erected to honor those individuals whose names were
omitted from the original monument. New research has provided these
additional names and corrected previous information regarding those
individuals who so gloriously served Kentucky at the Battle of Blue Licks.

Thomas Boone, killed
John Childress, captured but escaped
James Ward, escaped

This monument erected in April, 1999 by the Childress family
association and the Kentucky Department of Parks.
These other
sources also record the following individuals as likely participants in the Battle
of Blue Licks, omitted from the monument due to insufficient proof:

Majors

Levi Todd
Hugh McGary
George Michael Bedinger
Samuel Shannon

John Bradford
Benjamin A. Cooper
James Ellis
William Ellis

NOTE 1:
Samuel Shortridge was born in 1756 in Fairfax County, Virginia. Samuel served as an Indian fighter in Captain Charles Hazelrigg’s company of the Virginia Militia, in Fayette Co., Virginia, under the command of Col. Daniel Boone and in Gen. George Roger Clarke’s expedition against the Indians on the Scioto in Ohio in 1762 after the battle of Blue Licks. Samuel Shortridge married Sarah Scholl around 1776. They had 8 children who were named in his will; Keziah, Leah, Samuel, Elizabeth, Lelah, John, James and Morgan.
He died on July 8, 1823 in Tippecanoe Co., IN. and is buried on land that belongs to his daughter and son-in-law (thereafter called the Black Cemetery or the Rural Cemetery)
Edward Boone was born in Pennsylvania November 30, 1740 and was killed by Indians in Kentucky October 6, 1780, while he was on a hunting trip with his brother Daniel.

Edward and Daniel married sisters, Martha and Rebecca Bryan, whose father, Joseph Bryan, was one of the founders and defenders of Bryan Station near Lexington, Kentucky. Edward spent most of his life in what is today Wilkes County, North Carolina where he was a community leader and family man. He served on juries, was a road surveyor, a tax collector, a constable. Although the Boones had for many years been Quakers, he was baptized in the Baptist Church and loved to sing. He was called Ned or Neddie by his family and friends. He was "A peace man." (Draper Manuscript 23C17-4)
"E. Boone migrated at the same time with his Brother and the Scholls - he was Clerk & Deacon of the Baptist Church in NC - every boddy Called him Unkle Neddy. He was Never in any encounters that I heard of - he was a peace man; his widow Dyed at her oldest sons George Boone's at the Mouth of Boon's Creek Clark Co., KY. Sarah Hunter was Living Not Long Since." EB Scholl to LCD 1861.

In a letter to Dr. Lymon Draper, Ned’s daughter, Sarah, said that her father did not accompany his famous brother Daniel on his many expeditions. Ned stayed with his family and served their community – that is, until October of 1779 when he made that fateful decision to move his family to Kentucky with Daniel who was leading a large party of family members there for the promise of free land. Only one month before, Edward had taken out a land entry in Wilkes County. Then, only one year later, Edward was killed by Indians in Kentucky.

Daniel and Ned were returning from a trip to the Blue Licks to make salt and to do a little hunting. They stopped along a stream in Bourbon County to rest and let their horses drink. Edward sat down by the stream near an old Buckeye tree and was cracking nuts, while Daniel went off into the woods in pursuit of game. Indians lurking nearby shot and killed Edward but Daniel managed to escape. He ran all the way on foot to Boone Station where they were all living at the time with about fifteen other families near present-day Athens. The next morning Daniel and a party of men in the area went in search of Edward’s killers. They did not find the Indians, but found and buried Edward near that old Buckeye tree. Ned’s daughter Sarah in a letter to Draper said her father had been horribly cut by the Indian’s knives. Today in that very spot stands an old Buckeye tree. The creek was afterward named Boone Creek in honor of Edward’s death there. Edward was survived by his widow, Martha Bryan Boone, and six children: Charity, Jane, Mary, George, Joseph and Sarah. Although still a young woman, Martha never remarried and remained in Kentucky until her death. Her will was written July 23, 1793, and is recorded in Clark County.

Draper manuscripts indicate that “about 1827, the bones of Edward Boone became exposed to view where they were buried, in the road, by washing of water, near the bank of the creek, and close to the spring, and the Rev. Richard Thomas had them removed and re-interred a mile off in the Rockbridge Baptist Church yard.”

In the summer of 1997 Dell Boone Ariola, husband Ken, and grandson Bryan almost literally stumbled upon Edward’s gravestone that was erected in Bourbon County by the Paris, Kentucky, CAR/DAR in the 1920’s. The stone was on its side, almost completely covered by mud. Dell contacted Rochelle E. Cochran and Russell Lain Ready whom she knew to be direct descendants of Edward Boone, and they formed the Edward Boone Memorial Committee of the Boone Society.

The Edward Boone Memorial Committee met property owners, Ron and Phyllis Isaac (870 See Road), and discussed the committee ideas about restoring, protecting, and marking this historic grave. The Isaacs were not only supportive but also were very excited about the project and provided land for visitor parking; cut grass and underbrush. Bourbon County Judge Donnie Foley provided grading for parking. To protect the grave, Master Stonemason Stanley Matherly donated his time and specialized talent to build a stone precision-laid rock wall of the type that was built in the mid 1800’s (using no cement and local native flat rocks). Isaac installed an iron gate to protect the original marker. There was a lot of local interest in the project and many neighbors donated time and equipment to prepare the site. This historic site is visited by school students in the area and descendants and tourists from all across the country.

In May 1998 the Edward Boone Death Site was designated a Kentucky Landmark by the Kentucky Heritage Council. Then in 2001 a Kentucky Historical Highway Marker was installed and dedicated at the corner of KY Highway 537 & See Road, about a mile east of Little Rock. The Boone Society, Inc., paid for the historical marker completely through donations to the project. No state funds or tax dollars were used, although the Kentucky State Historical Society and the State Highway Cabinet approved and installed the marker (#2059).

April 23, 2001 Honoring the memory of Edward Boone, Kentucky Highway Historical Marker No. 2059 was dedicated by the Boone Society, Kentucky Historical Society, and the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Marker is located at junction of KY Hwy. 537 & See Road. The text of the marker reads: #2059, Edward Boone (1740-80) Death site of Edward Boone, a brother of renowned Kentucky pioneer Daniel Boone. Edward was killed by Indians here Oct. 1780 at age 40 while hunting with Daniel. Boone Creek named for Edward. Daniel and Edward wed sisters, Rebecca and Martha Bryan, whose family built and settled Bryan Station near Lexington. Presented by The Boone Society, Inc.”
George T. Scholl
Confederate Guerilla, Quantrill's Raiders (Bill Anderson's Company)
George T. Scholl was a recorded member of Quantrill's men, and served under Bill Anderson, Archie Clements, Dave Poole and Fletcher Taylor. He also served with and knew personally Frank and Jessie James as well as Cole Younger and his brother's. George and Boone Scholl were raised and attended school in Jackson County, Missouri. They had property in Independence, Mo. prior to Order #11, forcing them from land and home. George T. Scholl survived the war, and settled in St. Louis County. He is listed in the History of St. Louis County Volume II, published in 1911 by the S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.
MORE INFO:
Great Great Grandson of Daniel Boone the Frontiersman. Joseph Scholl married Lavinia Boone Daniel Boones Daughter. The Scholl's also fought in the Revolutionary War alongside the Boone Family of Kentucky. There was also another connection with the Boone family. George's mother, Harriet Rite Boone, was a 3rd cousin of his father, Nelson Scholl. She was a descendent of one of Daniel Boone's brothers.

George was the brother of Daniel Boone Scholl, who was killed while serving under Quantrill's command.

George Scholl surrendered in Lexington, Mo. 21 May 1865. He had just returned from Sherman, Texas with Dave Poole and Archie Clements group, also Bill Anderson's brother.

George is listed in the History of St. Louis County Vol. 2 published in 1911. George is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Kirkwood, Mo. He was a distinguished member of the Masons.
Daniel Boone Scholl
Confederate Guerilla, Quantrill Raiders
Great Great Grandson of Daniel Boone the Frontiersman. Joseph Scholl married Lavinia Boone Daniel Boones Daughter. The Scholl's also fought in the Revolutionary War alongside the Boone Family of Kentucky. There was also another connection with the Boone family. Boone Scholl's mother, Harriet Rite Boone, was a 3rd cousin of his father, Nelson Scholl. She was a descendent of one of Daniel Boone's brothers.

Boone Scholl died in a skirmish with the 9th Kansas Calvary near Westport, Mo. 17 June 1863. Boone was buried in the Smith/Davis Cemetery in Raytown, Mo.

Among others in that Cemetery is Capt. Ferdenand Scott, who was killed in the same skirmish. Smith/Davis has been completely destroyed. All the headstones have been stolen or fallen and are buried under the sod. The owner of the property a Mr. Buzz Dulaney of Kansas, has been less than cooperative in over a 12 year attempt to save and restore this cemetery. Among others buried there are the girls killed in the awful Union Jail Collapes. Those girls were the sisters of Bill Anderson and others who rode with Quantrill. True history records one of the Major reasons for the raid on Lawrence, Kansas was due to the apprehension and death of these ladies.

Boone Scholl is mentioned numerous times in the by "Noted Guerillas" by John N. Edwards.

Boone Scholl is the brother of George Scholl, who also rode with Quantrill under the command of Bill Anderson
Jesse James was born in Clay County, Mo. on September 5, 1847. He became one of the most famous outlaws of the American West. He was a Civil War guerrilla at age 15. After the war, Jesse formed a gang with his brother, Frank, and several other men. They robbed banks, stagecoaches, and trains. In 1876, the gang was decimated trying to rob a bank in Northfield, Minn. However, Jesse and Frank escaped. Jesse formed another gang, but soon quietly slipped out of the state and hid out in Nashville, Tenn. There he was known as Thomas Howard. Mr. Howard and his wife, Zee, had a son born to them on December 31, 1875. They named him Charlie Howard. Jesse James called him "Tim."
Mr. Howard moved his family back to Missouri. On April 3, 1882, in St. Joseph, Mo., Jesse James was shot in the back by a fellow gang member, Bob Ford, for a reward. The seven-year-old lad had not known his real name Jesse Edwards James, Jr. until after his father's death.
Jesse James, Jr. Grew up and was running a cigar stand in the lobby of the Jackson County Courthouse in Kansas City, Mo., when he met and married Stella Frances McGowan. They married in the parlor of her parents' home at 415 Landis Court, Kansas City, Mo., on January 24, 1900. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Dr. S.H. Werlein of the Kansas City Methodist Church, South.
Stella and her family had only recently moved to Kansas City. She grew up on a farm with her parents, Alfred M. and Martha McGowan, near Ash Grove, Mo. Mary Boone Hosman, Stella's great- grandmother and daughter of Nathan Boone, was living in the Nathan Boone cabin at the time of the marriage.
Jesse James, Jr. and his Nathan Boone descendant bride, lived in Kansas City where he practiced law for 25 years. One of his clients would become President of the United States. His name was Harry S. Truman.

Missouri Commonwealth -- Ash Grove, Missouri -- November 24, 1994
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CONNECTION TO JESSE JAMES

Mother finds daughter's connection to the famed Outlaw

For ages I’ve heard the same old story – we were related to Jesse James or at least had a connection to the James-Younger Gang. Now while I knew the family story nothing more was ever whispered about just how we connected or who the infamous family member might have been. Then recently I received an e-mail from someone who recognized an ancestor in my online tree as being their grandmother and I was asked once again, "Can you tell me how we connect to Jesse James and the James-Younger Gang?" Once more I told of countless hours doing search after search on Jesse and then checking sites with lists of reported James-Younger members and still not finding a connection. This time I once again thought to myself that maybe this time I might hit the mother-lode and either once and for all put the story to rest or maybe I might just find that outlaw in the family. So one day about a week ago I punched in the James-Younger Gang to a search engine and found an interesting web-site. Still nothing jumped out at me, no name I could claim as my own, but then one name did pop. It was the name of Daniel Boone. Okay, I tell myself this might go somewhere and I stopped to read the reference. Then I discover that Daniel’s great-great-great granddaughter, Stella Frances McGowan, had married Jesse’s son, Jesse Edward James. Apparently, Stella worked to her death in March of 1951 to preserve the history of her father-in-law from pretenders and others who sought to make money or a name for themselves from Jesse’s legend.
For a couple of days Stella’s ancestry eluded me, practically every tree I searched had just her, but nothing else as to her parents, etc. Then one rainy and miserably humid afternoon I ran across her father’s name, Alfred McGowan, born in Springfield, Missouri sometime before 1864. Well now I think to myself, "We’re cooking now!". From there I begin to search the name Alfred McGowan and soon I discover that his mother was Mary Boone Hosman, daughter of Alfred Hosman and Mary Boone. Now I had something to go to the Boone pages and search, so off I went. Mary Boone was the daughter of Nathan Boone and Olive Van Bibber! Wow, I had the connection and my shouts soon brought my daughter to my desk. With a bit of information added to my files I soon brought up a kinship chart on Stella Francis McGowan James and asked it to show the connection between Stella and my daughter, Susan --- 4th cousin, 3 times removed! With a laugh and a smile she rendered my great discovery to just one simple sentence. "Just goes to show if you dig long enough no telling who you might find!"

Submitted by Terrye Lambert
The branch of the Boone family that emigrated to Oregon was led by Daniel's Grandson, Alphonso Boone. Moving West seems to have run in the family, as Alphonso "westerned" at least three times in his life. In 1841, he set up shop in Independence, MO. outfitting fur traders and caravans on the Sante Fe Trail. From 1843 to 1845 he cashed in on a new source of business; emigrants bound for Oregon and California. in 1846 he headed West with 7 of his children, his Sister, Panthea Boone Boggs and her Husband, Liburn W. Boggs, former Govenor of Missouri.

The Boones with their eleven wagons joined a California bound wagon train which they expected to stay with to Fort Hall. Lilburn Boggs wanted to be the captain of the train, but he lost the election by a landslide to one, William H. Russell.

On August 8th at Fort Hall the Boones met a man promoting a new route, this one leading to Oregon's Willamette Valley. Boone decided to take a chance on the new road known as the Southern route or the Applegate Trail. This proved to be a mistake. The Indians were extremely hostile to the overlanders.

As winter set in and threatened to strand the travelers, the emigrants began throwing away everything they could to lighten their wagons. They cached everything of value in hope of returning later but the Indians dug up and stole everything but a few items of clothing. The Boone's lost everything that they couldn't carry out including a compass and surveying instruments belonging to Daniel Boone.

It was Christmas time when the Boones finally reached the settlements in the Willamette Valley. The Boones established a ferry on an old Indian trail.

When word of the gold strikes in California reached Oregon in 1848, Alphonso and his boys headed South to make their fortune in the gold fields.

On Feb. 1, 1850, Alphonso died at Long Bar's of an illness he contracted in the gold fields. The Ferry established by the Boones operated for 107 years, being shut down in 1954.

View a photo of Alphonso Boone in our "Photo Section"....
The home built in 1837 by the youngest son of Daniel Boone, was the recipient of a historical marker given by the Greene Co. Historical Sites Board. It served as the home of the Nathan Boone family until his death in 1856.

Boone was born in Kentucky in in 1871. When he was 18 he married Olive VanBibber. Although generally overshadowed by his famous Father, Nathan was also a genuine hero and pioneer. Along with his Brother, he established the Boone's Lick Salt Works in central Missouri.

Boone was also a member of the military. He retired as a US. Lt. Colonel after leading the US. Mounted Rangers in the Black Hawk War, assisting in the capture of Sante Fe, and serving as the Military Govenor of New Mexico and Texas.

Boone was also an explorer. He helped determine the boundry between the Creek and Cherokee Indian nations. In 1808 he guided William Clark to what is now Independence, where the two helped establish Fort Osage. The Fort, now restored, was a frontier outpost of great importance.

The 150 year old home is now open only once a year, during the Fall Nathan Boone Rendezvous.

Source; The Daily News.

View a photo of Nathan Boone's home in our "Photo Section"
THE BOONE FAMILY IN DAVIE COUNTY
On 04 October 1750, Squire Boone received a Land Warrant an Survey for a 640-acre tract ‘lying…upon Grants Creek, alias Lickon (Licking) Creek” in present Davie County. He received a grant for this 640 acres on the present Elisha and Dutchman creeks 30 April 1753 and a second grant on Bear Creek 29 December 1753. (A roadside marker locates this Bear Creek site on Highway 64 west).
Eleven children of Squire and Sarah (Morgan) Boone all came and lived in present Davie County. They were Sarah (Boone) Wilcockson, Israel, Samuel, Squire (Jr), and Hannah (Boone) Stewart Pennington.
Squire Boone’s nephew, John Boone (1727-1803), and wife Rebecca (Bryan?) Boone (c.1735-1820) received a 630-acre grant on Hunting Creek 21 December 1753. Their nine children were born there. Most of this family migrated to Tennessee, though some of their descendants lived at this Hunting Creek site until the 1850’s and some distant relatives still live in Davie County.
In addition to Squire and Sarah Boone, John and Rebecca Boone and John Wilcockson are buried here in Joppa Cemetery in unmarked graves. Israel Boone and his wife are probably buried here also.
Squire and Sarah Boone deeded the Elisha and Dutchman Creeks grant to sons Squire Jr on 12 October 1759. On the same day they also deeded the Bear Creek tract to Daniel and Rebecca.
Daniel Boone (1734-1820), son of Squire and Sarah Boone, married Rebecca Bryan (1739-1813) in Davie County on 14 August 1856. For some eight years, from about 1756 until about 1764 they lived on what was probably Bryan property in the forks of Sugar (tree) Creek in Eastern Davie County.
Only tradition locates this homesite. Their first two sons, James and Israel, were born there. Though Daniel farmed some, he was primarily engaged in hunting and trapping. He is said to have killed as many as 30 deer a day, selling the hides in Salisbury, North Carolina.
Daniel and Rebecca moved to Wilkes County, North Carolina, about 1764. In 1773 an attempted settlement of Kentucky failed because of a Shawnee Indian attack and the murder of Daniel’s 16-year-old son James and five other youths. Daniel and Rebecca with most of their relatives and many friends migrated permanently to Kentucky in 1779.
Daniel Boone, the archetypal frontiersman, acquired in Davie County the experience, endurance, resourcefulness, and expertness with the rifle which enabled him to become the great explorer and pioneer settler of the trans-Appalachian American West.
This monument was erected by the commity for the 250th anniversary of Daniel Boone’s birthday, Inc., Howell Boone, Chairman.

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