* IE Wm Ski" '"^^ElH|m|| |mi si ■ 9 Bk 9 m 9BK ■ ■ ■ ■ ■AB ■■ ■_ ■" SB- ; I I H Blp ■ ■ IkH |a| b Bi ■ ■§ BK • Ell U %gl |2 Li 2 ■ ■ il Wm E^E 11 Wi I* I® • «*.- * . “DAN BOONE CItLED 3.y- BAR HEAR” :WtT~ TT* •?“ —--a 7* —L*s—‘ -I :j When Dan Boone spent a half hotjr cutting with his hunting knife, the above words on the bark of a tree in East Tenn., he did not know that a descender* of his, 150 years later would fix a printing press so it would turn out the same words 1000 times faster. * Judging by the number of articles on the Boone family one sees from time to time in papers , and copied from one to another,, it would seem this subject is popular and that the” Boones, especially our two black' smiths of Burnsville, Kelsey and his son Daniel, are getting their full share of free advertising. Any reader of American history has al ready concluded from what he has heard and been taught in school, that this is an interesting not because they are Boones resid ent and being in Western North Carolina, but because they are dir ect descendents of the noted back woodsman, Dan Boone of Kentucky. This paper has published much matter pertaining to the early and late history of the Southern Moun tains and their lore during the many years it has appeared, but nothing heretofore on the Boone family. We should apologize, for not doing so, since the editor has always from infancy been more or less associat edwith the local Boone family. Our readers no dcubt, often read of the great ingenuity of Dan Boone and his father Kelse in metal wodc. They are in fact geniuses in such work ai'd the entire world seems to ~be finding it out. Few however, know that they are 'very expert mechanics and have done work on almost every type of machinery used in the souths It is concerning their art of re pairing printing presses of which we desire in this connection to write If our readers could visit our plant we could show parts on nearly every press and other machines to*hich were made by Dan Bocyie or ivally repair "work -s*The Boones have Been blacksmiths from time immemorial. Many times during the past twenty-five years when some important part about the big press on which this paper is being printed or some of . .the smaller presses have broken or| worn out and it looked like an or-, der for the factory, we would go to | Dan or Kelse and let them take a look at the trouble. About 99 times out of 100 they went to work and soon had the machine working again with a part even at times better than the original one. And the Boones have always patronized our job shop when in need of any printed matter and our ] files show that their orders have been steady if not large. The Grit, Atlanta Constitution, North Carolina Magazine, The Up lift and others have recently pub lished articles on the Boone Family and some have had pictures of them. C. Z. Mast, writer of one of the articles claims to be a rela tive of the family dwells much on the beauties of the mountains of Watauga county and the town of Boone which he says was named for the family and built by bird work. Mbst towns are. Massey's article tells us nothing more than the ordinary histories which no doubt arc in your library (% and in which you may read of the noted frontiersman, Daniel Boone s who is six generations back from •5 our Daniel and Wade who hammer out imitation “colonial ironware in their Burnsville forge as does their father Kelse at his forge at Burnsville at the junction of the Mt. Mitchell highway. These hist ories tell us, not of the Yancey County Boones that this article will dwell upon, butTtttfb the pioneer —Daniel was born in Bucks County, Pa., in 1746, later coming to North Carolina, perhaps along with the Edwards "people, which at that time seemed tp be a great haven a* a hunting ground for those who like .Daniel, wanted more "elbow room.’ Boone himself wrote a journal which furnishes the history writers with most of their materials. We learn he married a Tar Heel girl, as mbst of us have. Settled in the Valley of the Yadkin; went y> Kentucky, returned to N. C. in 1771, sold his farm and took i»ck -five families to Ky. in 1773. In Powell’s Valley he was joined by 40 more adventurers who helped r - - T" him, fight Indians a few days lateF <vhen he lost his oldest son. Re treated to Qinch River in 1774. • Done surveying work for Gov. Dunmore of Virginia to falls of 1 Ohio River. Next duty was a I member of the council of the Cher ' okee Indians in 1775- when they ; ceded all their lands south of the , Kentucky River. Rescued three ! flM®. on e of them his daughter, who | had been kidnapped by the Indians, lan incident which supplied Cooper I I with a leading idea in his tale, “Last 11 of the Mohicans.” 1778 commenc jed making salt for the colonists in ,Ky. and Va. Captured and adopt -1 ed by Indians, taken to Chilicothe. Escapes in time to save Boones -1 borough from an Indian and Frencß attack. Loses his land through weak titles, goes to Missouri and loses his wife. Returns to Ken tucky to live with his son Nathan where he dies at 84. In the Indian i idea, the great hunger had gone to the hunting grounds of the warriors above where his spirit would be eternally happy, when the stars would cease to give them light. It is with the local Boone family that we now choose to deal briefly. At a later date we propose to con tinue this article with some first hand matter which we intend to get Mr. Kelse Boone to furnish us. At present space and time will not per mit more than a short summary. The early Boones just before and perhaps after they arrived in North Carolina were said to have been neighbors to the Lincolns who must have directed them or had them fol low to Linnvile Creek in Virginia. The Lincoln homes and graveyards are nearby. On Boones Creek in Tennessee not many years ago stood : a tree on which was., carved in the long ago, perhaps about the 1780’s ■ just after the Indians had killed .his sons, and his brother and four of them had captured him from which , he made his escape by throwing snuff into their eyes: s ; “D BOON CILLED BAR HEAR" This hunt must have ocqured while Dan was going to North Car olina after the Indians had defeated jhim and caused his family to return , there or while he was taking TfigTiT i back to Kentucky. But Mr. Mast, in the Uplift, says this “bear tree” : was near the “rude cabin in which Daniel Boone was born and on the farm of his father here in Berks ■ County, Pa." Mr. Mast must have 'been mistaken for there are yet ' many persons in Tennessee who saw i | the tree there—or else these may 'have been two trees so inscribed by Dan’s jack knife* which we doubt. However, Mast does give us a bit i of unknown history when he con- ! eludes, “It may not be generally known that Kit Carson, the famous : ; western scout and explorer, was a i . grandson of Daniel Boone* so carry- ■ ing exploration and blood farther ] ; 'on. Boone led the way across the ] Appalachians; Crockett across the i Mississippi to Texas, 'And Carson i across the Rockies.” < When the editor of the Broad- i caster's grandfather came to Yancey i County from Forsythe in 1848, he < found many of the Boone family al- i ready here. Jerry Boone, Knox i Boone, Samuel Boone and several j others whose names Kelse will give ' us for the end of this story. Even j at that time or as late as the ‘6o's ' and 70’s there was a Dan Boone here. He went Jjter to Mississippi , as did several others of the family, ] ; Crumly Boone, Saxtur Boone, Jane j Boone. We remember Jane return- 1 :ed to Yancey around 1900. She t : had married a Mr. Cuffey Gray and < , they had some grown up sons. Gray 1 • claimed that he had made good as a 1 1 1 punier of cotton and had with him j . several" hundred dollars in cash | ; which was stolen from him by a i : man in Mine Fork Valley. Gray , returned wkH,his family penniless rto Mississippi. Nelson Boone, ] 1 father of Kelse, seemed -to have ; • beeli the giant of the family.. The j , writer remembers him as a man ; i that must have weighed 250 or 300 ; : lbs. It %ts a mighty sledge that he j : could vOield at his anvil. Only a . small number of- runts may be < : found in the Boone family. * 1 There were some pretty bad ac | tors in the Boone family in the old \en days: During the 70's there l : weire two Tom Boones ,bosh under l death sentences for murder at same. : time. One of them was convicted , and condemned to hang fSr the kill-1 i ing of an unde of the editor, whose ; * name was Sam Butner, ihoik 1876-7 i 'This Tom made his escape from the r' jail and was never apprehended. [ Just a few years ago he died in Tex v \ ' J I ' , , jas, and the facts in this csss are in teresting »n the extreme. A lawyer riie trial aid conviction had mar ried j and upon his escape, had left his wife and one young child who never heard of hirii until the lawyer came. Boone had died wealthy arid had sent all Kis money to,, his ‘ heirs herey his land going to his Texas heirs. The most wonderful part of the story was, that JBoone had given on his death bed the full and truthful details of the killing of Butner in which it was claimed that Ed Boone had done the killing and not. he. Ed was dead so the incid ent was ended. Ed Boone,"'himself was rather a noted character. He was a son of Jerry Boone,. : • His brothers were, Sul, Mack, Crum, all of whom were blacksmiths and* wagor.makers as was their father. There were 3 sisters, one of whom, Lucretia, mar ried Henry'Butner, another uncle of die Other Yancey county families that intermarried with the Boones were the Ramseys, McMa hans, Parrots, McAllisters, Rays and Wilsons, Woodfins, etc. But it was of Ed Boone that we started mention. He killed a man in the early 70’s about the time that both Big Tom and Little Temp Boone were under indictment for murder But it so happened that Ed made his escape from arrest and went to the wilds of Virginia, so called at that time, though now being an enlightened center of industry— Gate City, i (called Estelville when Ed was there). There was at the time a reward for Ed’s apprehen sion and there was a very active and shrewd young man living on Jacks Creek by name of Dock Hampton. In some way Dock got word of Ed’s whereabouts and took with him k man by name of Woodfin, a brother of the man Ed had killed. When these two officers‘arrived, at Estel ville they soon found Ed at one of hose big two story log houses so common then. They had little difficulty in putting him under ar rest, having arrived very unexpect edly. They had Ed handcuffed in the lower room, when suddenly his friends in some way attracted the attention of the officers and Ed sprang quickly the stairs and joined others already there. Hampton started up but at the head of the stairs he met a number of bullets "coming his way and he made a hasty rolling retreat. He lay for a long that on his back un trarr and fired shots through the loft at every sound. Woodfin had ran from the house in a fright. Hampton, too,' had to leave the pre mises later when about out of shells for his pistol, leaving Ed and his force in possession. ' "T? ~ Several years later Ed showed the writer the handcuffs he had on when he tan off. He said his friends had quite a task in filing them off—and they showed, the marks of the file. Ed then made a key to unlock them and repaired them and they remain still in the family 'as a souviner. i The pistol too. It was a 32 cal. old style re volver. Ed said he cairied it in a large bill book in a hteast pocket. He said when he got up sta »*s he used his teeth in, pulling the pistol from the bill book and then he could shoot very well with it down through the loft floor and fired each time at die spot where he would see one of Hampton’s bullets pierce the floor. Ed showed us marks on the pistol handles he said were made by his teeth. Some years later Ed came' in and surrendered to the authorities and was acquitted. .: - The Boone family of Yancey county are one of , the oldest and most of them have been respectable people. It seemed however, that they were inclined in the early days to dominate their neighbors to some extent. They were said to be over bearing and treacherous, much of this nature may have been adapted i from tfie Indians with whom the first Dsktuel and his companions of the wilderness associated and help ed to fill the family and the country j with their traditions of trickery and j horror. They are a family of musical ability; nearly 111 of them like their fun and their dram. They I are not a people of great educational attainments, most of them are, as! present-day spelling shows little im provement over that of their illus trious ancestor, Dan on ( his Boone I -Ibe said of their shortcomings of the r -noneer—days- are now ..among t he,county’s foremost peace abiding, f ndustrfoUs honest' But - they are apparently a dwindling t >eople and have not kept pace in > r timbers with their "neighbors, r Neither ar£ they jx long-lived peo r pie, few of them reaching the age i cf Dan I-—B4. | dan aniTwade^:: 1 —ph T'nr . 4 1 Hr “ALL THE BOONES, are black miths,” said Kelse Boone, at his hop in Burnsville, N* C. “Old DanieJ in the story book is noted for hunting, but he was the first blacksmith in these~hiHs. There’s his iron still to be found in these cabins.” “My daddy, Nelse, was a good one. My granddaddy, Jim Boone, iad a shop right here. - Here are iOme of his piedSs—a hoe and mat tock. Jim’s daddy, Squire Boone, was born in Kentucky but moved to ft this country and went tri blackr smithing. He learned it from his laddy, who was the original Dan’l Boone.” •...“I've been blacksmithing all my life. My four boys are black , smiths. Dan'l is the fanciest. I . lsed to have a shop with Dan’l arid [ Wade, hut they went' over to I Spruce Pine and opened up on their own. I run my shop now » alone. The young ’uns has got to - get out on their own. > BY THE SWEAT OF THEIR , BROWS—No smocksat the Boone - in Spruce Pine, where Daniel ; Bonne have > mdertaken iamsburg s iron. Like all the pre vious generations of iron-making Boones, Daniel and Wade know that to make useful things from hard metal requires a hot fire, a keen eye and a stout arm. r r ..... .rn'mdM I M | K. ; ■ lyflgigll KELSE BOONE Os Burnsville. There is another Kelse of Erwin, Tenn. to the writer of the Boone family! of Yancey County, Kelse gives the jiipt representatives as, Jerry whose [children were: Tom, Dove, Mack, hEdi Sul, father of Kelse at Erwin; I Crum, Mary Jane, Lucretia, Sarah I Ann. | iCelse’s father was a brother to [ferry. His sons were, Kelse, Doug- Jerry, deceased. JSam Boone and Jim Boone were i interesting characters. Sam was a Jldit of local humorist and many of HB»jbkes are still heard .in the' [county. It is said he could not read, tho like most of the early Boones, [he was proud and wished to con [eeal his illiteracy. Once he; was | waiting at a railroad station for a [train and seeing seve raiof the pass- Jengers buying papers, he bought [one. He was holding it upside] It'osyh pretending to be reading. A l ady said, “Mr. Boone do | any interesting news in your papr r Jer?” His reply was, “yes, lady, I J tee they’ve had a bad storm „ and j [.wreck on the sea, as here is a ship [turned up side, down.” , The lady rjlooking saw it was the paper that’ ;| w # up-side down, and said, "Mr. | [side up.” *ph that’s no bother at Jail to me ladv. as I reads from bot ►[torn to top just as ffksy as others Jim Bobne once killed a man in Burnsville by name of ir AJf .Keith. - This murder was just on the r eve of the -War between the States. He was given a choice to volunteer in the Southern army or stand trial in court. Hg served in army until—he riras killed in one of the cathpaigns in West Tennessee and died at Memphis, It was said that the'evidence against Jim was rather meager until a man by name of Micah Ayers, Co, C, 29N.C, Inst. C.S.A had a dream in which he dreamed that the murder scene passed before his eyes and he saw Jim Boone use a certim Boone-, made shop knife and kill Keith and then run and hide die knife under a small office "building then standing in a row of others on the north side of the town square. Sure enough it was said, searching par ties found the knife located just as Ayers had dreamed, after winch the evidence was so conclusive that had not Jim joined the army he would most certainly been convict ed of the murdeh ffiliS ■ ■——■—-■ “TWErat” . THE LITTLE MOOKTIH* i _ m -William C. Finney, Columbus, Ohio, sends the editor of the Post the following article on the W. N. & E T. (Narrow Gauge Railway) which he took from the Ohio State Journal of August 22,1938. He says: Mr. V. G. Edwards, Ed (tor Post, Spruce Pine, N. C* Thought perhaps you’d be inter ested in the following article. Sorry to seethe Banner go down— an editor’s life work. I am also sending your brother, L. E. Ed wards, Assistant Editor, Yancey Record a copy as might be in terested. Also the Columbus Dis patch had the photostats of two young women who killed a man at Fairfield, Illinois*one girl from Elizabethton, the other from , Johnson City; but I suprcne you know all about that. They accuse each other. They shot him fc degth, it is charged, and left hit body nude; stripped him of ev .-'rything, even his clothing, leav I in* him in his home. I recognized tneir faces as alleged “street hus tjera, ’ ground Elizabethton and the Soldier’s Home; they are in a mess this time. “Tweetsle” Runs Errands in Town Boone, N. C.—(A. P.)-The mountain folk swear by “Tweet sifi* *j a narrow guage railway winding along among the coves and crags on a66 mile route be tween here and Johnson City, Tenn. The engineer has been on the job 35 years, the conductor, 32 They think nothing of stopping the train in front of a mile-high cabin, picking up children and delivering them safely to the home of a relative down the track while the conductor often stops in town for an isolated farmer Theft the train stops in front of a , farm home for the specific pur-1 pose of delivering a spool of thread or length of wire. The little train, with its huff, puff locomotive will stop any where any time. Its whistle, ringing Ihrilly through the mou - ntains is more of a greeting than ♦warning. The formal name of this folksy railroad is the Eastern Tennessee & Western North Carolina Rail way, hut you could not tell the mountain people it is anything but “Tweetsie,” the title, they gave it 52\years ago. The father of the two editors above referred to has a diary in which there is an entry concerning his first sight, of the, W. N. & E. T. Rv. , ltssyg in Bubstitncee: “Aug. 9, 1899 left home near Burnsville equipped with a few clothes and some rations in a valise, crossed a mountain and joined a friend on Fig Pen creek Proceeded on foot toward Cranberry. H«-t toilsome walking; difficulty in dousing River at mouth of Cane Creek; saw Bakers ville first time; gpent night at John • Buchanan’s at Clarissy-Bnncb mines 3 miles above town. ~ \ i l’ IrnWrlMrllll Wi ll “August 10. \nother hars days’ walk ing over mountains and thru woods. - .. " • ■. Hard old boss by name of Winters. Regular slave driver and most qf, hia hands KegroeS antl fiaii ones. 80011,— left and staHed a newtreck ofsVhiUea ■ Tennessee. The Tweetsie Trains” were running regular with nice crews who waved'at ua as we stood, aside in the ditches for the train to pass. We walked several trestles and thru 3 tunnels. We subsisted upon a little bacon which we broiled dy the road_ side and ate with crackers and wash, eddown with rfter ,.g|ter. We had a little toT»aecobut no other luxuries as ... we tramped down Doe Rivei Gorge-- one of the grandest in the riast. At one place was an old time pound ing mill, at another some folk*-were selling liquor but We cotild afford none. On the way we passed thru Elk Park Creek, Mountain City, Allentown and camped for the night in a corn field at Elizabethton and next day thru Johnson City and then on thru - Cherokee, Garbers and then Embree ville arriving very sore Here I stayed one year. My friend Noah Letterman left after three months to marry. In a few yeafs be moved to Erwin where he djed many years ago. ” Edwards Printing Co., Burnsville, N. C. Dear Sirs: Am sending you the names of fifty or more business people and firms for which please send me one of your fountain pens. I do not know the,type of letter you desire for your Young Folks Correspondence Club but J hope this one will be printed. If not I hope you will print this little poem I have enclosed. I am a young high-school gradu ate and write poetry and short stories and" songs. I have had three of my poems and a song pub; lished. I have written abcut two-hundred poems and twenty short-stories and about fifteen songs' I also keep scrap books and collect anything , which appeals to me. ’ I-also like to do profiles of movie . stars and paint and I have a fun-~ j ny ambition of being an aviatrix j some day. I have rode in an air -1 plane one time. l Sincerely* | Miss Edyth Dowell, J B. T; Box 43, . Shouns, Tennessee. “I Want, to Build 4 House” " J want, to biXilcLsuhause, .... Inside'will He immaculate-fastidous ness. nt v . No matter il the pots are black or blue, -- -a; Each one will be .a looking-glass— Each one will boost a mirror, I want:' seme flowers, somt eommon flowers; Like funny, fuzzy weeds and things, And a get) tian in the fall, A brilliant poppy in the spring. I want my little house to be—• A shmiqg lovely place to see. Miss Edyth Dowell, R. 1, Box 43, Shouns, Tenn. 1 BOYS—GIRLS—ESPECIALLY GIRLS—WILL YOU WRITE FOR PAY? HAVE YOU A FOUNTAIN PEN? I ,We need names. We have [thousands of names on our mailing lists, but we have not revised our list for 5 years. Marty persons whose names we have are now dead or removed or gone into other business. . Will you Help us revise our list? We don’t want you to write for nothing. Still we have very little money and very slow business. But Oh, if you will just write us some letters, they will help us get more husincss— And we .will just pay you until you are satisfied. o Wc have gome of the nicest fountain ' pens to give away;—Yes, and Mechanical Pencils,' Needle Books, Bead Necklaces, Scissors, Pocket Knives, Printed Envelopes, Printed Letter Heads. “ Fill out the enclosed name and addresg blank if one is enclosed with this paper and for-as'fnany as - more names of live business people or firms, we. will send you one Fountain Ppn or Mechanical Pen cil, or your choice from above list. If you will write a letter-for publi cation in our Young Folks Corres pondence Club, just being started • LgO ~ Mrp u»;]| nrint it 4f it k 4

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