<h3 class="p6">CHAPTER XV<br/> A SERENE OLD AGE</h3>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Missouri's sparse population at that time
consisted largely of Frenchmen, who had
taken easily to the yoke of Spain. For a
people of easy-going disposition, theirs was
an ideal existence. They led a patriarchal
life, with their flocks and herds grazing upon
a common pasture, and practised a crude agriculture
whose returns were eked out by
hunting in the limitless forests hard by. For
companionship, the crude log cabins in the
little settlements were assembled by the
banks of the waterways, and there was small
disposition to increase tillage beyond domestic
necessities. There were practically no
taxes to pay; military burdens sat lightly;
the local syndic (or magistrate), the only
government servant to be met outside of St.
Louis, was sheriff, judge, jury, and commandant
combined; there were no elections,
for representative government was unknown;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</SPAN></span>
the fur and lead trade with St. Louis was the
sole commerce, and their vocabulary did not
contain the words enterprise and speculation.</p>
<p>Here was a paradise for a man of Boone's
temperament, and through several years to
come he was wont to declare that, next to his
first long hunt in Kentucky, this was the happiest
period of his life. On the eleventh of
July, 1800, Delassus—a well-educated French
gentleman, and a good judge of character—appointed
him syndic for the Femme Osage
district, a position which the old man held
until the cession of Louisiana to the United
States. This selection was not only because
of his prominence among the settlers and his
recognized honesty and fearlessness, but for
the reason that he was one of the few among
these unsophisticated folk who could make
records. In a primitive community like the
Femme Osage, Boone may well have ranked
as a man of some education; and certainly he
wrote a bold, free hand, showing much practise
with the pen, although we have seen that
his spelling and grammar might have been
improved. When the government was turned
over to President Jefferson's commissioner,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</SPAN></span>
Delassus delivered to that officer, by request,
a detailed report upon the personality of his
subordinates, and this is one of the entries
in the list of syndics: "Mr. Boone, a respectable
old man, just and impartial, he has already,
since I appointed him, offered his resignation
owing to his infirmities—believing I
know his probity, I have induced him to remain,
in view of my confidence in him, for
the public good."</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i007" id="i007"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i007.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="347" alt="Boone's Cabin" /> <p class="caption">BOONE'S CABIN IN ST. CHARLES COUNTY, MISSOURI.</p>
<p class="caption s08">From photograph in possession of Wisconsin State Historical Society.</p>
</div>
<p>Boone's knowledge did not extend to law-books,
but he had a strong sense of justice;
and during his four years of office passed
upon the petty disputes of his neighbors with
such absolute fairness as to win popular approbation.
His methods were as primitive
and arbitrary as those of an Oriental pasha;
his penalties frequently consisted of lashes
on the bare back "well laid on;" he would
observe no rules of evidence, saying he
wished only to know the truth; and sometimes
both parties to a suit were compelled
to divide the costs and begone. The French
settlers had a fondness for taking their quarrels
to court; but the decisions of the good-hearted
syndic of Femme Osage, based solely
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</SPAN></span>
upon common sense in the rough, were respected
as if coming from a supreme bench.
His contemporaries said that in no other
office ever held by the great rifleman did he
give such evidence of undisguised satisfaction,
or display so great dignity as in this
rôle of magistrate. Showing newly arrived
American immigrants to desirable tracts of
land was one of his most agreeable duties;
when thus tendering the hospitalities of the
country to strangers, it was remarked that
our patriarch played the Spanish "don" to
perfection.</p>
<p>In October, 1800, Spain agreed to deliver
Louisiana to France; but the latter found
it impracticable at that time to take possession
of the territory. By the treaty of April
30, 1803, the United States, long eager to
secure for the West the open navigation of
the Mississippi, purchased the rights of
France. It was necessary to go through the
form, both in New Orleans and in St. Louis,
of transfer by Spain to France, and then by
France to the United States. The former
ceremony took place in St. Louis, the capital
of Upper Louisiana, upon the ninth of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</SPAN></span>
March, 1804, and the latter upon the following
day. Daniel Boone's authority as a
Spanish magistrate ended when the flag of his
adopted country was hauled down for the last
time in the Valley of the Mississippi.</p>
<p>The coming of the Americans into power
was welcomed by few of the people of Louisiana.
The French had slight patience with
the land-grabbing temper of the "Yankees,"
who were eager to cut down the forests, to
open up farms, to build towns, to extend
commerce, to erect factories—to inaugurate
a reign of noise and bustle and avarice.
Neither did men of the Boone type—who had
become Spanish subjects in order to avoid
the crowds, to get and to keep cheap lands,
to avoid taxes, to hunt big game, and to live
a simple Arcadian life—at all enjoy this sudden
crossing of the Mississippi River, which
they had vainly hoped to maintain as a perpetual
barrier to so-called progress.</p>
<p>Our hero soon had still greater reason
for lamenting the advent of the new <i>régime</i>.
His sad experience with lands in Kentucky
had not taught him prudence. When the
United States commission came to examine
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</SPAN></span>
the titles of Louisiana settlers to the claims
which they held, it was discovered that Boone
had failed properly to enter the tract which
had been ceded to him by Delassus. The
signature of the lieutenant-governor was
sufficient to insure a temporary holding, but
a permanent cession required the approval of
the governor at New Orleans; this Boone
failed to obtain, being misled, he afterward
stated, by the assertion of Delassus that so
important an officer as a syndic need not
take such precautions, for he would never be
disturbed. The commissioners, while highly
respecting him, were regretfully obliged under
the terms of the treaty to dispossess the
old pioneer, who again found himself landless.
Six years later (1810) Congress tardily
hearkened to his pathetic appeal, backed by
the resolutions of the Kentucky legislature,
and confirmed his Spanish grant in words of
praise for "the man who has opened the way
to millions of his fellow men."</p>
<p>By the time he was seventy years old,
Boone's skill as a hunter had somewhat lessened.
His eyes had lost their phenomenal
strength; he could no longer perform those
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</SPAN></span>
nice feats of marksmanship for which in his
prime he had attained wide celebrity, and
rheumatism made him less agile. But as a
trapper he was still unexcelled, and for many
years made long trips into the Western wilderness,
even into far-off Kansas, and at
least once (1814, when eighty years old) to
the great game fields of the Yellowstone.
Upon such expeditions, often lasting several
months, he was accompanied by one or more
of his sons, by his son-in-law Flanders Calloway,
or by an old Indian servant who was
sworn to bring his master back to the Femme
Osage dead or alive—for, curiously enough,
this wandering son of the wilderness ever
yearned for a burial near home.</p>
<p>Beaver-skins, which were his chief desire,
were then worth nine dollars each in the St.
Louis market. He appears to have amassed a
considerable sum from this source, and from
the sale of his land grant to his sons, and in
1810 we find him in Kentucky paying his debts.
This accomplished, tradition says that he had
remaining only fifty cents; but he gloried in
the fact that he was at last "square with the
world," and returned to Missouri exultant.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The War of 1812-15 brought Indian troubles
to this new frontier, and some of the
farm property of the younger Boones was
destroyed in one of the savage forays. The
old man fretted at his inability to assist in
the militia organization, of which his sons
Daniel Morgan and Nathan were conspicuous
leaders; and the state of the border did not
permit of peaceful hunting. In the midst of
the war he deeply mourned the death of his
wife (1813)—a woman of meek, generous,
heroic nature, who had journeyed over the
mountains with him from North Carolina,
and upon his subsequent pilgrimages, sharing
all his hardships and perils, a proper
helpmeet in storm and calm.</p>
<p>Penniless, and a widower, he now went to
live with his sons, chiefly with Nathan, then
forty-three years of age. After being first a
hunter and explorer, and then an industrious
and successful farmer, Nathan had won distinction
in the war just closed and entered the
regular army, where he reached the rank of
lieutenant-colonel and had a wide and thrilling
experience in Indian fighting. Daniel
Morgan is thought to have been the first settler
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</SPAN></span>
in Kansas (1827); A. G. Boone, a grandson,
was one of the early settlers of Colorado,
and prominently connected with Western Indian
treaties and Rocky Mountain exploration;
and another grandson of the great
Kentuckian was Kit Carson, the famous
scout for Frémont's transcontinental expedition.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i008" id="i008"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i008.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="375" alt="Nathan Boone's House" /> <p class="caption">NATHAN BOONE'S HOUSE IN ST. CHARLES COUNTY, MISSOURI.</p> <p class="caption s08">Herein Daniel Boone died.</p>
</div>
<p>It was not long before the Yankee <i>régime</i>
confirmed Boone's fears. The tide of immigration
crossed the river, and rolling westward
again passed the door of the great
Kentuckian, driving off the game and
monopolizing the hunting-grounds. Laws,
courts, politics, speculation, and improvements
were being talked about, to the bewilderment
of the French and the unconcealed
disgust of the former syndic. Despite his
great age, he talked strongly of moving still
farther West, hoping to get beyond the reach
of settlement; but his sons and neighbors
persuaded him against it, and he was obliged
to accommodate himself as best he might to
the new conditions. In summer he would
work on the now substantial and prosperous
farms of his children, chopping trees for the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</SPAN></span>
winter's wood. But at the advent of autumn
the spirit of restlessness seized him, when
he would take his canoe, with some relative
or his Indian servant, and disappear up the
Missouri and its branches for weeks together.
In 1816, we hear of him as being at Fort
Osage, on his way to the Platte, "in the
dress of the roughest, poorest hunter." Two
years later, he writes to his son Daniel M.:
"I intend by next autumn to take two or
three whites and a party of Osage Indians
to visit the salt mountains, lakes, and ponds
and see these natural curiosities. They are
about five or six hundred miles west of here"—presumably
the rock salt in Indian Territory;
it is not known whether this trip was
taken. He was greatly interested in Rocky
Mountain exploration, then much talked of,
and eagerly sought information regarding
California; and was the cause of several
young men migrating thither. A tale of
new lands ever found in him a delighted
listener.</p>
<p>In these his declining years, although he
had suffered much at the hands of the world,
Boone's temperament, always kindly, mellowed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</SPAN></span>
in tone. Decay came gradually, without
palsy or pain; and, amid kind friends
and an admiring public, his days passed in
tranquillity. The following letter written by
him at this period to his sister-in-law Sarah
(Day) Boone, wife of his brother Samuel, is
characteristic of the man, and gives to us,
moreover, probably the only reliable account
we possess of his religious views:</p>
<p class="left65 p2 s08">"october the 19<sup>th</sup> 1816</p>
<p>"Deer Sister</p>
<p>"With pleasuer I Rad a Later from your
sun Samuel Boone who informs me that you
are yett Liveing and in good health Considing
your age I wright to you to Latt you
know I have Not forgot you and to inform
you of my own Situation sence the Death of
your Sister Rabacah I Leve with flanders
Calaway But am at present at my sun Nathans
and in tolarabel halth you Can gass
at my feilings by your own as we are So
Near one age I Need Not write you of our
satuation as Samuel Bradley or James
grimes Can inform you of Every Surcomstance
Relating to our famaly and how we
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</SPAN></span>
Leve in this World and what Chance we shall
have in the next we know Not for my part
I am as ignerant as a Child all the Relegan I
have to Love and fear god beleve in Jeses
Christ Don all the good to my Nighbour and
my self that I Can and Do as Little harm as
I Can help and trust on gods marcy for the
Rest and I Beleve god neve made a man of
my prisepel to be Lost and I flater my self
Deer sister that you are well on your way
in Cristeanaty gave my Love to all your
Childran and all my frends fearwell my
Deer sister</p>
<p class="left65">
"<span class="smcap">Daniel Boone</span></p>
<p class="p2">
"Mrs. Sarah Boone</p>
<p>"N B I Red a Later yesterday from sister
Hanah peninton by hir grand sun Da<sup>l</sup> Ringe
she and all hir Childran are Well at present</p>
<p class="left65">"D B"</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i009" id="i009"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i009.jpg" width-obs="416" height-obs="550" alt="Boone Letter" /> <p class="caption">BOONE'S RELIGIOUS VIEWS.</p> <p class="caption s08">Reduced facsimile from original MS. in possession of Wisconsin State
Historical Society.</p>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i010" id="i010"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i010.jpg" width-obs="459" height-obs="550" alt="Boone Letter" /></div>
<p>Many strangers of distinction visited him
at Nathan's home near the banks of the Missouri,
and the public journals of the day
always welcomed an anecdote of the great
hunter's prowess—although most of the stories
which found their way into print were
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</SPAN></span>
either deliberate inventions or unconsciously
exaggerated traditions. From published descriptions
of the man by those who could
discriminate, we may gain some idea of his
appearance and manner. The great naturalist
Audubon once passed a night under a
West Virginia roof in the same room with
Boone, whose "extraordinary skill in the
management of a rifle" is alluded to. He
says: "The stature and general appearance
of this wanderer of the Western forests approached
the gigantic. His chest was broad
and prominent; his muscular powers displayed
themselves in every limb; his countenance
gave indication of his great courage,
enterprise, and perseverance; and when he
spoke the very motion of his lips brought the
impression that whatever he uttered could
not be otherwise than strictly true. I undressed,
whilst he merely took off his hunting-shirt
and arranged a few folds of blankets
on the floor, choosing rather to lie there,
as he observed, than on the softest bed."</p>
<p>Timothy Flint, one of his early biographers,
knew the "grand old man" in Missouri,
and thus pictures him: "He was five
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</SPAN></span>
feet ten inches in height, of a very erect,
clean-limbed, and athletic form—admirably
fitted in structure, muscle, temperament, and
habit for the endurance of the labors,
changes, and sufferings he underwent. He
had what phrenologists would have considered
a model head—with a forehead peculiarly
high, noble, and bold—thin and compressed
lips—a mild, clear, blue eye—a large
and prominent chin, and a general expression
of countenance in which fearlessness
and courage sat enthroned, and which told
the beholder at a glance what he had been
and was formed to be." Flint declares that
the busts, paintings, and engravings of
Boone bear little resemblance to him. "They
want the high port and noble daring of his
countenance.... Never was old age more
green, or gray hairs more graceful. His
high, calm, bold forehead seemed converted
by years into iron."</p>
<p>Rev. James E. Welch, a revivalist, thus
tells of Boone as he saw him at his meetings
in 1818: "He was rather low of stature,
broad shoulders, high cheek-bones, very mild
countenance, fair complexion, soft and quiet
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</SPAN></span>
in his manner, but little to say unless spoken
to, amiable and kind in his feelings, very
fond of quiet retirement, of cool self-possession
and indomitable perseverance. He
never made a profession of religion, but still
was what the world calls a very moral man."</p>
<p>In 1819, the year before the death of
Boone, Chester Harding, an American portrait-painter
of some note, went out from St.
Louis to make a life study of the aged Kentuckian.
He found him at the time "living
alone in a cabin, a part of an old blockhouse,"
evidently having escaped for a time from
the conventionalities of home life, which
palled upon him. The great man was roasting
a steak of venison on the end of his ramrod.
He had a marvelous memory of the
incidents of early days, although forgetful
of passing events. "I asked him," says
Harding, "if he never got lost in his long
wanderings after game? He said 'No, I was
never lost, but I was bewildered once for
three days.'" The portrait is now in the possession
of the painter's grandson, Mr. William
H. King, of Winnetka, Ill. Harding says
that he "never finished the drapery of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</SPAN></span>
original picture, but copied the head, I think,
at three different times." It is from this
portrait (our frontispiece), made when
Boone was an octogenarian, emaciated and
feeble—although not appearing older than
seventy years—that most others have been
taken; thus giving us, as Flint says, but a
shadowy notion of how the famous explorer
looked in his prime. There is in existence,
however, a portrait made by Audubon, from
memory—a charming picture, representing
Boone in middle life.<SPAN name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Serene and unworldly to the last, and
with slight premonition of the end, Daniel
Boone passed from this life upon the twenty-sixth
of September, 1820, in the eighty-sixth
year of his age. The event took place in the
home of his son Nathan, said to be the first
stone house built in Missouri. The convention
for drafting the first constitution of the
new State was then in session in St. Louis.
Upon learning the news, the commonwealth-builders
adjourned for the day in respect
to his memory; and as a further mark of regard
wore crape on their left arms for twenty
days. The St. Louis Gazette, in formally
announcing his death, said: "Colonel Boone
was a man of common stature, of great enterprise,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</SPAN></span>
strong intellect, amiable disposition,
and inviolable integrity—he died universally
regretted by all who knew him.... Such
is the veneration for his name and character."</p>
<p>Pursuant to his oft-repeated request, he
was buried by the side of his wife, upon the
bank of Teugue Creek, about a mile from the
Missouri. There, in sight of the great river
of the new West, the two founders of Boonesborough
rested peacefully. Their graves
were, however, neglected until 1845, when the
legislature of Kentucky made a strong appeal
to the people of Missouri to allow the
bones to be removed to Frankfort, where, it
was promised, they should be surmounted
by a fitting monument. The eloquence of
Kentucky's commissioners succeeded in overcoming
the strong reluctance of the Missourians,
and such fragments as had not
been resolved into dust were removed amid
much display. But in their new abiding-place
they were again the victims of indifference;
it was not until 1880, thirty-five
years later, that the present monument was
erected.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i011" id="i011"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i011.jpg" width-obs="372" height-obs="550" alt="Boone's Monument" /> <p class="caption">BOONE'S MONUMENT AT FRANKFORT, KENTUCKY.</p> </div>
<p>We have seen that Daniel Boone was
neither the first explorer nor the first settler
of Kentucky. The trans-Alleghany wilds
had been trodden by many before him; even
he was piloted through Cumberland Gap by
Finley, and Harrodsburg has nearly a year's
priority over Boonesborough. He had not
the intellect of Clark or of Logan, and his
services in the defense of the country were
of less importance than theirs. He was not
a constructive agent of civilization. But in
the minds of most Americans there is a pathetic,
romantic interest attaching to Boone
that is associated with few if any others of
the early Kentuckians. His migrations in
the vanguard of settlement into North Carolina,
Kentucky, West Virginia, and Missouri,
each in their turn; his heroic wanderings in
search of game and fresh lands; his activity
and numerous thrilling adventures during
nearly a half-century of border warfare; his
successive failures to acquire a legal foothold
in the wilderness to which he had piloted
others; his persistent efforts to escape the
civilization of which he had been the forerunner;
his sunny temper amid trials of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</SPAN></span>
sort that made of Clark a plotter and a misanthrope;
his sterling integrity; his serene old
age—all these have conspired to make for
Daniel Boone a place in American history as
one of the most lovable and picturesque of
our popular heroes; indeed, the typical backwoodsman
of the trans-Alleghany region.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />