[Pioneers of the Old Southwest by Constance Lindsay Skinner]@TWC D-Link book
Pioneers of the Old Southwest

CHAPTER V
6/17

Once they were nigh to perishing of starvation and were saved from that fate only through chance meeting with a band of Indians who, seeing their plight, made camp and shared their food with them--according to the Indian code in time of peace.
Boone's party explored Florida from St.Augustine to Pensacola, and Daniel became sufficiently enamored of the tropical south to purchase there land and a house.

His wife, however, was unwilling to go to Florida, and she was not long in convincing the hunter that he would soon tire of a gameless country.

A gameless country! Perhaps this was the very thought which turned the wanderer's desires again towards the land of Kentucky.

* The silencing of the enemy's whisper in the Cherokee camps had opened the border forests once more to the nomadic rifleman.
Boone was not alone in the desire to seek out what lay beyond.

His brother-in-law, John Stewart, and a nephew by marriage, Benjamin Cutbirth, or Cutbird, with two other young men, John Baker and James Ward, in 1766 crossed the Appalachian Mountains, probably by stumbling upon the Indian trail winding from base to summit and from peak to base again over this part of the great hill barrier.


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