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What are the achievements of Daniel Boone?

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Daniel Boone was a notable American pioneer and explorer known for his exploration and settlement efforts in Kentucky. He led settlers to build the "Wilderness Road" and established Boonesborough, the first English settlement west of the Appalachians. Captured by Shawnee Indians in 1778, he escaped to warn the settlement of an attack. Boone also served briefly in the Virginia House of Burgesses. Despite losing land due to defective titles, he continued pioneering, eventually moving to Missouri.

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Daniel Boone (1734-1820)  American pioneer, backwoodsman, explorer, Indian fighter, farmer and land surveyor. Daniel grew up in western North Carolina, then on the frontier, farming, hunting, and trapping. In 1755, during the French and Indian War, he served as a blacksmith and wagoner for the British during General Braddock's disastrous campaign.  In the 1760's he explored Florida, then controlled by Spain, and begin the first of many explorations of Kentucky hunting and trapping.  In 1775 he led a party of settlers to build the "Wilderness Road"  through Kentucky and established Boonesborough, the first English settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains.  Indians attacked the settlement, and in 1778 he was captured by the Shawnee Indians, and taken to Detroit as a prisoner.  He escaped, and traveled 160 miles through the wilderness back to Boonesborough in 4 days to warn the settlement of an impending Indian attack, in which he distinguished himself in battle. Unfortunately, Boonesborough proved to be untenable and eventually was abandoned. For a short time he represented the western settlers in the Virginian House of Burgesses, Kentucky then being a part of Virginia. After losing his land through improper titles, he moved further into the wilderness to what is now Missouri, then controlled by Spain.  In 1803, after the Louisiana Purchase, his land claims there were found to be defective, and again he was dispossessed. He died in 1820, was buried in Missouri, but exhumed and reburied in Frankfort, Kentucky in 1845.  Although he was active within Kentucky, he was neither the first to explore nor the first to settle in the region.

Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th ed., vol. 4  pg.

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