Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt » Edward "Neddie" Boone (1740-1780)

Persoonlijke gegevens Edward "Neddie" Boone 

Bron 1
  • Hij is geboren op 19 oktober 1740 in Exeter Township, now Reading, Berks County, Pennsylvania Colony, Colonial America.
  • Beroep: Juror, Road Surveyor, Constable, & Tax Collector. He was killed by indians while on a hunting trip with his brother Daniel., Farmer.
  • (MARR) in het jaar 1757 in Eaton Baptist Church, Yadkin River, Rowan, North Carolina, Verenigde Staten: Spouse: Martha L. Bryan.
  • Hij is overleden op 6 oktober 1780 in Hinkston Creek, near Boone's Station, Fayette County, Kentucky, United States, hij was toen 39 jaar oud.
  • Hij is begraven op 7 oktober 1780 in Boone Station State Historic Site, Athens, Fayette County, Kentucky, United States.
  • Een kind van Squire Boone en Sarah Mary Milton Maugridge

Gezin van Edward "Neddie" Boone


Notities over Edward "Neddie" Boone

A Patriot of the American Revolution for NORTH CAROLINA - VIRGINIA. [http://services.dar.org/public/dar_research/search_adb/?action=full&p_id=A012098 DAR Ancestor #: A012098] rn 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.nd 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) and the Scholls - he was Clerk & Deacon of the Baptist Church in NC - everybody 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.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. unting. 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. Shawnee Indians lurking nearby shot and killed Edward but Daniel managed to escape. The horses ran away and Daniel ran 40 miles back 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 some other men went back to the site of the massacre and tried to find the Indians who killed Edward, but could not locate them. They did find Edward's body and took it back to Boone Station for burial Edward'is daughter Sarah said he was stabbed in seven places and his fingers were horribly cut. He was scalped and his coat and pantaloons had been removed. a 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.ter, 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.” th – Oley Township, Philadelphia County, PA (present day Berks County). was formed from Anson County, NC.)er 5, 1764 daughter Mary was born, Rowan County ��there is a warrant dated October 2, 1773, for a land survey for a 600-acre tract for him ‘on both sides of Sugar Creek joining Evan Ellis.’t Church, a branch of Dutchman’s Creek (Eaton’s) Baptist Church.C. “publick” road to be built. entucky through the Cumberland Gap. ayette, Jefferson & Lincoln. ( where he was shot. The address of the grave today is 870 See Road, ½ mile north of the junction of KY Hwy. 537 & See Road. The nearby creek thereafter was named Boone Creek in honor of Edward’s death there. He left his widow, Martha Bryan Boone, and six children: Charity, Jane, Mary, George, Joseph, Sarah.Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) in Paris, Kentucky, erected a tombstone at the death/burial site of Edward Boone in Bourbon County, KY. ath/burial site was recognized a Kentucky Landmark by the Kentucky Heritage Council. y 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.” oone married Martha Bryan sister to Rebecca Bryan Boone an William Bryan married to Edwards sister Mary. He was killed by Indians on Hinleston Creek, Near Boone's Station Kentucky in November 1780. They had six children. ., 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).es/Ned%20Boone.htmth, in which Indians kill him while hunting with Daniel in October of 1780, are still being investigated by some of Edward’s descendants today., GEORGE11, GEORGE BOONE10 JR., GEORGE9 BOONE, GREGORY8 BOHUN, GEFFREY BOHUN7 JR., GEFFREY BOHUM6 SR., JOHN5 BOHUM, JOHN4 DE BOHUN, JAMES3, JOHN2, FRANCO1 BOHUN) was born Nov 19, 1740 in Exeter, Berks County, Pennsylvania, and died Oct 05, 1780 in Bourbon County, Kentucky. He married MARTHA BRYAN 1758 in Rowan County, North Carolina. She was born 1747 in Exeter, Berks County, Pennsylvania, and died 1793 in Clark County, Kentucky.of my father, Col. Daniel Boone, which you are at perfect liberty to dispose of as you may think proper. In the fall of 1780, my father, Daniel Boone, and his brother Edward, left their post for the purpose of hunting buffalo. After procuring as much meat as they could pack upon their horses, they set out on their return home and came to a large deer lick near the bank of a creek at which to rest themselves. They were scarcely seated on the bank when a deer walked into the lick. Edward Boone shot it down and dragged it into the shade, where my father sat cracking walnuts. Just at that moment a party of Indians fired upon them from a neighboring canebrake. Edward fell dead; my father, Daniel Boone, sprang to his horse and attempted to throw off the load from his horse which he did not affect, for the Indians rushed out so suddenly that he was compelled to take to immediate flight on foot. In the bustle he lost his knife. Finding himself closely followed by the savages, he entered a canebrake, which concealed him from their sight; they then pursued him with their dogs, and it was not until he killed two of these that the Indians abandoned the chase. The knife remained lost until the summer of 1822, at which time some persons drawing a seine in the creek brought it up from the bottom, immediately at the lick alluded to. This creek and lick are in Clark County, Kentucky. From the time of the encounter I have described to you, in which my Uncle Edward lost his life, they have been known by the name of Boone's Lick and Boone's Creek., 1st Dragoons"ddress of the grave today is 870 See Road, ½ mile north of the junction of KY Hwy. 537 & See Road. The nearby creek thereafter was named Boone Creek in honor of Edward’s death there. He left his widow, Martha Bryan Boone, and six children: Charity, Jane, Mary, George, Joseph, Sarah. They buried Edward there where he had been killed. Draper letters report that in about 1827, Edward's bones were left exposed from flooding and the Rev. Richard Thomas collected the bones and reburied them at the Rockbridge Baptist Church nearby. : Edward Boone, Daniel's brother, most likely died in what is present day Montgomery County, Kentucky at the Grassy Lick. See articles about Edward Boone (two) by Donna Dodd Terrell Jones, B.A., M.A., J.D.. on the Journal of Kentucky History and Genealogy. Where he died was, at the time of his death, a part of Fayette County, KY. and then it became a part of Bourbon County, Ky. and then a part of Clark County, Ky and then, and FINALLY (so far), the legislature made it into Montgomery County, Kentucky. After the Civil War there was much confusion about the county line between Bourbon and Montgomery but Grassy Lick ended up in Montgomery.ryan, George W., Nathaniel , Squire Boone Jr., and Hannah Boone Stewart Pennington.e Boone - 28 April, 1767 - 10 June, 1841 lted in splitting Kentucky County, Virginia, into 3 counties: Jefferson, Fayette, and Lincoln. Part of the petition reads, "That the Militia Inhabitants of the north side of Kaintucky amount to about 400 with 11 fortified posts … that the nearest settlement to the Courthouse is at least 40 miles and the farthest about 70 miles … that the River Kentuckey is rendered impassable half the year by high waters & is ever inconvenient and Dangerous …" The petition was approved by the Virginia Legislature.25)28 - 1808))

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Edward "Neddie" Boone

George Boone
1690-1753
Squire Boone
1696-1765

Edward "Neddie" Boone
1740-1780


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  1. Geni World Family Tree, via https://www.myheritage.com/research/reco..., 19 januari 2019
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Historische gebeurtenissen

  • De temperatuur op 19 oktober 1740 lag rond de 5,0 °C. Er was 26 mm neerslagDe wind kwam overheersend uit het westen. Typering van het weer: geheel betrokken hagel. Bron: KNMI
  • Van 1702 tot 1747 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Tweede Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • In het jaar 1740: Bron: Wikipedia
    • 9 januari » De Rooswijk, een VOC-handelsschip, loopt tijdens een storm op een zandbank en vergaat (met een kostbare lading zilver) met haar volledige bemanning voor de Engelse kust van Kent.
    • 17 augustus » Kardinaal Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini wordt gekozen tot Paus Benedictus XIV.
    • 22 augustus » Kroning van Paus Benedictus XIV in Rome.


Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia

Bron: Wikipedia


Over de familienaam Boone

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Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Elizabeth Cromer, "Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-cromer-russell-buck-pratt/P8704.php : benaderd 9 augustus 2025), "Edward "Neddie" Boone (1740-1780)".