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1788 DANIEL BOONE + His Wife REBECCA BOONE Signed Land Sale Deed

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:12,000.00 USD Estimated At:15,000.00 - 20,000.00 USD
1788 DANIEL BOONE + His Wife REBECCA BOONE Signed Land Sale Deed
Autographs
Daniel Boone & Rebecca Boone Signed Land Sale Deed Daniel and “his Wife” being Named Ten Separate Times
DANIEL BOONE (1734-1820) & REBECCA BOONE (His Wife, 1739-1813). American Pioneer, Explorer, a Woodsman, and a Frontiersman, whose frontier exploits made him one of the First Folk Heroes of the United States. Rebecca Ann (Bryan) Boone was an American Pioneer and the wife of famed Frontiersman Daniel Boone.
August 19, 1788-Dated, Partially-Printed Document Signed, “Daniel Boone” and “Rabaca Boone” as “His Wife,” Land Sale Indenture Deed, Bourbon County, Virginia, Very Fine. The finest quality “Daniel Boone” signed Document we have offered, with the added bonus of an excellent signature of his wife “Rabaca Boone”. The names “Daniel Boone & Rabaca Boone” as “his Wife” are named Ten separate times throughout the text of this formal legal land sale Document, each time fully and clearly written in rich brown ink.

This Document is impressive. It has 1 page, measuring 16” x 13”, tall folio, being boldly printed in deep black text on laid period paper. It has expected folds and some modest centerfold separation at the right outer edge where it was most exposed and along a fold through both signatures at right. Two original red wax seals are still present at bottom right along side of the two primary signatures, “Daniel Boone” and “Rabaca Boone” which are boldly written in rich brown. This Indenture Document transfers ownership to a John Ludert for a parcel of land in Bourbon County, Virginia. In part:

“Flemings Creek. Beginning at the Sycamore and Cherry Tree corner to Peter Schmeltzers tract of Six Hundred acres, thence West One Hundred and Seventy Eight poles, to a stake thence North One Hundred and Seventy Eight poles to a hiccory (sic) and Sugar tree, thence East... part of a tract of Four Thousand Acres Entered in the name of Thomas Lagwood and Assigned to Daniel Boone.” There is a Handwritten statement upon the otherwise blank reverse which reads, in full:

“At a Court held for Bourbon county at the Court house on Tuesday the Sixteenth day of September 1788 --- This Indenture of Bargain & Sale from Daniel Boone & Rebecca his Wife to John Ludert was acknowledged by said Daniel & Rebecca his Wife, she being privily examinded as the law directs & having & languished her Right of Dower therein was ordered to be recorded. --- Test.(imony) John Edwards, Clk (Clerk).” Docket written upon the middle outer reverse side panel notes the sale and the official court recording of this Deed.

Daniel Boone held many government offices, including Leutenant Colonel of Fayette County, legislative representative, and sheriff. In 1786 he moved to Maysville, Kentucky, and was elected to the legislature. Bad luck continued to follow him, however; he lost his land because of a mistake made in the records. In 1788 he abandoned Kentucky and moved to Point Pleasant, in what is now West Virginia. He was appointed Lieutenant Colonel of Kanawha County in 1789 and its legislative delegate in 1791.

Boone and his family later moved west to Spain's Alta Luisiana (or Upper Louisiana, now Missouri). When asked why he had left Kentucky, he answered, "Too many people! Too crowded, too crowded! I want some elbow room." What he really wanted was to settle on land that would not be taken away from him later.

This historic “Daniel Boone” and “Rabaca Boone” Signed land sale deed has nice overall eye appeal and is excellent for display. The top margin is nicely indented, the body of the printed text is well centered with four full wide original margins. The final signatures are perfectly clear and each measure about 2.25” long, being next to their official red wax signature seals.
Rebecca and Daniel began their courtship in 1753 and married three years later.

Rebecca married Daniel Boone in a triple wedding on August 14, 1756, in Yadkin River, North Carolina at the age of 17. She took in her new husband's two young orphan nephews, Jesse and Jonathan who lived with them in North Carolina until the family left for Kentucky in 1773.

Like her mother and mother-in-law before her, Rebecca had many children born two or three years apart. Over twenty-five years time, she delivered six sons and four daughters of her own

In 1799, Daniel and Rebecca followed Nathan to Spain's Alta Luisiana (Upper Louisiana, now Missouri, about 45 miles west of St. Louis) in the Femme Osage valley. Daniel acquired 850 acres and was appointed Commandant and Syndic, district magistrate by the Spanish government. In 1803 with the Louisiana Purchase, they lost the rights to their lands but with the direct intercession of Congress in 1814 some parts of his acreage were restored.

After a brief illness, Rebecca Boone died at the age of 74 on March 18, 1813, at her daughter Jemima Boone Callaway's home near the village of Charette (near present-day Marthasville, Missouri). She was buried at the Bryan family cemetery nearby overlooking the Missouri River. She and her husband's remains were reinterred and buried again in Frankfort, Kentucky in 1845.