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Boone Station : ウィキペディア英語版
Boone Station

Boone Station State Historic Site is Kentucky State Historic Site on Boone's Creek near Athens in Fayette County, Kentucky, USA. It boasts numerous reconstructed log cabins and a stockade. Skilled staff and reënactors help to interpret daily life at the station during Kentucky's pioneer days.
==Boone's New Station==
Boone's Station initially known as Boone's New Station to distinguish it from the fort which is now known as Boonesborough was the home of Daniel Boone from 1779〔(Boone: A Biography ) By Robert Morgan; Algonquin Books (2008)〕 until 1782. Athens at the time was named "Cross Plains"〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Athens Historic District )〕 and Boone's son Israel established the fort nearby in 1776.
During the American Revolution, Daniel moved to his son Israel's settlement, which consisted at its height of 15 to 20 families. Like other "stations" in frontier Kentucky, Boone's Station probably consisted of a number of cabins which shared a common outside wall to defend against American Indian raids. Unlike Boonesborough, Boone Station saw little action during the Revolutionary War, although a number of Boone's Station residents were killed in the war at nearby locations. Daniel's brother Edward was killed by Shawnee in 1780 while hunting with Daniel in present-day Bourbon County. Boone's son Israel and his nephew Thomas were killed at the Battle of Blue Licks in 1782.
Boone eventually lost or sold his title to the station land as a result of the chaotic, overlapping land claim system of frontier Kentucky. Exactly when he moved away is uncertain. In 1783, he either resettled his family in a cabin at nearby Marble Creek, where he lived for a couple of years, or he relocated to Limestone (now part of Maysville), near the Ohio River. Boone Station ceased to exist as a community by 1791.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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