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  • More
    • Home
    • War in Miami County
    • Rough and Tumble Fighting
    • Local Massacres
    • The Siege of Fort Wayne
    • Silas Hoadley, Clockmaker
    • Dayton Rifle Company
    • The Death George Mann
    • The Death Margaret Harrop
    • Brother Jonathan
    • A Captive Returns Home
    • The Johnston Cemetery
    • Fort Mann (Shelby County)
    • Hunting the Upper Miamis
    • France Claims Ohio
    • Miami Claim Upper Piqua
    • Shawnee Claim Upper Piqua
    • Alcohol on the Frontier
    • Frontier Health&Wellness
    • Miami County's Mounds
    • Upper Piqua's Stone Wall
    • An Old Hero Returns
    • Shawnee Religion
    • Educating The Children
    • Wildcat, Faith, Law etc
    • Shawnee Language
    • A History of the Shawnee
    • Running with Daniel Boone
    • Ohio County Formation
    • Squire Boone Jr Timeline
    • Jacob & Sarah Stover
    • A Miami Hunting Story
    • Wildcat McKinney
    • Miami-Shelby Co. Heroine
  • Home
  • War in Miami County
  • Rough and Tumble Fighting
  • Local Massacres
  • The Siege of Fort Wayne
  • Silas Hoadley, Clockmaker
  • Dayton Rifle Company
  • The Death George Mann
  • The Death Margaret Harrop
  • Brother Jonathan
  • A Captive Returns Home
  • The Johnston Cemetery
  • Fort Mann (Shelby County)
  • Hunting the Upper Miamis
  • France Claims Ohio
  • Miami Claim Upper Piqua
  • Shawnee Claim Upper Piqua
  • Alcohol on the Frontier
  • Frontier Health&Wellness
  • Miami County's Mounds
  • Upper Piqua's Stone Wall
  • An Old Hero Returns
  • Shawnee Religion
  • Educating The Children
  • Wildcat, Faith, Law etc
  • Shawnee Language
  • A History of the Shawnee
  • Running with Daniel Boone
  • Ohio County Formation
  • Squire Boone Jr Timeline
  • Jacob & Sarah Stover
  • A Miami Hunting Story
  • Wildcat McKinney
  • Miami-Shelby Co. Heroine

I have researched the Boone family in some detail because I descend from Daniel and Squire’s aunt, Sarah Boone, and her husband, Jacob Stover.


When reading of the Boone family, it intrigued me that for a short time prior to their trek to the Carolinas, the Boone (Daniel and Squire’s family) moved to the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia for a short period of time when they left Pennsylvania.  In 1747 they moved to the Shenandoah Valley, near Winchester, Virginia.  Then in 1749, they relocated again to the Yadkin Valley in Rowen County, North Carolina.


Several tribes used the Shenandoah Valley as hunting grounds, among them the Shawnee, Iroquois, Occoneechee, Monocans, and Piscataways. There was a strong native presence, but no tribes laid claim to the land. 


Settlers found land in the area to be cheap and abundant.


Why did the Boone family go to Virginia before going to the Carolinas?


Jacob (Stauber, Stauffer) Stover was born about 1685. In 1714, around the time of his marriage, Jacob Stauber was granted land, on Oley Creek, Philadelphia (now Berks County). About that same time, when he was 30, He married Sarah Boone.  He and Sarah Boone eventually had 5 children. 


In 1720 Jacob Stover received a grant of 8,000 acres along the South Fork of the River at the base of Massanutten Mountain.


In 1730, there is a record of Jacob Stover’s sale of land in Augusta County (now Rockingham County), to George Boone of Oley; one tract of 500 acres and another of 1000 acres described as near the end of North Mountain, on a small branch of the Shenandoah, part of 5060 acres laid out for Stover by the Council of Virginia July 1730.


On November 11, 1735, Jacob Stover sold two tracts of land to the Boone family, the said tracts containing 500 and 1000 acres respectively, and being situated near the end of North Mountain, so called, on a small branch of Shenandoah River… part of 5000 acres laid out for Stover by the Virginia Council, June 17, 1730.


In 1738 a wife, Margaret Stover, signed a deed for land sold by Jacob Stover to another person. One would assume Sarah Boone Stover died in Philadelphia a year or two prior. Sarah’s father died in 1744, and within his will, she was not named as one of his survivors.


The Massanutten, where the Boone's purchased land, was commonly referred to as the North Mountain, and the Blue Ridge as the South Mountain. Boone’s Run probably bears its name from that family. It flows southeastward out of Runkle’s Gap, in the Massanutten, directly toward Elkton, then turns northeastward and enters the river two miles below Elkton. It is difficult to determine whether Stover sold this land from his upper or lower tract.


Why was land being issued to Stover by the Council of Virginia? In total, he was granted nearly 10,000 acres under the agreement that he would bring in 100 settlers to the area. There are numerous land sales recorded as he pursued his goal.... and it is said  that in order to meet the quota required by the government, the citizens participants named their farm animals  family names.... such a pig being named Frank Jones and being counted as a member of the family.....

 

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