Welcome to the Daniel
Boone Campus of
Lindenwood University
Lindenwood University
welcomes you to the
home
of Daniel Boone during the years he and his son, Nathan, lived in Missouri. Please stop by
when in Missouri.
STEP BACK INTO MISSOURI'S
PAST! The Historic Daniel
Boone Home is a four-story structure built between 1804 and 1810
in the Femme Osage Valley of St. Charles County. It was the last
permanent residence of Daniel Boone and his wife, Rebecca, and
was where he died in 1820. The adjoining Boonesfield Village is a collection of historic buildings
from throughout Missouri that are being reconstructed to form
a living history village and a center for the study of history,
traditional arts, natural sciences and ethics.The Historic Daniel
Boone Home and Boonesfield Village are part of the Lindenwood
University system.
The Lindenwood
University's goal is to create a living-history village that
that reflects the time of the Louisiana Purchase and early statehood,
which came for Missouri in 1821, a year after Boone died.
General Description of
the Boone Home Site
The Historic Daniel Boone Home and Boonesfield Village are open all year round. The grounds are accessible by guided tour only, except for special events.
The Historic Daniel Boone Campus and Boonesfield Village are
likely to impress visitors not only with the size of the home
but also the scope of the village that is coming to life behind
it. The village has expanded to include over a dozen other 19th-century
structures, including a chapel and schoolhouse. The
village is populated by interpreters in period dress, with more
performers and artisans to come as the village grows.
The Boone home, nearly 200 years old, is large even by today's
standards. It rises four stories -- counting a kitchen and dining
room in what might be considered a basement -- with limestone
walls that are 2 1/2 feet thick. The home has seven fireplaces
and a ballroom on the top floor.
One famous structure is the Sappington/Dressel Home, formerly located
on Gravois Road in St. Louis. After being obtained by Lindenwood
University it was disassembled in the spring of 1988 by Randell
Andrae, two full time paid staff members of the then Historic
Daniel Boone Home, Inc., and 2 volunteers, Bob Pecoraro and Barney
Combs. It was then reconstructed at its present site. There is
a bronze plaque inside the Sappington/Dressel Home describing
this historic restoration..
Other historic structures have also been acquired, primarily from
St. Charles and Warren counties.
Academic Programs
There is no greater way to learn than by doing. In addition to the standard tour of the Boone Home, Boone Campus staff will work with teachers and youth leaders to select program activities that provide experiential learning opportunities. These programs involve the participants in such hands-on activities as splitting fence rails with gluts and a maul, riving cedar shingles with a froe, fire starting with flint and steel or cooking a meal in a Dutch Oven. Participants may also observe a black-powder firearms demonstration or the "village blacksmith" forging an "S" hook.
Go directly to Lindenwood University's site for more information:
http://www.lindenwood.edu/boone/education.asp
BOONE HOME SEEKS VOLUNTEERS DURING
2009
Interested in history and looking for something to do with your time?
Consider being a Boone Home Volunteer. Lindenwood University's Daniel Boone Home and Boonesfield Village has many opportunities for someone willing to volunteer their time once a month, once a week or as often as you are willing to enjoy being part of the family. The Boone Home is locat
Interested in history and looking for something to do with your time? Consider being a Boone Home Volunteer. Lindenwood University's Daniel Boone Home and Boonesfield Village has many opportunities for someone willing to volunteer their time once a month, once a week or as often as you are willing to enjoy being part of the family. The Boone Home is located in the Defiance, MO area on Highway F between Highway 94 and New Melle.
Volunteers can participate in activities such as Demonstrators, Heritage Landscaping, Curatorial Assistant, Special Events and Programming, Retail Services in our Museum Shop and as an Historic Escort Interpreter.
Volunteering at the Boone Home is rewarding and a great place to escape to. Daniel Boone and his family chose to settle here when they arrived from Kentucky and the reason is clear. The landscape is beautiful and the vision is to preserve that essence of frontier life.
Training is available for each volunteer opportunity and we will try to fit you in a position that will suit your interests. If you would like to be part of Pioneer Days or the Candlelight Tour, the time to prepare is now.
Don't wait, call Grady Manus at 636-798-2005 or e-mail GManus@lindenwood.edu to schedule an interview.
The Boone Fellows Society is an organization of men and women who are pillars of industry, government, sports and entertainment, education, and community service. Through their respective life accomplishments, each has demonstrated determination, innovation, and entrepreneurship. A Boone Fellow is an exemplary leader and role model, committed to the principles of the Boone Fellows Society and capable of enlisting the support of his/her peers, both programmatically and financially.
Through their personal and professional lives, Boone Fellows represent the best of their communities in their personal character and in their commitment to the Judeo-Christian values embodied in the Lindenwood University founder Mary Easton Sibley and America's foremost frontiersman Daniel Boone. Boone Fellows see their century as the likes of Mary Sibley, Daniel Boone and Thomas Jefferson saw theirs - as one filled with both serious challenge and unlimited potential; one awaiting creative, ambitious and energetic leadership; and one that calls for each individual's best efforts in both philosophic and practical arenas.
The Boone Fellows activities include:
* Promoting the vision of the National Center for the Study
of American Culture and Values of Lindenwood University
* Drawing attention to traditional college-level curriculum with
non-traditional approaches at the 1,030 acre setting of the Daniel
Boone Home and Boonesfield Village located in the heart of the
Boone Valley
* Encouraging students to explore the entrepreneurial, free enterprise
aspects of our past that led to the creation of this country and
which will affect it in the next centuries
* Providing recommendations and referrals for candidates for membership
in the Boone Fellows Society
* Representing the Center in their day-to-day activities by helping
grow the Society and all it represents in this country
* Committing $50,000 over a five year period.
Benefits of Membership:
* Life membership
* Annual dinners at the Daniel Boone Home
* Admittance to Daniel Boone facilities and tours
* Annual acknowledgement in the Donors and Annual Reports of the
University
* Plaque in the Visitor's Center recognizing membership
Are you interested in joining?
Please contact Dr. Lucy Morros, Vice President for Institutional Advancement, at 636-949-4532.
Daniel Boone Home & Boonesfield Village Membership
The
mission of the Boone Home and Boonesfield Village Historic Site
is to preserve and protect the historic structures, collection,
and natural resources that comprise the facility; to interpret
the early American frontier experience in Missouri as exemplified
by the Boone family and their contemporaries; and to provide a
center for fully integrated learning on all education levels from
elementary through the University level.
Please click HERE for more information on this topic.
The
Boonesfield Village
currently contains:
* The Hope School House, circa 1831, from St. Paul, Missouri.
* A milliner's shop, circa 1840.
* A woodworker's shop, circa 1837, from Flint Hill, Missouri.
* The Peace Chapel, circa 1840-60, from New Melle, Missouri complete with a reconstructed 28-stop Wicks pipe organ
* Stake House, circa 1828-40, formerly a merchant's house in the Femme Osage Valley of Missouri.
* The Sappington-Dressel House, circa 1807, from south St. Louis County. The Lindbergh School District in St. Louis was planned and a charter was written for it in the house's dining room.
* Borgmann Animal Driven Mill, circa 1840, a gristmill originally constructed in Missouri's Femme Osage Valley.
* Fritz Von Der Bruelge General Store, circa 1830, from Schluersburg, Missouri.
* Flanders Callaway House, circa 1812, the home of Daniel Boone's daughter Jemima Boone Callaway, originally constructed near Marthasville, Missouri.
*The Squire Boone Home
*Grape Arbor
*The Covered Bridge
*Barn by Van Bibber
Boonesfield Village has acquired another treasure: a newly
discovered small Spanish Fort [Fort San Carlos] built in 1793.
Click Here for
an article courtesy of the St. Louis Post Dispatch and St. Louis Today.
One of the most historic homes in Missouri has been reconstructed.
by Margy Miles. ©2007
* For the full article and many more photos viisit Margy's wonderful Boone website at http://www.danielboonefamily.org
The large 2 story log home of Daniel Boone's daughter, Jemima, and her husband, Flanders Callaway, was built by them shortly after the Boone clan moved to Louisiana Territory (present state of Missouri). It was located on their farm near the little village of LaCharette which was at the present town of Marthasville.
Flanders and Jemima raised their family in this home and lived out the remainder of their lives here. This is where several of their children were born and the site of their weddings. It is where grandchildren were brought into the world and where Flanders and Jemima died in 1829 and 1834. The house is also where Daniel's wife, Rebecca, died in 1813 and where Daniel's only life portrait was painted by artist Chester Harding in 1820 .[See photo of painting below]
The house is now owned by Lindenwood University and has been reconstructed on the old farm at the Historic Daniel Boone Home in the Femme Osage Valley. This is a very important relic from the Boone family and Missouri history.
Visitor count since January 1, 1999
SPECIAL
NOTE: For
many years, I had maintained the "official" page for
our treasured Daniel Boone Home. I am a History teacher at Visitation Academy of St. Louis. In 2002, I was pleased to announce that
internet information has been provided by the talented folks in
the communications department at Lindenwood University. I continue
to express my thanks to the thousands of visitors to this site
over these many years. A special thanks goes to the thousands
who have visited our beloved Daniel Boone Home over these past
years. Hopefully my work on this web site has encouraged people
to cherish our national treasures like the Daniel Boone Home.
I will continue to keep this web site as a mirror of all the key
information provided by Lindenwood University. Visit the Boone web site of Lindenwood University for all the latest.
Please direct ALL of your questions
regarding the Daniel Boone Campus and Boonesfield Village to Kacky
Garner kgarner@lindenwood.edu
----- Dan Monahan, dmonahan@visitationacademy.org
Gate of
the beautiful Lindenwood University, 209 S. Kingshighway, St. Charles, Missouri,
63301.
© 2009 Dan Monahan
* Please direct ALL of
your questions regarding the Daniel Boone Campus and Boonesfield
Village to Kacky Garner kgarner@lindenwood.edu
* Special thanks to Margy Miles for the additional photos on these pages. Visit her outstanding Boone website at http://www.danielboonefamily.org