Living Well 60+ March-April 2014 | Page 5

MARCH/APRIL 2014 5 “That Little Road” Opened the Way West Trail created by Daniel Boone has great historical significance by Abby Malik, Staff Writer West of the Mississippi River, you’ll find the Oregon Trail and New Mexico’s Santa Fe Trail. East of the Mississippi, Dr. John M. Fox hopes Boone Trace will someday be as legendary and appreciated as those trails. Boone Trace was created by Daniel Boone and 30 other men during a two-month period in 1775. It opened the wilderness for settlers to travel through the Cumberland Gap to Boonesborough, Ky. No other road, Fox said, is of greater historical significance to Kentucky’s founding in 1792 and to the opening of the West. “It must be remembered that at that time, there were no actual roads into Kentucky or west of the Alleghenies,” he said. “No towns, no roads – nothing.” Since 2008, Fox, a surgeon with Colorectal Surgical & Gastroenterology Associates in Lexington, has dedicated most of his free time to preserving Boone Trace. The 71-year-old travels the 194-mile trail – affectionately called “That Little Road” – primarily on his motorcycle. Fox feels a strong connection to Boone, a man he says “is in Kentucky’s DNA.” “The trail feels like hallowed ground,” he said. “It may sound a little crazy, but I often sense the presence of Daniel Boone going down the trail.” While Boone Trace actually begins in Kingsport, Tenn., Fox’s preservation efforts start in Martin’s Station, Va., about eight miles from the Kentucky border, and stretch north through five Kentucky counties, ending at Fort Boonesborough in Madison County. But, Fox said, the trail is “slipping away, right before our eyes.” He has two primary concerns about Boone Trace’s future: Original markers are disappearing and the actual path is being threatened by commercial and residential growth. Fox has worked to research the precise location of Boone’s path, looking for long-forgotten sites and markers. In 1915, a chapter of the Kentucky Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) placed 14 markers along Boone Trace. Fox has uncovered and documented nine of them. In 2012, Fox and two others incorporated Friends of Boone Trace, a historic preservation, education and research organization. Friends of Boone Trace works to find allies for its preservation efforts, including the Kentucky Historical Society (KHS), the DAR and more. Besides advocacy activities, the Friends of Boone Trace travels the trail by car and motorcycle, and for the past three years, members of the Lexington Harley Owner Group (HOGS) have organized motorcycle rides. Last October, the Friends of Boone Trace hosted a dedication ceremony for a new KHS Hazel Patch Historical Marker at Levi Jackson Wilderness Road State Park in Laurel County. The marker documents a location important to Boone Trace’s history: It is at Hazel Patch that Boone’s trail forked. Boone Trace went north to Boonesborough and Wilderness Road stretched west toward Louisville. The group’s efforts also include going high tech, and soon Dr. John Fox often rides his Harley V-Rod on Boone Trace. He says he can feel Daniel Boone’s spirit there. KHS’s “Explore Kentucky” smartphone app will feature Boone Trace pictures and mapped points of interest. In addition, Fox’s work with a group of history-minded Madison County citizens recently resulted in the donation of the Twetty’s 2 HAMBURG JOURNAL Fort site to the Boonesborough chapter of the DAR. A deadly skirmish occurred at Twetty’s Fort just before the start of the Revolutionary War. Anyone interested in Friends BOONE Continued on Page 31 JANUARY 2O12 WWW.HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM Senior Retirement Community Rose Mary C. Brooks Place Rose Mary C. Brooks Place We’re Not Almost Home. We are Home. We’re not almost home. We are home. Schedule Your Free Tour Today! NOW LEASING 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. 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