The Boone Society Contributes to the Price-Loyles
Collection
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Boone Home, Lindenwood
Universtity |
Lindenwood University Makes Important Boone
Acquisition!
The Boone Society contributed proceeds from the silent auction at the 2002
"Oregon-or-Bust" reunion to help Lindenwood University of St. Charles, Missouri,
put toward the $350,000 purchase price for the "Price-Loyles Collection." The
Society's donation was offered in honor of board member Ken Kamper, not only for his many
years of Boone history research in Missouri, but also for his many years of dedicated
service to the Boone Society.
"This is an incredible collection for all Boone descendants and anyone interested
in Boone history," explains James Gladwin, director of the Boone home campus.
"The collection contains six generations of artifacts, all
with clean provenance, all in the same house for 140 years, and all the items belonged to
Boone granddaughters," continues Gladwin. Some of the items are furniture, textiles,
tools, china, silver, books, toys and incredible research materials, including personal
correspondence, family pictures, journals, diaries, business and household records of more
than 140 years of Boones in Missouri. Gladwin continues, "through these records, we
have come to know personally this remarkable branch of Daniel's family. After cataloguing
and archiving, these materials will be available to the public for research."
Known as the Price-Loyles
collection, it is to be housed at Boonesfield Village, located at the Boone Home in
Defiance, MO.
Boonesfield Village
includes the home of Daniel's son Nathan, where Daniel lived at the time of his death in
1820. For more information, you may call Pam Jensen at 636/798-2005."
The collection begins with Daniel and Rebecca Bryan Boone's son, Jesse Bryan Boone and
wife Chloe Van Bibber Boone.
The last owner was
Forestyne Loyles, the four-times great granddaughter of Daniel. Loyles and her ancestors
lived in a Weston, Missouri, house that Theodore Warner bought in 1864. Theodore Warner
was the grandson of Jesse Bryan Boone. "The house and its belongings were passed
through generations of mothers and their daughters, which was unusual at that time,"
explains Frances Feldhausen, curator of the collection.
"The collection should be ready for public visitors by the
annual Candlelight Christmas Tours the first two weekends in December (Dec 6-7 &
13-14), 2002," Gladwin said.
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