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Home Johnny Appleseed Festival The Story of Johnny Appleseed

The Story of Johnny Appleseed

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Almost everyone thinks that Johnny Appleseed is the mythical hero of a charming American legend. Actu¬ally, this is the nickname of a real person, John Chap¬man, who was born in Massachusetts in 1774.

As a youth, John followed his father's trade of carpen¬try. He drifted away from his birthplace and eventu¬ally migrated to Pittsburgh. Here he listened avidly to tales about the pioneers who were trekking westward, and to stories of life on the frontier.

Ignoring the disdainful laughter of those in whom he confided, he ultimately set out along with a sack of ap¬ple seeds gathered from cider press refuse, an axe, a short-handled hoe and a Bible, to follow an urge to teach religion and to plant apple trees.

His possessions were few. Often he wore only a burlap coffee sack for clothing. Bareheaded and often barefoot even when the weather was freezing, a saucepan on his head when it stormed, he traveled unarmed, often over the dangerous wilderness trails. Sometimes friendly Indians gave him moccasins. He was a welcome guest at homesteads where he stopped and he showed his ap¬preciation by making toys for the children, by telling stories, and by reading aloud from his Bible.

Johnny Appleseed was a gentle man, a student of Swe¬denborgian philosophy. He never harmed a living thing, and had an almost mystical love of nature. Above all, he had a deep love and respect for all man¬kind, including the Indian tribes he encountered in his travels.

John Chapman, the beloved "Johnny Appleseed," died in the early spring of 1845 near Ft. Wayne, Indiana, while tending one of his numerous frontier apple nurs¬ery plantings. He was 71 years of age. A friend of eve¬ryone he met, an honored guest wherever he stayed, respected and beloved throughout the 10,000 square miles of frontier country he traveled, he is remembered! today as one of that rare and truly good breed of men who devote their lives to their fellow men with no thought of reward.

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