James Fenimore Copper's Deerslayer James Fenimore Copper's unwavering character regards Deerslayer as a honesty, virtue, and an honorable figure. He is a warrior who lives in his own words. Even if this situation risks his life, he refuses to give up what he believes or he wants to do. If Deerslayer refuses to compromise his standards, even if it threatens his life, he can see Deerslayer's greatest personality and honor. After rescuing Hist from Hurons, Deerslayer was caught by them.
Diaz Layer, or the first war pass (1841) is the last "leather stocking tales" by James Fenimore Cooper. During the period from 1740 to 1745, it became the first Natie Bumpo to play the hero in the time series and the story of leather. The novel is the same as "Pioneer" (the beginning of the leather story published in 1823), in Osego Lake in northern New York State. Diaz Layer is considered the remainder of the first part of the series. Fenimore Cooper began his work, linking the amazing progress of New York State civilization, four of his five leather goods.
Natty Bumppo, a fictional character, a wonderful pioneer and guide, is the protagonist of James Fenimore Cooper's five frontier life novels called The Leatherstocking Tales. Characters are known throughout the series with various names such as leather stockings, Hawkeye, Pathfinder, Diaz Layer. Natty Bumppo is a young white man raised by the Delaware Indians, educated by a member of the Moravian school, a brave and celebrated coward, hunter, and translator. He is a lifetime friend of Mohawk's Chinga Chok Chief and his son Anka. In the series, Naitybanpo is working with various European pioneers and military factions and his Indian brothers. Through the series, he is associated with a wilderness that disappears, becoming an unforgettable idealized figure for a lifestyle that is destined to fail, without a wife, without a child.
Various people in American folklore and literature represent pioneers. The Deerslayer (1841) of James Denimore Cooper is Leatherstocking Tales in New York's pioneering life, the most successful in his early series. Laura Ingalls Wilder's Prairie series lodge was published in the century after 1932 to 1943, but appeared in the 1870s and 1880s and later drew a pioneer family. Daniel Boone (1734 - 1820) and Davy Crockett (1786 - 1836) are two true idols of pioneering history