Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 9).djvu/126

120 the latter was stronger and was entirely covered with a roof. How to buy or build a "flat" was the first query of the pioneer father as he finally arrived at one of the ports on the upper Ohio. Often several families joined together and came down the river on one flat-boat, a motley congregation of men, women, children and domestic animals surrounded by the few crude, housekeeping utensils which had been brought over the mountains or purchased at the port of embarkation. Perhaps all of the details which engrossed a prospective pioneer's attention are suggested in the previous quotations from The Navigator.

These Kentucky "broadhorns," or "broadhorn flatboats" as they were also called, almost invariably carried a tin horn by means of which some one on board would announce their arrival or make known their whereabouts in a fog. This weird music, reverberating from hill to hill, was heard far and wide and was welcomed by the country people.

The history of the flat-boat comes down within the present generation, for as late