Daniel Boone
somebody assassinated him Zapata continued to resist subsiquent government leaders he was ambushed and shot by Mexican troops in 1919. Zapata remains a folk hero in Mexico, where his name has often been mentioned.
he rebelled against british
The song, Oh My Darling, Clementine is an American western folk ballad dating from the 19th century. There is no evidence for it being based on any one particular girl by the name of Clementine, or any other name.
I'm not sure it's accurate to say Paul Revere wasn't considered an American hero. He was widely admired, and his "midnight ride" to warn the colonists of the arrival of British troops saved lives. He was also known as a silversmith and a craftsman. Perhaps he did not have as big a name as John Hancock or Samuel Adams, but people in Boston definitely respected him and considered him a patriot.
Jesse Owens
vaughn or hoggard
William Tell, a folk hero of Switzerland.
Babe, the Blue Ox
robin hood William Tell is a folk hero of Switzerland Diana was the goddess of the hunt
Ned Kelly It is important to note that Ned Kelly was not a folk hero. He was a murderous bushranger, but some people are under the impression that he robbed from the rich and gave to the poor. This was rarely the case at all.
The first known American pioneer to become a famous folk hero was Daniel Boone.
Dadaloglu, Karacaoglan, Pir Sultan Abdal, Nasreddin Hodja are only a few of them.
Buffalo Soldiers
Buffalo Soldiers
Nick Folk's birth name is Nicholas Alexander Folk.
John the Conqueror, also known as High John the Conqueror, John de Conquer, and many other folk variants, is a folk hero from African-American folklore. He is associated with a certain root, the John the Conquer root, or John the Conqueroo, to which magical powers are ascribed in American folklore, especially among the hoodoo tradition of folk magic. The root and its magical uses are mentioned in a number of blues lyrics. Regardless of which name is used, in all of these contexts "conqueror" is invariably pronounced "conker".
yes it was a native American who lived when the united states where expanding westwered and exploring/moving out onto the frontier