By 1776, Native raiders had made their point and few people remained in Kentucky except at the fortified settlements of Harrodsburg, Logan's Station and Boonesborough. Settlers were warned not to stray too far outside the stockades. On July 14, 1776, ten days after the Declaration of Independence was first signed at Independence Hall, three teenage girls decided to disregard that warning and take a boat out on the lake. They were Jemima Boone, a daughter of Daniel Boone, and two of her best friends Elizabeth and Frances Callaway. As they sat in the boat drifting on the lake. As they returned home, a war party led by Cherokee leader Hanging Maw consisting of two Cherokee and three Shawnee captured the girls and hurried with them toward the Ohio River and the Shawnee towns there. They were on their way to a life similar to that of Mary Jemison and other famous captives of the time.

There has to be a happy ending to a story like this. Jemima married Flanders Callaway, older brother of the Callaway girls and a member of the rescue party. Elizabeth and Frances Callaway also soon found husbands and settled down for the rest of their lives. Daniel Boone had to ask his daughter a hard question and her answer was no, the Natives had not attempted rape. She later said, "the Indians were kind to us, as much as they could well have been, or their circumstances permitted." This was a common theme among captivity stories. Native on Settler rape was almost non-existent.
The dramatic scenes of capture and rescue were common themes of paintings and prints throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. James Fenimore Cooper may also have used the story as one of his many inspirations for The Last of the Mohicans. Natty Bumpo, the main character, is often thought to be based on Boone. Just as Boone raised a party to rescue his daughter and her friends, Natty raises a party to rescue primarily Cora and Alice Munro.
No comments:
Post a Comment