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The Captivity of the Oatman Girls Among the Apache and Mohave Indians

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The Captivity of the Oatman Girls Among the Apache and Mohave Indians

In 1851, nine members of the Oatman family — on their way by covered wagon to California — were savagely attacked by Apache Indians near Fort Yuma, Arizona. Two girls in the family, Olive Ann, 14, and Mary Ann, 8, were taken captive by their attackers. An older brother, Lorenzo, 15, was left for dead but managed, though gravely wounded, to make his way back to civilization. The rest of the family had been brutally massacred.
The story of the Oatman girls — their despairing life in captivity, the tragic death of little Mary Ann from shock, poor food, and severe conditions a year after their capture, and their brother's five-year search for them — is vividly described in this riveting true-life story.


Reprint of Life Among the Indians, or: The Captivity of the Oatman Girls Among the Apache and Mohave Indians, Grabhorn Press, San Francisco, 1935.
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In 1851, nine members of the Oatman family — on their way by covered wagon to California — were savagely attacked by Apache Indians near Fort Yuma, Arizona. Two girls in the family, Olive Ann, 14, and Mary Ann, 8, were taken captive by their attackers. An older brother, Lorenzo, 15, was left for dead but managed, though gravely wounded, to make his way back to civilization. The rest of the family had been brutally massacred.
The story of the Oatman girls — their despairing life in captivity, the tragic death of little Mary Ann from shock, poor food, and severe conditions a year after their capture, and their brother's five-year search for them — is vividly described in this riveting true-life story.


Reprint of Life Among the Indians, or: The Captivity of the Oatman Girls Among the Apache and Mohave Indians, Grabhorn Press, San Francisco, 1935.
captured white;white mans;indian captivity;captivity narratives;olive's story;margot mifflin;white captives;country history;german settlers;southern plains;blue tattoo;captured children;olive's life;apache indians;summer moon;texas frontier;indian captive;texas hill;abducted children;indians lived;local indians;central texas;quanah parker;texas history;ann parker;native indian;white culture;nomadic life;forcibly returned;plains indians;hunting grounds;kidnapped children;american cultures;white families;white society;hill country;indian wars;white children;indian life;joseph smith;indian history;western history;west texas;indian tribes;white settlers;american indians;sister mary;similar experiences;white women;accurate picture;indian culture;historical account;political correctness;white woman;history class;history buff;white people;native americans;american history;yavapai;mohave;abductees;korn;mcginty;squaw;yuma;lehmann;gila;mojave;comanches;adolph;apaches;stratton;1851;settler;abductions;1870;eyewitness;raids;captors;traded;ancestor;firsthand;mormon;cynthia;whites;massacre;california;america;books on blue tattoos;books on country histories;books on german settlers;books on apache indians;books on white captives;books on indian captivities;books on white mans;books on southern plains;books on texas histories;books on olive 's stories;books on captured children;books on summer moons;books on texas frontiers;books on olive 's lives;books on captivity narratives
The Captivity of the Oatman Girls Among the Apache and Mohave Indians | Dover Publications