
A Survivor's Recollections of the WHITMAN MASSACRE
FOREWORD
FourteenTHE MASSACRE
Twenty-EightOREGON CITY—AFTER THE MASSACRE
Born on the Missouri frontier in 1839, she left with her family in 1844 on an ox‑team trek to Oregon. She describes the rugged trail from Independence to the Rockies, where river crossings were made on canoes and Indian guides watched every wagon. The account captures daily life on the road—hard work, constant danger, and hope for a new start.
The journey brings her into the orbit of Dr. and Mrs. Whitman, whose mission station becomes a focal point for hope and tragedy. She survived the violent attack at Waiilatpu, and her recollection of that day has become a key source for historians. Her narrative balances the horror of the massacre with the humanity she observed among those caught in its wake.
In later years she turned her home into a refuge for displaced Native families, offering food, shelter, and songs that lifted spirits. Her generosity and steadfast belief in service echo throughout the memoir, revealing a life shaped by loss and compassion. Listeners will hear a rare, first‑hand portrait of pioneer endurance and the complex frontier relationships that defined a turbulent era.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (113K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-01-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1839–1928
Raised amid one of the Oregon Trail’s most tragic stories, this survivor later turned her memories into a firsthand account of the Whitman massacre. Her writing preserves the voice of someone who lived through loss, migration, and a turning point in the history of the American West.
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