Captives Among the Indians

audiobook

Captives Among the Indians

by Francesco Giuseppe Bressani, Massy Harbison, Mary White Rowlandson, James Smith

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

This collection brings together vivid, first‑person accounts from the mid‑1700s, when the American frontier was a meeting point of settlers and Native nations. Readers hear directly from those who were taken captive, endured harsh trials, and learned the rhythms of tribal life. The narratives reveal a range of experiences—from brutal confrontations to moments of unexpected kindness—offering a rare glimpse into an era of conflict and cultural exchange.

Among them is the remarkable story of a young frontier man captured at eighteen and adopted into a Delaware village. He describes the shock of his sudden seizure, the bewildering customs he was forced to endure, and the daily routines of his captors that he gradually came to understand. Over months of living among the tribe, he gains intimate knowledge of their language, dress, and social practices, all while plotting his eventual return to his own people. His account stands out for its blend of personal hardship and insightful observation, shedding light on a world few outsiders ever saw firsthand.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (222K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-02-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

FG

Francesco Giuseppe Bressani

1612–1672

An Italian Jesuit missionary in New France, he lived through extreme hardship and left behind vivid accounts of the early colonial world. His name is also remembered for a 1657 map that helped shape European understanding of the Great Lakes region.

View all books
MH

Massy Harbison

b. 1770

Remembered for a vivid frontier captivity narrative, this early American writer turned personal tragedy into a firsthand account of survival on the Pennsylvania frontier. Her story offers a rare, direct glimpse into life and conflict in the 1790s.

View all books
Mary White Rowlandson

Mary White Rowlandson

d. 1711

Remembered for one of the earliest and most widely read captivity narratives in colonial America, this Puritan writer turned a traumatic wartime ordeal into a book that shaped how generations of readers imagined the New England frontier.

View all books
James Smith

James Smith

1775–1839

Best remembered for quick wit and polished satire, this English writer helped turn literary parody into a lasting comic art. He is especially associated with the lively collaborations behind Rejected Addresses and with a long career in journalism and humor.

View all books