Difference between revisions of "Mary Jemison" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Mary_Jemison_painting.jpg|thumb|right|200px| A painting of Mary Jemison]]
 
[[Image:Mary_Jemison_painting.jpg|thumb|right|200px| A painting of Mary Jemison]]
'''Mary Jemison''' (1743–1833) was an American frontier woman and an adopted [[Seneca Nation|Seneca]] Indian who was kidnapped by the [[Shawnee]], who murdered her parents and several siblings and then sold Mary to the Senecas, who then adopted her. She married twice, had eight children and numerous grandchildren and eventually told her story to writer [[James Seaver]] in 1824, from which her notoriety came. Her story provided insights into the grave suffering of captives among the Native Americans and also to the lives of the Indians in general, especially their women.
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'''Mary Jemison''' (1743–1833) was an American frontier girl who was kidnapped by the French and [[Shawnee]] raiders. Her captors murdered her parents and several siblings and then sold Mary to two [[Seneca Nation|Seneca]] women, who adopted her.
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She married twice, had eight children and numerous grandchildren, eventually settling in New York where she came to own land and lived her later years among white folk who moved into the area. She eventually told her story to writer [[James Seaver]] in 1824, who published a book which made her famous. Her story provided insights into the grave suffering of captives among the Native Americans and also into the lives of the Indians in general, especially their women.
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She is buried at [[Letchworth State Park]], where a memorial to her is located and historical documents related to her are kept.
  
 
==Her early life==
 
==Her early life==

Revision as of 16:20, 9 July 2008

A painting of Mary Jemison

Mary Jemison (1743–1833) was an American frontier girl who was kidnapped by the French and Shawnee raiders. Her captors murdered her parents and several siblings and then sold Mary to two Seneca women, who adopted her.

She married twice, had eight children and numerous grandchildren, eventually settling in New York where she came to own land and lived her later years among white folk who moved into the area. She eventually told her story to writer James Seaver in 1824, who published a book which made her famous. Her story provided insights into the grave suffering of captives among the Native Americans and also into the lives of the Indians in general, especially their women.

She is buried at Letchworth State Park, where a memorial to her is located and historical documents related to her are kept.

Her early life

Mary Jemison was born to Thomas and Jane Erwin Jemison aboard the ship William and Mary in the fall of 1743 while en route from Northern Ireland to America. Upon their arrival, the couple and children, John, Thomas, Betsey, and Mary, their youngest, joined other Scots-Irish immigrants and headed west from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to what was then the western frontier (now central Pennsylvania). There, they squatted on territory that was under the authority of the Iroquois Confederacy. Mary's parents had two more sons, Matthew and Robert.

During the time the Jemisons were establishing their home in the frontier, the French and Indian War was raging. One morning in 1758, a raiding party consisting of six Shawnee Indians and four Frenchmen captured Mary, her parents and siblings except two older brothers, and a boy from another family, Davy Wheelock. Her brothers Thomas and John had been in the barn and were able to escape the raid, going to live with their grandfather, Erwin, in Virginia.

Location of Fort Duquesne

On route to Fort Duquesne—where the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers meet to create the Ohio River in modern-day Pittsburgh—and even great tragedy struck. Mary’s mother, father, Betsey, Matthew, and Robert, plus a neighbor woman and her two children, were killed in horrible ways and also scalped. Mary and young Davy Wheelock were spared. Once the party reached the Fort, Mary was sold to two Seneca Indians, who took Mary down the Ohio river. The Senecas adopted Mary, giving her the name Corn Tassel then later "little woman of great courage."

Life with the Indians

Mary told her biography Seavers of her horrific kidnapping experience and how she watched her captors dry her parents' scalps on hoops by the fire. She suffered hunger and exhaustion and finally was given to two Seneca sisters to replace their brother who had died in battle against George Washington. She was nearly taken back by settlers at the fort but her new "family" spirited her away. However, she was well cared for by her first husband and even loved him for his kindness. She also told Seavers the terrible story of how her jealous son, John, killed his two brothers and died a violent death himself.

Mary was 17, she married Sheninjee. Concerned that the end of the war would mean the return of captives and thus the loss of his young wife, Sheninjee took Mary on a 700-mile journey to the Sehgahunda Valley along the Genesee River in New York. Although Mary reached this destination, her husband did not. He had left his her with his brothers in order to hunt along the way, took ill, and died.

Now a widow, Mary was taken in by Sheninjee's clan and made her home at the Little Beard's Town (present-day Cuylerville, New York). There, she married a Seneca chief named Hiakatoo and had six more children. Her husband was a leader in the 1778 Cherry Valley massacre during the American Revolutionary War, in which British and Seneca Indian attack the fort and village of Cherry Hill in eastern New York on November 11, 1778. She was then required to move to the Gardeau Flats near Castile, New York, when revolutionary General John Sullivan's army retaliated and destroyed her town.

Later life

Much of the land at Little Beard's Town was sold by the Senecas to white settlers in 1797. By 1823, most of the remainder of the land was sold, except for a two-acre tract reserved for Mary's use. She owned the largest herd of cattle in the region due to a 1797 tribal grant which made her one of the largest landowners. Her land title was confirmed by the state in 1817, at which time she became a naturalized U.S. citizen. Known locally as the "White Woman of the Genesee," Mary lived on the tract until she sold it in 1831 and moved to the Buffalo Creek Reservation. She was noted for her generosity and cheerfulness, and was said to be physically vigorous well into her 80s.

A writer named H.A. Dudley published a report in 1893 describing his meeting Mary Jemison when visiting with his aunt, who called his aunt "the woman who had hair just like my mother's."

"The old woman (Mary) would stroke the auburn tresses, and sit down on her low and well-worn rocking chair and croon over her reflections of the mother who charged her, when ruthlessly separated in the woods of Pennsylvania, not to forget the name of her childhood, nor the prayers she had taught her in the pioneer home which had that day been burned to the ground.[1]

At that first visit, Dudley reported, Mary was small in height—another report described her as four and a half feet tall—and dressed in Indian clothing with moccasins, cloth pantaletts or buckskin, petticoats, and an overgarment for her body with shoulders. She also wore a blanket when when she went outside.

At this time, Mary lived with her daughter Polly, her sons Tom and John, and perhaps some others. However, the boys would disappear as soon as any white visitors came and not return until the guests left. Polly would stay doing work around the house while the visitors talked, but she seemed "relieved" when they left.

When white friends came to visit on Sundays, Mary, normally reserved, would sometimes open up and tell about her life. She reported that she had tried once to go back and live among white people, but her mixed-race children would not be accepted, and she had grown accustomed to the style and habits of the Indians. She said she was just "too old now to learn again the ways of the whites." She also loved her beautiful acres, which were her home, so she stayed where she was with the Indians.

By 1830 only white farmers remained in the area. They reportedly looked with "envious eyes" on her rich bottom lands, which were underused by her family. She was said to be "white woman enough to own her own land, but too much of an Indian to work it profitably."[2] She then decided to move with the Indians to the reservation near Buffalo, New York. So she sold her pleasant home and went with her tribe to their reservation.

Another account of Mary came through businessman William Pryor Letchworth asked local resident William B. Munson to describe the woman he had known as a young man. His account appeared in Doty's History of Livingston County.

"The 'White Woman' was quite intelligent, sociable, and communicative, but grave and serious after the manner of the Indians with whom her life from early childhood had been spent... Mentioning to her upon one occasion that I had read the history of her life, and that it had interested me very much, 'Ah, yes!' she replied, 'but I did not tell them who wrote it down half of what it was.' It was thought at that time that she withheld information the Indians feared might stir up against them the prejudices of the white people."[3]

The descendants of a man who knew her, Truman Stone, tell of a time of famine and their great-grandfather went looking for grain. He walked 25 miles and found that no one had enough to sell. When he finally met Mary Jemison she gave it freely and refused to take any money from him. He reported that she fed him some Indian cake made of cracked corn with a little salt added and baked in a kettle. "After the cake was done, she broke a goose egg into the kettle and fried it... she invited me to eat, which I did, and it was the best dinner I ever ate."

File:Mary Jemison statue at Letchworth State Park.jpg
Statue of Mary Jemison at Letchworth State Park

Mary lived the rest of her life with the people of the Seneca Nation near Buffalo until she died on September 19, 1833. She was initially buried on the Buffalo Creek Reservation, but in 1874 this land was about to be sold with little concern for the graves there. Her grandchildren approached businessman Letchworth to see if her bones could be moved. He invited them to bring the bones of their grandmother to his Glen Iris estate. Her remains were placed in a new walnut coffin and brought by train by her grandchildren. She was re-interred at this location, which is now Letchworth State Park in present day Castile, New York.

Ceremonies held reportedly blended both the Seneca and Christian ways. Dehgewanus (Mary) was buried on the bluff above the Middle Falls. A bronze statue of her, created in 1910, now marks her grave. Historical documents concerning her life story are kept in the library at Letchworth State Park.

Seaver's biography

Mary Jemison's story is told in a classic "captivity narrative," J. E. Seaver's Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison (1824; latest ed. 1967), considered by most scholars to be a reasonably accurate account. She spent a good deal of time telling her story to Seaver, who worked on it from 1823 to 24. It was enormously popular and eventually had 30 editions.

According to Seavers, when setters moved into the Genessee valley seeking good farmland, "She was the protectoress of the homeless fugitive, and made welcome the weary wanderer. Many still live to commemorate her benevolence towards them, when prisoners during the war, and to ascribe their deliverance to the mediation of The White Woman.[4]

Seavers writes that the Peace of 1783 brought an end to the hostilities between the Indians and the whites, which allowed many captive whites to return to their friends and families. Stories began to spread about the horrific experiences these survivors had endured and the sad demise of many of their friends and families. It was this situation that led him to interview Mary Jemison.

He describes Jemison as, "speak[ing] English plainly and distinctly, with a little of the Irish emphasis, and has the use of words so well as to render herself intelligible on any subject with which she is acquainted. Her recollection and memory exceeded my expectation. It cannot be reasonably supposed that a person of her age has kept the events of seventy years in so complete a chain as to be able to assign to each its proper time and place; she, however, made her recital with as few obvious mistakes as might be found in that of a person of fifty."

He adds, "Her ideas of religion, correspond in every respect with those of the great mass of the Senecas. She applauds virtue, and despises vice. She believes in a future state, in which the good will be happy, and the bad miserable; and that the acquisition of that happiness, depends primarily upon human volition, and the consequent good deeds of the happy recipient of blessedness. The doctrines taught in the Christian religion, she is a stranger to."

Her children

  • A girl who lived two days, 1761
  • Thomas Jemison, son of her first husband, Sheninjee
  • John, born in 1766, son of Hiokatoo; killed in 1817
  • Nancy, first daughter to Hiokatoo, born in 1773, died in 1839
  • Betsey, date uncertain but presumed after Nancy but before Polly; died in 1839
  • Polly, born late in 1778 or early in 1779; died 1839.
  • Jane, born in 1782, died in 1897
  • Jesse, born in 1784 or 1785; killed by his half-brother, John, in 1812

(No reason is given for the deaths of three daughters within three months of each other It is likely, however, that they died of an epidemic on the Buffalo Creek Reservation)

The English names for these children reflect their white family history, but the children also had Seneca names. According to treaty documents, Thomas, for example, was known to the Senecas as Teahdowaingqua.[5]

Legacy

Mary Jemison's tale gave important insights into the suffering of white captives taken by Indians. Her story, as told to James Seavers, showed the life of the Indians in the Northeast of the United States and added much information about the culture, beliefs and practices of the Senecas and other tribes.

Her story has also been used in women's studies to highlight the lives of women, especially Indian women, of the time. She was known as "Dehgewanus, The White Woman of the Genesee." A granite marker was erected in the 1880's at her grave site in Lechtworth State Park, and the statue was dedicated in 1910. Artifacts, documents, and primary sources are kept in the Letchworth State Park Historical library.

Notes

  1. A Geneseo newspaper, the Livingston Republican ran this account by a H.A. Dudley in 1893.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Letchworth Park History at [1]
  4. Ibid.
  5. Seaver, 1824.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Beauchamp, William. History of the New York Iroquois (1905), Ira J. Friedman, Inc., 1963. ASIN B000WSG4A0.
  • Namias, June. White Captives: Gender and Ethnicity on the American Frontier. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 1993. ISBN 978-0807844083
  • Seaver, James. A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison. New York: American Scenic & Historical Preservation Society. 1942 edition. At Guttenberg Project www.gutengerg.org Retrieved July 5, 2008.
  • Strong, Pauline Turner. Captive Selves, Captivating Others: The Politics and Poetics of Colonial American Captivity Narratives, Westview Press, 2000). ISBN 978-0813316666
  • Volo, James M. and Dorothy Denneen Volo. Daily Life on the Old Colonial Frontier, Greenwood Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0313311031

External links

All retrieved July 5, 2008.

Sources

Other

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