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Indian Captives
The treatment accorded
captives was governed by those limited ethical concepts
which went hand in hand with clan, gentile, and other consanguineal organizations of Indian society. From
the members of his own consanguineal group, or what was considered
such, certain ethical duties were exacted of an Indian which could not
be neglected without destroying the fabric of society or outlawing the
transgressor.
Toward other clans, gentes, or bands of the same tribe his
actions were also governed by well recognized customs and usages which
had grown up during ages of intercourse, but with remote bands or
tribes good relations were assured only by some formal peace-making
ceremony. A peace of this kind was very tenuous, however, especially
where there had been a long-standing feud, and might be broken in an
instant. Toward a person belonging to some tribe with which there was
neither war nor peace, the attitude was governed largely by the
interest of the moment. In such cases the virtues of the clan or
gentile organizations as peace-making factors made themselves evident,
for if the stranger belonged to a clan or gens represented in the
tribe he was among, the members of that clan or gens usually greeted
him as a brother and extended their protection over him. Another
defense for the stranger was, what with civilized people is one of the
best guaranties against war, the fear of disturbing or deflecting
trade. If he brought among them certain much desired commodities, the
first impulse might be to take these from him by force and seize or
destroy his person, but it would quickly be seen by wiser heads that
the source of further supplies of this kind might thereby be
imperiled, if not entirely cut off. If nothing were to be had from the
stranger, he might be entirely ignored. And finally, the existence of
a higher ethical feeling toward strangers, even when there was
apparently no self-interest to be served in extending hospitality, is
often in evidence. There are not wanting stories of great misfortune
overtaking one who refused hospitality to a person in distress, and of
great good fortune accruing to him who offered succor. At the same time the attitude assumed toward a person
thrown among Indians too far from his own people to be protected by
any ulterior hopes or fears on the part of his captors was usually
that of master to slave. This was particularly the case on the north
Pacific coast, where slavery was an institution. Thus John Jewitt, at
the beginning of the 19th century, was preserved as a slave by the
Nootka chief Maquinna, because he was in ironworker and would be
valuable property. Most of the other whites who fell into the hands of
Indians on this coast were treated in a similar manner. The majority of captives, however, were those taken in
war. These were considered to have forfeited their lives and to have
been actually dead as to their previous existence. It was often
thought hat the captive's supernatural helper had been destroyed or
made to submit to that of the captor, though where not put to death
with torture to satisfy the victor's desire for revenge and to give
the captive an opportunity to show his fortitude, he might in a way be
reborn by undergoing a form of adoption. It is learned from the numerous accounts of white
persons who had been taken by Indians that the principal immediate
hardships they endured were due the rapid movements of their captors
in order to escape pursuers, and the continual threats to which they
were subjected. These threats were not usually carried out, however,
unless they attempted escape or were unable to keep up with the band,
or unless the band as pursued too hotly. Each person taken was
considered the property of the one who first laid hands on him, and
the character of this individual had much to do in determining the
extent of his hardships.
When two or more claimed a prisoner he was sometimes
kept by all conjointly, but sometimes they settled the controversy by
torturing him to death on the spot. The rapid retreat of a war party
bore particularly hard upon women and children, yet a certain amount
of consideration was often shown them. Sometimes the male captives
were allowed to help them along, sometimes they were drawn on an
improvised sledge or travois, and if there were horses in the party
these might be placed at their disposal, while one instance is
recorded in which the child of a female captive was carried by her
master for several days. It is worthy of remark that the honor of a
white woman was almost always respected by her captors among the
tribes east of the Mississippi; but west of that limit, on the plains,
in the Columbia River region, and in the southwest, the contrary was
often the case. Among the eastern tribes, on arriving at the village a
dance was held, at which the captives were expected to play a
conspicuous part. They were often placed in the center of a circle of
dancers, were sometimes compelled to sing and dance also, and a few
were usually subjected to revolting tortures and finally burned at the
stake. Instances of cannibalism are recorded in connection with these
dances after the return from war, and among some of the Texas and
Louisiana tribes this disposition of the bodies of captives appears to
have been something more than occasional. The Iroquois, some
Algonquians, and several western tribes forced prisoners to run
between two lines of people armed with clubs, tomahawks, and other
weapons, and spared, at least temporarily, those who reached the
chief's house, a certain post, or some other goal. Among many other
tribes an escaped captive who reached the chief's house was regarded
as safe, while the Creek peace towns also secured immunity from
pursuit to the persons who entered them. Offering food to a visitor
was usually equivalent to extending the host's protection over him. From the experiences of the Spaniard Juan Ortiz, taken
prisoner by the Florida chief Ucita, in 1528, as well as those of
other whites, it would appear that captives were sometimes held in a
sort of bondage elsewhere than on the north Pacific coast, but usually
where their lives were spared they were held for ransom or adopted
into the tribe. J. O. Dorsey says of some Siouan tribes, however, that
their captives were allowed either to go home or settle among
themselves, but were neither tortured nor regularly adopted. Although
the custom among the eastern Indians of holding white prisoners for
ransom dates from early times, it is questionable whether it was
founded on aboriginal usage. The ransoming or sale of captives,
however, was common among the plains and southwest tribes, while the
custom of ransoming slaves on the north Pacific coast was certainly
pre-Columbian.
In most of North America, however, it was probably a
rare procedure, especially since many tribes are said to have disowned
any person who once had been taken prisoner. Doubtless it became
common in dealing with white captives owing to the difficulty of
reconciling adult whites to Indian life and customs, while captives
taken from another tribe no doubt settled down into their new
relationships and surroundings very contentedly. The usual object in thus adopting a prisoner was that
he might fill the place of someone who had died, and it is affirmed by
one writer that, whatever his own character, he was treated exactly as
if he possessed the character of his predecessor. John Gyles, who was
captured by the Abnaki in 1689, informs us that a prisoner was brought
out to be beaten and tortured during the war dances unless his master
paid over a certain amount of property. Women and children were
generally preserved and adopted, though there are instances in which
white women were tortured to death, and it is said of the Ute that
female captives from other Indian tribes were given over to the women
to be tortured, while male prisoners who had distinguished themselves
were sometimes dismissed unhurt.
Among tribes possessing clans the adoption of captured
women was of special importance, as it often resulted in the formation
of a new clan from their descendants. Such, no doubt, was the origin
of the Zuñi and Mexican clans of
the Navaho. The Ute clan of the latter was recruited by a systematic
capture and purchase of Ute girls undertaken with the object of
supplying the tribe with good basket makers (Culin). Among the Plains
tribes captives, especially children, were sometimes taken for the
express purpose of being trained to the performance of certain
ceremonial duties. Besides the numbers of white persons carried away
by Indians and subsequently ransomed, it is evident from all the
accounts that have reached us that many of English, French, and
Spanish descent were taken into the tribe of their captors and, either
because carried off when very young or because they developed a taste
for their new life, never returned. Some of these even rose to high
positions, as in the case of a Frenchman who became chief of the
Attacapa, of a Mexican who is recorded as the most prominent and
successful war thief of the Comanche in 1855, and of another Mexican
still a man of influence among the Zuñi.
The present chief of the Comanche, Quanalt Parker (q. v.), is the son
of a captive American woman. The confederated tribes of Comanche,
Kiowa, and Kiowa Apache still hold at least 50 adopted white captives,
and it is probable that fully one-third of the whole population have a
traceable percentage of captive blood. The same is probably true in
nearly equal measure of the Apache of Arizona. From Oregon to south Alaska a different treatment of
captives was brought about by the existence of a slave class. Since
slaves were the most valuable property a man could have, the lives of
those taken in war were always spared unless such captives had
committed some great injury to the victorious tribe that prompted
immediate revenge. After this they might be killed at any moment by
their masters; but such a fate seldom overtook them until they grew
too old to work, unless their masters became involved in a property
contest, or the people of the town from which they had been taken had
committed depredations. Among the Tlingit, however, slaves were killed during
mortuary feasts, and bodies of slaves were thrown into the holes dug
for the posts of a new house. Slave women, especially if they were
known to be of noble descent, sometimes married their captors and
became free. Four prominent Haida clans and one clan among the
Tsimshian are said to have originated from marriages of this kind,
while another prominent Haida clan was called "the Slaves," though it
is impossible to say whether they were descended from slaves or
whether the term is applied ironically. Whether male slaves ever rose
to a high position is doubtful, owing to the strong caste system that
here prevailed. Instead of receiving commendation, a slave who had
escaped suffered a certain opprobrium which could be removed only by
the expenditure of a great amount of property. At the same time it is
related of the greatest Skidegate chief that he had been enslaved in
his youth. Consult Baker, True Stories of New England Captives,
1897; Drake, Indian Captivities, 1851; Eastman, Seven and Nine Years
among the Camanches and Apaches, 1874; Gentl. of Elvas. in Hakluyt
Soc. Puhl., ix, 1861; Harris, Life of Horatio Jones, 1903; Herrick,
Indian Narr., 1854; Hunter, Captivity among the Indians, 1823;
Johnston, Incidents attending the Capture, etc., of Charles Johnston,
1827; Kelly, Narr. of Captivity among the Sioux, 1880; Larimer,
Capture and Escape, Or Life among the Sioux, 1870: Leo, Three Years
among the Camanehes, 1859; Mooney in 17th Rep. 13. A. E:, 1898;
Relation of Alvar Nufiez Caber;a de Vaca, B. South transl., I87l,
Severance (ed.), Captivity of Benj. Gilbert, 1904; Spurs (led.),
Dangers and Sufferings of Robert Eastburn, 1904; Spencer, Indian
Captivity, 1834; Stratton, Captivity of the the Oatman Girls, 1857;
Tanner, Narr. of Captivity, 1830.
Additional Indian History
Resources:
The books presented are for their
historical value only and are not
the opinions of the Webmasters of
the site.
Handbook of American Indians, 1906
Indian Tribal History
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