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Shawnee Captive: The Story of Mary Draper Ingles

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Profiles Mary Draper Ingles, who was captured along with her sons and sister-in-law from their settlement on the Shenendoah Valley by the Shawnee Indians who claimed the frontier as their land, and explains how she escaped.

112 pages, Library Binding

First published July 1, 2001

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Mary Rodd Furbee

8 books2 followers

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5 stars
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20 (51%)
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Stacy Brunner.
61 reviews2 followers
August 30, 2017
I bought this book at the New River Gorge visitor's center. I read Follow the River a long time ago. As my family is from Virginia/West Virginia and I grew up in southern Ohio, the setting of the story appeals to me. The telling of life on the frontier and the settlers' desire to move west is well explained - I think that is a difficult part of our history to understand. Why on earth would the settlers attempt to move into lands that were so dangerous?

The author has thoroughly researched a story that has been told many times since it was first recorded. There is much opportunity to embellish a story this old to make it more interesting. But Mary Rodd Furbee does an excellent job weaving the culture of the settlers and the natives with the narrative. And while there is violence in this book, it is presented with the right amount of cultural context and emotion.

Additionally, I appreciate the bibliography and additional readings. This would be a great book for middle school students to use for studying local history.
Profile Image for Erin.
4,626 reviews57 followers
August 30, 2022
I did not fully read this, but skimmed through it after reading Follow the River. I wanted some sense of how close that fictional story stayed to the reported facts of Mary Ingles' experience.

From what I gathered, the bones of the story were pretty close. This biography tells far more of Mary Draper's early life, but the facts of her abduction were related very similarly, with plenty of additional resource cited. There was more emphasis here on the idea that the Shawnee did not attack unprovoked, as well as the acknowledgement that Mary's experience made her extraordinarily skittish for quite some time.

In the end, Mary Ingles is a fascinating woman, and her experience says a lot about relations between the encroaching colonists and the defensive Indigenous tribes.
Profile Image for Anna.
135 reviews2 followers
September 18, 2021
Through research on Ancestry.com I discovered Mary Draper Ingles is my 5th great grandmother! I had never heard her story before. Obviously I became intrigued and was surprised to find she is the subject of several books & even a movie! I hope at least a little of her bravery and pioneer spirit has been passed down to me and to my kids and grandkids. I know her story will.
Profile Image for Rita.
267 reviews35 followers
May 1, 2018
This was a really interesting book about early American settlers and the dangers they faced. I was especially interested because the "action" took place in areas where both my husband and my parents grew up.
Profile Image for Josh Daugherty.
16 reviews1 follower
March 7, 2025
Very easy read. From what I can tell it’s historically accurate but it’s written in an east to read story format. There’s a long bibliography at the end. If you’re from Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, or Kentucky you’ll recognize many of the landmarks and that adds to the interest.
Profile Image for Amy Beth  McPherson.
210 reviews3 followers
October 4, 2019
Amazing true story. More people should know about Mary Draper Ingles. A quick read just an hour to an hour and a half. Well researched. It would be nice if there were a map included.
Profile Image for Laraine.
450 reviews
August 25, 2021
This was a pretty teen book but I wanted to read it. We had been to Big Bone Lick and the Shawnee, I believe, were the Indians there. Took a special, adventurous person to live and survive there.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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