Blog Post

Captivity of the Oatman Girls

  • By Hancock County Historical Society
  • 30 Dec, 2018

1875, by R.B. Stratton (reprint)

From the back cover: In the spring of 1851, nine members of the Oatman family set out for California on the old Santa Fe Trail. Seventy miles from the California border, they were attacked by Indians, who massacred the entire family, except a boy, Lorenzo (mistakenly left for dead), and two girls, Ann and Olive. The girls were taken into captivity, soon to be sold to other Indians farther west. Lorenzo, though badly wounded, found his way back to civilization. As soon as he was able, he began to search for his sisters.

Stratton’s narrative is based upon interviews with the Oatmans themselves….Olive Oatman’s account of her captivity provided one of the earliest descriptions of life in Indian villages of the Southwest.

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