History has too long overlooked the fascinating stories of European settlers who were kidnapped by Native Americans and raised in their culture.

History has too long overlooked the fascinating stories of European settlers who were kidnapped by Native Americans and raised in their culture.


September 24, 2025 | Alex Summers

History has too long overlooked the fascinating stories of European settlers who were kidnapped by Native Americans and raised in their culture.


Lives Reshaped In The Wild West

The frontier’s history rarely stayed simple. Children and adults alike vanished into raids, only to emerge years later changed in ways no one expected. Their stories are preserved in the history that the West rarely tells.

Olive Ann Oatman

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Herman Lehmann Was Seized In Texas

In 1870, Apache raiders attacked near Mason County, Texas, and eleven-year-old Herman Lehmann was taken while tending fields with his family. His sisters escaped unharmed, but Herman was taken by Apaches. He was just a child caught in the violence of frontier clashes.

Screenshot Of Wild West ChroniclesImagicomm Entertainment, Wild West Chronicles (2020-)

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Life With The Apache

The Apaches carried Herman west and delivered him to Chief Carnoviste. Under the chief’s command, he learned horsemanship, marksmanship, and the ways of war. Though the discipline pressed hard on him, he gradually adjusted to his role within the camp.

Screenshot Of Wild West Chronicles (2020-)Imagicomm Entertainment, Wild West Chronicles (2020-)

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A Fighter Among Them

Herman grew into a skilled warrior, even joining raids against settlers. The boy who once worked a Texas farm now lived fully within Apache ways. In battles and hunts, he earned respect, no longer seen as a prisoner but as one of their own.

Screenshot Of Wild West Chronicles (2020-)Imagicomm Entertainment, Wild West Chronicles (2020-)

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Shift To The Comanche

After a clash with his Apache group, Herman wandered alone until Comanche warriors found him. They brought him into their tribe, where he again gained a place. The Comanche treated him as family, giving him a role that deepened his distance from Texas roots.

File:Three mounted Comanche warriors - 1892.jpgUnstated (Life time: Unknown), Wikimedia Commons

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Return To Texas

In 1877, US troops captured Herman and returned him to his mother the following year. Rejoining Anglo life felt impossible at first. He struggled with language, customs, and neighbors who feared his past. His life remained divided—part Comanche, part Anglo, and never fully either.

Screenshot Of Wild West Chronicles (2020-)Imagicomm Entertainment, Wild West Chronicles (2020-)

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Olive Ann Oatman Was Attacked In The Desert

The Oatman family, in 1851, moved west through Arizona’s barren land. There, Yavapai warriors ambushed their wagon, killing most of the group. Thirteen-year-old Olive and her sister Mary Ann were dragged away as captives, while their brother Lorenzo lay wounded and left behind.

File:Olive Oatman1 (cropped).jpgBenjamin F. Powelson, Wikimedia Commons

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Life With The Yavapai

The sisters were taken north to a Yavapai village where they worked long hours, carried heavy loads, and faced poor treatment. During this time, Olive clung to Mary Ann for comfort, the only link to her lost family. The girls waited, never knowing what fate would follow.

File:Yavapai shelters.jpgNk, Wikimedia Commons

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Traded To The Mohave

About a year later, the Yavapai exchanged Olive and Mary Ann to the Mohave. Immediately, the Mohave tattooed blue lines across Olive’s chin—a mark worn by Mohave women. That tattoo bound her to her new community and became a symbol settlers never forgot.

File:Olive Oatman ca. 1860.pngLoryea & Macaulay, Souvenir Photographic Studio, Wikimedia Commons

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Loss And Survival

Mary Ann ended up dying from starvation during a severe drought. So, Olive continued to live among the Mohave, wearing their dress and following their ways. She carried deep grief but also found herself accepted in ways she never expected when first taken.

File:Oatman girls.jpgBaker Deb?, Wikimedia Commons

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A Captive Returns

In 1856, at eighteen, Olive was released near Fort Yuma after negotiations. Her tattooed face astonished Americans, and her story filled newspapers, books, and lecture halls. To many, she became the most visible reminder of captivity on the western frontier.

File:Fort Yuma California 1875.jpgGeorge Baker, Wikimedia Commons

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The Rufus Buck Gang Was Made Up Of Young Outlaws

Rufus Buck, barely out of his teens, formed a gang in Indian Territory in 1895. His partners were Sam Sampson, Maoma July, and brothers Lewis and Lucky Davis. Fueled by resentment against colonists, they sought revenge through a violent spree across territory.

File:Map of Indian Territory and Oklahoma. LOC 2012586269.jpgUnited States. Bureau Of The Census, Wikimedia Commons

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The Abduction Begins

During their rampage, the gang stormed homes and attacked innocent bystanders during the spree. Their short terror hit everyone, from settlers to travelers. They even shot Deputy US Marshal John Garrett near Okmulgee and, on the same route…

File:OkmulgeeLounge.jpgFreeWine, Wikimedia Commons

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Mrs Wilson Taken

They seized Mrs Wilson, forcing her away from the safety of her family. The day was July 28, 1895, when the Rufus Buck Gang ambushed travelers near Okmulgee, then held the woman at gunpoint, and turned the road into a place of terror.

File:BuckGang.jpgunknown photographers, Wikimedia Commons

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A Crime That Shook The Territory

The gang brutalized Mrs Wilson while she remained in captivity. Word of the crime traveled quickly through Creek Nation and shocked both settlers and Native families. Her abduction revealed the gang’s cruelty and pushed lawmen into faster pursuit, determined to end the violence.

File:Muscogee (Creek) Nation Council House.jpgRdlogan05, Wikimedia Commons

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A Gang Destroyed

Rufus Buck and his men faced trial for all of their crimes and were sentenced to hang. The executions took place in 1896 in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Their downfall marked an end to one of the most violent sprees in frontier memory.

File:The Hanging Judge Gallows.jpgJlt78, Wikimedia Commons

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Mary Jemison Became A Victim Of A Raid At Dawn

In the mid-1750s, French-allied Shawnee warriors swept into the Jemison farm in Pennsylvania. Twelve-year-old Mary was seized during the attack, while most of her family was killed. Bound to a line of prisoners, she was forced westward into a future she could not imagine.

Statue Of JemisonDoug Kerr from Albany, NY, United States, CC BY-SA 2.0, Wikimedia Commons

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The March West

Days of walking carried her deeper into the wilderness. Hunger pressed on her, and the memory of her parents haunted each step. She listened to strange languages around her, only to realize that she had no way back and no familiar face to trust.

File:Mary Jemison 1856 pub.jpgJames E. Seaver, Wikimedia Commons

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Given To The Seneca

Her captors eventually traded her to the Seneca. Two women welcomed her into their household, naming her Dehgewanus to honor a relative who had died. The violence that stole her family also anchored her to another.

File:Seneca Indian Park, Buffalo, New York - 20200520.jpgAndre Carrotflower, Wikimedia Commons

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A Different Life

Mary took on the tasks of a Seneca woman, from planting corn to caring for hides. She even married within the tribe and raised children, which built bonds that anchored her firmly into the community. Over time, the rhythms of Seneca life shaped her world.

File:Mary Jemison saam XX104.jpgHenry Kirke Bush-Brown, Wikimedia Commons

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Her Choice

When officials later offered her release, Mary refused. She explained that her family now lived among the Seneca, and her children bound her to them. What began with violence ended with loyalty, as she chose to remain with the people who had become her own.

File:Mary Jemison - 1892.jpgHarriet S. Caswell (author of book in which this image appears), Wikimedia Commons

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Adolph Korn Was Taken At 10

Ten-year-old Adolph Korn tended sheep in Texas when Apache raiders struck in 1870. They seized him and carried him into the frontier. That single act tore him from his family and thrust him into a new life he never imagined.

File:Apache chieff Geronimo (right) and his warriors in 1886.jpgC. S. Fly, Wikimedia Commons

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Into Comanche Hands

Korn moved from Apache captors to Comanche warriors. And with them, he learned to ride horses, track buffalo, wield weapons, etc. That farm boy became a fighter, shaped by skills that stood far from the quiet fields he once called home.

File:Ako, a Comanche warrior and horse -.jpgUnstated (Life time: Unknown), Wikimedia Commons

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Life As A Warrior

Comanche life demanded toughness, so Korn faced harsh trials. However, he earned respect as he mastered survival. The tribe then no longer viewed him only as a captive. In time, he stood among them as a warrior, bound to his adopted people by loyalty.

File:Comanche Buffalo hunters and their tepee lodges. August 1871. - NARA - 533056.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author or not provided, Wikimedia Commons

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Return Without Belonging

Years later, Korn returned to Anglo-American society. But the reunion felt hollow. Family ties seemed thin, and the rhythms of town life no longer matched his own. A place that should have felt familiar instead left him unsettled and lost, which is why he spent the last years of his life in a cave.

File:Anglo-American Exposition poster,1914.jpgW. H. Barribal (Life time: Unknown), Wikimedia Commons

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The Captured By Scott Zesch

When Scott Zesch happened upon Korn’s grave and discovered he was his great-great-great uncle, he was driven to understand how a once “good boy” could have become so fully Indianized. The result was a book that explores eight lives like the ones we’ve discussed above.

Scott ZeschCaptured! Abductions of Children by Apache and Comanche Indians on the Texas Frontier 1870s. by Wild West History Association

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