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The Captured: A True Story of Abduction by…
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The Captured: A True Story of Abduction by Indians on the Texas Frontier (original 2004; edition 2005)

by Scott Zesch (Author)

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3801566,568 (4.01)14
STORY OF KIDS ABDUCTED BY INDIANS IN TEXAS. VERY INTERESTIN. IDEAS, MORALS, CUSTOMS OF INDIANS. SO VERY DIFFERENT than Judeo-Christian Europeans. Abducted kids did not want to return to their European/ western families. They had a very hard time returning to the "Whet World." ( )
  evatkaplan | Apr 30, 2020 |
Showing 15 of 15
Excellent Texas historical documentary.
This book also examines the psychological impact on the captured children when they returned to 'civilized' lives. ( )
  alanac50 | Feb 27, 2024 |
only read half.
  Lisa02476 | Aug 31, 2023 |
Scott Zechs’s great-great-great-uncle, Adolph Korn, was captured by Indians in 1870. From family stories, Zesch learned that his relative had difficulties readjusting to a farming life once he returned. He decided to find out more about his Uncle Adolph’s life. Since it had been so long and only a small amount of information specific to his uncle was available, he expanded his research to similar situations. This book describes the capture, captivity, release, and ultimate outcomes for nine such individuals, ranging in age from eight to fourteen at the time of their abduction. Most were held by Apaches or Comanches. All were from the Texas hill country and most were German immigrants.

The former captives spoke highly of their Indian families, and the vast majority did not want to leave them. This occurred at the time of the last Indian Wars, just before the native people were forced onto reservations and required to change their culture. Be prepared for descriptions of brutality. Also be prepared for the racism of the time, which is obvious from the newspaper quotes.

Some former captives adjusted well to their return, and others yearned to return to the untamed nomadic life on the plains. Almost all lost their native German or English language and were fluent in their Indian dialect. I did not find it surprising that these young people would adapt to a new life relatively quickly, since these were their formative years and they had no way of knowing if they would ever see their birth families again. They were taken far away, and it would be almost impossible for them to find their way back alone through harsh territory. It is reflective of the resilience of youth.

This book is a well-researched history. It is thoroughly documented in footnotes, some of which supplement the text and are interesting reading. The author, in his Afterward, outlines his research techniques and assumptions in deciding among the different versions and accounts of what transpired. It reminds me that each generation experiences a gradual decline in those that can recall it from experience. In the 1920s and 1930s, it was a gradual fading of memories of life on the frontier. This book does an excellent job of compiling and preserving a subset of these memories. I found it extremely educational and engrossing.
( )
  Castlelass | Oct 30, 2022 |
Well written ( )
  micahammon | Dec 19, 2020 |
STORY OF KIDS ABDUCTED BY INDIANS IN TEXAS. VERY INTERESTIN. IDEAS, MORALS, CUSTOMS OF INDIANS. SO VERY DIFFERENT than Judeo-Christian Europeans. Abducted kids did not want to return to their European/ western families. They had a very hard time returning to the "Whet World." ( )
  evatkaplan | Apr 30, 2020 |
The book, at its heart, is about the author's step relative who was abducted as a child. From family legends, the author knew that his relative, once returned to his family, had a difficult readjustment to the 'white' society he was born. He never lost the lessons and ways of his one-time native family. Through his research, author Zesch found many examples of other children who felt the same way. They never blamed or hated their adopted families.

Zesch does his best to show both sides of the story. Although, at times, segments were difficult to read. Contains graphic violence against women and infants. One capture and escape in particular seemed like a tall-tale: pregnant woman scalped, shot by arrows, walks miles in the snow at night to her neighbors who tell her BTW not to bled over everything as the flee without her, and she survives (and has the baby if I remember correctly). I smell an old-timey newspaperman who wanted to sell papers over heresay and terror. ( )
  vonze | Sep 19, 2017 |
Historically accurate and well researched. I enjoyed this book. ( )
  Pat_Gibson | May 28, 2017 |
Interesting history of white children captured by Indians before the turn of the century. A mixture of fact and legend. ( )
  mldavis2 | Dec 9, 2016 |
I used this book for research on an upcoming book I am writing. This book was just what the doctor ordered. This book covered what happened to these white captives and how they lived with the Comanche and Apache Indians. This was a fascinating book. Two thumbs up. ( )
  branjohb | Mar 1, 2016 |
This book tells the story of "white Indians," children of German settlers in Texas who were abducted by Comanches and eventually returned to their families where they had great difficulties adjusting to white customs. ( )
  proflinton | Nov 18, 2014 |
This is the story of people who lived on both sides of a line in an irreconcilable conflict between cultures and societies. They experienced a duality of awareness that few in their age could even imagine.

Scott Zesch's biography of his ancestor Adolph Korn, a "White Indian", captured and raised for a few years by the Comanches, is eye opening and enlightening. Zesch explores the historical context of his ancestor and about ten other individuals who were captured on the Texas frontier by Indians from 1865 to 1871. In so doing, he explains the circumstances of Texas settlement by German immigrants (poverty, struggle, fear), differences between English speaking and German settlers in Texas, the cultures of the tribes who captured the children (a warrior ethic), their motivations (largely, they wanted more warriors), and the policies of the U.S. government toward native Americans during and after the Civil War. We are reminded that for many of the captives, after about a year of captivity a life as a Plains Indian was preferred, and few wanted to return home. When they were forced to return to their parents and homes, as the US army drove the Indians into reservations, the adjustment was difficult and painful.

Zesch feels himself both to be a descendant of whites and, through the experience of his ancestor Adolph Korn, to be an adoptive descendant of the Comanche. He tells both sides' stories with balance and sympathy. He also explores his own family's ambivalent relationship to its ancestor, and peels back the layers of history, so that we feel not only the reality of the 1860s and 1870s, but the subsequent ways in which the experiences of soldiers, Indians, captives and others were later represented in the early twentieth century, through books, Wild West shows, reunions between former adversaries (White and Indian) and former brothers (the captives and their former fellow warriors.) Family history is woven beautifully together with historical sociology and political history.

The story of "White Indians", in short, cracks open a window on the entire Western reality. The bi-cultural experience of the captives, their struggle to become Indians, and their struggle to return to White society, reveal worlds about both societies. I cannot recommend this highly enough as a lens on American history and the American experience. Focussed on Texas from 1860 to 1880, we understand through the very specific experiences of 10 captives and the activities of those who held them and those who tried to redeem them, something profound about the entirety of 19th century America.

( )
  hereandthere | Apr 8, 2013 |
This is a deeply researched and well-written account of the nine white children captured by Indians in Texas Hill Country between 1865 and 1871. It covers all known details about their family lives, their captures, their lives with the Comanche and Apache, their re-captures by whites, and their adult lives. Zesch draws out the similarities and patterns of the case studies, as well as the themes of inconsistency in stories, dehumanization of the other, difficult marriages, and so on.

Zesch notes repeatedly that all the children felt a strong connection to the Indian life they lived for the rest of their lives -- even when they returned to the white world, and even past 1880, when the Indians themselves no longer maintained that way of life. That may have been because even the young children of white frontiersmen worked extremely hard without prospering, and the Indian world offered freedom and rewarded cleverness -- or, a hypothesis Zesch doesn't discuss but also seems likely, it may have been because the children who passed the initial capture hazing had a natural personality type that strongly favored Indian mores.

Regardless, the sort of people drawn to the frontier were not the sort of people given to deep reflections and documentation of their experience, and this book is about as factual as any book can be regarding Indian captures. ( )
  pammab | Feb 12, 2013 |
Captivating! ( )
  wbrackett | Mar 2, 2012 |
I would highly recommend this book for those who want to get a better understanding of life on the Texas frontier near the end of the 1800. He gives an in depth historical perspective of Indians and settlers from every angle as he follows the lives of the captured children from the time of their capture till their death.
I only give it a 4 because it was way too long in many parts. ( )
  GShuk | Oct 27, 2009 |
http://fireandsword.blogspot.com/2006/12/captured-by-scott-zesch-as-youngster.ht...

As a youngster, Scott Zesch heard tales of Adolf Korn, his great-uncle. Adolf Korn would have been little different from other German youngsters in Texas, except that one day in 1870, Indian raiders carried him off. Eventually he returned to his white family, but he was a very different young man.
  DaveHardy | Dec 27, 2006 |
Showing 15 of 15

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