The narrative of the captivity and restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson
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Author
Contributions
- NetLibrary, Inc - Contributor
Publication
1997-03-01 - Project Gutenberg, Champaign, Ill, Illinois
Language
English
Word Count
20,223 words, Calculated
Page Count
33 pages
Physical Format
[electronic resource] /
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL57630574M
- ISBN-100585005885
- OCLC Control Number44958976
- Project Gutenberg851
Classifications
- DDC974.4/3/020924
- LCCMicrofilm 41344 (E)
- LCCDA300 .S69 vol. 8
and 4 more
- LCCE87 .R868
- LCCE87.R895 R69 1997
- LCCE85 .G2 vol. 1
- LCCE87 .G2 vol. 1
Description
In February 1676, during King Philip's War, the frontier village of Lancaster, Massachusetts, was attacked by a party of Nipmuck Indians and completely destroyed. As relief from Concord approached, the attackers withdrew, taking with them 24 captives, including Mrs. Mary Rowlandson and her three children. For almost three months the little family was forced to live with their captors and endure exposure to a New England winter.The youngest child, who had been injured during the attack, failed to survive. Eventually ransom was paid and the family released. Mrs. Rowlandson's account of her experience was published in 1682. It became a"best-seller" of its day and created a new literary genre, the captivity narrative. Such accounts were in part responsible for the mistrust and hatred of the Indians that plagued the country for centuries. It is also the first publication in English by a woman in the New World.
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- The narrative of the captivity and restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson
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