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Jane Frazier
Jane Frazier
Born
Jane Bell

January 1, 1735 (1735-01)
Winchester, Virginia, United States
DiedApril 14, 1815(1815-04-14) (aged 80)
Known forEscape from Native American captivity in 1756
Spouse John Fraser
ChildrenBenjamin, Margaret, William, James, Jane, Catherine, Mary, Amelia
ParentJames Bell

Jane Frazier (or Fraser, sometimes Fraizier, also referred to as Jean or Jenny; January 1, 1735 – April 14, 1815) was a Virginia pioneer captured by Native Americans in the 18th century. Wife of Scottish frontiersman John Fraser, she was taken prisoner by Miami Indians and held in a Miami village in Ohio for 13 months before escaping and traveling through the wilderness to return home. Her story was transcribed from her diary and later published.

Birth and early life

Jane Bell was born on January 1, 1735 in Winchester, Virginia. At 18, she married Captain Edward McClain, who died in 1753. At 19, she met John Fraser, a gunsmith who was repairing rifles for George Washington in Winchester. [1] They married in Winchester on August 8, 1754 and moved to the mouth of Evitts Creek near Fort Cumberland, Maryland, where Fraser had a farm and was preparing to build a gunsmith workshop. [2]

Capture and escape

In October 1755, while traveling with one of her husband's employees, Mr. Bradley, to Fort Cumberland to purchase items at the fort's store, Jane was attacked by Miami Indians. Mr. Bradley was killed and scalped, and Jane was taken on a 3-week journey to a village on the Great Miami River, possibly Pinkwi Mihtohseeniaki (near present-day Piqua, Ohio). [3]: 50–51  Adopted by a prominent Miami family, she gave birth a month after her arrival, and although her captors treated the child kindly, he died after three months. [4]: 127–28 

After 13 months, while most of the village men were away raiding Pennsylvania settlements and the remaining men were out hunting, Jane escaped with the help of two other captives, Dutch men who had been captured in Pennsylvania. They stole a little food and a broken rifle, which they were able to repair, but they were afraid to hunt because they feared the gunshot would attract attention. [1] After a week, they shot and killed a wild turkey, which they ate raw, fearing that smoke from a fire would give away their location. The next day, the two men were too weak to continue and Jane decided to proceed on her own, eating roots and tree bark and hiding in hollow logs or trees at night. [5] After eleven days she reached Oldtown, Maryland, and people there helped her return to Fort Cumberland. She arrived home in early November 1756, only to learn that her husband had remarried because he assumed that she was dead. John Fraser took her back, and he returned his second wife home to her father. "Being a woman of good sense," he compensated the second wife financially for the rest of her life. [6]: 35  [7] [8]

Return to Maryland

Following her return, Frazier was evidently interviewed by Colonel Adam Stephen, who wrote on November 14 to Governor William Denny: "By a woman who once belonged to John Fraser (his wife or mistress) and has now, after being prisoner with Shingas, &c, thirteen months, made her escape from Muskingum, we learn that Shingas and some Delawares live near the head of that River." Frazier probably passed through the village of Muskingum on her way to the Miami village from which she escaped. [9]: 159 

In a November 30 letter from Colonel John Armstrong to Governor Denny, Armstrong reports that "We hear that two men and one woman (the Wife or Miss of Jon Frazer) has made their Escape to Fort Cumberland," indicating that Frazier's two Dutch companions survived. [10]: 79 

Although Frazier had been captured by Miami Indians and held in a Miami village, several contemporary documents report that the Lenape leaders Shingas and Pisquetomen knew of her capture and escape. In a peculiar postscript to Frazier's story, Christian Frederick Post wrote in his diary that while traveling with Pisquetomen in October 1758, they passed through Bedford (then known as Raystown), where Pisquetomen recognized "Jenny Frazer": "Pesquitomen, finding Jenny Frazer there, who had been their prisoner, and escaped, spoke to her a little rashly." Later, as they were preparing to leave, Post noted: "Pesquitomen, before we went from hence, made it up with Jenny Frazer, and they parted good friends." [11]: 13–14 

Later life and death

In 1759, John and Jane Fraser moved near Fort Bedford. They had eight children: Benjamin, Margaret, William, James, Jane, Catherine, Mary, and Amelia. After the death of John Fraser, Jane married Richard DeKapt (Delapt), which they changed to Dunlap. Jane Frazier died April 14, 1815, in Schellsburg, Bedford County, Pennsylvania.

Sources

Frazier's captivity narrative was transcribed from her diary in 1897 by her great-grandson, Colonel William T. Beatty, [5] and first published on November 9, 1900 in the Delphi Times of Delphi, Indiana. It was later published again in the History of Allegany County in 1923. [12]: 84–88 

Memorialization

A historical marker commemorating Frazier's capture and escape can be seen near Evitts Creek Drive in Cumberland, Maryland. [13]

A housing complex on Memorial Ave. in Cumberland, Maryland is named Jane Frazier Village in Jane's honor. [14]

In popular culture

A historical novel describing Frazier's experiences, Red Morning, was published by Ruby Frazier Parsons Frey, a direct descendant, in 1946. [15]

Jane Frazier and her husband John were portrayed in the 1947 film Unconquered, with Ward Bond as John Fraser and Virginia Campbell as Mrs. John Fraser.

Bibliography

  • Edward C. Papenfuse et al., Maryland: A New Guide to the Old Line State, Johns Hopkins University 1999, ISBN  978-0-8018-5980-9.
  • Ruby Frazier Frey, Red Morning, G.P. Putnam's Sons 1946, ASIN B0007DQ41Y, LC Control Number 46006088.
  • "The Old Pike Post", Genealogical Society of Allegany County, Maryland, Vol. 16, No. 3 September 1999.

References

  1. ^ a b Clark, Howard Glenn. "John Fraser, Western Pennsylvania Frontiersman, Parts 1 & 2" Western Pennsylvania History Magazine, Vol. 38, No 3-4, Fall-Winter 1955; pp 83-93
  2. ^ "Jean (Jane) Bell History, from the Beatty Family History"
  3. ^ George Michael Ironstrack, "From the Ashes: One Story of the Village of Pinkwi Mhtohseeniaki," Master's Thesis, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, 2006
  4. ^ Jeffrey Deward Carlisle, "The Evolution of the Treatment of Captives by the Indians of the Northeastern Woodlands from Earliest European Contact Through the War of 1812," Master's Thesis, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, December, 1992
  5. ^ a b Dan Whetzel, "1755 Frontier Life – An Intertwining of Local and International Events in Cumberland, Maryland & Bedford, Pennsylvania, pp 44-47
  6. ^ McDaid, Jennifer D., "Into a Strange Land: Women Captives among the Indians," Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. William & Mary, December 1990
  7. ^ Wilcomb E. Washburn, ed., "Narrative of the Captivity of Jane Frazier," vol. 109, The Garland Library of Narrative of North American Indian Captives. New York: Garland Publishing, 1977, pp 2-13
  8. ^ Lannie Dietle, "John Fraser, frontier gunsmith, blacksmith, Indian trader, and tavern keeper," Korns.org
  9. ^ Charles Augustus Hanna, The Wilderness Trail: Or, The Ventures and Adventures of the Pennsylvania Traders on the Allegheny Path, Volume 2, Putnam's sons, 1911
  10. ^ Samuel Hazard, ed. Colonial Records of Pennsylvania, Volume 3. T. Fenn & Company, 1851
  11. ^ Christian Frederick Post, The Second Journal of Christian Frederick Post; On a Message from the Governor of Pensilvania to the Indians on the Ohio, London: Printed for J. Wilkie 1759
  12. ^ Thomas, James Walter., Williams, Thomas John Chew. History of Allegany County, Maryland, Regional Publishing Company, 1969.
  13. ^ J. J. Prats, "Jane Frazier, wife of Lieut. John Frazier," Historical Marker Database," June 21, 2006
  14. ^ "Jane Frazier Village," 202 Memorial Ave, Cumberland, MD 21502
  15. ^ Frey, Ruby Frazier Parsons. Red Morning. G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1946.

External links