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- Narrative of the Captivity of William Biggs Among the Kickapoo Indians in Illinois in 1788 (Dodo Press)
Narrative of the Captivity of William Biggs Among the Kickapoo Indians in Illinois in 1788 (Dodo Press)
Angebote / Angebote:
In the year 1788, March 28th, I was going from Bellfontain to Cahokia, in company with a young man named John Vallis, from the State of Maryland, he was born and raised near Baltimore. About 7 o'clock in the morning I heard two guns fired, by the report I thought they were to the right, I thought they were white men hunting, both shot at the same time. I looked but could not see any body, in a moment after I looked to the left and saw sixteen Indians, all upon their feet with their guns presented, about forty yards distant from me, just ready to draw trigger. I was riding between Vallis and the Indians in a slow trot, at the moment I saw them. I whipped my horse and leaned my breast on the horse's withers, and told Vallis to whip his horse, that they were Indians. That moment they all fired their guns in one platoon, you could scarcely distinguish the report of their guns one from another. They shot four bullets into my horse, one high up in his withers, one in the bulge of the ribs near my thigh, and two in his rump, and shot four or five through my great coat. The moment they fired their guns they ran towards us and yelled so frightfully, that the wounds and the yelling of the Indians scared my horse so that he jumped so suddenly to one side of the road, that my gun fell off my shoulder, and twisted out of my hand, I then bore all my weight on one stirrup, in order to catch my gun, but could not.
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