Hannah Duston's Capture and Escape from the Indians
The Hannah Duston statue is in Haverhill, Massachusetts. |
I really enjoy it when I catch myself in some preconceived notion.
When you think of Puritan settlers in 1600s Massachusetts, do you think of a
bunch of devoutly religious, passive people, kind of like the pilgrim mythology?
Me too! Then while I was on the west coast, I read the story of Hannah Duston
in the book “Massacre on the Merrimack: Hannah Duston's Captivity and Revenge
in Colonial America” by Jay Atkinson. That book dissuaded me from my
preconceptions and when we were recently passing through Massachusetts, I just
had to take a look at the area where this story took place.
On the base of the statue you'll find a panel that shows Thomas Duston defending his children. |
Haverhill, Massachusetts, is on the north side of the Merrimack River, just 14 miles west of the Atlantic, or thirty-five miles north of Boston as the crow flies. Puritan settlers first arrived as early as 1640. Almost fifty years later, when our story takes place, it was still the edge of civilization, assuming the perspective of the English settlers. One of those settler families was the Dustons: Thomas and Hannah and their nine children.
During King William’s War (1688 – 1697), the governor of New
France encouraged Native American tribes to raid English settlements. On March
15, 1697, Abenaki Indians from Quebec, made a raid on Haverhill. A “garrison
house,” that was more heavily fortified (think brick, stone, or heavy logs) than
your average farmhouse was on a hill above the Duston farm, but some distance
away. As they had been instructed, eight of the Duston children headed that way
when they heard the raid begin. Hannah, age 40 at the time, had given birth to
her ninth child a couple of weeks earlier. She had a difficult birth and was
still recovering. Present that morning was a neighbor/nurse, Mary Neff. Husband
Thomas was working on building a brick garrison house of his own about half a
mile away. When he heard the gunfire and whoops of Indians, he mounted his
horse and headed for his house.
Another panel shows the killing of the Indians. |
The Abenaki killed 27 colonists and took 14 captives, two of
those were Hannah and Mary. The Indians took them on a speed march away from
any potential pursuers. If any of the captives slowed them down, they were
killed. Hannah’s newborn was stripped from her arms and killed in front of her.
On the trail she and Mary received help in their survival from a fourteen-year-old
boy named Samuel Lennardson who had been taken from Worcester, Massachusetts up
to a year prior and had some modicum of trust from their captors.
The Duston Garrison House. |
The Aftermath
Hannah never wrote down her story, nor did Mary or Samuel. Hannah died in
Haverhill sometime between 1736 and 1738. However, several people have written
the story, claiming that they interviewed Hannah for the details. The most
prominent of these was Cotton Mather. We know that she really did take the
Indian’s scalps because her husband petitioned the government of the Massachusetts
Colony to collect the bounty.
About a hundred years after Hannah’s death, her story was resurrected
and she became a heroine. Some historians believe the story resonated with the
public because of the Indian removal efforts that began in the 1820s. The
first statue in her honor was erected in 1874 in Boscawen, New Hampshire (the site
of her escape). The 35-foot statue depicts her with a hatchet in one hand and
scalps in the other. In 1879 a statue of Hannah was placed in the GAR park in
Haverhill. This one has Hannah holding a hatchet, but she’s pointing with the other hand as if to say, “You were bad.” On the sides of the base are depictions of
the four events in her story: her capture, her husband’s defense of the
children, killing her captors, and returning in a canoe. Today, some question
why Hannah Duston was elevated to hero status, particularly considering that
she killed six children along with the adults, like the tone of this article from Smithsonian. I’m afraid I don’t agree. You just can’t judge someone in
those circumstances through the lens of our modern morality. And although it’s
not right to say “they did it too” as an excuse, one source said that many
of the settlers killed in the Abenaki raid were children. And what about Hannah's newborn?
By the way, the garrison house that Thomas was working on got finished. You can visit it, just outside of Haverhill. Like visiting a Civil War
battlefield, when you’re stopping off at Dunkin’s and fighting the going to
work traffic, it’s hard to visualize what it was like there in the 1600s. The Hannah
Dustin statue and the Duston Garrison House help us remember.