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A History of Jonathan Alder:
His Captivity and Life with the Indians.
Ed. by Larry Nelson. (Akron:
University of Akron Press, 2002.
ix, 222 pp. Cloth,
$34.95, ISBN 1-884836-80-1. Paper,
$14.95, 1-884836-98-4.)
In 1795, Jonathan Alder settled in today's central Ohio. Shortly thereafter, other settlers began to move into the
area; and within a decade the small community of Darby, composed of
both white settlers and Indians, had been formed.
Alder played a unique role in this young settlement.
He acted as an interpreter and intermediary between the two
races and helped them co-exist under unusually peaceful terms.
"Here," Alder rejoiced, he "could lie down at night
without fear . . . and [he] could rise up in the morning and shake
hands with the white man and the Indians, all in perfect peace and
safety" (119). The
unusual, yet true story of this Ohio settler is told in
autobiographical format in A History of Jonathan Alder:
His Captivity and Life with the Indians (2002), edited by
Larry Nelson, chief administrator at Fort Meigs State Memorial in
Perrysburg, Ohio and adjunct professor of history at Firelands
College of Bowling Green State University.
The narrative recounts half a century of Alder's
experiences, from his 1782 capture by Indians at the age of nine, to
the early 1830's when the United States federal government removed
the Indians with whom Alder had lived to the territory west of the
Mississippi River.
Alder's story provides a rare
glimpse into the Indian experience and frontier life in Ohio in the
late 1700's and early 1800's at a time when the native nations
of the region were experiencing the growing pressures of
Anglo-American settlement. The
account includes Indian traditions as commonplace as learning how to
swim, traditional types of agriculture, learning to hunt, and
courtship and marriage. It
provides Alder's impressions of Ohio legendary figures and events,
such as frontier hero Simon Kenton, the infamous Simon Girty, and
the horrific burning of Colonel William Crawford at the stake.
It also introduces the reader to other Ohio Indian captives,
including John Bricke, Jeremiah and Robert Armstrong, James
McPherson, and Samuel Davis. While
Alder writes his life story as a white Ohio settler, his view of
frontier Ohio is distinctly from the native perspective.
Indeed, Alder claims, he "was getting to be an Indian in
the true sense of the word" (80).
The
Indian wars of the 1790's
proved to be a turning point for Alder and the Indians on the Ohio
frontier. Alder cheered
the Indians' victory over General Arthur St. Clair and voiced the
awe with which the Indians viewed General Anthony Wayne after the
Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794 and the Treaty of Greenville the
following year. After
the treaty, Alder left the Indian nation and moved to Darby where
he became one of the first white settlers of the area.
For a time, Alder, the Indians, and the frontier settlers
would co-exist in peace, as his story reveals.
These conditions would not last, however, as tensions
increased between the two races prior to the War of 1812.
As his Indian friends left the region, Alder was left in a
somewhat unusual position, fearing the suspicions of his white
neighbors more than the threats of an Indian attack.
After their final defeat during the war, Alder's Indian
friends were relegated to reserves
and then, in the early 1830's, were finally removed from their Ohio
home to Kansas. With their removal, Alder considered his "career" with the
Indians over and thus ended his narrative (178).
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