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Abducted Child to Indian Chief's Wife Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

rebeccasitar: Ill archive this because I cannot check on it for a while. Where it was located shouldnt be affected by a makeover unless they took down trees and fences around perimeter. But ill put new one up in spring. Thanks.

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Hidden : 7/15/2013
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

I always enjoy local history caches. This one is rich in drama, excitement, heartbreak, and ultmately love.

Stealth required, as muggles abound. Enjoy the park, bring the kids. First to find, gets certificate, I also added a little light bling. Egg shaped container can fit small items. Look at rock in front corner, as it has a nice plaque. Enjoy.

Frances Slocum

Indian captive
Born: 3/4/1773
Birthplace: Warwick, R.I.
Frances Slocum was the daughter of Jonathan and Ruth Tripp Slocum, Quakers who had settled near Wilkes-Barre, Pa. In Sept. 1778, at the age of five, she was kidnapped by Delaware Indians during a raiding party. Although her family continued to search for her, it wasn't until 1837, nearly 60 years later, that two of her brothers finally found her, living in a Miami Indian village near present-day Peru, Ind. In the years since her captivity, Slocum had completely adopted the Indian way of life, taking the Indian name Ma-con-a-qua and marrying a Miami chief named Shep-o-con-nah (died 1833). Their children included two adult daughters and two sons who died in childhood.

Although Slocum's brothers tried to persuade her to return to Pennsylvania with them, she preferred to remain in the Miami Indian village. Her white relatives helped her secure a grant of land for her daughters, so that even after most of the Miamis were forced to move west to Indian Territory, Slocum and her descendants continued to live in Indiana. After her death, she was buried next to her husband and sons in the Indian cemetery near her home. In 1900 the cemetery was renamed the Frances Slocum Cemetery, and a monument was erected there in her memory.

Died: 3/9/1847

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Congrats on FTF: PaddleAway

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