Category
page 1Captives of Native Americans

Sacagawea
Sacagawea ( or ; also spelled Sakakawea or Sacajawea; May 1788 – December 20, 1812) was a Lemhi Shoshone or Hidatsa woman who, in her teens, helped the Lewis and Clark Expedition in achieving their chartered mission objectives by exploring the Louisiana Territory. Sacagawea traveled with the expedition thousands of miles from North Dakota to the Pacific Ocean, helping to establish cultural contacts with Native American people and contributing to the expedition's knowledge of natural history in different regions.

Daniel Boone
American pioneer and frontiersman (1734–1820)
Mary Rowlandson
American woman captured by Native Americans during King Philip's War

John Stark
American Revolutionary War general from New Hampshire
Olive Oatman
American living in Mormon, Tolkepaya, and Mohave societies after childhood kidnapping
Cynthia Ann Parker
American kidnapped by the Comanches (1827–1870)
Raid on Deerfield
1704 raid
Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda
Spanish shipwreck survivor
Hannah Duston
colonial Massachusetts Puritan
Mary Jemison
American frontierswoman who was adopted in her teens by the Seneca
Raid on Haverhill
part of Queen Anne's War
Simon Girty
Loyalist and British Indian Department interpreter
Kittanning
18th-century Native American village in the Ohio Country
Juan Ortiz
Spanish military personnel

Alexander Henry the elder
British-Canadian fur trader