Rachel Plummer

Rachel Parker Plummer (March 22, 1819 – March 19, 1839) was the daughter of James W. Parker and the cousin of Quanah Parker, last free-roaming chief of the Comanches. An Anglo-Texan woman, she was kidnapped at the age of seventeen, along with her son, James Pratt Plummer, age two, and her cousins, by a Comanche raiding party.

Rachel Plummer's 21 months among the Comanche as a prisoner became a sensation when she wrote a book about her captivity, ''Rachael Plummer's Narrative of Twenty One Months' Servitude as a Prisoner Among the Commanchee Indians'', which was issued in Houston in 1838. This was the first narrative about a captive of Texas Indians published in the Republic of Texas, and it was a sensation not just there, but in the United States and beyond. In 1844, after Rachel's death, her father published a revised edition of her book as an appendix to his ''Narrative of the Perilous Adventures, Miraculous Escapes and Sufferings of Rev. James W. Parker''. Her book is considered an invaluable look at Comanche culture before environmental destruction, disease, starvation, and war forced them onto reservations. Provided by Wikipedia
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