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1932 Stories

EXPERIENCES OF THE HALL GIRLS

By Thelma Henrickson, Dist. 245

I have chosen this story to write because I know a few people in this community that are related to Sylvia and Rachel Hall. Two of my schoolmates are related to them.

William Hall and his wife, Mary Jane Rebecca, were staying with several other people in William Davis' house, on the north bank of Indian creek, in La Salle county, Illinois, about twelve miles north of Ottawa, when the captivity of his two daughters took place. He had four daughters and three sons. The girls that were captured by the Indians were Rachel and Sylvia.

It was on the afternoon of May 20, 1832, that the Indians came to harm them. Most pf the Hall family were killed by the Indians, but Rachel and Sylvia were hurried away as quickly as possible. The Indians led them until they came to the rest of their group, then placed the girls on a pony apiece. The Indians and the captured sisters traveled until quite late at night. They rested awhile, and then started traveling again, until two o'clock in the afternoon of the next day. At that time they rested again and had roasted acorns and scalded beans to eat. Of course, Sylvia and Rachel ate very little of this.

On the seventh day the Indians traveled much faster, because they thought the white men were after them. For supper that evening sliced meat, boiled coffee and corn soup were served. Different evenings the Indians had a dance after they had eaten their supper.

The next morning the Indians placed the scalps of the girls' murdered father, mother and friends upon a pole. The girls thought they, too, would soon be murdered, but they moved away from this place unharmed. The girls felt very happy that the Indians were sparing them.

After three more days of traveling, Sylvia and Rachel were quite exhausted, but they knew they must obey the Indians. The Indians supplied the girls with Indian dresses and tried to make them wear moccasins. The leader of that group was White Crow. He felt sorry for them and told them he would soon take them home.

The tenth day they traveled through wet land and underbrush. The next day the girls thought it was getting more like home.

After stopping to eat, they moved on until they came to the fort of Blue Mounds. The two sisters were then taken to their two uncles, Edward and Reason Hall.

This was about the first of June. The Indians wanted to give the girls a Sac squaw for a servant during their lives, but they did not accept that.

Rachel and Sylvia were bidden a final farewell by the Indians at Gratiat's Grove. Their brother, J. W. Hall, met them there. The girls had imagined that he had been murdered, also. They stayed there a few weeks and then went with their brother and uncle to Galena. There they met many old friends, who treated them quite nicely. They then went to live with their uncle, Robert Scott, about forty miles from where the girls were captured.

The sisters felt very thankful to the friends that had taken part in helping them escape.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 102.


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