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Beinhaltet den Namen: Herman Lehmann

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"Nine Years Among the Indians, 1870-1879" is a memoir written by Hermann Lehmann. It tells the true story of Lehmann's capture as a young boy by a Native American tribe and his subsequent years living among them. Here's a brief overview of the book:

Hermann Lehmann was a German immigrant who settled with his family in Texas in the late 1860s. In 1870, when he was just ten years old, he and his older brother were kidnapped by a raiding party of Apache Indians. His brother managed to escape, but Hermann was taken deep into the rugged and unforgiving lands of the American Southwest.

The book describes Lehmann's experiences living among various Native American tribes, including the Apache and Comanche. It provides insights into their way of life, customs, and beliefs. Lehmann gradually adapted to his new environment, learning the languages and survival skills necessary to navigate the harsh conditions.

During his nine-year captivity, Lehmann witnessed tribal conflicts, participated in buffalo hunts, and experienced both the joys and sorrows of Native American life. He formed deep bonds with some members of the tribes he encountered, including the chief's daughter, whom he married.

Eventually, Lehmann was recaptured by the U.S. Army in 1879 during a raid on the tribe's camp. He was then reunited with his family, who had thought him dead. Lehmann's memoir recounts his difficult adjustment to returning to a settled life after being fully immersed in Native American culture for so many years.

"Nine Years Among the Indians, 1870-1879" offers readers a unique perspective on the interactions between settlers and Native Americans during the late 19th century. It provides a firsthand account of the complexities and challenges faced by individuals caught between two distinct worlds.
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delta61 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 8, 2023 |
Well this is very different. This shows a very different view of the Native Americans than we have seen. I do wonder how much of it is real and how much of it is a product of the times as far as perhaps an increase in bloodthirstiness and sensationalism.
 
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melsmarsh | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 10, 2020 |
A New Look at Nine Years with the Indians is by far the best reading surprise I’ve had all year. That’s partially, I know, because I expected so little of it when I picked it up, but as I got deeper and deeper into Herman Lehmann’s memoir, I began to realize that this is a really good book despite any misgivings about the complete accuracy of the story I still may have. I’m still a bit skeptical that all of it happened exactly the way Mr. Lehmann says it happened, but I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt more times than not. Oh, I expect there are some exaggerations and the like, but how surprising would that be, really, for a book written some fifty or so years after the events being described happened to its author.

On May 16, 1870 eleven-year-old Herman Lehmann and his eight-year-old brother Willie were taken by a small band of Apache Indians from their family homestead near Fredericksburg, Texas. Willie was forcibly abandoned a couple of days later and was returned to his family eighteen days after his abduction. Herman, on the other hand, lived with the Apaches, and later the Comanches, for the next eight or nine years before the Army forced him to return to his white family. I say “eight or nine years” because the book’s title says it was nine years despite there being at least one reference in the book to eight years of captivity. And in addition, the book tells us that Herman was eleven when taken by the Indians and nineteen when he returned to his family.

Herman, in a surprisingly short period of time, fully adopted the culture and lifestyle of his Indian captors, even to going on horse and cattle rustling raids in Texas and New Mexico during which he took great delight in killing farmers, ranchers, and prospectors and taking their scalps. In the process, he came to hate the white and Mexican interlopers in Indian country as much as his Apache brothers and sisters hated them. Herman, in fact, came to consider the band of Apaches he lived and fought with to be his true family, and even after he returned to his German-American family he felt most comfortable when surrounded by his old Apache cohorts.

Herman, in fact, only even returned to his family because he was physically carried there by Army troopers after almost all the Indians in the region had been forced to surrender into the “care” of the U.S. government at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Even then he would have tried to escape on his own if his adoptive father, the great Chief Quanah Parker, had not advised him that it was time to go home. Sadly, going home would not solve Herman’s problems. For the rest of his life he suffered from the trauma of having been violently jerked out of one culture, immersed into a shockingly different one for almost a decade, and then almost as violently being forced to return to the original culture (which itself had already drastically changed). Herman never managed to make a complete return to the white-man culture of his day. Both of his marriages failed, and he never mastered a trade that would have made his and his family’s living.

Willie, on the other hand, did very well in life, probably because he was not held captive long enough to have lost his “personal identity” to his captors. He likely looked back on his kidnapping as one of the great adventures of his life, one in which he beat the odds and came out whole. Willie married for a second time after the death of his first wife, and this second marriage produced two daughters, Gerda and Esther. The copy of the book that I now own was inscribed by Gerda to family friends in 1997 (some sixteen years before her death at age 94). I’ve attached a copy of that inscription and a picture of Gerda and the rest of her family (from the book) that was taken around 1930. (Available on the review posted at bookchase.blogspot.com only)

Bottom Line: A New Look at Nine Years with the Indians is a fascinating account of what life was like in central Texas right up into the 1880s. It was a time in which farmers and prospectors daring to push further and further west were in constant danger of being picked off by raiders from several different Indian tribes that considered that part of the country to be their own. Not surprisingly, this is not a politically correct book and it displays numerous unconscious racist overtones when describing the Indians and their way of life. For instance, Willie is described on page 271 as having been “taken away by animal-like men” and Herman tells an “amusing” story on page 180 about a black man who was forced to dress as an Indian during one skirmish with Rangers so that the Rangers would mistakenly kill him as he ran for his life back toward the Texans. Herman Lehmann was a real life Little Big Man, no doubt about it.
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SamSattler | Dec 14, 2019 |
http://fireandsword.blogspot.com/2006/12/nine-years-among-indians-1870-1879-by.h...

Herman Lehmann was an ordinary German boy living on the Texas frontier in 1870. Then Apache raiders carried him and his brother Willie off. Willie escaped, but Herman did not get away from his captors. When he returned, Herman was no longer a captive of the Indians, he was a captive of the whites.… (mehr)
 
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DaveHardy | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 27, 2006 |

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