Twelve-year-old Mary Jemison took her peaceful days on her family's farm
in eastern Pennsylvania for granted. But on a spring day in 1758,
something happened that changed her life forever. A band of warriors
invaded the house and took the Jemison family captive. Mary was
separated from her parents and brothers and sister. She traveled with
the Indians to southern Ohio and later to a Seneca village on the
Genesee River in what is now western New York.
Mary's new life was not easy. She missed her family terribly, and she
was unaccustomed to Seneca ways. Several times she even tried to run
away. But the Indians were kind to her and taught her many things about
the earth, its plants, and its creatures. She became a sister to animals
and to all growing things. Then Mary was finally given the chance to
return to the world of white men. But she had also become a sister to
the Indians. How could she leave them?
Based on a true story, here is the unforgettable tale of the legendary
"White Woman of the Genesee."