Mercy Harbison

Mary Jane "Massy" Harbison (March 18, 1770 [1] - December 9, 1837) was a young American woman living in the decades immediately following the Revolutionary War. She was captured by Native Americans in May 1792. Massy escaped after six days and gave a deposition, Capture and Escape of Mercy Harbison, 1792, which is an example of the American literary genre of captivity narratives.

Mary Jane White was born on March 18, 1770 in Amwell, New Jersey, the daughter of Edward White, a soldier during the Revolutionary War and Rebecca Pelton, a descendant of Richard More (Mayflower passenger). She married John Harbison in 1787 in Pennsylvania. Harbison was born in Belfast, Ireland the son of Matthew Harbison Jr. and Margaret "Peg" Carson.

In November 1791, Harbison lived in western Pennsylvania on the Allegheny River above Pittsburgh with three small children. Her husband accompanied General Arthur St. Clair to defeat at the Battle of the Wabash, otherwise known as St. Clair's Defeat and St. Clair's Shame. After the Native American victory, tribes on the frontier increased their attacks on European-American settlements. Harbison's husband was scouting in late May 1792 when the Harbison home was attacked.

Massy Harbison and her three children were captured. The natives killed and scalped her three-year-old child. Her five-year-old son was killed shortly after. Massy managed to escape after several days. She evaded re-capture for six days with minimal access to food. Carrying her infant, she navigated barefoot back to Fort Pitt. The deposition of her experiences was given before the magistrates in Pittsburgh. She and John later separated. John died in 1822 when he was lost at sea and Massy died in 1837.

You can read Massey Harbison's account of her captivity in her own words online courtesy of the University of Pittsburgh Library: https://archive.org/details/narrativeofsuffe00harb

References

  1. A narrative of the sufferings of Massy Harbison, from Indian barbarity : giving an account of her captivity, the murder of her two children, her escape, with an infant at her breast. Beaver [Pa.] : Printed by Wm. Henry. 1836. p. 14.

Further reading

  • Kephart, Horace, ed. The Account of Mary Rowlandson and Other Indian Captivity Narratives. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2005. ISBN 0-486-44520-8


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