Mr. Peter Williamson in the Dress of a Delaware Indian (1759)
12019-09-05T09:08:25-07:00Will Fenton82bf9011a953584cd702d069a30cbdb6ef90650a72001French and Indian cruelty: exemplified in the life, and various viscissitudes of fortune, of Peter Williamson...2019-09-05T09:08:25-07:001759Williamson, Peter, 1730-1799.John Carter Brown Library, Box 1894, Brown University, Providence, R.I. 02912. JCB call number: D759 W732f.Williamson wrote of his capture by a professional gang in Aberdeen, Scotland, his sale in America, and subsequent capture by the Delaware Indians. He successfully prosecuted his kidnappers, compiled the first city directory of Edinburgh, established the first penny post there and he kept a tavern where he was known as Indian Peter. The details of his account have been questioned by scholars, but his narrative was popular at the time and served as a model for other captivity narratives. The British and French, realizing the esteem with which Indians held the pipe, began to manufacture metal trade hatchet pipes or tomahawk pipes in the eighteenth century. This image may have been copied from Pierre-Francois-Xavier de Charlevoix, A voyage to North-America, Paris, 1744; see also image in Charlevoix, Voyage, Dublin, 1766.Engraving, 18 cm. x 10.2 cm. "Printed for the unfortunate author, and sold by R. Griffiths, opposite Somerset-House in the Strand" (London, 1759).11Will Fenton82bf9011a953584cd702d069a30cbdb6ef90650a
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