cabin beheld a dozen or more Apaches, andβ¦
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Entities extracted from this source (3)
A. J. Hurlburtperson
3 claims cited from this source
a.k.a. Capt. A. J. Hurlburt, Mr. Hurlburt, Capt. Hurlburt
Hurlburt's childperson
1 claim cited from this source
a.k.a. only child, his child
Hurlburt's wifeperson
1 claim cited from this source
a.k.a. his wife
Chunks (1)
chunk 451 Β· paragraph 1777
1869, while engaged in cultivating his little
field of corn, at or about the present junction
of Broadway and Main, on a lovely bright
summerβs afternoon, he was startled by the
shrieks of his wife and the screams of an only
child, and on looking in the direction of his
( 23 )cabin beheld a dozen or more Apaches, and
found to his utter amazement and dismay that
the Indians were between him and his rifle. A
moment later the screams had ceased and being
discovered by the Indians the race for life began
for the Langston mine, near Pinos Altos, nine
miles distant, the only white settlement in the
country, and succeeded in giving the alarm.
The following day a party of mountaineers
visited the now deserted frontier home, and
found his wife and child not only murdered, but
mutilated. On examining the cabin it was
ascertained that his wife, on discovering the
approach of the Indians, seized the rifle and
secreted it in the chimney of the fire place, and
the alarm intended for her husband was a
scream of anguish, as she fell pierced with a
dozen arrows. In 1870, Capt. Hurlburt was one
of a party of eight who located Legal Tender
Hill, and which subsequently led to the dis-
covery of the Sherman mine, and the Chloride
Flat mining district.