Bianca Babb, originally named Bianca Louella and also known as Bankuella, Bianca Babb Bell, or simply Banc, was born on August 26, 1856, during her family's journey from
Wisconsin to
Texas, in a covered wagon near
Lecompton, Kansas. Her parents, John S. Babb and Isabel A. Babb, were settlers and ranchers. In her formative years, Bianca resided with her family in a cabin near present-day
Chico in
Wise County, Texas. The region, situated on the outskirts of non–Native American settlements, was often fraught with tensions and conflicts between settlers and indigenous tribes, particularly the Comanche people who dominated the area. On September 14, 1866, a band of Nokoni Comanches, led by Persummy, raided the Babbs' cabin. Bianca's father and eldest brother were away at the time, leaving her mother, Isabel Babb, and Bianca herself, along with her siblings, vulnerable to the attack. Isabel Babb was stabbed or shot five times, scalped alive, and left to die with her infant child still breastfeeding, while Bianca, along with her brother Theodore Adolphus ("Dot") and a young houseguest named Sarah Jane Luster, were captured by the Comanches. Comanche warriors, renowned for their exceptional horsemanship, were adept at traversing long distances without sustenance. Racing westward through the night, they swiftly crossed the Little Wichita River close to modern-day
Henrietta. The journey proved arduous for the captives, who endured a relentless ride spanning at least without pause, eventually halting at 11a.m. the following day near Holiday Creek. There, they prepared and consumed the flesh of a steer mauled by wolves. Bianca, consumed by hunger, pleaded for raw meat. Exhausted and numb, she sat amidst her own filth, earning the disparaging moniker "stinks when walks" from her captors. After the young houseguest, who had been raped, escaped with Dot's help, the warriors beat the boy and prepared to kill him. The siblings defied execution, earning the warriors' respect, hence they allowed her brother to live. Bianca was separated from her brother. The warrior Kerno who captured her gave Bianca as a foster daughter to his widowed sister Tekwashana. For seven months in 1866–1867, Bianca lived immersed in traditional Comanche society. While being forced to gather wood and haul water, she learned skills like camp setup, swimming, and cultural practices like ear-piercing from her adoptive mother. Tekwashana also darkened Bianca's blonde hair. The band followed a nomadic lifestyle, frequently relocating camps across the Oklahoma–Texas panhandle region, allowing Bianca to experience the daily routines, customs, and way of life among the Comanches firsthand. After Bianca's capture, her father John Babb joined efforts by frontiersmen and Native allies to search for his missing children. Around April 1867, Jacob J. Sturm, a civilian agent from
Fort Arbuckle, located Bianca and secured her ransom and release from the Comanches for US$333 (roughly $ today). Sturm then brought Bianca to the fort. Despite her months living with the tribe, Bianca returned willingly to her family. Most children suffered from
Stockholm syndrome after such an ordeal and did not want to return. In June 1867, her brother Dot was also ransomed for $210 (roughly $ today), with articles of clothing worth $23.75, and released back to their father. == Later years and memoir ==