James Winchester was a native of
Elgin and belonged to a prominent family in
Morayshire. As a result, the MP for Moray and Nairn raised the matter in the House of Commons and led the issue of Mary Winchester's kidnapping to
Queen Victoria herself. This pressure would lead to decisive action in a punitive expedition. The
British colonial government launched a
military campaign called the
Lushai Expedition on 8 October 1871. An
expeditionary force of the
British Indian Army captured and occupied Mizo villages one by one. The column from Burma failed a river crossing, which delayed their arrival to the captive village. The other two columns from the North in Silchar and South in Chittagong did manage to reach the location on time. The right column of the campaign reached Sailàm village on 21 January 1872. The
siege started at 08:30 in the morning, and after a few gunshots and shelling, the Mizos found their tribal weaponry no match to such advanced
artillery and soon tendered their submission. After destroying the
granaries and
crops, the expeditionary force rescued Mary Winchester. The moment of her rescue is told in two different versions: • according to T.H. Lewin, the expedition leader, Mary Winchester was simply taken from the chief's hut. She was found sitting on the log platform of the hut, wearing a blue rag round her loins, and a
smoking pipe in her mouth. She was heard giving commands to small boys who were running around in fear. A few days short of a year in captivity, she had already lost her
mother tongue, and the British soldiers had to lure her with
sweets. • according to Sailam residents, the popular story is that she was handed over by the queen. Being completely adapted to the Mizo life, other British were strangers to Mary Winchester. She even called them, "Foreigners." Therefore, Pi Tluangi on pretence took her to a forest for gathering firewoods (or for cleaning at the stream, yet in another version). In the forest, her guardian left her to the awaiting soldiers, who had to drag her away against her will. Upon rescue, later on General Brownlow who participated in the
Lushai Expedition, wrote to Lewin stating that he was astonished at her grades knowing that ten years earlier she had little to no command of English. In 1912, Mary Winchester wrote a letter thanking T.H Lewin's command to rescue her in the expedition after missionary
James Herbert Lorrain sent a copy of Lewin's book
A fly on the wheel. T.H Lewin met with Mary Winchester on encouragement of his wife. The resulting meeting was negatively received by Lewin who referred to her as "stuck-up, conceited little half-caste woman" in a letter to his son. In a separate letter to Major John Shapespeare he articulates his thoughts on the perception that Mary Winchester was the reason for the advent of Christianity in the Lushai Hills. ==In Britain==