During
King William's War, Castin's settlement was plundered by English Governor Sir
Edmund Andros in 1688. In response, Saint-Castin led an Abenaki war party to raid the English settlement at
Pemaquid (present-day
Bristol, Maine) in August 1689. During the
Siege of Pemaquid (1689), one of the captives the
Maliseet took back to their main village,
Meductic, was
John Gyles, who created one of the few
captivity narratives to come out of Nova Scotia/Acadia. John Gyles' brother James was also captured by the Penobscot and eventually taken back to Fort Penobscot where he was tortured and burned alive at the stake. In 1692 the village was again seized by the English, when Major
Benjamin Church destroyed the fort and looted the settlement. With the return of Baron de Saint-Castin and his sons to
France, the settlement became sparsely occupied. == Queen Anne's War ==