Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger, both age 12, were captured during the
Penn's Creek massacre on 16 October 1755. In her account of her captivity, Marie Le Roy reports that in November, 1756 she and Barbara Leininger "accompanied our Indian master to Sackum [Saucunk], where we spent the winter, keeping house for the savages, who were continually on the hunt."
Hugh Gibson, 14, was captured in July, 1756, by
Lenape Indians, outside
Robinson's Fort, near present-day
Southwest Madison Township, Pennsylvania. His mother and a neighbor were killed by the Indians, and he was brought to
Kittanning, where he was adopted by Shingas' brother Pisquetomen. In the spring of 1757 Gibson and Pisquetomen moved to "Soh’-koon, at the mouth of the Big Beaver," where they lived together with Pisquetomen's Dutch wife for a year, then moved to
Muskingum. In March, 1759, Gibson escaped, together with Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger and a Scotsman named David Brackenridge, and walked 250 miles to Fort Pitt (then under construction). Marie Le Roy states that in October 1758, after French and Indian forces were defeated in an attack on the British outpost of
Fort Ligonier, most of the population of the
Kuskusky towns,
Logstown and Saucunk fled to Muskingum. == Catholic mission, 1757 ==