When four men left the fort early that morning, the Indigenous warriors ambushed them, killing one. The other three escaped, including two who returned to the fort to raise the alarm. spotted a warrior and shot him, prompting the rest to open fire. Seeing that they were very nearly surrounded, Mason and his men retreated, with Mason suffering severe enough injuries that he was forced to hide by the path rather than go to the fort. When Ogle led some men out to assist, his party was also attacked, and he was forced to take cover. Despite taking casualties, he and Mason were eventually able to retreat to the fort. Shortly after the siege began, calls for help went out to militias throughout the region. Captain Van Swearingen was the first to respond with fourteen men from Cross Creek, about 20 miles north, and was able to enter the fort without issue. The second to respond was Major Samuel McColloch, who led a force of 40 men from
Fort Van Meter along
Short Creek to assist the besieged Fort Henry. As his men approached the fort, they were also ambushed. While covering his men's safe retreat into the fort, McCollock found himself cut off. Riding his horse, McColloch fled up Wheeling Hill, and there he found himself surrounded by the enemy on three sides, and on the other by a steep drop. Instead of being captured or killed, he chose to charge his horse over the edge of the cliff managing to save both himself and his horse without injury, and becoming a local folk hero for the story which has become known as
McColloch's Leap. Over the course of the raid, the Indigenous force burned approximately 25 surrounding cabins and slaughtered or stole 300 cattle. Following the Revolutionary War, Captain Samuel Mason would later turn to a life of crime as a
river pirate in 1797 at
Cave-In-Rock on the
Ohio River and a
highwayman on the
Natchez Trace. ==References==