Indians believed to be behind mans disappearance

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In 1774, Logan served as an officer in a militia unit led by his brother Benjamin. His unit arrived too late to participate in the battle, but was able to accompany him during his invasion of the Shawnee lands beyond the Ohio River.

Logan joined the local militia in several excursions against the Indians. During one engagement, the forefinger of Logan's right hand was severed by a bullet. In August 1778, Logan led an unauthorized expedition against the Shawnee known as the Paint Creek Expedition. The party engaged a small detachment of Shawnees with indecisive results before retreating in a small swamp bottom North of modern day Portsmouth, OH.

Trigg and Todd's party had been soundly defeated at the battle. Trigg and Todd, along with two majors, five captains, and five lieutenants were among the casualties. The combined force returned to the battlefield, but the Indian forces had already returned north of the Ohio River, and the men returned to their homes. In November, John Logan was among the men led on a retaliatory mission that destroyed the Indian settlements.

Logan was commissioned by the governor as colonel to replace Stephen Trigg on July 22, 1783, although he had already been functioning in that capacity for three months. In October 1785, Logan and twenty-two militiamen recovered property and prisoners from an Indian raiding party that had attacked several families. He again joined an expedition against the Shawnee in October 1786, but later mysteriously disappeared after a Shawnee retaliatory attack in the same small Ohio swamp that left only Logan unaccounted for.

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