At the turn of the 18th century, five young boys from Kentucky were playing on the banks of the Ohio river. Their boisterous games attracted the attention of groups of Pottawattamie and Kickapoo American Indians who were passing by. In an attack that followed, two of the boys were killed and the other three were taken captive.

One of the boys, Isaac Knight, was 13 years old at the time of the kidnapping. After two years and six months, during which he contracted a severe illness, he escaped from the encampment in Michigan where he was being held. He journeyed south to look for his family, who had, by then, moved to another settlement. The tired boy somehow made his way to this site and in 1795 was reunited with his family, who had long since believed he was dead.

Much later, as an adult, he relocated to Vanderburgh County in Indiana, and established a township that would later be named after him. He also published a book recounting his experiences and tracking his arduous escape and journey back home. A painting showing his capture can be seen at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science. A commemorative marker was placed at the location of his original grave site. It sits in a small garden in front of Snodgrass Floral Co. on Lincoln Avenue, just east of Green River Road.