On July 18, 1694, Ann Jenkins and 48 of her neighbors were taken captive. A year later, June 11, 1695 she gave testimony in the trial of the Indian Chief Bomazeen in Boston. Her deposition follows:    

Ann Jenkins, of full age, Testifieth and saith, that at Oyster River, on the eighteenth of July last past, in the morning about the dawning of the day my husband being up went out of the dore, and presently returning cried to me and our children to run for our lives, for the Indians had beset the town: whereupon my husband and myself fled with our children into our corne field, and at our entrance into the field, Bomazeen, whouume I have seen since I came out of captivity in the prison, came towards us and about ten Indians more: and the sd Bomazeen then shot at my husband and shote him down, ran to him and struck him three blows on the head with a hatchet, scalped him and run him three times with a bayonet. I also saw the said Bomazeen knock one of my children on the head and tooke of her scalp and then put the child into her father's armes; and then stabbed the breast. And Bomazeen also then killed my husband's grandmother and scalped her, and then led me up to a house and plundered it and then set it on fire and carried me and my three children into captivity, together with the rest of our neighbors, whose lives were spared, being at first forty nine: but in one miles goeing, or thereabouts, they killed three children, so there remained forty six captives.

Ann was Stephen's second wife. Azariah Jenkins, Ann and Stephen's only child, was the daughter killed by Bomazeen. The other children were from Stephen's first marriage.

 

Full text and description can be found in several places, including:

The New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Vol 18, For the Year 1864, p. 164.

Old Eliot: A Monthly Magazine of the History and Biography of the Upper Parish of Kittery, now Eliot, 1901