Charles le Moyne, Sieur de Longueil wrote of it to the minister of colonial affairs in France, and noted that Chief Coldfoot and his sons were dead, as was "Le Gris, Chief of the Tepicons," who was "well disposed towards the French."
Other survivors of the epidemic founded a Pepikokia village on the east side of the St. Joseph River, not far from Kekionga.
More information about Le Gris comes from the diary of Henry Hay, an English-Canadian trader from Detroit who spent three months with the Miami.
Le Gris and Pacanne accompanied British Lt-Governor Henry Hamilton on his journey down the Wabash River to capture Vincennes, although when George Rogers Clark came in February 1779, Le Gris waited outside the town to await the outcome of the battle.
The Americans finally gained a victory in 1794 when General Anthony Wayne led his Legion of the United States at the Battle of Fallen Timbers.