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{{PageHeader}}{{External|wikidata=Q5470788|wikipedia=Fort_Beauregard}}
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1862-1863) - A Confederate [[U.S. Civil War]] Fort established in 1862 along the Ouachita River near Harrisonburg, Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. Captured and destroyed in 1863.
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1862-1863, 1864) - A Confederate [[U.S. Civil War]] Fort established in 1862 along the Ouachita River near Harrisonburg, Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. Likely named after the first Confederate general officer, General [[P.G.T. Beauregard]], {{Cullum|942}}. Abandoned and destroyed in the face of an overwhelming Union force in 1863. Partially rebuilt in 1864 to stop Union gunboats but failing in this the Fort was again abandoned.
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|width="50%"|[[Image:.jpg|350px|thumb|right|Fort Beauregard (5)]]
|width="50%"|[[File:Ouachita River near Harrisonburg.jpeg|350px|thumb|right|Ouachita River near Harrisonburg, the town is across the river and the Fort is on the Hill behind the Town.]]
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== History ==
== History ==
Fort Beauregard was a Confederate enclosed casemated earthworks fortification situated on a hill behind Harrisonburg in Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. Fort Beauregard was one of four forts stretching for two miles below the town and more than a mile above, designed to protect Monroe, Louisiana from Federal gunboats coming up the Ouachita River. At the time of its capture in 1863, the fort was armed with four large 32-pounders, four 6-pounders brass cannons, three 3-inch rifled cannons, and one 12-pounder howitzer. The fort was planned and built under the supervision of Lt. Buhlow.
[[File:Fort Beauregard Center.jpeg|thumb|left|250px|Fort Beauregard Interior looking north.]]
Fort Beauregard was a Confederate enclosed casemated earthworks fortification situated on a 190' hill behind Harrisonburg in Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. This fort was one of four forts stretching for two miles below the town and more than a mile above, designed to protect Monroe, Louisiana from Federal gunboats coming up the Ouachita River. At the time of its capture in 1863, the fort was armed with four large 32-pounders, four 6-pounders brass cannons, three 3-inch rifled cannons, and one 12-pounder howitzer. The fort was planned and built under the supervision of Lt. [[Alphonse Buhlow]].
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[[File:Fort Beauregard Sign 1.jpeg|thumb|left|250px|Fort Beauregard Info Sign #1.]]
On 10 May 1863, four Union gunboats appeared on the river south of the fort and anchored within sight but out of range of the fort's guns. The Union flotilla under Commodore [[C.E. Woodworth]] demanded unconditional surrender, and when that was refused by the fort commander Lieutenant Colonel [[George W. Logan]], they began shelling the fort. At the end of the day, the gunboats withdrew but they returned the next day to continue the bombardment. After expending some 150 shells the only damage to the fort was to some parapets and the flotilla withdrew. Casualties in the fort included Lieutenant Carter who was mortally wounded by a large fragment of shell and three wounded enlisted members. Fire from the fort was described as most effective, striking the boats repeatedly and exploding rifled shells in their midst. Union losses were described by the Confederates as eight killed and thirty or forty wounded.
On 10 May 1863, four Union gunboats appeared on the river south of the fort and anchored within sight but out of range of the fort's guns. The Union flotilla under Commodore [[C.E. Woodworth]] demanded unconditional surrender, and when that was refused by the fort commander Lieutenant Colonel [[George W. Logan]], they began shelling the fort. At the end of the day, the gunboats withdrew but they returned the next day to continue the bombardment. After expending some 150 shells the only damage to the fort was to some parapets and the flotilla withdrew. Casualties in the fort included Lieutenant Carter who was mortally wounded by a large fragment of shell and three wounded enlisted members. Fire from the fort was described as most effective, striking the boats repeatedly and exploding rifled shells in their midst. Union losses were described by the Confederates as eight killed and thirty or forty wounded.
 
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[[File:Fort Beauregard Info Sign 2.jpeg|thumb|left|250px|Fort Beauregard Info Sign #2.]]
On 4 Sep 1863, a Union column led by Brigadier General [[Marcellus M. Crocker]] advanced on the fort but found that it had been evacuated that morning by the garrison under Lieutenant Colonel Logan. Working through the night, the Confederates had destroyed the casemates, supplies, and larger guns, and withdrew with their horses, mules, wagons, 3-inch guns, and the 12-pounder howitzer. As they left they set fire to what remained. Union troops entering the fort found it still burning and they continued the destruction, spiking the four 32-pounders and the two 6-pounders and taking two other 6-pounders with them. The name of this Fort Beauregard disappears from the Official Record after September 1863.
On 4 Sep 1863, a Union column led by Brigadier General [[Marcellus M. Crocker]] advanced on the fort but found that it had been evacuated that morning by the garrison under Lieutenant Colonel Logan. Working through the night, the Confederates had destroyed the casemates, supplies, and larger guns, and withdrew with their horses, mules, wagons, 3-inch guns, and the 12-pounder howitzer. As they left they set fire to what remained. Union troops entering the fort found it still burning and they continued the destruction, spiking the four 32-pounders and the two 6-pounders and taking two other 6-pounders with them. The name of this Fort Beauregard disappears from the Official Record after September 1863.


The loss of the Fort so weakened the Confederated defenses of the Ouachita Valley that Union forces occupied the valley in 1864 without opposition.
In 1864 Confederate authorities ordered that Fort Beauregard be repaired and reactivated but without the big 32-pounder guns. This left the fort with just the 3-inch rifled guns. The smaller guns were not effective enough to stop a Union floatilla from steaming by on their way to capture Monroe.


== Current Status ==
== Current Status ==
Roadside Marker.
[[File:Fort Beauregard Marker.jpeg|thumb|left|250px|Fort Beauregard Roadside Marker by the Courthouse.]]
Roadside Marker in town by the courthouse in Harrisonburg, Louisiana. The remains of the fort are located in the Fort Beauregard Historical Park aka Fort Beauregard Veteran's Memorial Park just about .25 miles north of Harrisonburg, Louisiana on Hwy 124.
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<googlemap version="0.9" lat="31.77118" lon="-91.82232" zoom="16" width="-500" height="-500" scale="yes" overview="yes" controls="large" icons="http://www.fortwiki.com/mapicons/icon{label}.png">
(F) 31.77118, -91.82232, Fort Beauregard (5)
(F) 31.77118, -91.82232, Fort Beauregard (5)
(1862-1863)
(1862-1863, 1864)
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|valign="top"|
|valign="top"|
'''Location:''' Harrisonburg, Catahoula Parish, Louisiana.
'''Location:''' Fort Beauregard Historical Park<br>aka Fort Beauregard Veteran's Memorial Park<br> just about .25 miles north of Harrisonburg, Louisiana<br>on Hwy 124 in Catahoula Parish, Louisiana.


{{Mapit-US-cityscale|31.77118|-91.82232}}
{{Mapit-US-cityscale|31.77118|-91.82232}}
* Elevation: ?'
* Elevation: 180'
|valign="top"|
|valign="top"|
<br>
'''GPS Locations:'''
'''GPS Locations:'''
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=31.77118|Lon=-91.82232}} Roadside Marker
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=31.77118|Lon=-91.82232}} Roadside Marker
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=31.77378|Lon=-91.82180}} Fort Beauregard Memorial Park
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=31.77378|Lon=-91.82180}} Fort Beauregard Memorial Park
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=31.77373|Lon=-91.82162}} Observation Tower
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=31.77431|Lon=-91.82076}} Battery Center
|}
|}


'''See Also:'''
'''See Also:'''
 
* [[Fort Buhlow]]
'''Sources:'''  
'''Sources:'''  
* {{Roberts}}, page 330.
* {{Roberts}}, page 330.
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'''Links:'''  
'''Links:'''  
* [https://www.northamericanforts.com/East/la.html#beau North American Forts - Fort Beauregard]
* [https://www.northamericanforts.com/East/la.html#beau North American Forts - Fort Beauregard]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Beauregard Wikipedia - Fort Beauregard]
* [http://rootsfromthebayou.blogspot.com/2014/02/the-civil-war-fort-beauregard-two-days.html The Civil War ~ Fort Beauregard, Two Days of Bombardment, May 10-11, 1863 - Official Report of Colonel George William Logan, on the Engagement Between the Federal Gunboats and Fort Beauregard, on the 10th and 11th of May, 1863.]


{{Visited|3 Nov 2020}}
{{Visited|3 Nov 2020}}

Latest revision as of 05:03, 26 February 2025

More information at Warlike and Wikipedia


Fort Beauregard (5) (1862-1863, 1864) - A Confederate U.S. Civil War Fort established in 1862 along the Ouachita River near Harrisonburg, Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. Likely named after the first Confederate general officer, General P.G.T. Beauregard, (Cullum 942). Abandoned and destroyed in the face of an overwhelming Union force in 1863. Partially rebuilt in 1864 to stop Union gunboats but failing in this the Fort was again abandoned.

Fort Beauregard Interior from the Observation Tower.
Ouachita River near Harrisonburg, the town is across the river and the Fort is on the Hill behind the Town.
Fort Beauregard Historical Park Entrance in 2020

History

Fort Beauregard Interior looking north.

Fort Beauregard was a Confederate enclosed casemated earthworks fortification situated on a 190' hill behind Harrisonburg in Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. This fort was one of four forts stretching for two miles below the town and more than a mile above, designed to protect Monroe, Louisiana from Federal gunboats coming up the Ouachita River. At the time of its capture in 1863, the fort was armed with four large 32-pounders, four 6-pounders brass cannons, three 3-inch rifled cannons, and one 12-pounder howitzer. The fort was planned and built under the supervision of Lt. Alphonse Buhlow.

Fort Beauregard Info Sign #1.

On 10 May 1863, four Union gunboats appeared on the river south of the fort and anchored within sight but out of range of the fort's guns. The Union flotilla under Commodore C.E. Woodworth demanded unconditional surrender, and when that was refused by the fort commander Lieutenant Colonel George W. Logan, they began shelling the fort. At the end of the day, the gunboats withdrew but they returned the next day to continue the bombardment. After expending some 150 shells the only damage to the fort was to some parapets and the flotilla withdrew. Casualties in the fort included Lieutenant Carter who was mortally wounded by a large fragment of shell and three wounded enlisted members. Fire from the fort was described as most effective, striking the boats repeatedly and exploding rifled shells in their midst. Union losses were described by the Confederates as eight killed and thirty or forty wounded.

Fort Beauregard Info Sign #2.

On 4 Sep 1863, a Union column led by Brigadier General Marcellus M. Crocker advanced on the fort but found that it had been evacuated that morning by the garrison under Lieutenant Colonel Logan. Working through the night, the Confederates had destroyed the casemates, supplies, and larger guns, and withdrew with their horses, mules, wagons, 3-inch guns, and the 12-pounder howitzer. As they left they set fire to what remained. Union troops entering the fort found it still burning and they continued the destruction, spiking the four 32-pounders and the two 6-pounders and taking two other 6-pounders with them. The name of this Fort Beauregard disappears from the Official Record after September 1863.

In 1864 Confederate authorities ordered that Fort Beauregard be repaired and reactivated but without the big 32-pounder guns. This left the fort with just the 3-inch rifled guns. The smaller guns were not effective enough to stop a Union floatilla from steaming by on their way to capture Monroe.

Current Status

Fort Beauregard Roadside Marker by the Courthouse.

Roadside Marker in town by the courthouse in Harrisonburg, Louisiana. The remains of the fort are located in the Fort Beauregard Historical Park aka Fort Beauregard Veteran's Memorial Park just about .25 miles north of Harrisonburg, Louisiana on Hwy 124.


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Location: Fort Beauregard Historical Park
aka Fort Beauregard Veteran's Memorial Park
just about .25 miles north of Harrisonburg, Louisiana
on Hwy 124 in Catahoula Parish, Louisiana.

Maps & Images

Lat: 31.77118 Long: -91.82232

GPS Locations:

See Also:

Sources:

  • Roberts, Robert B., Encyclopedia of Historic Forts: The Military, Pioneer, and Trading Posts of the United States, Macmillan, New York, 1988, 10th printing, ISBN 0-02-926880-X, page 330.
  • Mitcham, Samuel W. "Fort Beauregard, Louisiana: Confederate Strongpoint on the Ouachita." Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 22, no. 2 (1981): 183-87. Accessed November 5, 2020. JSTOR.

Links:

Visited: 3 Nov 2020