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| [[Category:All]]
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| [[Category:Oregon Forts]]
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| [[Category:Hudson's Bay Company Forts]]
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| [[Category:Farmland]]
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| [[Category:Private Property]]
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| [[Image:FortUmpquaMarker.jpg|200px|thumb|left|{{PAGENAME}} Marker]]
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| '''{{PAGENAME}} (1836-1854)''' - In 1836, [[:Category:Hudson's Bay Company Forts|Hudson’s Bay Company]] established Fort Umpqua near the town of Elkton. Many Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw Indians traded hides for goods there.
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| The site for the fort was selected by [[Jean Baptiste Gagnier]] sometime in 1835. It was placed across from the intersection of Elk Creek and the Umpqua River on a known travel route for [[:Category:Hudson's Bay Company Forts|Hudson’s Bay Company]] traders. There was also an Indian trail from Coos River to Ash Valley and on to the Umpqua River, and upriver to the Fort.
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| The fort itself was a 12 ' high stockade with bastions at diagonal corners. The 90' square enclosed a dwelling for Superintendent Jean Baptiste Gagnier and his Umpqua family, a range of stores, a few apple trees and quarters for 6 employees. Outside was a barn and stable. Eighty fenced acres were under cultivation.
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| In 1840 the post was described by Gustavus Hines as consisting of "...three or four little log huts built on three sides of a square, and covered with cedar bark. These huts are stockaded by poles set in the ground, and rising 12 feet high; and at two opposite corners of the enclosure thus formed, there are two bastions commanding all sides of the fort, and containing means for the defense of the establishment against the attacks of the Indians...". The fort was twice besieged by Indians.
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| The fort was destroyed by a fire on 15 Nov 1851 while the commander was at Fort Vancouver. The [[:Category:Hudson's Bay Company Forts|Hudson’s Bay Company]] kept the operaton going for another three years without the protection of the fort but the post closed in 1854 as the fur trade diminished.
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| {{Clr}}
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| '''Fort Commanders (Chief Traders)'''
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| * 1836 - John McLeod, Jr.
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| * 1837 - Michel LaFramboise
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| * 1838 - James Birnie
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| * 1839-42 - [[Jean Baptiste Gagnier]]
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| * 1843-44 - Paul Fraser
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| * 1845 - William McBean
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| * 1846-50 - Jean Baptiste Gagnier
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| * 1851-52 - Johnson E. King
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| * 1853-54 - Robert Todd
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| {{Clr}}
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| ----
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| {|
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| <gmap lat="43.632596" long="-123.570614" zoom="4" helper="off" width="500" height="400" type="hybrid">
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| points:
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| 43.632596|-123.570614|{{PAGENAME}} (1836-1854)<br>Original location
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| 43.641728|-123.584518|{{PAGENAME}} (1836-1854)<br>Location of the Restoration
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| </gmap>
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| |valign="top"|
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| '''Location:'''
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| {{Mapit-US-cityscale|43.632596|-123.570614}}
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| * Elevation:
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| |}
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| '''Sources:'''
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| * Stephen Dow Beckham, ''"Land of the Umpqua: A History of Douglas County, Oregon"'', 1986, Commissioners of Douglas County. ISBN 0-961-6574-0-5
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| '''Links:'''
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| * [http://www.ctclusi.org/cultural_historical.asp Indian History]
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| * [http://www.fortumpqua.com/ Web Site]
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| '''Publications:'''
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| * Jerry Winterbotham, ''"Umpqua The Lost County of Oregon"'', ASIN: B0006P7PLQ
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| '''Visited:''' 15 Jul 2006
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| ==Picture Gallery==
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| <gallery>
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| Image:Elkton Oregon Sign.jpg|Elkton, Oregon Welcome Sign, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Original Site - 3.jpg|Original Site of Fort Umpqua from across the Umpqua River at the Bridge, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Original Site - 4.jpg|Umpqua River Upstream from the Bridge, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Original Site - 1.jpg|Rear of the Original Fort Umpqua Site from Mehl Creek Road, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Original Site - 2.jpg|Front of the Original Fort Umpqua Site from Mehl Creek Road, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Restoration Site - 1.jpg|Fort Umpqua Restoration Site looking toward the River, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Restoration Site - 3.jpg|Fort Umpqua Restoration Site looking toward State Highway 38, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Restoration Site - 4.jpg|Fort Umpqua Restoration Site looking toward the school, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| Image:Fort Umpqua (1) Restoration Docs - 1.jpg|Drawing of the proposed restoration, Jul 2006, J Stanton
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| </gallery>
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