Fort Holt: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1861-1862) - A Union [[U.S. Civil War]] Fort established in 1861 near Wickliffe, Ballard County, Kentucky. Named Fort Holt after [[Joseph Holt]] who was appointed Postmaster General in 1859, and Secretary of War in 1861. Abandoned in early 1862. | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1861-1862) - A Union [[U.S. Civil War]] Fort established in 1861 near Wickliffe, Ballard County, Kentucky. Named Fort Holt after [[Joseph Holt]] who was appointed Postmaster General in 1859, and Secretary of War in 1861. Abandoned in early 1862. | ||
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|width="50%"|[[Image:.jpg|350px|thumb|left|Fort Holt]] | |width="50%"|<!--[[Image:.jpg|350px|thumb|left|Fort Holt]]--> | ||
|width="50%"|[[Image:.jpg|350px|thumb|right|Fort Holt]] | |width="50%"|<!--[[Image:.jpg|350px|thumb|right|Fort Holt]]--> | ||
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|colspan="2"|[[ | |colspan="2"|[[File:Fort Holt Sketch.jpg|795px|thumb|center|Fort Holt Sketch, Harpers Weekly 1862.]] | ||
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== History == | == History == | ||
Established in Setember 1861 by Colonel [[John Cook]], with 20 companies from the 7th and 28th Volunteer Infantry along with 1 company of Dragoons, and 1 company of Artillery. The fort was located on the Kentucky side of the Ohio River at its confluence with the Mississippi River, opposite Cairo, Illinois. | Established in Setember 1861 by Colonel [[John Cook]], with 20 companies from the 7th and 28th Volunteer Infantry along with 1 company of Dragoons, and 1 company of Artillery. The fort was located on the Kentucky side of the Ohio River at its confluence with the Mississippi River, opposite Cairo, Illinois. |
Revision as of 21:21, 10 October 2017
HistoryEstablished in Setember 1861 by Colonel John Cook, with 20 companies from the 7th and 28th Volunteer Infantry along with 1 company of Dragoons, and 1 company of Artillery. The fort was located on the Kentucky side of the Ohio River at its confluence with the Mississippi River, opposite Cairo, Illinois. Fort Holt was a small earthen structure with a wooden palisade identified in the plan as a "Columbiad Battery" with mounts for two Columbiad cannons. A contemporary sketch in Harpers Weekly shows four mounted cannon facing the water side and two cannons facing the land side. The post was probably abandoned in January, 1862. Current StatusNo remains, the exact site is thought to be further inland than it was in 1862 with changes in the river course.
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