Fort Raglan: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1855-1856) - A [[Yakima War]] Fort established in 1855 in present day Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge, Thurston County, Washington. Named Fort Raglan after British commander [[Lord Raglan]]. | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1855-1856) - A [[Yakima War]] Fort established in 1855 in present-day Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge, Thurston County, Washington. Named Fort Raglan after the British commander [[Lord Raglan]], who ordered the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava in October 1854. The post was abandoned as a fortification in 1856 toward the end of the war. | ||
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Revision as of 19:10, 22 May 2019
HistoryEstablished in 1855 by Washington Territorial Volunteers who built a blockhouse located on the Nisqually River at Packard's Ferry on the Joel Myers land claim. The blockhouse guarded the ferry to keep the route open between the territorial capital at Olympia and Fort Steilacoom. This was a log house (some said a barn), very strongly built with a stockade, that stood on a Sand Spit, on the south side of the Nisqually River. Abandoned as a fortification in 1856 toward the end of the war. Current StatusArcheological remains only, site tentatively identified by land claim map and artifact recovery.
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