Fort Clatsop: Difference between revisions
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'''Location:''' Located three-fourths of a mile south of the Oregon Coast Highway,<br>just west of the Lewis and Clark River in Clatsop County, Oregon. | '''Location:''' Located three-fourths of a mile south of the Oregon Coast Highway,<br>just west of the Lewis and Clark River in Clatsop County, Oregon. | ||
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{{FortID|ID=OR0045|Name={{PAGENAME}}}} | {{FortID|ID=OR0045|Name={{PAGENAME}}}} | ||
{{Visited|28 Apr 2017, 28 Jan 2007, 15 Feb 2006, 27 Aug 2005}} | {{Visited|13 Jul 2023, 28 Apr 2017, 28 Jan 2007, 15 Feb 2006, 27 Aug 2005}} | ||
==Picture Gallery== | ==Picture Gallery== |
Latest revision as of 19:46, 13 July 2023
History![]() The Corps built the original fort between 7 Dec 1805 and 30 Dec 1805 according to a plan that Clark had drawn on the back of his elk skin-covered journal. They named the fort after a neighboring tribe of friendly Indians. The site of Fort Canby, on the other side of the Columbia, is said to be the location where, on 15 Nov 1805, members of the Corps of Discovery first stepped into the breaking surf of the Pacific Ocean. The party left Fort Clatsop on 23 Mar 1806 and began the journey back east, abandoning the fort to the local Indian tribes.
Current StatusMust See! The fort was reconstructed in 1955 on a site that was thought to be close to the original site. It became Fort Clatsop National Memorial Park in 1958. In 1963 a visitor center was added and the park became a part of the Lewis & Clark National Historical Park in 2004. On 3 Oct 2005, the 1955 replica of the fort was destroyed by fire. The replica was rebuilt in 2006 and was reopened to the public on 9 Dec 2006.
See Also: Sources:
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Fortification ID:
Visited: 13 Jul 2023, 28 Apr 2017, 28 Jan 2007, 15 Feb 2006, 27 Aug 2005 Picture Gallery
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