Fort York (1): Difference between revisions
John Stanton (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
John Stanton (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
|} | |} | ||
--> | --> | ||
== [[Fort York]] History == | |||
Colonel [[John Graves Simcoe]] ordered the construction of a fortification at the current site of Fort York in 1793. His plan was to establish a naval base and to move the capital of Upper Canada from Niagara to Toronto renaming Toronto to York in the process. The fortification was built and the capital moved but the Lake Ontario Squadron was based in Kingston not in York. The initial fort was log built and was soon replaced with a new barracks for the garrison. | |||
== [[War of 1812]] (1812-1814) == | |||
In 1811 the fortification was rebuilt in anticipation of a conflict with the U.S. The conflict came to York on 27 Apr 1813 when the U.S. Army and Navy attacked the capital of Upper Canada. The British military commander Major General Sir [[Roger Sheaffe]] put up a stout defense but when he was forced to retreat from Fort York he blew up the powder magazine. The blast caught the Americans by surprised and some 250 were killed or wounded by the blast alone. The American field commander, Brigadier General [[Zebulon Pike]], was among those officers killed in the blast. American casualties from the attack numbered some 55 killed and 265 wounded. British casualties are in dispute but one source indicated that some 82 were killed, 43 wounded, 274 captured and seven missing (475 total). In the evacuation, the militia got left behind and they surrendered the city. | |||
There was anger over the losses and the Americans grew impatient over the time taken to ratify the terms of surrender. Two days of plundering the city and burning government government buildings resulted and they did not leave the city until 8 May 1813. The American depredations on the Capital of Upper Canada set the stage for the later British attack and burning of Washington DC. | |||
American forces made several more successful attacks on York but by August 1814 the Fort was rebuilt and garrisoned by enough soldiers to repel an attack on that date. | |||
== Current Status == | == Current Status == | ||
Must see! Fort York National Historic Site, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. | Must see! Fort York National Historic Site, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. | ||
Line 31: | Line 39: | ||
* [http://www.northamericanforts.com/Canada/on.html#york North American Forts - Fort York] | * [http://www.northamericanforts.com/Canada/on.html#york North American Forts - Fort York] | ||
* [http://www.fortyork.ca/history-of-fort-york.html Friends of Fort York - Fort York History] | * [http://www.fortyork.ca/history-of-fort-york.html Friends of Fort York - Fort York History] | ||
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_York Wikipedia - Fort York] | |||
{{Visited|No}} | {{Visited|No}} |
Revision as of 17:34, 2 March 2013
Fort York (1) (1793-1934) - A British colonial fort established in 1793 after the American Revolutionary War in present day Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Captured and destroyed by American forces in the War of 1812. Abandoned in 1934. Also known as Stanley Barracks.
Fort York History
Colonel John Graves Simcoe ordered the construction of a fortification at the current site of Fort York in 1793. His plan was to establish a naval base and to move the capital of Upper Canada from Niagara to Toronto renaming Toronto to York in the process. The fortification was built and the capital moved but the Lake Ontario Squadron was based in Kingston not in York. The initial fort was log built and was soon replaced with a new barracks for the garrison.
War of 1812 (1812-1814)
In 1811 the fortification was rebuilt in anticipation of a conflict with the U.S. The conflict came to York on 27 Apr 1813 when the U.S. Army and Navy attacked the capital of Upper Canada. The British military commander Major General Sir Roger Sheaffe put up a stout defense but when he was forced to retreat from Fort York he blew up the powder magazine. The blast caught the Americans by surprised and some 250 were killed or wounded by the blast alone. The American field commander, Brigadier General Zebulon Pike, was among those officers killed in the blast. American casualties from the attack numbered some 55 killed and 265 wounded. British casualties are in dispute but one source indicated that some 82 were killed, 43 wounded, 274 captured and seven missing (475 total). In the evacuation, the militia got left behind and they surrendered the city.
There was anger over the losses and the Americans grew impatient over the time taken to ratify the terms of surrender. Two days of plundering the city and burning government government buildings resulted and they did not leave the city until 8 May 1813. The American depredations on the Capital of Upper Canada set the stage for the later British attack and burning of Washington DC.
American forces made several more successful attacks on York but by August 1814 the Fort was rebuilt and garrisoned by enough soldiers to repel an attack on that date.
Current Status
Must see! Fort York National Historic Site, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
{"selectable":false,"width":"500"} |
Location: Fort York National Historic Site, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Maps & Images Lat: 43.639028 Long: -79.403333 |
Sources:
Links:
Visited: No
Fort York (1) Picture Gallery
Click on the picture to see a larger version. Contribute additional pictures - the more the better! |