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Bill Thayer (talk | contribs) Removed item, repeated mistake in Cullum, per your e‑mail 20 Nov 16. |
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{{FortsWPTList|Fort=Eaton's Fort|State=TN|Dates=1776|Mentions=1|Notes=Not completely sure it was a fort, but at least it was something like one, and a battle was fought there in 1776, mentioned just once on my site, and in passing. See [http://gaz.jrshelby.com/eatons-fort.htm], [http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~gtusa/usa/tn.htm], etc.}} | {{FortsWPTList|Fort=Eaton's Fort|State=TN|Dates=1776|Mentions=1|Notes=Not completely sure it was a fort, but at least it was something like one, and a battle was fought there in 1776, mentioned just once on my site, and in passing. See [http://gaz.jrshelby.com/eatons-fort.htm], [http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~gtusa/usa/tn.htm], etc.}} | ||
{{FortsWPTList|Fort=Fort Caillou|State=LA?|Dates=1861|Mentions=2|Notes=Confederate (or Confederate-occupied), one of a group of forts evacuated by the Confederacy, mentioned by Kendall in [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/America/United_States/Louisiana/New_Orleans/_Texts/KENHNO/15*.html#The_Forts Chapter 15] and [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/America/United_States/Louisiana/New_Orleans/_Texts/KENHNO/16*.html#evacuation_of_the_forts Chapter 16].}} | {{FortsWPTList|Fort=Fort Caillou|State=LA?|Dates=1861|Mentions=2|Notes=Confederate (or Confederate-occupied), one of a group of forts evacuated by the Confederacy, mentioned by Kendall in [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/America/United_States/Louisiana/New_Orleans/_Texts/KENHNO/15*.html#The_Forts Chapter 15] and [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/America/United_States/Louisiana/New_Orleans/_Texts/KENHNO/16*.html#evacuation_of_the_forts Chapter 16].}} | ||
Revision as of 06:14, 25 February 2017
| Fort | State | Dates | Mentions | Notes
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deshler's Fort | PA | 1 | A fortified house rather than a fort strictly speaking, but referred to as such in many sources, including at least one on my own site. A solid account is given in Report of the Commission to Locate the Site of the Frontier Forts of Pennsylvania, as transcribed on this USGenWeb page. | |
| Eaton's Fort | TN | 1776 | 1 | Not completely sure it was a fort, but at least it was something like one, and a battle was fought there in 1776, mentioned just once on my site, and in passing. See [1], [2], etc. |
| Fort Caillou | LA? | 1861 | 2 | Confederate (or Confederate-occupied), one of a group of forts evacuated by the Confederacy, mentioned by Kendall in Chapter 15 and Chapter 16. |
| Fort Caldwell | KS | 1885 | 1 | (Cullum 2535). Sparse references online, but including in printed books. |
| Fort Columbus (2) | KY or IL | 1 | Freeman writes: "The newspapers that Lee read on his arrival in Richmond contained the gloomy intelligence that Fort Columbus, the advanced Confederate position on the Mississippi, thirty miles south of the confluence of the Ohio, had been abandoned by (Lee's) old West Point friend, Leonidas Polk" | |
| Fort Des Prairies | ??? | ??? | 1 | Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Fort Gelaspy | IA | 1805 | 1 | On my site: [3]. Probably a Frenchified spelling of Gillespie or Gillaspie. There is some doubt as to whether Pike actually saw this fort, see [4] |
| Fort Graham (2) | NC | 1 | In (Cullum 1994) — occurring just before he was posted to another fort in North Carolina, so not likely to be a mistake for the fort in Texas. Poking around online for it, I couldn't find much — except a "GRAHAM's Fort" in North Carolina, which I don't think is it (Revolutionary War), but it's not on FW either, so I'll add it to the pot as well: see this page at NCMarkers.Com. | |
| Fort Harrison (6) | NB | 1896-1898 | 1 | (Cullum 3432) |
| Fort Hatteras | NC | 1861-1862 | 1 | (Cullum 902) |
| Fort Henry (10) | TN | 1793 | 1 | Not the same as Fort Henry (5); this one is mentioned by John Sevier in his diary in 1793, as follows (in toto): "Camp Henry, Fort 24 October 1793." |
| Fort Holt | KY | 1862 | 1 | ("organizing the defenses of the Mississippi River" in 1862) — but it's Cullum writing his own entry (Cullum 709), so it's gotta be right. |
| Fort Horseshoe | ??? | ??? | 1 | Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Fort Howard (4) | NM | 1 | Cullum, (Cullum 789). See also possibly Camp Howard (IT), below under Camps. | |
| Fort Howard (5) | ID | 1879 | 1 | (Cullum 2074), date 1879. North American Forts calls it a Camp: actually has 3 of them all in Idaho. |
| Fort Jonquière | ??? | ??? | 1 | Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Fort Kearny (6) | NM or AZ | 1859 | 1 | (Cullum 917) |
| Fort Lacorne | ??? | ??? | 1 | Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Fort Lexington | MO | 1861+ | 1 | a Federal fort captured by the Confederates in 1861 or maybe 1862, called an important victory. Appears on my site once so far, (Cullum 2086), year 1866, characterized as "Ft. Lexington, Missouri River" |
| Fort Matilda | ON | 1813 | 1 | in (Cullum 79) |
| Fort McIntosh (3) | PA | 1778 | 1 | Thwaites annotates a passage of Chapter 9 of Cuming's Tour to the West, referring to Beaver, PA, as follows: "The present town of Beaver was laid out in 1792, and eight years later made the county town for the newly-erected Beaver County. Fort McIntosh was a Revolutionary post erected (1778) by General Lachlin McIntosh, who had been chosen to succeed General Hand at Fort Pitt. It was the first military post in the Indian territory beyond the Allegheny and Ohio rivers. An important Indian treaty was held at this place in 1784; but four years later the fort was demolished, the erection of lower posts on the Ohio having rendered it superfluous." |
| Fort Rocky Mountain | ??? | ??? | 1 | Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Fort St. Joseph (1) | LA | 1700's | 2 | There were two Fort St. Joseph near each other, this one at Pointe Coupée, and one elsewhere: see LHQ Vol. I No. 4 p314. |
| Fort St. Joseph (2) | LA | 1700's | 1 | There were two Fort St. Joseph near each other, this one; and the other at Pointe Coupée: see LHQ Vol. I No. 4 p314. |
| Fort Stephenson (2) | IA? | 1800s | 2 | early 19c. Mentioned in at least 2 onsite books on Iowa history. |
| Fort Unalaska | ? | 1700s | 2 | Two very incidental bare mentions in Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Fort Vauligny | ??? | 1700s | 1 | Mentioned in passing in Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Fort Waco | TX | 1870 | 1 | (Cullum 1845). |
| Fort Wade (2) | VA | 1861-1865 | 2 | Vol. 4, Ch. 26, he is made to point to the nearby ramparts of Fort Wade in talking with someone after the war, somewhere near Manassas. During the war itself, Freeman has him pointing to it too:Vol. 2, Ch. 24. |
| Ish's Fort | ??? | ??? | 1 | John Sevier's Journal, 24 Oct 1793. |
| Lafleur's Fort | ??? | ??? | 1 | Wade's Mackenzie of Canada. |
| Mission Santa Catalina | GA? | 1670 | 1 | NPS booklet on Castillo San Marcos: "In 1670, a vessel bound for Charleston, mistakenly put in at Santa Catalina Mission, the Spanish post near the Savannah River…" |
| Nashville Ordnance Depot | TN | 1865 | 1 | Temporary depot, according to this webpage out there, discontinued sometime after 1865. (Cullum 2008) was its commander June 30, 1865, to May 26, 1866. |
| Omaha Ordnance Depot | NB | 1872-1895 | 3 | in (Cullum 2035) • (Cullum 2372) • (Cullum 2942) |
| Queen's Fort (3) | RI | 1 | Not the one you have, but a ruin near Wickford, RI. The barest remnants, but it's still a fort, and of some historical interest: I even have a photograph of bits of it onsite, such as it is: George Ellis & John Morris, King Philip's War • Chapter 9 | |
| Ralston Fort | PA | 1 | also called BROWN'S FORT. A solid account is given in Report of the Commission to Locate the Site of the Frontier Forts of Pennsylvania, as transcribed on this USGenWeb page.
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