Fort Vengeance: Difference between revisions
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'''Links:''' | '''Links:''' | ||
* [https://www.northamericanforts.com/East/vt.html#vengeance North American Forts - Fort Vengeance] | * [https://www.northamericanforts.com/East/vt.html#vengeance North American Forts - Fort Vengeance] | ||
* [ | * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Vengeance_Monument_Site Wikipedia - Fort Vengeance Minument] | ||
* [https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/d5e1cdef-3a95-4c1d-a7f8-69ae0a654b2f NRHP - Fort Vengeance Monument Site] | * [https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/d5e1cdef-3a95-4c1d-a7f8-69ae0a654b2f NRHP - Fort Vengeance Monument Site] | ||
Revision as of 17:36, 22 March 2022
HistoryIn April 1780 the Board of War of independent Vermont directed Major Ebenezer Allen (a cousin of Ethan Allen) to choose a proper location for a fort "near the north line of Pittsford" and to construct that fort. Major Allen obeyed this order promptly, using the labor of a company of militia stationed in the town and local residents. Captain Hutchins' Company of Green Mountain Rangers arrived in Pittsford, Vermont in February 1780 and construction began in the spring The fort was first occupied in June and was completed in August 1780. The fort was to be built on the property of Caleb Hende Sr. located roughly a half-mile south of Pittsford's northern border. On 3 May 1780, Hendee agreed to allow Vermont to construct the fort on his property and to occupy it for one year. This lease was later extended for a second year. The new fort at Pittsford was ordered to be large enough to accommodate 150 men but the normal company assigned to the fort was 30 to 60. In times of alarm, additional militia units were called out to support soldiers already on duty. A detailed description of the fort, circa 1848 by Caleb Hendee, Jr. the eldest son of Caleb, Sr. is replicated below (from the NRHP)
The Hendee family returned to their farm about April 1782, as the second year's lease with Vermont expired and troops were withdrawn from the fort. Current StatusA monument honoring Fort Vengeance and the fallen soldier stands within the boundaries of the Fort Vengeance Monument site. The monument is a squat obelisk standing atop two base blocks, cut from local marble. In 1990 the Fort Vengeance Monument Site was recorded as Site VT-RU-216 by the Vermont Division of Historic Preservation. The Division relied upon the Fort Vengeance Monument and A.M. Caverly's 1872 account of the fort to record its location.
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