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[[Image:Fort Williams Plan.jpg|thumb|left|795px|Fort Williams Plan 1935]]
[[Image:Fort Williams Plan.jpg|thumb|left|795px|Fort Williams Plan 1935]]
[[Image:Fort Williams Aerial View.jpg|left|795px|Fort Williams Aerial View]]
[[Image:Fort Williams Aerial View.jpg|thumb|left|795px|Fort Williams Aerial View]]
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Revision as of 16:50, 3 June 2011

Fort Williams (1) (1899-1963) - An Endicott Period Coastal Fort first established in 1899 on the site of a previous fortification known as the Battery at Portland Head. Located on Portland Head, Cumberland County, Maine. Named Fort Williams in G.O. 71, 13 Apr 1899, after Bvt. Major General Seth Williams, Assistant Adjutant General of the Union Army of the Potomac during the U.S. Civil War. Abandoned in 1963.

Fort Williams 1902 Commanding officer Quarters
Fort Williams 1911 Guard House, 40 Prisoner Capacity
Fort Williams 1902 Barracks 114 Men

Endicott Period

Part of the Harbor Defense of Portland, Maine.

Land acquisition for the military reservation took place between 1872 and 1903 resulting in a military post totaling 90.45 acres. Construction began on 1 Jun 1873 at Portland Head on a battery known as the Battery at Portland Head.

Endicott Period gun battery construction on Fort Williams began in 1893 on Battery DeHart and continued until the last of the six batteries was accepted for service 1906. Four of the batteries used disappearing carriages to hide the guns after firing while two used fixed pedestal mounts.

Post construction began in 1898 on what was initially a small two company coastal artillery post. Between 1898 and 1904, four sets of brick married officer quarters, two brick enlisted barracks, three sets of brick NCO quarters, a hospital, and a post exchange were among the buildings constructed for the first first phase. A second building phase occurred between 1909 and 1911, it expanded the post to house seven companies of coast artillery and a band. Two new brick enlisted barracks were added, one of which was a double barracks. A band barracks had been added in 1906. Three sets of NCO quarters and five sets of officer quarters were added along with an admin building and bachelor officers quarters. By the end of 1911, the second building phase was complete.

Fort Williams (1) Endicott Period Battery (edit list)
Battery
Click on Battery links below
No. Caliber Type Mount Service Years Battery Cost Notes
Battery Blair 2 12" Disappearing 1901-1903-1903-1943 $ 126,845
Battery Sullivan 3 10" Disappearing 1894-1898-1898-1932 $ 107,063 Guns Removed 1918
Guns Replaced 1919
Battery DeHart 2 10" Disappearing 1893-1898-1898-1942 $ 106,757 Guns Dismounted 1918
Guns Remounted 1918
Battery Garesche 2 6" Disappearing 1904-1906-1906-1917 $ 48,991 One gun
to France
Battery Hobart 1 6" Armstrong 1898-1898-1900-1913 $ 6,545 Gun & Carriage
to Hawaii
Battery Keyes 2 3" Pedestal 1903-1905-1906-1945 $ 16,893
Source: CDSG


World War I


Fort Williams Plan 1935
Fort Williams Aerial View


World War II


Fort Williams World War II Battery (edit list)
Battery
Click on Battery links below
No. Caliber Type Mount Service Years Battery Cost Notes
Battery AMTB 961 2
2
90mm
90mm
AMTB Fixed
Mobile
1943-1943-1943-1946 $ 10,921
Source: CDSG
Fort Williams WWII Plan 1945


Cold War

Current Status

Part of Fort Williams Park, Cape Elizabeth, Cumberland County, Maine.

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Location: Fort Williams Park, Cape Elizabeth, Cumberland County, Maine.

Maps & Images

Lat: 43.6225834 Long: -70.2106029

Sources:

  • Roberts, Robert B., Encyclopedia of Historic Forts: The Military, Pioneer, and Trading Posts of the United States, Macmillan, New York, 1988, 10th printing, ISBN 0-02-926880-X, page 374
  • U.S.Army, Supplement to the Harbor Defense Project of Portland, Maine, (HDPB-AN-45), 11 Apr 1945, CDSG

Links:

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Fort Williams (1) Picture Gallery

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