Fort Hamilton (1): Difference between revisions
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|width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Hamilton Bain LOC 01938v.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Rear of 10" Battery, 1908]] | |width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Hamilton Bain LOC 01938v.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Rear of 10" Battery, 1908]] | ||
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== {{PAGENAME}} History == | == {{PAGENAME}} History == |
Revision as of 13:44, 21 July 2011
Fort Hamilton (1) (1825-Current) - Originally designed as a Third System Coastal Defense fort constructed 1825-1831 to protect the New York Narrows from the Brooklyn side of the river in Kings County, New York. Named after Alexander Hamilton, first Secretary of the U.S. Treasury. Active military post.
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Fort Hamilton (1) History
Part of the Harbor Defense of Southern New York. Originally established to protect the Narrows entrance to New York Harbor.
Fort Hamilton was built as a small dual purpose fort providing seaward and landward defenses at the New York Narrows, the site of present day Verrazano Narrows Bridge. Construction was started 11 Jun 1825 with the laying of the cornerstone by the French engineer, Simon Bernard. The Fort was completed in 1831 and first garrisoned 1 Nov 1831 by Battery F, 4th U.S. Artillery.
Some distinguished military men served at the Fort including Capt. Robert E. Lee, post engineer from 1841 to 1846 and Capt. Abner Doubleday, post commander in 1861.
U.S. Civil War (1861-1865)
Fort Hamilton's garrison expanded during the U.S. Civil War and in 1863 it was called upon to help put down the New York City draft riots.
Endicott Period (1890-1910)
Between 1893 and 1905 eleven reinforced concrete Endicott Period gun batteries were built on the Fort Hamilton reservation. In June of 1908 the batteries of Fort Hamilton, Fort Wadsworth, Fort Schuyler (1) and Fort Hancock (2) participated in a mock battle against an invading force that saw most of the gun batteries firing at towed targets with reduced charges. The first day of the exercise saw the batteries firing full charges for calibration of the weapons. The Regular Army Coast Artillery units were paired up with National Guard units to maximize the training experience. In addition to the damage done to on-post and off-post buildings and property caused by concussion, two members of the 9th Coast Artillery were killed by "blowback" from one of the guns of Battery Dix at Fort Wadsworth. The pictures above and those in the gallery below show Fort Hamilton's participation in that event.
Battery Click on Battery links below |
No. | Caliber | Type Mount | Service Years | Notes |
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Battery Piper | 8 | 12" | Mortar | 1901-1942 | |
Battery Harvey Brown | 2 | 12" | Disappearing | 1902-19?? | |
Battery Doubleday | 2 | 12" | Disappearing | 1900-1943 | |
Battery Neary | 2 | 12" | Barbette | 1900-1937 | |
Battery Gillmore | 4 | 10" | Disappearing | 1899-1942 | Orig 7 Guns, 3 designated as Spear |
Battery Spear | 3 | 10" | Disappearing | 1898-1917 | |
Battery Burke | 4 | 6" | Pedestal | 1903-1917 | 2 guns to Fort Tilden, Battery Fergusson |
Battery Livingston (2) | 2 | 6" | Disappearing | 1905-1920? | Guns to West Point |
Battery Livingston (2) | 2 | 6" | Pedestal | 1905-1948 | |
Battery Johnston | 2 | 6" | Pedestal | 1902-1943 | |
Battery Mendenhall | 4 | 6" | Disappearing | 1905-1917 | |
Battery Griffin | 2 | 4.7" | Pedestal | 1899-1913 | British Armstrong Guns |
Battery Griffin | 2 | 3" | Masking Parapet | 1902-1920 | |
Battery Griffin | 2 | 3" | Pedestal | 1903-1946 | |
Source: CDSG |

World War I (1917-1918)
During World War I Fort Hamilton was a processing center for hundreds of thousands of American troops shipping out to France.
World War II (1941-1945)
Battery Click on Battery links below |
No. | Caliber | Type Mount | Service Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Battery AMTB 18 - Norton Point | 4 | 3" | Fixed Pedestal | 1943-1943-1943-1946 | Norton Point Guns & carriages from Fort Wadsworth, Battery Catlin |
Battery AMTB 19 - Norton Point | 2 2 |
90mm 90mm |
Fixed Pedestal Mobile |
1943-1943-1943-1946 | Norton Point |
Source: CDSG |
During World War II Fort Hamilton served as a processed center for 3 million troops headed for Europe. At the end of the war it processed and discharged the returning veterans. After the war the building of the Verrazano Bridge in 1959 resulted in the destruction of the parade ground and most the brick barracks.
Current Status
Fort Hamilton is an active duty Army post with 5000 full time active duty personnel serving 126 Army Reserve units, 100,000 military retirees and numerous Department of the Defense agencies throughout the greater New York City metropolitan area.
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Location: East side of the Verrazano Narrows at the base of the Verrazano Bridge, Kings County, New York. Maps & Images Lat: 40.6086584 Long: -74.0325308 |
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 557
- Weaver, John R. II, A Legacy in Brick and Stone: America Coastal Defense Forts of the Third System, Redoubt Press, McLean, 2001, First Printing, ISBN 1-57510-069-X, page 111-113
Links:
Visited: No
Fort Hamilton (1) Picture Gallery
Click on the picture to see a larger version. Contribute additional pictures - the more the better! |
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Lt. Col. Henry H. Ludlow, Fort Commander, 17 Jun 1908
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Observation Tower
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Firing 10" Gun
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Loading 12" Gun
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Cleaning 12" Gun
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Lined up for Mess
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Observations Tower(s)