Fort Clinch (1): Difference between revisions

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Fort Clinch was put in caretaker status after the [[U.S. Civil War]] and never finished or completely armed.
Fort Clinch was put in caretaker status after the [[U.S. Civil War]] and never finished or completely armed.
== [[Endicott Period]] ==
== [[Endicott Period]] ==
[[Image:Fort Clinch2 8" Emp.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Endicott Period 8" Rifled Cannon Emplacement]]
Fort Clinch was re-garrisoned in early 1898 by Battery A, [[6th U.S. Artillery]] as a result of the [[Spanish American War]]. Some improvements and repairs were made but Fort Clinch did not have any of the heavy concrete batteries of the Endicott Period installed. A single, small, unnamed, [[Endicott Period]] battery was built along the northeast parapet for one 8" Rodman gun. The fort was only garrisoned for a short period in 1898 and the troops were removed in September 1898.
Fort Clinch was re-garrisoned in early 1898 by Battery A, [[6th U.S. Artillery]] as a result of the [[Spanish American War]]. Some improvements and repairs were made but Fort Clinch did not have any of the heavy concrete batteries of the Endicott Period installed. A single, small, unnamed, [[Endicott Period]] battery was built along the northeast parapet for one 8" Rodman gun. The fort was only garrisoned for a short period in 1898 and the troops were removed in September 1898.
{{Clr}}
== [[World War II]] ==
== [[World War II]] ==
Service during the [[World War II]] was limited to a communications and security facility.
Service during the [[World War II]] was limited to a communications and security facility.

Revision as of 16:57, 29 February 2012

Fort Clinch (1) (1847-1936) - Construction began in 1847 on this Third System masonry fort and continued until 1867. Named after General Duncan L. Clinch in November 1850.

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Fort Clinch Parade Showing the Barracks, Warehouse and the Officer Quarters Foundations
Fort Clinch 10" Rodman Cannons

Fort Clinch (1) History

Established to protect the entrance to Cumberland Sound and the mouths of the Amelia and St. Johns rivers.

Third System

Built as a masonry Third System fort with five sides and bastions located on each corner. Designed to mount 70 pieces of heavy ordnance, it was never fully armed.

U.S. Civil War

At the beginning of the U.S. Civil War the Florida Militia occupied Fort Clinch. Union forces reoccupied the fort in Mar 1862 after it was abandoned by Confederate forces. The fort was never shelled and sustained no damage during the U.S. Civil War.

Fort Clinch was put in caretaker status after the U.S. Civil War and never finished or completely armed.

Endicott Period

Endicott Period 8" Rifled Cannon Emplacement

Fort Clinch was re-garrisoned in early 1898 by Battery A, 6th U.S. Artillery as a result of the Spanish American War. Some improvements and repairs were made but Fort Clinch did not have any of the heavy concrete batteries of the Endicott Period installed. A single, small, unnamed, Endicott Period battery was built along the northeast parapet for one 8" Rodman gun. The fort was only garrisoned for a short period in 1898 and the troops were removed in September 1898.

World War II

Service during the World War II was limited to a communications and security facility.

Current Status

In 1935, the state of Florida purchased 256 acres which included the abandoned fort and developed one of Florida's first State Parks. The civilian Conservation Corps restored the fort in the 1930s. It was formally opened to the public in 1938. Ten U.S. Civil War period guns are mounted on period carriages and emplaced along the parapets as they would have been in that period.


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Location: Fort Clinch is on route A1A at the north end of Amelia Island, three miles north of Fernandina Beach, Nassau County, Florida.

Maps & Images

Lat: 30.704689 Long: -81.454461

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 158
  • 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 147-149

Links:

Visited: 17 Jan 2010

Fort Clinch (1) Picture Gallery

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