Fort Assinniboine (1): Difference between revisions

From FortWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
John Stanton (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
John Stanton (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{SocialNetworks}}
{{SocialNetworks}}
'''{{PAGENAME}} (1879-1911)''' - A U.S. Army post established in 1879 by Colonel [[Thomas H. Ruger]], [[18th U.S. Infantry]] and named for the Assinniboine Indian Tribe. Abandoned in 1911.
'''{{PAGENAME}} (1879-1911)''' - A U.S. Army post established in 1879 by Colonel [[Thomas H. Ruger]], [[18th U.S. Infantry]] and named for the Assinniboine Indian Tribe. Abandoned in 1911.
{{Clr}}
{|{{FWpicframe}}
[[Image:Fort AssiniBoine 1908.jpg|500px|thumb|left|Fort AssiniBoine Plan 1908]]
|- valign="top"
<!-- Uncomment for images <======================
|width="50%"|[[Image:.jpg|300px|thumb|left|ttttt fffff]]
[[Image:Image2.jpg|thumb|435px|right|<<Image 2 Caption>>]]
|width="50%"|[[Image:.jpg|300px|thumb|right|ttttt fffff]]
-->
|-
{{Clr}}
|colspan="2"|[[Image:.jpg|795px|thumb|center|ttttt fffff]]
|-
|colspan="2"|[[Image:.jpg|795px|thumb|center|ttttt fffff]]
|}
=={{PAGENAME}} History==
=={{PAGENAME}} History==
[[Image:Fort AssiniBoine 1908.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Fort Assinniboine Plan 1908]]
Established on 9 May 1879 by Colonel [[Thomas H. Ruger]], [[18th U.S. Infantry]], to prevent the Sioux Chief [[Sitting Bull]] from returning to the U.S. from Canada and to control the local Indian population.
Established on 9 May 1879 by Colonel [[Thomas H. Ruger]], [[18th U.S. Infantry]], to prevent the Sioux Chief [[Sitting Bull]] from returning to the U.S. from Canada and to control the local Indian population.


Line 15: Line 19:


Abandoned in 1911.
Abandoned in 1911.
{{Clr}}
==Current Status==
==Current Status==
The Fort site is now the home of Northern Agricultural Research Center and is not open to individual visitors. The Fort Assinniboine Preservation Association does conduct regular guided tours during the summer months.
The Fort site is now the home of Northern Agricultural Research Center and is not open to individual visitors. The Fort Assinniboine Preservation Association does conduct regular guided tours during the summer months.

Revision as of 18:09, 24 September 2013

Fort Assinniboine (1) (1879-1911) - A U.S. Army post established in 1879 by Colonel Thomas H. Ruger, 18th U.S. Infantry and named for the Assinniboine Indian Tribe. Abandoned in 1911.

File:.jpg
ttttt fffff
File:.jpg
ttttt fffff
File:.jpg
ttttt fffff
File:.jpg
ttttt fffff

Fort Assinniboine (1) History

Fort Assinniboine Plan 1908

Established on 9 May 1879 by Colonel Thomas H. Ruger, 18th U.S. Infantry, to prevent the Sioux Chief Sitting Bull from returning to the U.S. from Canada and to control the local Indian population.

Fort Assinniboine was the largest fort constructed in Montana. It had long rows of brick buildings and barracks with castle like towers at the corners surrounding a very large parade ground. At it's peak the fort had 104 buildings mostly of brick and a complement of 36 officers and 453 non-commissioned officers and enlisted men.

The most famous officer to serve at the Fort was John J. (Black-Jack) Pershing who arrived in 1896 with the 10th U.S. Cavalry, a black regiment.

Abandoned in 1911.


Current Status

The Fort site is now the home of Northern Agricultural Research Center and is not open to individual visitors. The Fort Assinniboine Preservation Association does conduct regular guided tours during the summer months.

{"selectable":false,"width":"500"}

Location: 7 miles south of Havre, Hill County, Montana, on Hwy 87.

Maps & Images

Lat: 48.5006 Long: -109.7930

Sources:

Links:

Visited: No

Fort Assinniboine (1) Picture Gallery

Click on the picture to see a larger version. Contribute additional pictures - the more the better!