Fort Harrison (1): Difference between revisions

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Capt. [[Zachary Taylor]] was in command when the [[War of 1812]] began. A force of 600 Miami, Potawatomi, Kickapoo and Winnebago warriors attacked Fort Harrison on 4 Sep 1812. Captain Taylor had only 15 soldiers (5 of whom were sick) and the help of several civilians to defend the fort. Early on September 4, an Indian warrior crawled up and set the barracks on fire. This set the few defenders into a panic and the Indian warriors began firing upon the fort. Taylor ordered the fort's surgeon and a handful of defenders to control the fire. The remaining few of the garrison returned the fire of the Indians so fiercely that they were able to hold off the attack. The Indian force withdrew later that day and when reinforcements arrived from Vincennes. For his services at Fort Harrison, Capt. [[Zachary Taylor]] received a brevet promotion to major.
Capt. [[Zachary Taylor]] was in command when the [[War of 1812]] began. A force of 600 Miami, Potawatomi, Kickapoo and Winnebago warriors attacked Fort Harrison on 4 Sep 1812. Captain Taylor had only 15 soldiers (5 of whom were sick) and the help of several civilians to defend the fort. Early on September 4, an Indian warrior crawled up and set the barracks on fire. This set the few defenders into a panic and the Indian warriors began firing upon the fort. Taylor ordered the fort's surgeon and a handful of defenders to control the fire. The remaining few of the garrison returned the fire of the Indians so fiercely that they were able to hold off the attack. The Indian force withdrew later that day and when reinforcements arrived from Vincennes. For his services at Fort Harrison, Capt. [[Zachary Taylor]] received a brevet promotion to major.


{{FtHarrison1Cmdrs}}
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'''Commandants at Fort Harrison'''
'''Commandants at Fort Harrison'''
* Lt. Col. [[James Miller]], 31 Oct 1811 - 14 Nov 1811
* Lt. Col. [[James Miller]], 31 Oct 1811 - 14 Nov 1811
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* Maj. [[John T. Chunn]], May 1816 - 4 Jul 1817
* Maj. [[John T. Chunn]], May 1816 - 4 Jul 1817
* Maj. [[Robert Sturges]], 4 Jul 1817 - 10 Feb 1818
* Maj. [[Robert Sturges]], 4 Jul 1817 - 10 Feb 1818
 
-->
== Current Status ==
== Current Status ==



Revision as of 11:00, 9 November 2013

Fort Harrison (1811-1818) - Constructed in 1811 to protect Vincennes, the capitol of the Indiana Territory and named after General William Henry Harrison who ordered its construction. Abandoned in 1818. Also known as Fort William Henry Harrison (3).

Fort Harrison (1) History

Capt. Zachary Taylor was in command when the War of 1812 began. A force of 600 Miami, Potawatomi, Kickapoo and Winnebago warriors attacked Fort Harrison on 4 Sep 1812. Captain Taylor had only 15 soldiers (5 of whom were sick) and the help of several civilians to defend the fort. Early on September 4, an Indian warrior crawled up and set the barracks on fire. This set the few defenders into a panic and the Indian warriors began firing upon the fort. Taylor ordered the fort's surgeon and a handful of defenders to control the fire. The remaining few of the garrison returned the fire of the Indians so fiercely that they were able to hold off the attack. The Indian force withdrew later that day and when reinforcements arrived from Vincennes. For his services at Fort Harrison, Capt. Zachary Taylor received a brevet promotion to major.


Fort Harrison (1) Partial Commanders List (edit list)
Assumed Relieved Rank Name Cullum Notes
1811-10-31 1811-11-14 Lt. Colonel Miller, James N/A
1811-11-14 1812-06 Captain Snelling, Josiah N/A 4th U.S. Infantry
1812-06 1812-09-16 Captain Taylor, Zachary N/A 7th U.S. Infantry
1815-12 1816-05 Major Morgan, Willoughby N/A
1816-05 1817-07-04 Major Chunn, John T. N/A
1817-07-04 1818-02-10 Major Sturges, Robert N/A
Dates are formatted in yyyy-mm-dd to sort correctly.
The Cullum Number is the graduation order from the United States Military Academy by year and class rank and links to a page for the officer on the website version of the Cullum Register. Listings without a Cullum Number indicate that the person was not a graduate of the United States Military Academy.

Current Status

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Location: Vigo County, Indiana.

Maps & Images

Lat: 39.50833 Long: -87.41111

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 282

Links:

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