Fort Louis de la Louisiane: Difference between revisions
John Stanton (talk | contribs) m Text replace - "{{DEFAULTSORT:" to "|} {{DEFAULTSORT:" |
John Stanton (talk | contribs) m Text replace - "==ReplaceText Picture Gallery== {| cellspacing="5" width="640px" border="1" cellpadding="5" | |- valign="top" |width="33%" class="MainPageBG" style="border: 1px solid #c6c9ff; color: #000; background-color: #f0f0ff"| '''Click on the pictu |
||
| Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
{{Visited|No}} | {{Visited|No}} | ||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ | ||
Revision as of 20:08, 23 February 2015
|
Fort Louis de la Louisiane (1702-1711) - A Fench colonial fort established in 1702 by the colonial governor of Louisiana, Sieur de Bienville at Twenty-Seven Mile Bluff in present day Mobile County, Alabama. The fort and the adjacent city became the capital of French Louisiana. Named for the French King, Louis XIV. Moved to Mobile in 1711. Fort Louis de la Louisiane HistoryFort Louis de la Louisiane was a square fort with bastions on the corners, each equipped with a battery of six cannon. The fort buildings included quarters for soldiers and officers, a chapel, and a warehouse. Bienville maintained his quarters inside the fort. The fort was surrounded by a log palisade. The village outside the fort was laid out in a grid pattern behind the fort and served a population of some 180 men and 27 families by 1704. Frequent flooding made life difficult for the colonists and a massive flood in the spring of 1711 forced the residents to seek safety in tree tops and kept the houses under water for nearly a month. It was decided to move the town and fort to a location down river at present day Mobile. The relocation was completed by mid 1712 and the structures were burned down to prevent use by others. Current StatusArcheological site and Marker near the Mobile River, Le Moyne in Mobile County, Alabama.
Sources:
Links: Visited: No
| ||||||
