Fort Adams (3)
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Fort Adams (3) (1798-1810) - A U.S. military post first established in 1798 by General James Wilkinson in present-day Wilkinson County, Mississippi. Named after President John Adams. Abandoned in 1810. HistoryEstablished on 5 Oct 1798 and built out in 1798 and 1789 as an earthworks fort with barracks and magazine. The post was built after the Spanish abandoned the area and it helped to define and defend the southern border with Spain. The nearby Cantonment Columbian Spring was established in 1807 to house troops assigned to the fort. Both the fort and the cantonment were abandoned in 1810. Cuming visited the fort in 1808 and says :(Tour to the West, Chapter 51, in Thwaites, Early Western Travels):
A path descended from the blockhouse along "a very narrow ridge" to the town of Wilkinsonburg, later called Fort Adams. Midway down this path was a military cemetery, which included the graves of officers and privates. Officer plots were distinctive because they had headstones listing the name, rank and time of death of the deceased. Also buried in the cemetery were "two or three men" who had been killed in duels Cuming observed from the peak and spotted "two gun boats moored a little above the fort,” while there were also a dozen or more transport boats capable of carrying 30 men and cargo. Columbian Springs Cantonment (1807-1810}During Cuming's visit in August 1809, one company of men was stationed at Fort Adams and five companies were encamped at the separate Columbian Springs Cantonment area. The cantonment area was stablished in 1807 as quarters for the troops who were not necessary to the operation of the fort, it was abandoned in 1810 as the number of troops declined and the fort closed. Traveling from Fort Adams southward "on a good road,” he encountered the most broken and hilly country he had seen. This road west to Pinckneyville, maintained by the soldiers, followed "high and steep precipices." Four miles from Fort Adams, a turn to the right led to the Columbian Springs Cantonment area a mile away on a high hill. At the cantonment area, Cuming's was "much surprised” with the encampment, “differing from any I had ever before seen." Twenty-four huts "faced a wide-open space cleared for a parade, in which is held the market. In the rear of these, with a narrow street between" were 10 "snug and well furnished cottages" where the officers lived, some bachelors and some married men with families. He noted that the "whole camp is constructed with cane (the large reed) in such a manner to render every dwelling perfectly tight and warm." Each cottage was floored "with plank, and the officers' quarters are glazed, and each a little garden." The camp had "an air of neatness" and "cleanliness," where everyone he met was well behaved and mannered. The cantonment area was abandoned circa 1810 as the number of troops declined. Current StatusOn private property in Wilkinson County, Mississippi
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