Fort Tombigbee
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HistoryOriginally built as a French trading post and supply depot in 1735 by Sieur de Bienville, Governor of French Louisiana. The post was located on an 80-foot high chalk bluff along the Tombigbee River near present-day Epes in Sumter County, Alabama. Bienville used the post to support his ill-fated campaign against the Chickasaw. The original post resembled a three-pointed star with nine internal buildings surrounded by a red cedar stockade and a ditch. There was a single full bastion in the northwest corner and demi-bastions at the northwest and southeast corners. Entrance to the fort was through a gate in the north wall. The south and east access to the fort were protected by the steep 90' chalk river bank. On the river side of the fort, a pathway to the river below provided access to supply boats. The fort could support a 30 to 50 man garrison. British OccupationCeded by the French to the British in the Treaty of Paris (1763) and renamed Fort York. Abandoned by the British in 1768. Spanish OccupationThe post was reestablished in 1794 by the Spanish and renamed Fort Confederation. The Spanish withdrew under the Pinckney Treaty (1795). American OccupationAmerican troops occupied the post as Fort Tombigbee from 1797 until it was abandoned in 1799. Current StatusA stone monument was placed by the Colonial Dames of America at the site in 1915 and the site has been the focus of archaeological excavations from the 1980s that continue to date. The site is now owned by the University of West Alabama and the Archaeological Conservancy. The site can only be viewed via special tour arranged with Black Belt Museum in Livingston.
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Visited: 24 Jan 2018
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