Fort Roberdeau
HistoryThe original fort buildings were enclosed in a horizontal log palisade with a bastion at each of the four corners. Two cannons provided additional protection. The fort was originally erected under General Roberdeau's supervision to protect local lead mining activities from Tories and their Indian allies. Buildings inside the fort included officers' quarters, barracks, a powder magazine, a kitchen, a blacksmith shop, and the lead smelter. Lead production proved to be disappointing and the mining operation was discontinued. The fort continued to be used as settler refuge until the enemy raiding parties stopped circa 1780. Current StatusInitial efforts were made in 1939-41 to reconstruct the fort by local agencies with support from the National Youth Administration. The stockade was finally reconstructed as a Bicentennial project in 1975–76. The site consists of the reconstructed fort and its structures (officers' quarters, storehouse, barracks, blacksmith shop, lead miner's cabin, powder magazine, and lead smelter), a restored barn (1859) which serves as the visitor center, a restored farmhouse (ca. 1860) and a log house (2012) built in the style of an original frontier house. The site is open May 1 through October 31.
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