Fort Snelling

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Fort Snelling (1820-1946) - A U.S. Army post in present day St. Paul, Hennepin County, Minnesota. Colonel Josiah Snelling began construction on the permanent fort in 1820 on the site of previous fortifications. The post was completed and named after Snelling in 1825. The fort was abandoned in 1857, but reactivated in 1861 by state volunteer troops. Federal troops returned in 1866. Deactivated in 1946.

Fort Snelling in 1840s. Painting by Henry Lewis
Map of Minnesota/Wisconsin Forts 1820
File:FortSnellingTower.jpg
Fort Snelling West Tower

Fort Snelling History

A U.S. Army post built out as an enclosed diamond with bastions at all four corners situated on a bluff overlooking the confluence of the Mississippi River and the Minnesota River. The western bastion was a large, round stone tower and opposing it on the east was a semicircular bastion housing a gun battery facing the Mississippi River. The north bastion housed a gun battery in a five sided stone blockhouse and the south bastion also housed a gun battery but in a six sided stone blockhouse. The bastions were connected by a high 10' stone wall with two entrances near the western end of the post. A central parade was surrounded by four long buildings that housed the single and married officers, the enlisted troops and offices At the head of the parade, on the east side, was the commanding officer's quarters. The commissary, guard house, hospital and shops were built into the south walls. Other support buildings including a magazine, a sutler's store and a chapel were built in the western corner of the parade.

Fort Snelling Plan


Located east of the fort was an American Fur Company trading post and south of the fort was a Columbia Fur Company trading post.

The fort was abandoned in 1857.

U.S. Civil War (1861-1865)

Fort Snelling was reactivated in 1861 as a state volunteer training center during the U.S. Civil War. The post was home to some 25,000 Union soldiers during the U.S. Civil War

Federal troops returned in 1866, making the post the headquarters of the vast Military Department of Dakota.

World War I (1917-1918)

The post was used as a recruitment and training depot during World War I.

World War II (1941-1945)

The post was used as a recruitment and training depot during World War II. Some 300,000 troops passed through the reception center at Fort Snelling during [[World War II]. At the height of induction effort in 1942, Fort Snelling could process over 800 troops a day as a processing center. Other, longer term training schools on the post, included Military Police, Military Railroad Service, Winter Troop training and a Military Intelligence Language School.

Post World War II

Fort Snelling was deactivated on 12 October 1946, and and a number of federal agencies including the U.S. Army Reserve, took over parts of the post. Many of the buildings in the old walled fort and the newer upper post fell into disrepair. In 1960, the post was made a National Historic Landmark and restoration efforts began on the old walled fort. The Upper Post buildings continued to decline. The U.S. Army Reserve mission was deactivated in 1994. Other parts of the post have been repurposed by the Minneapolis Veterans Health Administration Medical Center and the Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport.

Current Status

Must See! Historic areas include the old walled fort, the newer Upper Post and Fort Snelling National Cemetery. On the old walled Fort Snelling site eleven buildings have been reconstructed around the parade and four of the original sixteen buildings remain. The most distinctive of the original structures is the large stone tower in the western corner. The Minnesota Historical Society Museum is located in the old walled fort.


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Location: Located at the junction of Minnesota Highways 5 and 55, one mile east of the Twin Cities International Airport, Hennepin County, Minnesota.

Maps & Images

Lat: 44.892774 Long: -93.180692

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 438

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