Fort Defiance (Massachusetts)

Fort Defiance was a fort that existed from 1794 to after 1865 on Fort Point in Gloucester, Massachusetts. The location protecting the inner harbor was also called Watch House Point.[1]

Fort Defiance/Fort Lillie/Fort at Gloucester
Fort Point, Gloucester, Massachusetts
Watch House Point, 1860 painting of Fort Defiance by Fitz Henry Lane
Fort Defiance/Fort Lillie/Fort at Gloucester
Location in Massachusetts
Fort Defiance/Fort Lillie/Fort at Gloucester
Fort Defiance/Fort Lillie/Fort at Gloucester (the United States)
Coordinates42°36′31.32″N 70°39′50.49″W
TypeCoastal defense
Site information
Conditiondemolished
Site history
Built1794
Built byStephen Rochefontaine and John Lillie
In usecirca 1794–1865
Materialsmasonry, earthworks
Demolishedafter 1865
Battles/warsWar of 1812
American Civil War
The Old Fort and Ten Pound Island, 1850s painting of Fort Defiance by Fitz Henry Lane

History

18th century

Prior to the establishment of Fort Defiance, the British Fort Anne was located on Watch House Point, built in 1703 for Queen Anne's War and rebuilt in 1743 for King George's War, the latter work possibly named Fort Libby.[1][2] A fortified breastwork was erected on the site during the American Revolutionary War.[2] In 1794 a fort at Gloucester was funded as part of the federal first system of U.S. fortifications. The selectmen of Gloucester requested that Fort Anne be rebuilt as the new fort. The fort was built at the direction of Stephen Rochefontaine, a former French military engineer and Revolutionary War veteran working in the United States as a civilian; the next year he was commissioned a lieutenant colonel and commander of the Corps of Artillerists and Engineers.[3][4] Assisting him was Major John Lillie, a former artillery officer with the Continental Army and possibly the fort's namesake.[5][6] The goal was to mount eight seacoast guns with a separate citadel, but as no federal funds were appropriated after 1795, it is not clear how much was accomplished.[3] It was popularly called Fort Lillie until 1814 but never assigned an official name except Fort at Gloucester by the US Army.[7]

19th century

The fort was probably upgraded in 1807 under the second system of U.S. fortifications, as it appears in the secretary of war's fortifications report dated December 1808. It is briefly mentioned as "the old fort of stone, in front of this place... has been repaired".[8] The report for December 1811 states "At the head of the harbor, an enclosed battery, mounting seven guns, covered by a blockhouse".[9] In 1814, during the War of 1812, the fort was renamed Fort Defiance. The fort went into caretaker status after that war,[2] but the caretaker was later removed.[7] The fort was burned by vandals in 1833,[2] and rebuilt in 1851.[1] Watch House Point, an 1860 painting of the fort by Fitz Henry Lane, shows the fort with stone-faced walls topped by earth. It was garrisoned during the Civil War and possibly rearmed.[7][10] Abandoned after that war, the land remained a federal reservation into the 1920s; it is unclear when the fort was demolished. Currently, nothing remains of the fort.[1]

gollark: And I found out the computers all have keyloggers by typing a bunch of suspicious keywords into notepad (and not saving that). They complained that I had apparently wasted a bunch of time by doing so.
gollark: This has never been fixed because apparently the old software does everything they want fine.
gollark: Also, they use Raspberry Pis for some programming education, but connecting to the package repositories they need for updates is blocked by the filtering proxy.
gollark: Sometimes they fail to PXE-boot or something like that and are just stuck displaying a black screen with some error messages on it.
gollark: In my school there are a bunch of displays with "information" on them (mostly news headlines and promotional images of the school) which apparently run Windows, because they frequently seem to undergo updates and sometimes are stuck on a blank desktop (do they not know how to make stuff autostart?).

See also

References

  1. "Massachusetts - Fort Defiance". American Forts Network. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  2. Roberts, p. 400
  3. Wade, pp. 15-16
  4. Wade, p. 221
  5. Heitman, p. 350
  6. Pierce, p. 23
  7. Fort at Gloucester at FortWiki.com
  8. Wade, p. 235
  9. Wade, p. 242
  10. Lesch, Scott B., Big guns over Gloucester in the Civil War (blog)

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.