Fort Ouiatenon

Fort Ouiatenon, built in 1717, was the first fortified European settlement in what is now called Indiana.[2] It was a palisade stockade with log blockhouse used as a French trading post on the Wabash River located approximately three miles southwest of modern-day West Lafayette.[3] The name 'Ouiatenon' is a French rendering of the name in the Wea language, waayaahtanonki, meaning 'place of the whirlpool'. It was one of three French forts built during the 18th century in what was then New France, later the Northwest Territory and today the state of Indiana, the other two being Fort Miami and Fort Vincennes. A substantial French settlement grew up around the fort in the mid-18th century. It was ceded to the British and abandoned after the French and Indian war. Later, it passed into Indian hands and was destroyed in 1791 by American militia during the Northwest Indian War. It was never a U.S. fort. The original site was rediscovered in the 1960s and is now an archaeological site on the National Register of Historical Places.

Fort Ouiatenon
West Lafayette, Indiana
The replica of the blockhouse
TypeFort
Site information
Controlled byNew France; Great Britain; First Nations
Site history
Built1717
In use1717–1763
Garrison information
Past
commanders
François-Marie Bissot(Fr); Edward Jenkins(Br)
Fort Ouiatenon
Fields at the site
Nearest cityLafayette, Indiana
Area17.5 acres (7.1 ha)
Built1717
NRHP reference No.70000008[1]
Added to NRHPFebruary 16, 1970
The historical marker at Fort Ouiatenon.

Every year between the end of September and the month of October, a reenactment of pioneer life called the Feast of the Hunters' Moon is held at a replica of the fort built a short distance from the original site.[4]

French period

Fort Ouiatenon was originally constructed by the Government of New France as a military outpost to protect against Great Britain's western expansion. Its location among the unsettled woodlands of the Wabash River valley also made it a key center of trade for fur trappers. French merchants and trappers from Quebec would arrive at Fort Ouiatenon in search of beaver pelts and to take advantage of trade relations with the native Wea Indian tribes.

In 1717, Ensign François Picote de Beletre (related to another Picoté de Bélestre, see Adam Dollard des Ormeaux) arrived at the mouth of the Tippecanoe and Wabash with four soldiers, three men, a blacksmith [Jean Richard, a son of Guillaume Richard dit Lafleur and Agnes Tessier] and supplies to trade with the nearby Wea people, an Algonquian-speaking nation closely related to the Miami people. They built a stockade on the Wabash, eighteen miles below the mouth of the Tippecanoe. François-Marie Bissot, the Sieur de Vincennes assumed command of the fort sometime in the 1720s. The French settled on the north bank, with Wea villages on the south bank.[5] The boundary between the French colonies of Louisiana and Canada, although inexact in the first years of the settlement, was decreed in 1745 to run between Ouiatenon and Fort Vincennes.[6]

In order to convince the Wea to trade exclusively with the French, the Governor-General of New France, Philippe de Rigaud Vaudreuil, issued permits for trade at Ouiatenon. Traders immediately began to bring a steady flow of goods to the new town.[7] Soon the officials in Louisiana sent more men to help Vincennes to hold the Wabash River.[8] Ouiatenon was described as "the finest palisaded fort in the upper country," and was one of the most successful trading posts in the region.[9] At its peak level of activity during the mid-18th century, Fort Ouiatenon may have supported over 3,000 residents,[10] and it was central to a hub of five Wea and two Kickapoo villages.[11]

British period

After the surrender of New France to the British in September 1760, Robert Rogers dispatched troops to occupy Ouiatenon. A contingent of British soldiers led by Lieutenant Edward Jenkins arrived in 1761, capturing and occupying the fort.[12]

On June 1, 1763, during Pontiac's War, the Wea, Kickapoo and Mascouten peoples captured Ouiatenon.[13] They surprised Lieutenant Jenkins and his men and captured Fort Ouiatenon without firing a shot. Seven similar posts were also captured in the widespread Indian uprising against the British presence.

The British made little use of Fort Ouiatenon after the French and Indian War; it was never garrisoned. In the mid-1770s, the fort was described as 70 yards from the Wabash river.

The Ouiatenon nation of Indians is on the opposite side, & the Kiccaposses are round the Fort, in both villages about 1000 men able to bear arms.[14]

As late as 1778, Ouiatenon was a staging ground for war parties fighting on behalf of the British government.[15]

Indian period

Captain Leonard Helm and Lt. Bailey arrived in 1778 to secure the fort for the rebelling Americans. A British Indian agent named Celeron controlled the fort and tried to evacuate, but was captured with a force of 40 men.[16] A British company arrived and hoisted "St. George's Ensign" in the fort by December of the same year.[17] Shortly after the Americans captured Vincennes in 1779, Captain I. Shelby arrived in Ouiatenon and received promises of cooperation from the Wea.

During the 1780s, however, local Indian tribes used it as a base of operations in resistance against the westward expansion of white American settlers. Consequently, President George Washington ordered the fort to be destroyed in 1791. In an operation dubbed the "Blackberry Campaign", Northwest Territory Governor Arthur St. Clair ordered General Charles Scott to attack villages along the Wabash River, with Ouiatenon as the primary target. Scott crossed the Ohio River in May 1791 and marched to the Ouiatenon area with 750 Kentucky militia.[18] While Colonel John Hardin led a force to the Big Pine Creek to destroy a large Kickapoo village, Scott led the main force to Ouiatenon. The American Indians who were present evacuated, and Colonel James Wilkinson led a battalion of mounted militia down to the river to fire on escaping Indians. Ouiatenon was then burned to the ground, and the militia destroyed several other nearby villages, including the large village of Keth-tio-e-ca-muck near the mouth of the Tippecanoe River.[19] 38 Native Americans had been killed, and another 58 were taken prisoner, mostly women and children.[19] The Kentucky militia had no men killed, and only five wounded.[20]

Ouiatenon was never again a site of historical significance.

Twentieth century

The ruins of the old fort were lost, and the land became a farm in the 20th century.

The site of Fort Ouiatenon was discovered and confirmed archaeologically in the late 1960s. The Ouiatenon Preserve is located about a mile west of the Fort Ouiatenon Historical Park along South River Road and the Wabash River. It contains the site of the original 1700s era Fort Ouiatenon and nearly 200 acres of land surrounding it. In 1970 the site was placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the U.S. Department of the Interior.

In 1930, a replica of Fort Ouiatenon was built by a local physician named Richard Wetherill. Since few useful records of the original structure exist, the replica is mostly confabulation. The Daughters of the American Revolution had placed a small commemorative marker near this spot in 1909. Dr. Wetherill's blockhouse was actually patterned after those more typical of British fortifications (using horizontal logs) and does not match the style or type of construction of the original Fort Ouiatenon (with vertical logs). The replica blockhouse is now the focal point of Fort Ouiatenon Historical Park.[21] Today, the Fort Ouiatenon Blockhouse Museum is open to tourists in the summer and is the location of the annual Feast of the Hunters' Moon. Many rare artifacts from the original Fort Ouiatenon are displayed by the Tippecanoe County Historical Association during the Feast.

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See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. "The Ouiatenon Preserve" Tippecanoe County Historical Association
  3. Encyclopædia Britannica Online s. v. "West Lafayette," http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9076617?query=Wabash&ct= (Accessed May 17, 2006).
  4. "Feast of the Hunters' Moon". www.tcha.mus.in.us. Archived from the original on June 20, 2009. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
  5. Cayton, 5, 7.
  6. Ekberg, Carl (2000). French Roots in the Illinois Country: The Mississippi Frontier in Colonial Times. Urbana and Chicago, Ill.: University of Illinois Press. p. 32. ISBN 9780252069246. Retrieved November 29, 2014.
  7. Cayton, 5.
  8. Cayton, 18
  9. Allison, 25
  10. Allison, 26
  11. Allison, 25–26
  12. Cayton, 27.
  13. Cayton, 28.
  14. Dunn, V2, pp. 403–442. Available online at the Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology website.
  15. Hamilton to Carleton, April 25, 1778. in Haldimand Papers and in Michigan History Collections V9 p. 434. Available online at the Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology website.
  16. Lt-Gov. Henry Hamilton's journal describes their arrival, and is available online Archived July 20, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  17. Allison, 77
  18. Allison, 78
  19. Allison, 80
  20. "Blockhouse Museum" Tippecanoe County Historical Association

Bibliography

  • Allison, Harold (1986). The Tragic Saga of the Indiana Indians. Turner Publishing Company, Paducah. ISBN 0-938021-07-9.
  • Cayton, Andrew R. L. (1996). Frontier Indiana. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
  • Dunn, Jacob Piatt, ed. (1894). The Road from Detroit to the Illinois. Documents relating to the French Settlements on the Wabash. Indiana Historical Society Publications.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  • English, William Hayden (1896). Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio 1778–1783 and Life of Gen. George Rogers Clark. Vol I. The Bowen-Merrill Company, Indianapolis, Ind., and Kansas City, Mo.
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