Fort Prince George (South Carolina)

Fort Prince George was constructed in 1753 in northwest South Carolina, on the Cherokee Path. It was named for the Prince of Wales, who would later become King George III of the United Kingdom. It was the principal Carolinian trading post among the Cherokee "Lower Towns".

The fort was built on the Keowee River, across from the largest "lower town", Keowee. The fort was a 200-foot (61 m) square built of earth and wood with walls 12 to 15 feet (4.6 m) high, surrounded by a deep trench. The fort's interior living area was about 100 feet (30 m) square. The interior contained a guardhouse, storehouse, kitchen, magazine, barracks, and officer's wquarters .[1] The fort served as a staging point for three British assaults on the Cherokee during the Anglo-Cherokee War. It also was the site of a siege by Cherokee warriors in February 1760, simultaneously with attacks on Ninety-Six, Fort Dobbs and Fort Loudoun. Hostilities ended in 1761, and the fort was abandoned by 1768.[2]

The site is in modern-day Pickens County, South Carolina. The fort was archaeologically excavated 18 months before the fort was submerged by Lake Keowee by the completion of the Keowee Dam in 1971. Some of the items discovered included:

  • three presumed Indian skeletons
  • musket and cannonballs,
  • rum bottles,
  • pieces of cooking utensils, and
  • wine glass fragments[3]

References

  1. Edgar, W. (ed.) (2006) South Carolina Encyclopedia. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 1-57003-598-9.
  2. John Oliphant,Peace and War on the Anglo-Cherokee Frontier, 1756-1763, (LSU Press, 2001), pp. 72-78, 110-111
  3. Michael Hembree and Dot jackson (ed.) (1997) Keowee: The story of the Keowee River Valley in Upstate South Carolina.


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