List of forts in Florida
There are several historical forts in the U.S. state of Florida. De Quesada states that there have been more than 300 "camps, batteries, forts and redoubts"[1] in Florida, since European settlement began. More than 80 "blockhouses, forts, camps and stockades"[2] were used at one time or another in Florida, during the Seminole Wars. Most forts were constructed from earth or wood, or both; some incorporate brick or stone. Many were intended to be used for only a short period, and most have effectively disappeared. In some cases, a series of forts with different names were built on or close to the same place.[3]
List of forts[]
- , Pensacola
- - Second Seminole War fortification.[4]
- - Second Seminole War fortification.[5]p. 170.
- Camp Dunlawton - Second Seminole War fortification - site of the Battle of Dunlawton.[4]
- Camp Scott, Everglades
- Cantonment Clinch, Pensacola
- Castillo de San Marcos (also Fort Marion and Fort St. Mark, now a U.S. National Monument)
- see Fort Foster
- Fort Arbuckle, Frostproof, Polk County
- , near Bushnell. On December 28, 1835, 180 Seminoles ambushed Major Francis L. Dade and his two U.S. Army companies of 110 soldier, resulting in the Dade battle. All but three of Dade's men were killed. The massacre began the Second Seminole War. A regiment of Tennessee militiamen[6] led by Major Robert Armstrong, built Fort Armstrong at the site of Dade's Massacre. From Fort Armstrong, Brigadier General Keith Call led an attack on the Seminoles living in the Wahoo Swamp a few days after the fort's construction ended.
- - Second Seminole War fort - was also known as Fort Columbia.
- Fort Barrancas (also Fort San Carlos de Barrancas)
- Fort Basinger - Second and Third Seminole War Fort.[7]
- - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- Fort Blount[8]
- Fort Braden
- Fort Brooke - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Brooks - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Butler[9]
- Fort Caben - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- Fort Caroline
- Fort Carroll[10]
- Fort Casey
- Fort Center
- Fort Chokonikla (also Fort Chokkonickla and Fort Chokhonikla, now part of Paynes Creek Historic State Park)
- Fort Christian - Second Seminole War Fort.[5]p. 190.
- Fort Christmas – one in a series of four small, short lived forts built along the St. Johns River during the Seminole Wars. These forts were used to garrison troops and protect supplies during War.[11]
- , in present-day Gainesville, Second Seminole War[12]
- Fort Clinch
- Fort Coombs[13]
- Fort Cooper
- Fort Crèvecoeur (French), First Spanish Period[14]
- , on Cape Sable, Third Seminole War
- Fort Cummings[10] - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Dade (Withlacoochee River), Second Seminole War[15]
- Fort Dade (Egmont Key), Spanish–American War
- Fort Dallas, Miami - Second Seminole War fort.
- Fort De Soto
- , Second Seminole War
- Fort Denaud - Second Seminole War fort.
- Fort Denaud, LaBelle
- - Second Seminole War fort.
- Fort Drum
- - Second Seminole War fort.
- Fort Duncan McRee (also Addison Blockhouse) - Second Seminole War Fort.
- - Second Seminole War Fort. Also known as Fort Mellon.
- Fort Florida - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- Fort Foster - Established during the Second Seminole War as Fort Alabama by Colonel William Lindsay in present day Hillsborough County, Florida. Fort Alabama was destroyed and a new fort, Fort Foster, was built to replace it and named for Lieutenant Colonel William S. Foster. Fort Foster State Historic Site is a reproduction of the fort and is a part of the Hillsborough River State Park.[16]
- Fort Foster, Collier County - not to be confused with Fort Foster in Hillsborough County.
- - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Fraser
- Fort Fulton - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- Fort Gadsden
- Fort Gardiner - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort George
- Fort Green
- Fort Hanson - Second Seminole War Fort - (located eighteen miles southwest of St. Augustine).[4]
- Fort Heilman - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Homer W. Hesterly[17]
- Fort Houston, in Tallahassee, Civil War
- Fort Jackson - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Jefferson
- - Second Seminole War Fort.[5]pp. 190, 193.
- - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort King - Second Seminole War Fort.
- - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- Fort Kissimmee
- Fort Lane – one in a series of four small, short lived forts built along the St. Johns River during the Seminole Wars. These forts were used to garrison troops and protect supplies during War.[18]
- Fort Lauderdale - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Lonesome
- Fort Macomb - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Maitland
- Fort Matanzas
- Fort McCoy (formerly Fort MacKay)
- , north bank of Taylor Creek, Orange County
- Fort McRee
- Fort Meade
- Fort Mellon – one in a series of four small, short lived forts built along the St. Johns River during the Seminole Wars. These forts were used to garrison troops and protect supplies during War.[19]
- , Second Seminole War
- Fort Mose
- Fort Myers
- - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- Fort Peyton - Second Seminole War Fort - (originally called Fort Moultrie which was located 6 miles west of St. Augustine).[4]
- Fort Pickens
- Fort Picolata
- Fort Pierce - Second Seminole War Fort.
- , on Cape Sable, Second Seminole War.
- - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Reid[20]
- Fort Russell, on Key Biscayne, Second Seminole War
- Fort St. Andrews
- Fort San Carlos, Fernandina Beach, Second Spanish rule
- Fort San Luis de Apalachee
- Fort San Marcos de Apalache (also Fort St. Marks)
- Fort Shannon - Second Seminole War fortification.
- Fort Stansbury
- - Second Seminole War fortified plantation
- Fort Taylor – one in a series of four small, short lived forts built along the St. Johns River during the Seminole Wars. These forts were used to garrison troops and protect supplies during War. This should not be confused with Fort Zachary Taylor (see below), built in Key West, Florida, approximately 280 miles to the Southwest of this Fort Taylor's location. The future President was a Colonel during the Second Seminole War and served in the Florida campaigns at the same time this Fort Taylor was in active operation.[11]
- Fort Tonyn
- Fort Vinton
- - Second Seminole War Fort.[4]
- - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Walker (also Fort Hogtown), in present-day Gainesville, Second Seminole War[12]
- Fort Walton
- Fort Ward
- Fort White - Second Seminole War Fort.
- Fort Zachary Taylor (also Fort Taylor) – Fort Zachary Taylor should not be confused with the original Florida "Fort Taylor" – entry above, which was built during the Second Seminole War as one of a string of four small, short-lived Forts along the Saint John's River, approximately 280 miles to the Northeast of Key West, Florida. During the Second Seminole War (1835 – 1842) future President Zachary Taylor – for whom this Key West, Florida fort was named – was a Colonel in the US Army, leading troops in the field.[21]
- Mala Compra Fortress also known as the Post at Mala Compra - Second Seminole War fortification.[4]
- Martello towers, Key West, Florida
- - Second Seminole War fortress.[4]
- Negro Fort
- Presidio Santa Maria de Galve, Pensacola
- St. Joseph's Fortress also known as Camp Brisbane - Second Seminole War fortification.[4]
- Yellow Bluff Fort
See also[]
Notes[]
- ^ de Quesada (2006), p. 9
- ^ de Quesada (2006), p. 10
- ^ de Quesada (2006), p 9–10
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jaye, Randy. Second Seminole War (1835-1842) Fortifications in the Present-day Volusia and Flagler County Area. Halifax Herald, Volume 35, Number 2, Fall 2017.
- ^ a b c Sprague, J.T. The Origin, Progress, and Conclusion of the Florida War. New York: D. Appleton & Company, 1848.
- ^ White, John C., Jr. (Apr 1995). "American Military Strategy During the Second Seminole War". Thesis. GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved Mar 25, 2014.
- ^ "Fort Basinger" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ "Site of Fort Blount" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ "Fort Butler" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ a b Bair, Cinnamon. 11/25/1997. "Fort Carroll Marker Put Back in Place", Lakeland Ledger, F11.
- ^ a b " See map on page 170 for the fort's location
- ^ a b Rajtar (2007), p. 17.
- ^ "Fort Coombs – Franklin Guards" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ "Fort Crèvecoeur" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ "Fort Dade" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ "Fort Foster (2) - FortWiki Historic U.S. And Canadian Forts".
- ^ "Fort Homer Hesterly Armory" at Tampapix
- ^ " see map on page 170 for the fort's location
- ^ "Fort Mellon and Mellonville" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ "Fort Reid" at The Historical Marker Database
- ^ Stewart (2005)
References[]
- de Quesada, Alejandro M. (2006) A History of Florida Forts. Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press. ISBN 1-59629-104-4
- Rajtar, Steve. (2007) A guide to historic Gainesville. Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press. ISBN 978-1-59629-217-8
- Stewart, R. W. (2005 and 2009). American military history - Volume 1 - the United States Army and the forging of a nation, 1775 - 1917, second edition (2nd ed.). Washington, DC: Center of Military History, United States Army. ISBN 0-16-072362-0 "Map 20" on page 170 of this book shows the location of Florida forts and battles during the Second Seminole War (1835 - 1842).
Categories:
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