Fort Jefferson (Ohio)

Fort Jefferson Site
Southern side of the hill on which the fort sat
Location: State Route 121 in Neave Township, Darke County, Ohio
Area: 6.5 acres (2.6 ha)
Built: 1791
Governing body: State
NRHP Reference#: 70000488[1]
Added to NRHP: November 10, 1970

Fort Jefferson was a fortification erected by soldiers of the United States Army during the Northwest Indian War. Built to support a military campaign, it saw several years of active fighting. Today, the fort site is a historic site.

Contents

Establishment

Located in present-day Darke County in far western Ohio, the fort was built under the direction of General Arthur St. Clair in October of 1791 as an advance post for his campaign from Fort Washington against local Native Americans.[2]:578 A square of approximately 100 feet (30 m) on each side, the fort was built of wood and intended primarily as a supply depot; accordingly, it was originally named "Fort Deposit."[3] Before St. Clair's army departed the fort, a court-martial was conducted for an unknown crime; the three soldiers who were convicted and hanged became the first whites to be executed in present-day Darke County.[2]:578

Isolation

One month later, after St. Clair's army was badly defeated in battle near modern-day Fort Recovery to the north, the scattered remnants of his force reconstituted at Fort Jefferson. Because it was not intended to house many soldiers,[2]:578 and because few supplies were actually stored at the fort,[3] St. Clair found the fort insufficiently large for his men; consequently, he took most of his surviving soldiers and returned to Fort Washington, leaving only a small garrison to guard his many wounded. It is believed that the garrison was under the command of one Captain Shaylor.[2]:578

The defeat of the American army left Fort Jefferson deep in enemy territory. Determined to drive the American soldiers back to the Ohio River, a Native American force (possibly under the command of Simon Girty) raided the fort in the early summer of 1792. This raid began with an attack of one hundred warriors against a party gathering hay for the fort's supplies on June 25; sixteen soldiers were killed or left missing by the fight.[2]:578 It is possible that another raid was conducted a short while later with the intention of capturing or killing Captain Shaylor; if a story told by locals be accurate, Shaylor's love of hunting was exploited by some of the besiegers, who lured Shaylor and his son into the woods by imitating the call of the wild turkey. While Shaylor escaped the ensuing pursuit, his son was killed.[2]:579 The siege continued intermittently for three years, as continued Native American attacks were made to neutralize the fort.[3]

Wayne's campaign

As the United States Army prepared to return to the offensive in the western Ohio country, Fort Jefferson became more than an isolated location outside of the control of the hostile Miamis: projections were created of using the fort as a base for the protection of local settlers and for raids on nearby Native Americans.[3] When Anthony Wayne and his Legion of the United States, fresh from Legionville, began their expedition to avenge St. Clair in the fall of 1793, they erected a new supply fort at the site of Greenville, 5 miles (8.0 km) north of Fort Jefferson.[2]:579 Nevertheless, they relied heavily on the supplies of Fort Jefferson in their campaign during the following year.[3]

After the war

After the end of the war, white settlers began to take up residence in the vicinity of the abandoned fort. A blockhouse was built by one nearby resident in 1810; by 1820, more settlers had built houses, a mill, and a school near the fort site. The new community was named "Fort Jefferson."[2]:579

In the fall of 1907, the Greenville Historical Society dedicated a memorial on the site of the fort.[2]:579 Fort Jefferson was further recognized in 1970 when it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. The area designated as historic encompasses approximately 6.5 acres (2.6 ha).[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13. http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov/natreg/docs/All_Data.html. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wilson, Frazer. History of Darke County Ohio: From Its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time. Vol. 1. Milford: Hobart, 1914.
  3. ^ a b c d e Fort Jefferson, Ohio Historical Society, 2010. Accessed 2010-04-10.

Further reading

External links