Fort Dearborn
Fort Dearborn | |
1856 drawing showing Fort Dearborn as it appeared in 1831[1] | |
Location | Chicago, Illinois |
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Architect | U.S. Army |
Architectural style | log-built fort enclosed in a double stockade |
Part of | American frontier, Michigan–Wacker Historic District (#78001124) |
Fort Dearborn was an United States fort built in 1803 beside the Chicago River, in what is now Chicago, Illinois. It was constructed by troops under Captain John Whistler and named in honor of Henry Dearborn, then United States Secretary of War. The original fort was destroyed following the Battle of Fort Dearborn during the War of 1812, and a new fort was constructed on the same site in 1816. By 1837, the fort had been de-commissioned. Parts of the fort were lost to both the widening of the Chicago River in 1855, and a fire in 1857. The last vestiges of Fort Dearborn were destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. The site of the fort is now a Chicago Landmark, located in the Michigan–Wacker Historic District.
Background
Historic events
The history of human activity in the Chicago area prior to the arrival of European explorers is mostly unknown. In 1673, an expedition headed by Louis Jolliet and Jacques Marquette was the first recorded to have crossed the Chicago Portage and traveled along the Chicago River.[2] Marquette returned in 1674, and camped for a few days near the mouth of the river; then moved on to the portage, where he camped through the winter of 1674–75. Joliet and Marquette did not report any Indians living near the Chicago River area at that time,[3] although archaeologists have discovered numerous Indian village sites dating to that time elsewhere in the greater Chicago area.[4] Two of de La Salle's men built a stockade at the portage in the winter of 1682/1683.[5]
In 1682, René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle had claimed a large territory (including the Chicago area), for France.[6] In 1763, following the French and Indian War, the French ceded this area to Great Britain, and it became a region of the Province of Quebec. Great Britain later ceded the area to the United States (at the end of the American Revolutionary War), although the Northwest Territory remained under de facto British control until about 1796.[7] Following the Northwest Indian War of 1785–1795, the Treaty of Greenville was signed at Fort Greenville (now Greenville, Ohio), on August 3, 1795. As part of the terms of this treaty, a coalition of Native Americans and Frontiers men, known as the Western Confederacy, turned over to the United States large parts of modern-day Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, and Illinois. This included the six square miles centered at the mouth of the Chicago River.[8][9]
Local events
A Jesuit mission, the Mission of the Guardian Angel, was founded somewhere in the vicinity in 1696, but was abandoned around 1700.[10] The Fox Wars effectively closed the area to Europeans in the first part of the 18th century. The first non-native to re-settle in the area may have been a trader named Guillory, who might have had a trading-post near Wolf Point on the Chicago River around 1778.[11] Jean Baptiste Point du Sable built a farm and trading post near the mouth of the Chicago River in the 1780s,[12] and he is widely regarded as the founder of Chicago.[13][14] Antoine Ouilmette is the next recorded resident of Chicago; he claimed to have settled at the mouth of the Chicago River in July 1790.[15]
First Fort Dearborn
On March 9, 1803, Henry Dearborn, the Secretary of War, wrote to Colonel Jean Hamtramck, the commandant of Detroit, instructing him to have an officer and six men survey the route from Detroit to Chicago, and to make a preliminary investigation of the situation at Chicago.[16] Captain John Whistler was selected as commandant of the new post, and set out with six men to complete the survey. The survey completed, on July 14, 1803, a company of troops set out to make the overland journey from Detroit to Chicago. Whistler and his family made their way to Chicago on a schooner called the Tracy. The troops reached their destination on August 17.[17] The Tracy was anchored about half a mile offshore, unable to enter the Chicago River due to a sandbar at its mouth. Julia Whistler, the wife of Captain Whistler's son, Lieutenant William Whistler, later related that 2000 Indians gathered to see the Tracy.[18][19] The troops had completed the construction of the fort by the summer of 1804;[20] it was a log-built fort enclosed in a double stockade, with two blockhouses (see diagram above).[17] The fort was named Fort Dearborn, after U.S. Secretary of War Henry Dearborn, who had commissioned its construction.
A fur trader, John Kinzie, arrived in Chicago in 1804, and rapidly became the civilian leader of the small settlement that grew around the fort.[17] In 1810 Kinzie and Whistler became embroiled in a dispute over Kinzie supplying alcohol to the Indians. In April, Whistler and other senior officers at the fort were removed; Whistler was replaced as commandant of the fort by Captain Nathan Heald.[22]
Fort Dearborn Massacre
During the War of 1812, General William Hull ordered the evacuation of Fort Dearborn in August 1812. Heald oversaw the evacuation, but on August 15 the evacuees were ambushed along the trail by about 500 Potawatomi Indians in the Fort Dearborn Massacre. The Potawatomi captured Heald and his wife, Rebekah, and ransomed them to the British. Of the 148 soldiers, women, and children who evacuated the fort, 86 were killed in the ambush. The Potawatomi burned the fort to the ground the next day.
The second fort
Following the war, a second Fort Dearborn was built (1816). This fort consisted of a double wall of wooden palisades, officer and enlisted barracks, a garden, and other buildings. The American forces garrisoned the fort until 1823, when peace with the Indians led the garrison to be deemed redundant. This temporary abandonment lasted until 1828, when it was re-garrisoned following the outbreak of war with the Winnebago Indians. In her 1856 memoir Wau Bun, Juliette Kinzie described the fort as it appeared on her arrival in Chicago in 1831:
The fort was inclosed [sic] by high pickets, with bastions at the alternate angles. Large gates opened to the north and south, and there were small portions here and there for the accommodation of the inmates. ... Beyond the parade-ground which extended south of the pickets, were the company gardens, well filled with currant-bushes and young fruit-trees. The fort stood at what might naturally be supposed to be the mouth of the river, yet it was not so, for in these days the latter took a turn, sweeping round the promontory on which the fort was built, towards the south, and joined the lake about half a mile below[23]
The fort was closed briefly before the Black Hawk War of 1832 and by 1837, the fort was being used by the Superintendent of Harbor Works. In 1837, the fort and its reserve, including part of the land that became Grant Park, was deeded to the city by the Federal Government.[24] In 1855 part of the fort was demolished so that the south bank of the Chicago River could be dredged, straightening the bend in the river and widening it at this point by about 150 feet (46 m);[25] and in 1857, a fire destroyed nearly all the remaining buildings in the fort. The remaining blockhouse and few surviving outbuildings were destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.
Legacy and monuments
The southern perimeter of Fort Dearborn was located at what is now the intersection of Wacker Drive and Michigan Avenue in the Loop community area of Chicago along the Magnificent Mile. Part of the fort outline is marked by plaques, and a line embedded in the sidewalk and road near the Michigan Avenue Bridge and Wacker Drive. A few boards from the old fort were retained and are now in the Chicago History Museum in Lincoln Park.
On March 5, 1899, the Chicago Tribune publicized a Chicago Historical Society replica of the original fort.[26]
In 1933, at the Century of Progress Exhibition, a detailed replica of Fort Dearborn was erected as a fair exhibit.[27][28][29] As part of the celebration, both a United States one-cent postage stamp and a souvenir sheet (containing 25 of the stamps) were issued, showing the fort. The individual stamp and sheet were reprinted when Postmaster General James A. Farley gave imperforated examples of these, and other stamps, to his friends. Because of the ensuing public outcry, millions of copies of "Farley's Follies" were printed and sold.
In 1939, the Chicago City Council added a fourth star to the city flag to represent Fort Dearborn. This star is depicted as the left-most, or first, star of the flag.[30]
The site of the fort was designated a Chicago Landmark on September 15, 1971.[31]
Gallery
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London Guarantee Building with large relief above the entrance commemorating Fort Dearborn
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A plaque on Michigan avenue
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A Marker showing the fort's southern perimeter
See also
References
- ↑ Kinzie 1856; p. 182.
- ↑ Quaife 1913, pp. 22–24
- ↑ Quaife 1933, p. 18
- ↑ Swenson, John F. "Chicago: Meaning of the Name and Location of Pre-1800 European Settlements". Early Chicago. Early Chicago Inc. Retrieved September 13, 2010.
- ↑ Mason, Edward (1901). Chapters from Illinois History. Chicago: Herbert S. Stone and Company. p. 144. Retrieved August 25, 2010.
- ↑ Worth, Richard (2006). Louisiana, 1682-1803. National Geographic Books. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-7922-6544-3.
- ↑ Quaife 1933, pp. 63–64
- ↑ Charles J. Kappler (1904). "Treaty With the Wyandot, etc., 1795". U.S. Government treaties with Native Americans. Oklahoma State University Library. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
- ↑ "Fort Dearborn"; Encyclopedia of Chicago online; accessed August 8, 2009]
- ↑ Briggs, Winstanley (2005). "Mission of the Guardian Angel". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved August 6, 2010.
- ↑ Meehan, Thomas A. (1963). "Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, the First Chicagoan". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 56 (3): 439–453. JSTOR 40190620.
- ↑ Pacyga 2009, p. 12
- ↑ Baumann, Timothy E. (December 2005). "The Du Sable Grave Project in St. Charles, Missouri". The Missouri Archaeologist 66: 59–76.
- ↑ Graham, Shirley (1953). Jean Baptiste Pointe De Sable Founder of Chicago. Julian Messner. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
- ↑ Letter of Antoine Ouilmette to John H. Kinzie, June 1, 1839; reproduced in Blanchard, Rufus (1898). Discovery and Conquests of the Northwest, with the History of Chicago (volume 1). R. Blanchard and Company. p. 574. Retrieved September 7, 2010.
- ↑ Quaife 1933, pp. 65–66
- 1 2 3 Pacyga 2009, p. 13
- ↑ Currey 1912, p. 24
- ↑ Quaife 1933, p. 72
- ↑ Quaife 1933, p. 75
- ↑ Lossing, Benson (1868). The Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812. Harper & Brothers, Publishers. p. 303.
- ↑ Pacyga 2009, p. 14
- ↑ Kinzie 1856, pp. 183–184
- ↑ "United States v. Illinois Cent. R. CO., 154 U.S. 225 (1894)". Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ↑ Andreas, Alfred T. (1884). History of Chicago, Volume 1. A. T. Andreas. p. 238. Retrieved September 19, 2010.
- ↑ ""Replica of the Original Fort Dearborn," Chicago Tribune, 5 March 1899". Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ↑ Lohr, Lenox R. (1952). "Fair Management. The Story of a Century of Progress". The Cuneo Press.
- ↑ "Rebuilding Old Fort Tests Engineers' Skill". Popular Mechanics 55 (1): 48–49. January 1931. Retrieved 2011-04-18.
- ↑ "Reproduction of Fort Dearborn at the Century of Progress Exposition, 1933". Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ↑ "Municipal Flag of Chicago". Chicago Public Library. 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-04.
- ↑ "Site of Fort Dearborn". City of Chicago Department of Planning and Development, Landmarks Division. 2003. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
Bibliography
- Currey, J. Seymour (1912). The Story of Old Fort Dearborn. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co.
- Helm, Linai T. (1912). Gordon, Nellie Kinzie, ed. The Fort Dearborn Massacre. Rand McNally.
- Kinzie, Juliette (1856). Wau-Bun, the "Early Day" in the North-West. Derby and Jackson. Retrieved August 25, 2010.
- Pacyga, Dominic A. (2009). Chicago: A Biography. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-64431-6.
- Quaife, Milo Milton (1913). Chicago and the Old Northwest, 1673-1835. The University of Chicago Press. Retrieved August 25, 2010.
- Quaife, Milo Milton (1933). Checagou From Indian Wigwam To Modern City 1673-1835. The University of Chicago Press. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
External links
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Coordinates: 41°53′18″N 87°37′29″W / 41.88833°N 87.62472°W
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