Fort Defiance (other)
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Fort Defiance (other)
Fort Defiance may refer to: ;Canada *Fort Defiance (British Columbia), winter quarters for American Captain Robert Gray ;United States * Fort Defiance, Arizona, an unincorporated community * Fort Defiance (California), formerly Roop's Fort, located in Susanville * Fort Morris, Georgia, known as Fort Defiance during the War of 1812 * Fort Defiance (Illinois), a Civil War post commanded by General Ulysses S. Grant, site of Fort Defiance Park * Fort Defiance State Park near Estherville, Iowa * Fort Defiance (Maryland), a War of 1812 fort on the Elk River * Fort Defiance (Massachusetts), a 19th-century fort in Gloucester * Fort Defiance (Brooklyn), a fort in the neighborhood of Red Hook, Brooklyn, New York during the American Revolution * Fort Defiance (Lenoir, North Carolina), former plantation home of General William Lenoir * Fort Defiance (Ohio), in present-day Defiance, Ohio * Fort Defiance, Tennessee, in Clarksville TN, later renamed Fort Bruce * Fort Defiance, briefly the name of ...
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Fort Defiance (British Columbia)
Fort Defiance was a small outpost that the crew of the ''Columbia Rediviva'' built as winter quarters during 1791–1792 on Meares Island in present-day British Columbia, Canada. American merchant and maritime fur trader Captain Robert Gray (sea captain), Robert Gray was in command. Prelude In early August 1791, John Kendrick (American sea captain), John Kendrick arrived in Clayoquot Sound and acquired land from Wickaninnish, chief of the Tla-o-qui-aht, in exchange for firearms. An Opitsaht village was nearby. Kendrick fortified a small island, and like his Nootka Sound base, called it Fort Washington. In late August, Robert Gray, of the same trading company, arrived on the ''Columbia Redivia''. Following a short overlap, Kendrick sailed away on the ''Lady Washington'' for China. Fort Defiance On September 19, Gray located a narrow cove suitable for wintering the ''Columbia'', and building a sloop. Two days later, construction of their winter quarters began. Completed by Septembe ...
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Fort Defiance (Lenoir, North Carolina)
Fort Defiance is a historic plantation house located near Lenoir, Caldwell County, North Carolina. The main block was built between 1788 and 1792, and is a two-story, frame structure measuring 28 feet by 40 feet. A wing was added in 1823. It was the home of Revolutionary War General William Lenoir. The property was transferred to the Caldwell County Historical Society in 1965 and operated as a historic house museum. This location on the Yadkin River was originally built upon by the troops serving under Elijah Isaacs in the summer of 1776. At the time, it was known as Fort Isaacs. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance or "great artistic v ... in 1970. References External linksFort Defiance website* Plantation houses i ...
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Fort Defiance, Virginia
Fort Defiance is an unincorporated community in Augusta County, Virginia, United States. It is part of the Staunton– Waynesboro Micropolitan Statistical Area. History Augusta Stone Church was established in the area now known as Fort Defiance in 1740. Local legend claims the church was used as a haven during the French and Indian War, when Augusta County was the western frontier for the country. The original church building was made of logs and, along with the historic cemetery, was located east of present-day U.S. Route 11 and to the rear of the stone church. Following the defeat of General Edward Braddock at the Battle of the Monongahela on 9 July 1755, parishioners fortified the Old Stone Presbyterian Church and named the fortification Fort Defiance. The name Fort Defiance was not put on the community until the late 19th century. Sites of interest * Augusta Military Academy, a now-defunct military academy that was one of the first in the nation to adopt the JROTC prog ...
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List Of Forts In Vermont
The following is a list of forts in the U.S. state of Vermont. List of forts * Battery Redoubt * Brattleboro Barracks * Camp Baxter (also known as Baxter Barracks) * Champlain Arsenal *Chimney Point * Cooke's Hill Fort *Fort Cassin * Fort Defiance *Fort Dummer *Fort Ethan Allen * Fort Frederick * Fort Independence, located on Mount Independence *Fort Loyal * Fort Mott *Fort New Haven *Fort Putney *Fort Ranger *Fort Rutland * Fort Sainte Anne * Fort Warren *Josiah Sartwell's Fort *Orlando Bridgman's Fort See also * List of forts in the United States ReferencesAmerican Forts Network: Vermont {{DEFAULTSORT:Forts In Vermont, List Of * Lists of buildings and structures in Vermont Vermont Vermont () is a state in the northeast New England region of the United States. Vermont is bordered by the states of Massachusetts to the south, New Hampshire to the east, and New York to the west, and the Canadian province of Quebec to ...
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Fort Defiance (Vermont)
Fort Defiance may refer to: ;Canada *Fort Defiance (British Columbia), winter quarters for American Captain Robert Gray ;United States * Fort Defiance, Arizona, an unincorporated community * Fort Defiance (California), formerly Roop's Fort, located in Susanville * Fort Morris, Georgia, known as Fort Defiance during the War of 1812 * Fort Defiance (Illinois), a Civil War post commanded by General Ulysses S. Grant, site of Fort Defiance Park * Fort Defiance State Park near Estherville, Iowa * Fort Defiance (Maryland), a War of 1812 fort on the Elk River * Fort Defiance (Massachusetts), a 19th-century fort in Gloucester * Fort Defiance (Brooklyn), a fort in the neighborhood of Red Hook, Brooklyn, New York during the American Revolution * Fort Defiance (Lenoir, North Carolina), former plantation home of General William Lenoir * Fort Defiance (Ohio), in present-day Defiance, Ohio * Fort Defiance, Tennessee, in Clarksville TN, later renamed Fort Bruce * Fort Defiance, briefly the nam ...
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Presidio La Bahía
The Presidio Nuestra Señora de Loreto de la Bahía, known more commonly as Presidio La Bahía, or simply La Bahía is a fort constructed by the Spanish Army that became the nucleus of the modern-day city of Goliad, Texas, United States. The current location dates to 1747. During the Texas Revolution, the presidio was the site of the Battle of Goliad in October 1835, and the Goliad massacre in March 1836. It was restored in the 1960s and became a National Historic Landmark in 1967. While several adjacent historical sites in Goliad are now part of the Texas state parks system, La Bahía is owned by the Catholic Diocese of Victoria, Texas but operates as a public museum. Overview Founded in 1721 on the ruins of the failed French Fort Saint Louis, the presidio was moved to a location on the Guadalupe River in 1726. In 1747, the presidio and its mission were moved to their current location on the San Antonio River. By 1771, the presidio had been rebuilt in stone and had become "t ...
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Fort Defiance, Tennessee
Fort Defiance (formerly also known as Fort Sevier and Fort Bruce) was a fort built during the American Civil War at Clarksville, Tennessee, on the Cumberland River. It changed hands several times during the war, and is now preserved by the city administration. Construction and Union takeover In November 1861, Confederate troops began to build a defensive fort that would control the river approach to Clarksville. They mounted three guns in the fort. On February 19, 1862, Union gunboats came up the river from Fort Donelson and reported the fort displayed a white flag and was deserted. The Union took over the fort and enlarged it so that it would control traffic on the Hopkinsville (Kentucky) Pike. Clarksville was left with a small garrison of Union troops. In April 1862, this small garrison was made up of the 71st Ohio Volunteers commanded by Col. Rodney Mason. 1862 combat During July and August 1862, there was an increase in guerrilla activity around Clarksville. On August 18, 18 ...
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Fort Defiance (Ohio)
Fort Defiance was built by General "Mad" Anthony Wayne in the second week of August 1794 at the confluence of the Auglaize and Maumee rivers. It was the one of a line of defenses constructed by American forces in the campaign leading to the Northwest Indian War's Battle of Fallen Timbers on August 20, 1794. Work began on August 9, 1794 and was completed by August 17. The name was derived from a declaration by Charles Scott, who was leading a band of Kentucky militiamen in support of Wayne, that: "I defy the English, Indians, and all the devils of hell to take it."Nelson, p. 246 The post was considered one of the strongest fortifications built in that period. Following the Battle of Fallen Timbers, Wayne ordered the destruction of all Native American villages and their crops within a radius of the fort. Under terms of the Treaty of Greenville, signed on August 3, 1795, the native nations ceded six square miles around the fort and allowed the Americans to maintain a trading ...
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Fort Defiance (Brooklyn)
Fort Defiance (Brooklyn) was one of the forts constructed by General Nathanael Greene in 1776 to provide for the defense of New York. Construction On August 27, 1776, during the Battle of Long Island, five cannons, a series of earthworks and a defensive wall were manned by colonials on an island in New York Bay. It was the westernmost of forts along Brooklyn Heights, defending the Upper New York Bay from incursion by the British navy. Prior to the battle a thousand men worked under General Israel Putnam's direction to prepare for the invasion of New York, building the fort during one night in April. General George Washington inspected the fort in May, finding it 'exceedingly strong'. The complex consisted of three redoubts on the small island, connected by trenches, with an earthwork on the island's south side to defend against a landing. On 12 July 1776 the first test of the redoubts came when Admiral Howe sent two ships, Phoenix and , to run the American gauntlet by heading up ...
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Fort Defiance, Arizona
Fort Defiance ( nv, ) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Apache County, Arizona, United States. It is also located within the Navajo Nation. The population was 3,624 at the 2010 census. History The land on which Fort Defiance was eventually established was first noted by the U.S. military when Colonel John Washington stopped there on his return journey from an expedition to Canyon de Chelly. Fort Defiance was established on September 18, 1851, by Col. Edwin V. Sumner to create a military presence in Diné bikéyah (Navajo territory). Sumner broke up the fort at Santa Fe for this purpose, creating the first military post in what is now Arizona. He left Major Electus Backus in charge. Fort Defiance was built on valuable grazing land that the federal government then prohibited the Navajo from using. As a result, the appropriately named fort experienced intense fighting, culminating in two attacks: in 1856 and 1860. The next year, at the onset of the Civil War, the army ...
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Fort Defiance (Massachusetts)
Fort Defiance was a fort that existed from 1794 to after 1865 on Fort Point in Gloucester, Massachusetts. The location protecting the inner harbor was also called Watch House Point. History 18th century Prior to the establishment of Fort Defiance, the British Fort Anne was located on Watch House Point, built in 1703 for Queen Anne's War and rebuilt in 1743 for King George's War, the latter work possibly named Fort Libby.Roberts, p. 400 A fortified breastwork was erected on the site during the American Revolutionary War. In 1794 a fort at Gloucester was funded as part of the federal first system of U.S. fortifications. The selectmen of Gloucester requested that Fort Anne be rebuilt as the new fort. The fort was built at the direction of Stephen Rochefontaine, a former French military engineer and Revolutionary War veteran working in the United States as a civilian; the next year he was commissioned a lieutenant colonel and commander of the Corps of Artillerists and Engineer ...
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Fort Defiance (Maryland)
Fort Defiance was an earthworks fortification on the western bank of the Elk River in northern Maryland. The fort was in use from 1813 to 1815 during the War of 1812 and repelled British forces on April 29, 1813. Today, there is a historical marker A commemorative plaque, or simply plaque, or in other places referred to as a historical marker, historic marker, or historic plaque, is a plate of metal, ceramic, stone, wood, or other material, typically attached to a wall, stone, or other ... located approximately northwest of the original site of the fort. References See also * List of forts in Maryland {{DEFAULTSORT:Defiance, Fort (Maryland) Forts in Maryland Maryland in the War of 1812 War of 1812 forts ...
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