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Arkansas Post

The Arkansas Post (French: Poste de Arkansea; Spanish: Puesto de Arkansas), formally the Arkansas Post National Memorial, was the first European settlement in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain and present-day U.S. state of Arkansas. In 1686, Henri de Tonti established it on behalf of Louis XIV of France for the purpose of trading with the Quapaw Nation.[2] The French, Spanish, and Americans, who acquired the territory in 1803 with the Louisiana Purchase, considered the site of strategic value. It was the capital of Arkansas from 1819 until 1821 when the territorial government relocated to Little Rock.

Arkansas Post
Partial reconstruction of the
Revolutionary War era fort
Nearest cityGillett, Arkansas, U.S.
Coordinates34°01′00″N 91°20′43″W / 34.01667°N 91.34528°W / 34.01667; -91.34528
Area757.51 acres (306.55 ha)
Elevation174 ft (53 m)
Built1686 (338 years ago) (1686)
Built forLouis XIV of France
RestoredFebruary 27, 1929
(95 years ago)
 (1929-02-27)
Restored byArkansas General Assembly
Visitors30,126 (in 2018)[1]
Governing bodyU.S. National Park Service
Websitenps.gov/arpo
Official nameArkansas Post National Memorial
DesignatedOctober 15, 1966 (57 years ago) (1966-10-15)
Reference no.66000198
DesignatedJuly 6, 1960 (63 years ago) (1960-07-06)
Designated byPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower
Location within the United States

During the fur trade years, Arkansas Post was protected by a series of fortifications. The forts and associated settlements were located at three known sites and possibly a fourth. Some of the historic structures have been lost as the waterfront has been subject to erosion and flooding.[2][3] The land encompassing the second (and fourth) Arkansas Post site (Red Bluff) was designated as a state park in 1929. In 1960, about 757.51 acres (306.55 ha) of land at the site were protected as the Arkansas Post National Memorial, a National Memorial and National Historic Landmark.[4]

Since the 1950s, three archeological excavations have been conducted at Arkansas Post. Experts say the most extensive cultural resources at the site are archaeological, both for the 18th and 19th-century European-American settlements, and the earlier Quapaw villages.[3] Due to changes of the Arkansas River river and its navigation measures, the local water level has risen closer to the height of the bluffs, which used to be well above the river. The site is now considered low lying. Erosion and construction of dams, canals, and locks on the Arkansas and Mississippi rivers have resulted in the remains of three of the historic forts now being underwater in the river channel.[3]

History edit

French ownership (1686–1763) edit

 
Henri de Tonti

First location edit

The Arkansas Post was founded in the summer of 1686 by Henri de Tonti, Jacques Cardinal, Jean Couture, Peter Bisaillon, and three other Frenchmen as a trading post near the site of a Quapaw village named Osotouy. It was about 35 miles upriver from the strategically significant confluence of the Arkansas River with the Mississippi River. The post was established on land given to De Tonti for his service in René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle's 1682 expedition. The French came to an arrangement with the local Quapaw to trade French goods for beaver furs. This arrangement did not yield much profit, as the Quapaw had little interest in hunting beaver. But the trade and friendly relations with the Quapaw and other local native peoples, such as the Caddo and Osage, were integral to the post's survival for most of its operations.[2]

The French settlers initially called the post Aux Arcs ("at the home of the Arkansas." Arkansea was the Algonquian name used by the Illinois and related tribes to refer to the Quapaw, and was adopted by the French.) The traders first built a simple wooden house and fence at the site. This was the first permanent French holding west of the Mississippi and the first European settlement in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain.[5] Here the French conducted the first documented Christian services in Arkansas.[2]

The importance of the post was fully realized in 1699, when King Louis XIV of France began to invest more resources into French Louisiana. John Law's Mississippi Company made a venture from 1717 to 1724 recruiting German settlers to develop the surrounding area as a major agricultural hub. The plan was to grow crops on the lower Arkansas for trade with Arkansas Post, New Orleans (which did not have the climate to support grain cultivation), and French Illinois. The French brought about 100 slaves and indentured servants to the area as workers, and offered land grants to German settlers. But this project failed when the company withdrew from Arkansas Post, due to financial decline related to the Mississippi Bubble. Most of the slaves and indentured servants were relocated or sold elsewhere along the Lower Mississippi River, but a few remained in or near the post, becoming hunters, farmers, and traders.[2] By 1720, the post had lost much of its significance to the French because of the lack of profit, and the population was low.[3] In 1723, the post was garrisoned by thirteen French soldiers, and Lieutenant Avignon Guérin de La Boulaye was the commander. Father Paul du Poisson was the priest at the post from July 1727 until his death in 1729. The post was significantly expanded in 1731, when its new commander, First Ensign Pierre Louis Petit de Coulange, built a barracks, a powder magazine, a prison, and a house for him and future commanders.[2]

On May 10, 1749, during the Chickasaw Wars, the post engaged in its first military action. Chief Payamataha of the Chickasaw attacked the rural areas of the post with 150 of his warriors, killing and capturing several settlers.[2]

The site of this first post is believed to be near what is now called the Menard–Hodges site, located about 5 miles (8.0 km) (but about 25 miles (40 km) by road) from the Arkansas Post Memorial. This property, also a National Historic Landmark, is owned by the National Park Service, and is undeveloped.[6]

Second location (Red Bluff) edit

 
Annie Hatley, Depiction of Arkansas Post in 1689, Arkansas State Archives, 1904

As a result of the Chickasaw raid and continued threats of attack, commander Ensign Louis Xavier Martin de Lino moved the post upriver. This was further from the Chickasaw territory east of the Mississippi, and closer to the Quapaw villages, the post's main trading partners and potential allies. This new location, about 45 miles from the mouth of the Arkansas, was called Écores Rouges (Red Bluff), at "the heights of the Grand Prairie". It was situated on a bend in the river, on higher ground than the previous site.[2]

In 1752, Captain Paul Augustin Le Pelletier de La Houssaye, the next commander, rebuilt the post's major structures, such as the barrack, prison, and powder magazine. In addition, he expanded the commander's house to include a chapel and quarters for the priest. He added a storehouse, hospital, bake house, and latrine. To protect the post's new buildings, he erected a stockade eleven feet in height.[2][3]

Third location edit

In 1756, after the start of the Seven Years' War between France and England, Captain Francois de Reggio moved the post to a location 10 miles from the confluence with the Mississippi in order for the post to better respond to British and Chickasaw attacks. Whereas the first two locations had been on the Arkansas's north bank, this one was on the south. The layout of this post was generally similar to earlier ones, containing the usual important structures protected by a stockade.[2]

Spanish ownership (1763–1802) edit

 
Diagram of the 1760s era stockade.

After the British defeated the French in the Seven Years' War and gained most of their North American territories east of the Mississippi, France ceded the area west of the Mississippi to Spain. This was in exchange for the British to gain land in Spanish Florida and give up any claims to Cuba.[2] The post was officially ceded to Spain in 1763, but Spain did not take up its administration until 1771.[3]

Initially, the Spanish kept the post at the third site and built the first Fort Carlos there to defend it.[7] The majority of the post's population remained French. This reality complicated Spain's effort for diplomacy. In 1772, Commander Fernando de Leyba was ordered to assert dominance over the local French and to reduce the amount of feasts and gifts they provided for the local Quapaw, as it was costing the colonial government too much. The Quapaw nearly came to blows with the Spanish, but eventually Commander Leyba conceded to previous practice and restored the goods, and conflict was avoided.[2]

Fourth location (Red Bluff) edit

In 1777 and 1778, the post was partially inundated by floodwaters. The garrison captain, Balthazar de Villiers, wrote to the Spanish governor of Louisiana, Bernardo de Gálvez, requesting the post be moved upriver. De Villiers cited annual flooding and the long distance from the local Quapaw villages as concerns.[7] In the fall of 1778, Colonel David Rogers and Capt. Robert Benham made a stop here while on their way to meet with Gálvez to convince him that Spain should support the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War.

 
Counterattack! by Sidney E. King shows the sally made by the Fixed Infantry Regiment of Louisiana and Quapaw during the April 17, 1783 British partisan raid on Fort Carlos III.

Gálvez gave permission for de Villiers to move the post back to the site of the second French post, 36 miles upriver at Red Bluff, and in 1779, the post was relocated. The colonists hoped the settlement would be less flood-prone.[7] Fort Carlos III was built here in July 1781, near the former Le Houssaye fort. It consisted of several small buildings surrounded by a stockade. During the last two decades of the 18th century, several Americans from the new United States settled at the post. They developed a separate American village on the bluffs north of the river, nearer to the Quapaw villages. Many of these settlers arrived as refugees from the American Revolutionary War.[3]

The only battle of the Revolution fought in present-day Arkansas took place on April 17, 1783, when Captain James Colbert of the 16th Regiment of Foot led a force of British partisans and Chickasaw allies on a raid against Spanish forces controlling Arkansas Post. This was part of a small British campaign against the Spanish on the Mississippi River during the American Revolutionary War, when power was shifting in North America. The Spanish defended it with their soldiers, Quapaw allies, and settlers acting as Indians to scare off the partisans.[5][7][8]

Fort Carlos III suffered from constant river erosion, so the Spanish relocated the military garrison to a site about half a mile from the waterfront and, in March 1791, built Fort San Estevan (renamed Fort Madison after the Louisiana Purchase). Fort San Estevan included a commandant's house, large barracks, storehouse and kitchen, all surrounded by a stockade.[3][7]

Second French ownership (1802–1804) edit

Although Spain ceded Louisiana and the Arkansas Post to France in 1800, no French officials were sent to administer the post. The Spanish garrison remained to oversee the post until the Louisiana Purchase was made by the United States.[2]

United States ownership (1804–present) edit

In 1804, Arkansas Post became a part of the United States as a result of the Louisiana Purchase from France. By the time the post was sold, it contained 30 houses in rows along two perpendicular streets. These were inhabited mostly by the post's ethnic French population.

The American settlers predominately lived in the separate villages north of the post, although further American settlement began after purchase by the United States. Americans built new buildings in the main part of the post alongside French and Spanish ones. The post was guarded by Fort Madison, in use until 1810, when it was abandoned in turn due to erosion and flooding.[3][9]

In 1805, the U.S. government built a federal trading house at the north end of the post, operated by Jacob Bright. The location became a major frontier post for travelers heading west, with explorers such as Stephen Harriman Long and Thomas Nuttall passing through, althogut the government closed the federal house in 1810.[3]

Arkansas Post was selected to be the capital of Arkansas County in 1813. In 1819, it was selected as the first capital of the new Arkansas Territory. It became the center of commercial and political life in Arkansas. The territory's first newspaper, the Arkansas Gazette, was founded in 1819 at the post by William E. Woodruff.

A tavern owned by William Montgomery was operated at the post, in Bright's trading house, from 1819 to 1821. This structure also served as the meeting place for the first Arkansas Territorial General Assembly in February 1820. During its period as territorial capital, Arkansas Post grew substantially, and two towns were established near it.[3]

Gradually, settlement developed further into the Arkansas River Valley, and Little Rock became the territory's dominant settlement. When the territorial capital was moved there in 1821, the territory's major businesses and institutions moved as well. Arkansas Post lost much of its importance as a result.[2]

The settlement continued to be active as a river town through the 1840s after steamboat traffic increased on the rivers. A French entrepreneur, Colonel Frederick Notrebe, came to dominate commercial life at the post. His establishment consisted of a house, a store, a brick store, a warehouse, a cotton gin, and a press. In the 1840s, the post was expanded with several new buildings, including one to serve as the Arkansas Post Branch of the State Bank of Arkansas. By the 1850s, the post was in a period of decline, and the population shrank significantly.[3]

A well and cistern were built at the post in the early 1800s and remain intact at the memorial site to this day.[3]

Confederate control (1861–1863) edit

 
Battle of Fort Hindman, Ark., 1863

During the American Civil War, the post remained an important strategic site militarily. In 1862, the Confederate States Army constructed a massive defensive earthwork known as Fort Hindman, named after Confederate General Thomas C. Hindman. It was located on a bluff 25 feet above the river on the north bank, with a mile view up and downriver. It was designed to prevent Union forces from going upriver to Little Rock and to disrupt Union movement on the Mississippi. On January 9–11 of 1863, Union forces conducted an amphibious assault on the fortress backed by ironclad gunboats as part of the Vicksburg campaign. Because the Union forces outnumbered the defenders (33,000 to 5,500), they won an easy victory and captured the post, with most of the Confederate garrison surrendering. During the battle, the artillery bombardments destroyed or severely damaged both the fort and the civilian areas, after which Arkansas Post lost any status it had retained since being replaced as the territorial capital, and became a mostly rural area.[3][10]

The Union victory relieved much of the harassment by Confederate forces on the Mississippi and contributed to the eventual victory at Vicksburg, Mississippi.[3]

During the period of Confederate control, the state bank building was used as a hospital. Parts of the Confederate road, trenches, and artillery positions built at the post during this era are still visible at the memorial site.[3]

Arkansas Post National Memorial edit

 
National Park Service map (1997)

The Arkansas Post National Memorial is a 757.51-acre (306.55 ha) protected area in Arkansas County, Arkansas, United States. The National Park Service manages 663.91 acres (268.67 ha) of the land, and the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage, and Tourism manages a museum on the remaining grounds.

The Memorial commemorates the complex history of several cultures and time periods: the Quapaw, French settlers who were the first colonists to inhabit the small entrepôt, the short period of Spanish rule, an American Revolutionary War skirmish in 1783, the settlement's role as the first territorial capital of Arkansas, and as the site of an American Civil War battle in 1863.[3][11]

The former site of Arkansas Post was made into a state park in 1929. The park began with 20 acres donated by Fred Quandt, a descendant of German immigrants whose family still lives in Arkansas. In the following years, additional acreage was acquired and numerous improvements made with the support of Works Progress Administration labor.

On July 6, 1960, the site was designated a National Memorial, and a National Historic Landmark on October 9, 1960.[3][12][13] As with all National Historic Landmarks, Arkansas Post was administratively listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966.[14]

Archaeology edit

In 1956–1957, Preston Holder conducted the first archeological excavations at the site. His team found remains of the eighteenth-century French colonial village within the area of the current memorial. The trenches discovered there were later identified as traditional French colonial residential building patterns of poteaux-en-terre.[15] By this time, the remains of the 1752 La Houssaye fort, Fort Carlos III, 1790s Fort San Estevan, and Fort Hindman were all underwater in the former Arkansas River channel, an area then used as a navigation lake. No archeological evidence remains for those forts because of the erosion.[3]

In 1964 the National Park Service undertook some partial reconstruction of colonial remains at the site, including Fort Carlos III built by the Spanish. Additional archeological excavations of the colonial settlement were done for the National Park Service in 1966 and 1970–1971. Nineteenth-century buildings identified include the state bank and residences. Most of the residences were built in a French or Spanish colonial style, although a house's architecture varied based on the resident's culture. Also discovered in various excavations were thousands of ceramic shards. John Walthall, the state archeologist for Arkansas, said in the 1990s that the archeological resources constitute the most valuable cultural resources within the area of the memorial, including nearly unexplored Quapaw settlements, as well as the 18th- and 19th-century European and American settlements. Archeological ventures have generally been more successful in the more northerly portion of the historic site because it was less prone to erosion and flooding. No physical traces remain of the post's historical waterfront because of such erosion.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "NPS Annual Recreation Visits Report". National Park Service. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n DuVal, Kathleen (May 9, 2011). . Encyclopedia of Arkansas. The Butler Center. Archived from the original on April 25, 2021. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t House, John H. (December 3, 1998). "Arkansas Post" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places Registration. National Park Service. from the original on May 16, 2021.
  4. ^ "Listing of acreage – December 31, 2011" (XLSX). Land Resource Division, National Park Service. Retrieved March 30, 2012. (National Park Service Acreage Reports)
  5. ^ a b "American Latino Heritage Travel Itinerary: Arkansas Post National Memorial". National Park Service. from the original on April 4, 2021. Retrieved June 8, 2013.
  6. ^ . National Park Service. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d e Bearss, Edwin C. (November 1974). "Special History Report: The Colbert Raid" (PDF). National Park Service. (PDF) from the original on November 16, 2020. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  8. ^ Sesser, David (September 14, 2010). "Colbert Raid". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Central Arkansas Library System. from the original on May 6, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
  9. ^ Wesley, Edgar Bruce (1935). Guarding the Frontier. University of Minnesota Press, p. 41.
  10. ^ Christ, Mark K. (December 31, 2010). "Battle of Arkansas Post". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Central Arkansas Library System. from the original on March 3, 2021. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  11. ^ "History & Culture". National Park Service. November 2, 2006. from the original on January 15, 2012. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  12. ^ . National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. September 25, 2007. Archived from the original on May 2, 2015.
  13. ^ "Arkansas Post—Accompanying 1 photo, exterior, undated" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places Registration. National Park Service. December 3, 1998. from the original on November 7, 2021.
  14. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  15. ^ John Walthall, "An Analysis of Late Eighteenth-Century Ceramics from Arkansas Post at Ecores Rouges", Southeastern Archeology 10:98–113[page needed]

External links edit

Government
  • Official website  
  • Arkansas Post Museum at Arkansas State Parks
General information

arkansas, post, this, article, about, historic, site, unincorporated, community, arkansas, french, poste, arkansea, spanish, puesto, arkansas, formally, national, memorial, first, european, settlement, mississippi, alluvial, plain, present, state, arkansas, 16. This article is about the historic site For the unincorporated community see Arkansas Post Arkansas The Arkansas Post French Poste de Arkansea Spanish Puesto de Arkansas formally the Arkansas Post National Memorial was the first European settlement in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain and present day U S state of Arkansas In 1686 Henri de Tonti established it on behalf of Louis XIV of France for the purpose of trading with the Quapaw Nation 2 The French Spanish and Americans who acquired the territory in 1803 with the Louisiana Purchase considered the site of strategic value It was the capital of Arkansas from 1819 until 1821 when the territorial government relocated to Little Rock Arkansas PostPartial reconstruction of theRevolutionary War era fortNearest cityGillett Arkansas U S Coordinates34 01 00 N 91 20 43 W 34 01667 N 91 34528 W 34 01667 91 34528Area757 51 acres 306 55 ha Elevation174 ft 53 m Built1686 338 years ago 1686 Built forLouis XIV of FranceRestoredFebruary 27 1929 95 years ago 1929 02 27 Restored byArkansas General AssemblyVisitors30 126 in 2018 1 Governing bodyU S National Park ServiceWebsitenps wbr gov wbr arpoU S National Register of Historic PlacesOfficial nameArkansas Post National MemorialDesignatedOctober 15 1966 57 years ago 1966 10 15 Reference no 66000198U S National MemorialDesignatedJuly 6 1960 63 years ago 1960 07 06 Designated byPresident Dwight D EisenhowerLocation within the United StatesDuring the fur trade years Arkansas Post was protected by a series of fortifications The forts and associated settlements were located at three known sites and possibly a fourth Some of the historic structures have been lost as the waterfront has been subject to erosion and flooding 2 3 The land encompassing the second and fourth Arkansas Post site Red Bluff was designated as a state park in 1929 In 1960 about 757 51 acres 306 55 ha of land at the site were protected as the Arkansas Post National Memorial a National Memorial and National Historic Landmark 4 Since the 1950s three archeological excavations have been conducted at Arkansas Post Experts say the most extensive cultural resources at the site are archaeological both for the 18th and 19th century European American settlements and the earlier Quapaw villages 3 Due to changes of the Arkansas River river and its navigation measures the local water level has risen closer to the height of the bluffs which used to be well above the river The site is now considered low lying Erosion and construction of dams canals and locks on the Arkansas and Mississippi rivers have resulted in the remains of three of the historic forts now being underwater in the river channel 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 French ownership 1686 1763 1 1 1 First location 1 1 2 Second location Red Bluff 1 1 3 Third location 1 2 Spanish ownership 1763 1802 1 2 1 Fourth location Red Bluff 1 2 2 Second French ownership 1802 1804 1 3 United States ownership 1804 present 1 3 1 Confederate control 1861 1863 2 Arkansas Post National Memorial 3 Archaeology 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editFrench ownership 1686 1763 edit See also French colonial empire and Louisiana New France nbsp Henri de TontiFirst location edit The Arkansas Post was founded in the summer of 1686 by Henri de Tonti Jacques Cardinal Jean Couture Peter Bisaillon and three other Frenchmen as a trading post near the site of a Quapaw village named Osotouy It was about 35 miles upriver from the strategically significant confluence of the Arkansas River with the Mississippi River The post was established on land given to De Tonti for his service in Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle s 1682 expedition The French came to an arrangement with the local Quapaw to trade French goods for beaver furs This arrangement did not yield much profit as the Quapaw had little interest in hunting beaver But the trade and friendly relations with the Quapaw and other local native peoples such as the Caddo and Osage were integral to the post s survival for most of its operations 2 The French settlers initially called the post Aux Arcs at the home of the Arkansas Arkansea was the Algonquian name used by the Illinois and related tribes to refer to the Quapaw and was adopted by the French The traders first built a simple wooden house and fence at the site This was the first permanent French holding west of the Mississippi and the first European settlement in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain 5 Here the French conducted the first documented Christian services in Arkansas 2 The importance of the post was fully realized in 1699 when King Louis XIV of France began to invest more resources into French Louisiana John Law s Mississippi Company made a venture from 1717 to 1724 recruiting German settlers to develop the surrounding area as a major agricultural hub The plan was to grow crops on the lower Arkansas for trade with Arkansas Post New Orleans which did not have the climate to support grain cultivation and French Illinois The French brought about 100 slaves and indentured servants to the area as workers and offered land grants to German settlers But this project failed when the company withdrew from Arkansas Post due to financial decline related to the Mississippi Bubble Most of the slaves and indentured servants were relocated or sold elsewhere along the Lower Mississippi River but a few remained in or near the post becoming hunters farmers and traders 2 By 1720 the post had lost much of its significance to the French because of the lack of profit and the population was low 3 In 1723 the post was garrisoned by thirteen French soldiers and Lieutenant Avignon Guerin de La Boulaye was the commander Father Paul du Poisson was the priest at the post from July 1727 until his death in 1729 The post was significantly expanded in 1731 when its new commander First Ensign Pierre Louis Petit de Coulange built a barracks a powder magazine a prison and a house for him and future commanders 2 On May 10 1749 during the Chickasaw Wars the post engaged in its first military action Chief Payamataha of the Chickasaw attacked the rural areas of the post with 150 of his warriors killing and capturing several settlers 2 The site of this first post is believed to be near what is now called the Menard Hodges site located about 5 miles 8 0 km but about 25 miles 40 km by road from the Arkansas Post Memorial This property also a National Historic Landmark is owned by the National Park Service and is undeveloped 6 Second location Red Bluff edit nbsp Annie Hatley Depiction of Arkansas Post in 1689 Arkansas State Archives 1904As a result of the Chickasaw raid and continued threats of attack commander Ensign Louis Xavier Martin de Lino moved the post upriver This was further from the Chickasaw territory east of the Mississippi and closer to the Quapaw villages the post s main trading partners and potential allies This new location about 45 miles from the mouth of the Arkansas was called Ecores Rouges Red Bluff at the heights of the Grand Prairie It was situated on a bend in the river on higher ground than the previous site 2 In 1752 Captain Paul Augustin Le Pelletier de La Houssaye the next commander rebuilt the post s major structures such as the barrack prison and powder magazine In addition he expanded the commander s house to include a chapel and quarters for the priest He added a storehouse hospital bake house and latrine To protect the post s new buildings he erected a stockade eleven feet in height 2 3 Third location edit In 1756 after the start of the Seven Years War between France and England Captain Francois de Reggio moved the post to a location 10 miles from the confluence with the Mississippi in order for the post to better respond to British and Chickasaw attacks Whereas the first two locations had been on the Arkansas s north bank this one was on the south The layout of this post was generally similar to earlier ones containing the usual important structures protected by a stockade 2 Spanish ownership 1763 1802 edit nbsp Diagram of the 1760s era stockade See also Spanish Empire Louisiana New Spain and Treaty of Fontainebleau 1762 After the British defeated the French in the Seven Years War and gained most of their North American territories east of the Mississippi France ceded the area west of the Mississippi to Spain This was in exchange for the British to gain land in Spanish Florida and give up any claims to Cuba 2 The post was officially ceded to Spain in 1763 but Spain did not take up its administration until 1771 3 Initially the Spanish kept the post at the third site and built the first Fort Carlos there to defend it 7 The majority of the post s population remained French This reality complicated Spain s effort for diplomacy In 1772 Commander Fernando de Leyba was ordered to assert dominance over the local French and to reduce the amount of feasts and gifts they provided for the local Quapaw as it was costing the colonial government too much The Quapaw nearly came to blows with the Spanish but eventually Commander Leyba conceded to previous practice and restored the goods and conflict was avoided 2 Fourth location Red Bluff edit In 1777 and 1778 the post was partially inundated by floodwaters The garrison captain Balthazar de Villiers wrote to the Spanish governor of Louisiana Bernardo de Galvez requesting the post be moved upriver De Villiers cited annual flooding and the long distance from the local Quapaw villages as concerns 7 In the fall of 1778 Colonel David Rogers and Capt Robert Benham made a stop here while on their way to meet with Galvez to convince him that Spain should support the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War nbsp Counterattack by Sidney E King shows the sally made by the Fixed Infantry Regiment of Louisiana and Quapaw during the April 17 1783 British partisan raid on Fort Carlos III Galvez gave permission for de Villiers to move the post back to the site of the second French post 36 miles upriver at Red Bluff and in 1779 the post was relocated The colonists hoped the settlement would be less flood prone 7 Fort Carlos III was built here in July 1781 near the former Le Houssaye fort It consisted of several small buildings surrounded by a stockade During the last two decades of the 18th century several Americans from the new United States settled at the post They developed a separate American village on the bluffs north of the river nearer to the Quapaw villages Many of these settlers arrived as refugees from the American Revolutionary War 3 The only battle of the Revolution fought in present day Arkansas took place on April 17 1783 when Captain James Colbert of the 16th Regiment of Foot led a force of British partisans and Chickasaw allies on a raid against Spanish forces controlling Arkansas Post This was part of a small British campaign against the Spanish on the Mississippi River during the American Revolutionary War when power was shifting in North America The Spanish defended it with their soldiers Quapaw allies and settlers acting as Indians to scare off the partisans 5 7 8 Fort Carlos III suffered from constant river erosion so the Spanish relocated the military garrison to a site about half a mile from the waterfront and in March 1791 built Fort San Estevan renamed Fort Madison after the Louisiana Purchase Fort San Estevan included a commandant s house large barracks storehouse and kitchen all surrounded by a stockade 3 7 Second French ownership 1802 1804 edit See also Third Treaty of San Ildefonso Although Spain ceded Louisiana and the Arkansas Post to France in 1800 no French officials were sent to administer the post The Spanish garrison remained to oversee the post until the Louisiana Purchase was made by the United States 2 United States ownership 1804 present edit See also Louisiana Purchase In 1804 Arkansas Post became a part of the United States as a result of the Louisiana Purchase from France By the time the post was sold it contained 30 houses in rows along two perpendicular streets These were inhabited mostly by the post s ethnic French population The American settlers predominately lived in the separate villages north of the post although further American settlement began after purchase by the United States Americans built new buildings in the main part of the post alongside French and Spanish ones The post was guarded by Fort Madison in use until 1810 when it was abandoned in turn due to erosion and flooding 3 9 In 1805 the U S government built a federal trading house at the north end of the post operated by Jacob Bright The location became a major frontier post for travelers heading west with explorers such as Stephen Harriman Long and Thomas Nuttall passing through althogut the government closed the federal house in 1810 3 Arkansas Post was selected to be the capital of Arkansas County in 1813 In 1819 it was selected as the first capital of the new Arkansas Territory It became the center of commercial and political life in Arkansas The territory s first newspaper the Arkansas Gazette was founded in 1819 at the post by William E Woodruff A tavern owned by William Montgomery was operated at the post in Bright s trading house from 1819 to 1821 This structure also served as the meeting place for the first Arkansas Territorial General Assembly in February 1820 During its period as territorial capital Arkansas Post grew substantially and two towns were established near it 3 Gradually settlement developed further into the Arkansas River Valley and Little Rock became the territory s dominant settlement When the territorial capital was moved there in 1821 the territory s major businesses and institutions moved as well Arkansas Post lost much of its importance as a result 2 The settlement continued to be active as a river town through the 1840s after steamboat traffic increased on the rivers A French entrepreneur Colonel Frederick Notrebe came to dominate commercial life at the post His establishment consisted of a house a store a brick store a warehouse a cotton gin and a press In the 1840s the post was expanded with several new buildings including one to serve as the Arkansas Post Branch of the State Bank of Arkansas By the 1850s the post was in a period of decline and the population shrank significantly 3 A well and cistern were built at the post in the early 1800s and remain intact at the memorial site to this day 3 Confederate control 1861 1863 edit nbsp Battle of Fort Hindman Ark 1863Main article Battle of Arkansas Post 1863 Fort Hindman redirects here For the Union Navy steamer see USS Fort Hindman 1862 During the American Civil War the post remained an important strategic site militarily In 1862 the Confederate States Army constructed a massive defensive earthwork known as Fort Hindman named after Confederate General Thomas C Hindman It was located on a bluff 25 feet above the river on the north bank with a mile view up and downriver It was designed to prevent Union forces from going upriver to Little Rock and to disrupt Union movement on the Mississippi On January 9 11 of 1863 Union forces conducted an amphibious assault on the fortress backed by ironclad gunboats as part of the Vicksburg campaign Because the Union forces outnumbered the defenders 33 000 to 5 500 they won an easy victory and captured the post with most of the Confederate garrison surrendering During the battle the artillery bombardments destroyed or severely damaged both the fort and the civilian areas after which Arkansas Post lost any status it had retained since being replaced as the territorial capital and became a mostly rural area 3 10 The Union victory relieved much of the harassment by Confederate forces on the Mississippi and contributed to the eventual victory at Vicksburg Mississippi 3 During the period of Confederate control the state bank building was used as a hospital Parts of the Confederate road trenches and artillery positions built at the post during this era are still visible at the memorial site 3 Arkansas Post National Memorial edit nbsp National Park Service map 1997 The Arkansas Post National Memorial is a 757 51 acre 306 55 ha protected area in Arkansas County Arkansas United States The National Park Service manages 663 91 acres 268 67 ha of the land and the Arkansas Department of Parks Heritage and Tourism manages a museum on the remaining grounds The Memorial commemorates the complex history of several cultures and time periods the Quapaw French settlers who were the first colonists to inhabit the small entrepot the short period of Spanish rule an American Revolutionary War skirmish in 1783 the settlement s role as the first territorial capital of Arkansas and as the site of an American Civil War battle in 1863 3 11 The former site of Arkansas Post was made into a state park in 1929 The park began with 20 acres donated by Fred Quandt a descendant of German immigrants whose family still lives in Arkansas In the following years additional acreage was acquired and numerous improvements made with the support of Works Progress Administration labor On July 6 1960 the site was designated a National Memorial and a National Historic Landmark on October 9 1960 3 12 13 As with all National Historic Landmarks Arkansas Post was administratively listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15 1966 14 Archaeology editIn 1956 1957 Preston Holder conducted the first archeological excavations at the site His team found remains of the eighteenth century French colonial village within the area of the current memorial The trenches discovered there were later identified as traditional French colonial residential building patterns of poteaux en terre 15 By this time the remains of the 1752 La Houssaye fort Fort Carlos III 1790s Fort San Estevan and Fort Hindman were all underwater in the former Arkansas River channel an area then used as a navigation lake No archeological evidence remains for those forts because of the erosion 3 In 1964 the National Park Service undertook some partial reconstruction of colonial remains at the site including Fort Carlos III built by the Spanish Additional archeological excavations of the colonial settlement were done for the National Park Service in 1966 and 1970 1971 Nineteenth century buildings identified include the state bank and residences Most of the residences were built in a French or Spanish colonial style although a house s architecture varied based on the resident s culture Also discovered in various excavations were thousands of ceramic shards John Walthall the state archeologist for Arkansas said in the 1990s that the archeological resources constitute the most valuable cultural resources within the area of the memorial including nearly unexplored Quapaw settlements as well as the 18th and 19th century European and American settlements Archeological ventures have generally been more successful in the more northerly portion of the historic site because it was less prone to erosion and flooding No physical traces remain of the post s historical waterfront because of such erosion 3 See also editList of French forts in North America List of newspapers in Arkansas List of National Historic Landmarks in Arkansas List of national memorials of the United States National Register of Historic Places listings in Arkansas County ArkansasReferences edit NPS Annual Recreation Visits Report National Park Service Retrieved June 13 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n DuVal Kathleen May 9 2011 Arkansas Post Encyclopedia of Arkansas The Butler Center Archived from the original on April 25 2021 Retrieved March 19 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t House John H December 3 1998 Arkansas Post PDF National Register of Historic Places Registration National Park Service Archived from the original on May 16 2021 Listing of acreage December 31 2011 XLSX Land Resource Division National Park Service Retrieved March 30 2012 National Park Service Acreage Reports a b American Latino Heritage Travel Itinerary Arkansas Post National Memorial National Park Service Archived from the original on April 4 2021 Retrieved June 8 2013 The Weathervane Volume 2 Number 2 2006 National Park Service Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved October 20 2014 a b c d e Bearss Edwin C November 1974 Special History Report The Colbert Raid PDF National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on November 16 2020 Retrieved June 4 2013 Sesser David September 14 2010 Colbert Raid Encyclopedia of Arkansas Central Arkansas Library System Archived from the original on May 6 2021 Retrieved June 7 2013 Wesley Edgar Bruce 1935 Guarding the Frontier University of Minnesota Press p 41 Christ Mark K December 31 2010 Battle of Arkansas Post Encyclopedia of Arkansas Central Arkansas Library System Archived from the original on March 3 2021 Retrieved June 15 2013 History amp Culture National Park Service November 2 2006 Archived from the original on January 15 2012 Retrieved March 19 2012 Arkansas Post National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service September 25 2007 Archived from the original on May 2 2015 Arkansas Post Accompanying 1 photo exterior undated PDF National Register of Historic Places Registration National Park Service December 3 1998 Archived from the original on November 7 2021 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 John Walthall An Analysis of Late Eighteenth Century Ceramics from Arkansas Post at Ecores Rouges Southeastern Archeology 10 98 113 page needed External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arkansas Post GovernmentOfficial website nbsp Arkansas Post Museum at Arkansas State ParksGeneral informationArkansas Post at the Texas State Historical Association Arkansas Post National Memorial at the National Park Foundation Colonial Arkansas Post Ancestry at the University of Arkansas nbsp Geographic data related to Arkansas Post at OpenStreetMap Works by or about Arkansas Post at Internet Archive Portals nbsp American Civil War nbsp Arkansas nbsp France nbsp Indigenous peoples of the Americas nbsp Museums nbsp National Register of Historic Places nbsp Spain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arkansas Post amp oldid 1217455085, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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