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Fort Pitt (Pennsylvania)

Fort Pitt was a fort built by British forces between 1759 and 1761 during the French and Indian War at the confluence of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, where the Ohio River is formed in western Pennsylvania (modern day Pittsburgh). It was near (but not directly on) the site of Fort Duquesne, a French colonial fort built in 1754 as tensions increased between Great Britain and France in both Europe and North America. The French destroyed Fort Duquesne in 1758 when they retreated under British attack.

A Plan of the New Fort at Pitts-Burgh drawn by cartographer John Rocque in 1765

Virginia colonial protection of this area ultimately led to the development of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County, Pennsylvania by British-American colonists and immigrants.

Location and construction edit

 
Artist's interpretation of Fort Pitt in 1759 with the Allegheny (left) and Monongahela (right) rivers. At their confluence is the Ohio River, seen at the bottom.

In April 1754, the French began building Fort Duquesne on the site of the small British Fort Prince George at the beginning of the French and Indian War (AKA Seven Years' War).[1] The Braddock expedition, a 1755 British attempt to take Fort Duquesne, met with defeat at the Battle of the Monongahela at present-day Braddock, Pennsylvania. The French garrison later defeated an attacking British regiment in September 1758 at the Battle of Fort Duquesne. French Colonel de Lignery ordered Fort Duquesne destroyed and abandoned at the approach of General John Forbes' expedition in late November.[2]

A number of factors contributed to this strategic withdrawal. In August 1758 the French Fort Frontenac, at the head of Lake Ontario, was captured by British Gen. Bradstreet, severing the supply lines to French fortifications across the frontier. Fort Duquesne was the southernmost of these. Short on materiel, French commander François-Marie Le Marchand de Lignery was forced to dismiss elements under his command down the Ohio River to their bases in Illinois and Louisiana, and send others overland north to Ft. Presque Isle.[3] Those Native who may have remained at Fort Duquesne were likely eager to return to their winter longhouses before the weather changed. Consequently, the fort was further undermanned, possibly left with as few as 200 regulars.[4]

The late October Treaty of Easton with several Native tribes involved in the war largely dissolved the alliance that had enabled French military dominance in the region. Chiefs of 13 American Indian nations agreed to negotiate peace with the colonial governments of Pennsylvania and New Jersey and to abandon any alliances with the French. The nations were primarily the Six Nations of the Iroquois League, bands of the Lenape (Delaware), and the Shawnee. They agreed to the treaty based on the colonial governments' promising to respect their rights to hunting and territory in the Ohio Country, to prohibit establishing new settlements west of the Appalachian Mountains, and to withdraw British and colonial military troops after the war.

The French commander, anticipating an attack along Braddock's road, had spent some effort fortifying positions there. (Forbes had several times advanced men along that route as a feint.) From prisoners captured during Maj. James Grant’s catastrophic attack on Fort Duquesne, de Lignery was reportedly surprised to learn of a fortified encampment of British troops only 50 miles away at Ligonier, Pennsylvania, with substantial reserves behind. He was also certainly cognizant of the British lightning raid on the Native village of Kittanning (40 miles north on the Allegheny River) two years earlier. Thus, a British attack from the north was a distinct possibility. Forbes had indeed contemplated an attack further north on Fort Machault (later, Ft. Venango; modern-day Franklin, PA.)

Finding himself in an under-manned, flood-prone fort in a weak defensive position, vulnerable to attack from three directions, and running low on provisions, de Lignery retreated north. He destroyed the stores and many of the structures as 1500 advance British troops under the command of Forbes drew within 10 miles. The French never returned to the region.

The British built a new fort and named it Fort Pitt, after William Pitt the Elder. The fort was built from 1759 to 1761 during the French and Indian War (Seven Years' War), next to the site of former Fort Duquesne. It was built in the popular pentagram shape, with bastions at the star points, by Captain Harry Gordon, a British Engineer in the 60th Royal American Regiment.[5]

Pontiac's War edit

 
Fort Pitt Blockhouse, constructed in 1764

After the colonial war and in the face of continued broken treaties, broken promises and encroachment by the Europeans, in 1763 the western Lenape and Shawnee took part in a Native uprising known as Pontiac's War, an effort to drive settlers out of the Native American territory. The American Indians' siege of Fort Pitt began on June 22, 1763, but they found it too well-fortified to be taken by force. In negotiations during the siege, Captain Simeon Ecuyer, a Swiss mercenary and the commander of Fort Pitt, gave two Delaware emissaries blankets that had been exposed to smallpox. The potential of this act to cause an epidemic among the American Indians was clearly understood. Commander William Trent wrote that he hoped "it will have the desired effect."[6] Colonel Henry Bouquet, leading a relief force, would discuss similar tactics with Commander-in-Chief Jeffery Amherst. The effectiveness of these attempts to spread the disease are unknown, although it is known that the method used is inefficient compared to respiratory transmission, and it is difficult to differentiate from naturally occurring epidemics resulting from previous contacts with colonists.[7][8]

During and after Pontiac's War, epidemics of smallpox among Native Americans devastated the tribes of Ohio Valley and the Great Lakes areas. On August 1, 1763, most of the American Indians broke off the siege to intercept the approaching force under Colonel Bouquet. In the Battle of Bushy Run, Bouquet fought off the American Indian attack and relieved Fort Pitt on August 10.

In 1772, after Pontiac's War, the British commander at Fort Pitt sold the building to two colonists, William Thompson and Alexander Ross.[9] At that time, the Pittsburgh area was claimed by the colonies of both Virginia and Pennsylvania, which struggled for power over the region. After Virginians took control of Fort Pitt, they called it Fort Dunmore, in honour of Virginia's Governor Lord Dunmore. The fort served as a staging ground in Dunmore's War of 1774.

American Revolutionary War and beyond edit

During the American Revolutionary War, Fort Pitt served as a headquarters for the western theatre of the war.[clarification needed] In 1778, Sampson Mathews, George Clymer, and Samuel Washington were sent as representatives for the United States Congress to the western frontier to report on security of the American border. Congress had learned of British governor Henry Hamilton's efforts to pit local Indian tribes against the lightly guarded American western border, and feared attack. From Fort Pitt, the committee reported back to Congress the seriousness of the threat, leading Congress to send 3,000 militiamen to the western frontier,[10] including George Rogers Clark. Clark finally captured Hamilton in winter 1779—a success that encouraged the alliance with France.[11] In present-day Michigan, the British garrisoned Fort Detroit.

Later, during the Northwest Indian War, General Anthony Wayne built a fort adjacent to the site as Fort Lafayette, elided to Fort Fayette. Still later it was regarrisioned in the War of 1812 as a staging point and supply depot for expeditions against northern British forts. Both forts became part of the borough of Pittsburgh.

20th century edit

 
A view of the Fort Pitt Museum from Mount Washington; its structure is a recreation of a bastion of Ft. Pitt.

In the 20th century, the city of Pittsburgh commissioned archeological excavation of the foundations of Fort Pitt. Afterward, some of the fort was reconstructed to give visitors at Point State Park a sense of the size of the fort. In this rebuilt section, the Fort Pitt Museum is housed in the Monongahela Bastion, and excavated portions of the fort were filled in.

A redoubt, a small brick outbuilding called the Blockhouse, survives in Point State Park as the sole remnant of Fort Pitt. Erected in 1764, it is believed to be the oldest building still standing in Pittsburgh. Used for many years as a private residence, the blockhouse was purchased and preserved for many years by the local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

Fort Pitt Foundry was an important armaments manufacturing center for the Federal government during the Civil War, under the charge of William Metcalf.

Popular culture edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lorant, Stefan. "Historic Pittsburgh Chronology". Historic Pittsburgh. University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  2. ^ Bomberger, Christian Martin. "The Battle of Bushy Run: the most decisive victory in all history gained by the white man over the American Indian". Historic Pittsburgh Text Collection. University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  3. ^ Parkman, Francis (December 29, 2004). "Montcalm and Woolfe". Project Gutenberg. Retrieved February 12, 2020.
  4. ^ "Fort Duquesne".
  5. ^ Pittsburgh Waste Book and Fort Pitt Trading Post Papers, 1757-1765, DAR.1925.03, The Darlington Collection, Special Collections Department, University of Pittsburgh.
  6. ^ Mann, Barbara Alice (2009-01-01). The Tainted Gift: The Disease Method of Frontier Expansion. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9780313353383.
  7. ^ Barras, V.; Greub, G. (June 2014). "History of biological warfare and bioterrorism". Clinical Microbiology and Infection. 20 (6): 497–502. doi:10.1111/1469-0691.12706. PMID 24894605. However, in the light of contemporary knowledge, it remains doubtful whether his hopes were fulfilled, given the fact that the transmission of smallpox through this kind of vector is much less efficient than respiratory transmission, and that Native Americans had been in contact with smallpox >200 years before Ecuyer's trickery, notably during Pizarro's conquest of South America in the 16th century. As a whole, the analysis of the various 'pre-micro-biological' attempts at BW illustrate the difficulty of differentiating attempted biological attack from naturally occurring epidemics.
  8. ^ Medical Aspects of Biological Warfare. Government Printing Office. 2007. p. 3. ISBN 9780160872389. In retrospect, it is difficult to evaluate the tactical success of Captain Ecuyer's biological attack because smallpox may have been transmitted after other contacts with colonists, as had previously happened in New England and the South. Although scabs from smallpox patients are thought to be of low infectivity as a result of binding of the virus in fibrin metric, and transmission by fomites has been considered inefficient compared with respiratory droplet transmission.
  9. ^ O'Meara, Walter (2005). Guns at the Forks. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 249. ISBN 9780822971283. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  10. ^ Pieper, Thomas I.; Gidney, James B. (1976). Fort Laurens, 1778-1779: The Revolutionary War in Ohio. Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87338-240-3.
  11. ^ English, William Hayden (1896). Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio, 1778–1783, and Life of Gen. George Rogers Clark, vol 2. Bowen-Merrill, Indianapolis.

Further reading edit

  • O'Meara, Walter. Guns at the Forks. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1965. ISBN 0-8229-5309-9.
  • Stotz, Charles Morse. Outposts Of The War For Empire: The French And English In Western Pennsylvania: Their Armies, Their Forts, Their People 1749-1764. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8229-4262-3.
  • Durant, Samuel W., plate IV, History of Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania : with illustrations descriptive of its scenery, palatial residences, public buildings, fine blocks, and important manufactories, Philadelphia: L. H. Everts, 1876.
  • Pittsburgh Waste Book and Fort Pitt Trading Post Papers. ULS Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh Library System.

External links edit

40°26′28″N 80°00′32″W / 40.4411°N 80.0090°W / 40.4411; -80.0090

fort, pitt, pennsylvania, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, june, 2008, learn, when, remove, this, template, mes. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Fort Pitt was a fort built by British forces between 1759 and 1761 during the French and Indian War at the confluence of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers where the Ohio River is formed in western Pennsylvania modern day Pittsburgh It was near but not directly on the site of Fort Duquesne a French colonial fort built in 1754 as tensions increased between Great Britain and France in both Europe and North America The French destroyed Fort Duquesne in 1758 when they retreated under British attack A Plan of the New Fort at Pitts Burgh drawn by cartographer John Rocque in 1765Virginia colonial protection of this area ultimately led to the development of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County Pennsylvania by British American colonists and immigrants Contents 1 Location and construction 2 Pontiac s War 3 American Revolutionary War and beyond 4 20th century 5 Popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLocation and construction edit nbsp Artist s interpretation of Fort Pitt in 1759 with the Allegheny left and Monongahela right rivers At their confluence is the Ohio River seen at the bottom In April 1754 the French began building Fort Duquesne on the site of the small British Fort Prince George at the beginning of the French and Indian War AKA Seven Years War 1 The Braddock expedition a 1755 British attempt to take Fort Duquesne met with defeat at the Battle of the Monongahela at present day Braddock Pennsylvania The French garrison later defeated an attacking British regiment in September 1758 at the Battle of Fort Duquesne French Colonel de Lignery ordered Fort Duquesne destroyed and abandoned at the approach of General John Forbes expedition in late November 2 A number of factors contributed to this strategic withdrawal In August 1758 the French Fort Frontenac at the head of Lake Ontario was captured by British Gen Bradstreet severing the supply lines to French fortifications across the frontier Fort Duquesne was the southernmost of these Short on materiel French commander Francois Marie Le Marchand de Lignery was forced to dismiss elements under his command down the Ohio River to their bases in Illinois and Louisiana and send others overland north to Ft Presque Isle 3 Those Native who may have remained at Fort Duquesne were likely eager to return to their winter longhouses before the weather changed Consequently the fort was further undermanned possibly left with as few as 200 regulars 4 The late October Treaty of Easton with several Native tribes involved in the war largely dissolved the alliance that had enabled French military dominance in the region Chiefs of 13 American Indian nations agreed to negotiate peace with the colonial governments of Pennsylvania and New Jersey and to abandon any alliances with the French The nations were primarily the Six Nations of the Iroquois League bands of the Lenape Delaware and the Shawnee They agreed to the treaty based on the colonial governments promising to respect their rights to hunting and territory in the Ohio Country to prohibit establishing new settlements west of the Appalachian Mountains and to withdraw British and colonial military troops after the war The French commander anticipating an attack along Braddock s road had spent some effort fortifying positions there Forbes had several times advanced men along that route as a feint From prisoners captured during Maj James Grant s catastrophic attack on Fort Duquesne de Lignery was reportedly surprised to learn of a fortified encampment of British troops only 50 miles away at Ligonier Pennsylvania with substantial reserves behind He was also certainly cognizant of the British lightning raid on the Native village of Kittanning 40 miles north on the Allegheny River two years earlier Thus a British attack from the north was a distinct possibility Forbes had indeed contemplated an attack further north on Fort Machault later Ft Venango modern day Franklin PA Finding himself in an under manned flood prone fort in a weak defensive position vulnerable to attack from three directions and running low on provisions de Lignery retreated north He destroyed the stores and many of the structures as 1500 advance British troops under the command of Forbes drew within 10 miles The French never returned to the region The British built a new fort and named it Fort Pitt after William Pitt the Elder The fort was built from 1759 to 1761 during the French and Indian War Seven Years War next to the site of former Fort Duquesne It was built in the popular pentagram shape with bastions at the star points by Captain Harry Gordon a British Engineer in the 60th Royal American Regiment 5 Pontiac s War edit nbsp Fort Pitt Blockhouse constructed in 1764After the colonial war and in the face of continued broken treaties broken promises and encroachment by the Europeans in 1763 the western Lenape and Shawnee took part in a Native uprising known as Pontiac s War an effort to drive settlers out of the Native American territory The American Indians siege of Fort Pitt began on June 22 1763 but they found it too well fortified to be taken by force In negotiations during the siege Captain Simeon Ecuyer a Swiss mercenary and the commander of Fort Pitt gave two Delaware emissaries blankets that had been exposed to smallpox The potential of this act to cause an epidemic among the American Indians was clearly understood Commander William Trent wrote that he hoped it will have the desired effect 6 Colonel Henry Bouquet leading a relief force would discuss similar tactics with Commander in Chief Jeffery Amherst The effectiveness of these attempts to spread the disease are unknown although it is known that the method used is inefficient compared to respiratory transmission and it is difficult to differentiate from naturally occurring epidemics resulting from previous contacts with colonists 7 8 During and after Pontiac s War epidemics of smallpox among Native Americans devastated the tribes of Ohio Valley and the Great Lakes areas On August 1 1763 most of the American Indians broke off the siege to intercept the approaching force under Colonel Bouquet In the Battle of Bushy Run Bouquet fought off the American Indian attack and relieved Fort Pitt on August 10 In 1772 after Pontiac s War the British commander at Fort Pitt sold the building to two colonists William Thompson and Alexander Ross 9 At that time the Pittsburgh area was claimed by the colonies of both Virginia and Pennsylvania which struggled for power over the region After Virginians took control of Fort Pitt they called it Fort Dunmore in honour of Virginia s Governor Lord Dunmore The fort served as a staging ground in Dunmore s War of 1774 American Revolutionary War and beyond editDuring the American Revolutionary War Fort Pitt served as a headquarters for the western theatre of the war clarification needed In 1778 Sampson Mathews George Clymer and Samuel Washington were sent as representatives for the United States Congress to the western frontier to report on security of the American border Congress had learned of British governor Henry Hamilton s efforts to pit local Indian tribes against the lightly guarded American western border and feared attack From Fort Pitt the committee reported back to Congress the seriousness of the threat leading Congress to send 3 000 militiamen to the western frontier 10 including George Rogers Clark Clark finally captured Hamilton in winter 1779 a success that encouraged the alliance with France 11 In present day Michigan the British garrisoned Fort Detroit Later during the Northwest Indian War General Anthony Wayne built a fort adjacent to the site as Fort Lafayette elided to Fort Fayette Still later it was regarrisioned in the War of 1812 as a staging point and supply depot for expeditions against northern British forts Both forts became part of the borough of Pittsburgh 20th century edit nbsp A view of the Fort Pitt Museum from Mount Washington its structure is a recreation of a bastion of Ft Pitt In the 20th century the city of Pittsburgh commissioned archeological excavation of the foundations of Fort Pitt Afterward some of the fort was reconstructed to give visitors at Point State Park a sense of the size of the fort In this rebuilt section the Fort Pitt Museum is housed in the Monongahela Bastion and excavated portions of the fort were filled in A redoubt a small brick outbuilding called the Blockhouse survives in Point State Park as the sole remnant of Fort Pitt Erected in 1764 it is believed to be the oldest building still standing in Pittsburgh Used for many years as a private residence the blockhouse was purchased and preserved for many years by the local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution Fort Pitt Foundry was an important armaments manufacturing center for the Federal government during the Civil War under the charge of William Metcalf Popular culture editThe Allegheny Uprising 1939 starred John Wayne and Claire Trevor In Cecil B DeMille s Unconquered 1947 starring Gary Cooper and Paulette Goddard Howard Da Silva played a gunrunner and Boris Karloff a Seneca chief who lead an American Indian uprising in 1763 Cooper and Goddard save Fort Pitt The video game Assassin s Creed III 2012 features Fort Pitt but it is referred to as Fort Duquesne although some of the action takes place after the Braddock and Forbes expeditions when Pitt had been built to replace Duquesne Conrad Richter s youth novel The Light in the Forest 1953 is partially set at Fort Pitt Aerials of the fort can be seen during the opening credits of the 1993 film Groundhog Day as the live truck leaves the downtown area on its way to Punxsutawney See also editGreat Britain in the Seven Years War Redstone Old FortReferences edit Lorant Stefan Historic Pittsburgh Chronology Historic Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Retrieved 19 September 2013 Bomberger Christian Martin The Battle of Bushy Run the most decisive victory in all history gained by the white man over the American Indian Historic Pittsburgh Text Collection University of Pittsburgh Retrieved 19 September 2013 Parkman Francis December 29 2004 Montcalm and Woolfe Project Gutenberg Retrieved February 12 2020 Fort Duquesne Pittsburgh Waste Book and Fort Pitt Trading Post Papers 1757 1765 DAR 1925 03 The Darlington Collection Special Collections Department University of Pittsburgh Mann Barbara Alice 2009 01 01 The Tainted Gift The Disease Method of Frontier Expansion ABC CLIO ISBN 9780313353383 Barras V Greub G June 2014 History of biological warfare and bioterrorism Clinical Microbiology and Infection 20 6 497 502 doi 10 1111 1469 0691 12706 PMID 24894605 However in the light of contemporary knowledge it remains doubtful whether his hopes were fulfilled given the fact that the transmission of smallpox through this kind of vector is much less efficient than respiratory transmission and that Native Americans had been in contact with smallpox gt 200 years before Ecuyer s trickery notably during Pizarro s conquest of South America in the 16th century As a whole the analysis of the various pre micro biological attempts at BW illustrate the difficulty of differentiating attempted biological attack from naturally occurring epidemics Medical Aspects of Biological Warfare Government Printing Office 2007 p 3 ISBN 9780160872389 In retrospect it is difficult to evaluate the tactical success of Captain Ecuyer s biological attack because smallpox may have been transmitted after other contacts with colonists as had previously happened in New England and the South Although scabs from smallpox patients are thought to be of low infectivity as a result of binding of the virus in fibrin metric and transmission by fomites has been considered inefficient compared with respiratory droplet transmission O Meara Walter 2005 Guns at the Forks Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press p 249 ISBN 9780822971283 Retrieved 13 December 2017 Pieper Thomas I Gidney James B 1976 Fort Laurens 1778 1779 The Revolutionary War in Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 978 0 87338 240 3 English William Hayden 1896 Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio 1778 1783 and Life of Gen George Rogers Clark vol 2 Bowen Merrill Indianapolis Further reading editO Meara Walter Guns at the Forks Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Press 1965 ISBN 0 8229 5309 9 Stotz Charles Morse Outposts Of The War For Empire The French And English In Western Pennsylvania Their Armies Their Forts Their People 1749 1764 Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 2005 ISBN 0 8229 4262 3 Durant Samuel W plate IV History of Allegheny Co Pennsylvania with illustrations descriptive of its scenery palatial residences public buildings fine blocks and important manufactories Philadelphia L H Everts 1876 Pittsburgh Waste Book and Fort Pitt Trading Post Papers ULS Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh Library System External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fort Pitt Pennsylvania Fort Pitt at Heinz History Center40 26 28 N 80 00 32 W 40 4411 N 80 0090 W 40 4411 80 0090 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort Pitt Pennsylvania amp oldid 1177712809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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