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Fort Snelling

Fort Snelling is a former military fortification and National Historic Landmark in the U.S. state of Minnesota on the bluffs overlooking the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers. The military site was initially named Fort Saint Anthony, but it was renamed Fort Snelling once its construction was completed in 1825.

Fort Snelling
Minnesota State Register of Historic Places
Fort Snelling's round tower
LocationFort Snelling Unorganized Territory, Minnesota
Nearest cityBordering Minneapolis, St. Paul, Mendota and Mendota Heights.
Coordinates44°53′34″N 93°10′50″W / 44.89278°N 93.18056°W / 44.89278; -93.18056
Built1819
ArchitectColonel Josiah Snelling
WebsiteHistoric Fort Snelling
NRHP reference No.66000401
Significant dates
Added to NRHP15 October 1966[1]
Designated NHL19 December 1960[2]

Before the American Civil War, the U.S. Army supported slavery at the fort by allowing its soldiers to bring their personal enslaved people. These included African Americans Dred Scott and Harriet Robinson Scott, who lived at the fort in the 1830s. In the 1840s, the Scotts sued for their freedom, arguing that having lived in "free territory" made them free, leading to the landmark United States Supreme Court case Dred Scott v. Sandford.[3] Slavery ended at the fort just before Minnesota statehood in 1858.

The fort served as the primary center for U.S. government forces during the Dakota War of 1862. It also was the site of the concentration camp[4] where eastern Dakota and Ho-chunk non-combatants awaited riverboat transport in their forced removal from Minnesota when hostilities ceased. The fort served as a recruiting station during the Civil War, Spanish–American War, and both World Wars before being decommissioned a second time in 1946. It then fell into a state of disrepair until the lower post was restored to its original appearance in 1965. At that time, all that remained of the original lower post were the round and hexagonal towers. Many of the important buildings of the upper post remain today with some still in disrepair.

The historic fort is in the unorganized territory of Fort Snelling within Hennepin County, bordering Ramsey and Dakota counties.

There are now multiple government agencies that own portions of the former fort with the Minnesota Historical Society administering the Historic Fort Snelling site. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources administers Fort Snelling State Park at the bottom of the bluff. Fort Snelling once encompassed the park's land. It has been cited as a "National Treasure" by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.[5] The historic fort is in the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area, a National Park Service unit.

History edit

Bdóte edit

Bdóte ('meeting of waters' or 'where two rivers meet')[6] is considered a place of spiritual importance to the Dakota.[7] A Dakota-English Dictionary (1852) edited by missionary Stephen Return Riggs originally recorded the word as mdóte, noting that it was also "a name commonly applied to the country about Fort Snelling, or mouth of the Saint Peters,"[8] now known as the Minnesota River. According to Riggs, "The Mdewakantonwan think that the mouth of the Minnesota River is precisely over the center of the Earth and that they occupy the gate that opens into the western world.".[9]

The confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers also became a place where Native Americans would sign treaties with the United States: the 1805 Treaty of St. Peters signed by the Mdewakanton Dakota, the 1837 White Pine Treaty signed by several Ojibwe bands, and the 1851 Treaty of Mendota signed by representatives of the Mdewakanton and Wahpekute Dakota.

Land cession treaty edit

 
Lieutenant Zebulon Pike acquired the land for the fort in 1805

In 1805, Lieutenant Zebulon Pike signed a treaty he was unauthorized to create, known as Pike's Purchase (1805 Treaty of St. Peters). There were seven Dakota members present, with only two signing the treaty: Cetan Wakuwa Mani (Petit Corbeau) and Way Aga Enogee (Waynyaga Inaźin). It ceded 155,320 acres of land in the area (400 km2).[10] For an unspecified amount of money, later valued at $2,000. The treaty states:

Article One — That the Sioux nation grants unto the United States for the purpose of establishment of military posts, nine miles square at the mouth of river St. Croix, also from below the confluence of the Mississippi and St. Peters, up the Mississippi to Include the falls of St. Anthony, extending nine miles on each side of the river.[11]

Legal scholars, historians, and the Dakota have long raised questions about the validity of the 1805 treaty.[12][13] Although Pike was an army officer, he was not authorized to sign a treaty on behalf of the United States, nor were there any formal witnesses.[12] Pike represented the treaty as having been agreed with the entire Sioux nation, but in reality it was only signed by representatives of two Mdewakanton villages.[10]

From a legal point of view, there was insufficient description of the land the signers intended to convey.[12] Furthermore, there was no consideration, or payment terms, stated in the treaty.[12] Pike wrote in his journal he thought the land was worth US$200,000, but within the treaty itself he left the payment amount blank,[14] deferring to Congress to determine the final amount to be paid.[15] On April 16, 1808, when the U.S. Senate finally ratified the treaty, it approved payment to the Dakota in the amount of only $2,000.[14] Payment for the ceded lands only arrived in 1819, when the United States Department of War sent Major Thomas Forsyth to distribute approximately $2,000 worth of goods.[16] In 1838, Indian agent Lawrence Taliaferro paid a further $4,000 to try to settle the matter with other Dakota band. The issue would was raised in subsequent treaty negotiations in the 1850s.[12] In 1863, the US Congress passed an act which "abrogated and annulled" all treaties with the Dakota people.[17] The moral legitimacy of the land title is still disputed.[18]

Pike Island, at the mouth of the Minnesota River, was later named after Zebulon Pike.[19]

Frontier post edit

Following the War of 1812, the United States Department of War built a chain of forts and installed Indian agents from Lake Michigan to the Missouri River in South Dakota. These forts were intended to extend the United States presence into the northwest territories following the Treaty of Ghent and the demarcation of the 49th parallel. The treaty restricted British-Canadian traders from operating in the US and the forts were intended to enforce that as well as keep Indian lands free of white settlement until permitted by treaty. The forts were seen as the embodiment of federal authority representing law, order, for the protection of pioneers and traders.[20] The Fort Snelling garrison also attempted to keep the peace among the Dakota and other tribes .[21] Also built on army land was the St. Peter's Indian Agency at Mendota.[22] The Anglo-Europeans called the Minnesota River the St. Peter's and the Indian Agency would be a part of Fort Snelling from 1820 to 1853.

 
Camp New Hope 1819

Lieutenant Colonel Henry Leavenworth commanded the expedition of 5th Infantry that built the initial outpost in 1819. That cantonment was called "New Hope" and was on the river flats along the Minnesota River. Col. Leavenworth lost 40 men to scurvy that winter and moved his encampment to Camp Coldwater because he felt the riverside location contributed to the outbreak.[23] The new camp was near a spring closer to the fortification he was constructing. That spring would be the source of drinking water to the fort throughout the 19th century. The spring held a spiritual significance to the Sioux. The post surgeon began recording meteorological observations at the fort in January 1820. The U.S. Army Surgeon General had made the recording of four weather readings every day a duty of the surgeon at every Army post.[24] Fort Snelling has one of the longest near-continuous weather records in the country.[25] In 1820 Colonel Josiah Snelling took command of the outpost and the fort's construction. Upon completion in 1824, he christened his work "Fort St. Anthony" for the waterfalls just upriver. That did not last long as it was changed by General Winfield Scott to Fort Snelling in recognition of the fort's architect commander.

From construction in 1820 to closure in 1858, four army units would garrison the fort, the 1st,[26] 5th,[27] 6th,[28] 10th Regiments.[29] plus a company from the 1st Dragoons. In 1827 the 5th Infantry would be replaced by the 1st Infantry for ten years with the 5th returning in 1837.[23] The 5th would garrison the fort until the 1st relieved them again in 1840. In 1848 the 6th Infantry became the garrison.[23] The garrison would change again in November 1855. The 10th commanded by Col. C.F. Smith assumed duty. Smith would go on to become a major general.

Colonel Snelling was recalled to Washington leaving Fort Snelling in September 1827. He died the next summer from complications of dysentery and a "brain fever".

In 1827 the first post office in Minnesota started at Fort Snelling with most mail forwarded from Prairie du Chien.[30]

Colonel Zachary Taylor assumed command in 1828. He observed that the "buffalo are entirely gone and bear and deer are scarcely seen." He also wrote that the "Indians subsist principally on fish, water fowl and wild rice".[31] While posted to Fort Snelling Col. Taylor had eight adult slaves die as well as several minors.[31] Along with the construction of the fort an Indian Agency was constructed on the military Reservation opposite the fort at Mendota. It was administered by Major Lawrence Taliaferro. In 1834 Taliaferro and the fort commandant, Major Bliss, assisted missionaries Gideon and Samuel W. Pond develop the Dakota alphabet and compile a Dakota dictionary.[32] Taliaferro also served as the Territorial Justice of Peace until 1838 when the Governor of Iowa named Henry Sibley his replacement.[33] The Agency was used to hold court and those incarcerated were sent to Fort Snelling's round tower. The town of St. Paul also sent its criminals to the tower until it built its first jail in 1851.[34] Both Fort Snelling and Fort Ripley provided this civil service for internment of criminals until the territory developed the civil infrastructure needed.[34] Major Taliaferro owned 21 slaves one of whom was Harriet Robinson.[35] She married Dred Scott with Major Taliaferro officiating at Mendota.

John Marsh, arrived at the fort during the early-1820s. He started the first school in the Territory for the officers' children. Marsh developed a relationship with the Dakota compiling a dictionary of the dialect used by the Mendota tribe. He had studied medicine at Harvard without earning a degree. He continued his studies under the tutelage of the fort's physician, Dr. Purcell. However, Purcell died before he completed the coursework and March moved west.[36] Major Plympton became post commander in August 1837. He made determining the actual boundaries of the fort's land a priority, doing two surveys.

After the second he sent troops to evict Pigs-eye Parrant from Fountain Cave down river. Pigseye's tavern there was the first commercial venture in what became St. Paul. Parrant gained notoriety for his bootleg liquor business with both the Dakota and the soldiers causing issues for the fort commander.[37] The eviction coincided with the arrival of the Catholic missionary Lucian Galtier. That year also brought the arrival of Pierre Bottineau, the Kit Carson of the Northwest.[38] He would serve the fort as a guide and interpreter. He could speak French and English, Dakota, Ojibwe, Cree, Mandan and Hochunk.[38]

 
Fort Snelling by Colonel Seth Eastman

Lieutenant Colonel Seth Eastman was commander of the fort twice in the 1840s.[39][40] Eastman was an artist. He has been recognized for his extensive work recording the Dakota.[41] His skill was such that he was commissioned by Congress to illustrate the six-volume study of Indian Tribes of the United States by Henry Rowe Schoolcraft. The set was published 1851–1857 with hundreds of his works.[42]

 
Inlaid Pipe Bowl with Two Faces collected at Fort Snelling 1833–36

From 1833 to 1836 Dr. Nathan Sturges Jarvis (surgeon) was stationed at Fort Snelling.[43] During that time he acquired a notable collection of northern plains Native American artifacts now housed at the Brooklyn Museum.[43]

  • In 1848 A Co of the 6th U.S. Infantry was dispatched from Fort Snelling to build Fort Ripley.[28]
  • In 1848 the Fort's Military Reservation was declared too big, with the lands east of the Mississippi detached and sold. That land created much of what became St. Paul.[44]
  • In the summer of 1849, D Company 1st Dragoons escorted Maj. Woods of the 6th Infantry at Fort Snelling, to mark a northern boundary line and select a site for a future fortification near Pembina.[45]
  • In 1850 E Co of the 6th Infantry was sent south to build Fort Dodge and would garrison the fort until the army closed it and sent E Co. to help construct Fort Ridgely.[28]
  • In 1850 Alexander Ramsey requested Congress fund five military roads in the Territory. Two ran from Mendota at Fort Snelling. One followed the Mississippi to Wabasha and the Iowa border. The other headed west to the Big Sioux River confluence with the Missouri.
  • In 1853 C, E, and K Companies of the 6th Infantry were tasked with the construction of Fort Ridgely.[46]
  • Also in 1853, congress authorized money specifically to "mount" E Company of the 3rd Artillery to be stationed at Fort Snelling and Fort Ridgely until May 1861.[47]
  • 1856 Major Edward Canby was fort commander. He became a general. The only one killed in the Indian wars. The town of Canby is named for him.
  • 1857–1861 G, I, and L Companies 2nd Artillery were variously posted to northern forts Snelling, Ridgely, Ripley.
  • 1864–65 The Minnesota Valley Railroad completed line from St. Paul to Minneapolis crossing the river at Mendota that passed beneath the Fort. Pilings remain of the line's river crossing.

As the towns of Minneapolis and St. Paul grew and with Minnesota statehood before Congress, the need for a forward frontier military post had ceased. In 1857, with the fort's deactivation looming, the garrison was sent to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to join the other units being sent to Utah for what became known as the Utah War.[29] With the departure of the 10th Infantry, Fort Snelling was designated surplus government property. In 1858, when Minnesota became a state, the army sold it to Franklin Steele for $90,000. Steele operated the two ferries serving the fort across both rivers at the same time he was the sutler to the fort. He also was a friend of the sitting President, James Buchanan.[48][44] At that time the fort sat on 8,000 acres (32 km2). A small portion of that land was later annexed into south Minneapolis.[49] The balance of that original land is now broken into: Historic Fort Snelling Interpretive Center (300 acres), Fort Snelling State Park (2,931 acres), Fort Snelling National Cemetery (436 acres), Fort Snelling VA Hospital (160 acres),[50] Minnesota Veterans Home (53 acres), the Coldwater Spring unit of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area (29 acres),[51] the Upper Post Veterans Home, Minneapolis St Paul International Airport and the Minneapolis-St Paul Joint Air Reserve Station (2,930 acres).

  • Fort Snelling watercolor by Lt. Sully October 1855.[52]

Slavery at the fort edit

When Fort Snelling was built in 1820, fur traders and officers at the post, including Colonel Snelling, employed slave labor for cooking, cleaning, and other domestic chores. Although slavery was a violation of both the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 and the Missouri Compromise of 1820, an estimated 15–30 Africans worked as slaves at the fort.[53] US Army officers submitted pay vouchers to cover the expenses of retaining slaves. From 1855 to 1857, nine individuals were enslaved at Fort Snelling. The last slave-holding unit was the 10th Infantry. Slavery was made unconstitutional in Minnesota when the state constitution was ratified in 1858.[54]

 
Restored quarters believed to have been occupied by Dred & Harriet Scott 1836–1840 at Fort Snelling

Two women that had lived as slaves at Fort Snelling sued for their freedom and were set free in 1836. One, named Rachel, was a slave to a Lieutenant Thomas Stockton at Fort Snelling from 1830 to 1831, then at Fort Crawford at Prairie du Chien until 1834. When Rachel and her son were sold in St. Louis, she sued, claiming that she had been illegally enslaved in the Minnesota Territory. In 1836 the Missouri Supreme Court ruled in her favor making her a free person.[54] The second woman, Courtney, also sued for freedom in St. Louis. When the Missouri Supreme Court ruled in Rachel's favor, Courtney's slaveowner conceded her case as well, and freed Courtney and her son William.[54][55] Courtney had another son named Godfrey that remained in Minnesota when she was sent to a slave market in St. Louis.[56] He is the only known "Minnesota runaway slave" that ran away from the fort and was taken in by the Dakota.[56] He was involved in the Dakota War and was the first defendant on the docket of the military tribunal for hanging.[56]

The fort surgeon, Dr. John Emerson, purchased Dred Scott at a slave market in Saint Louis, Missouri, where slavery was legal. Emerson was posted to Fort Snelling during the 1830s and brought Dred north with him.[53] There Dred meet and married Harriet and had two children as slaves at Fort Snelling from 1836 to 1840. Dr. Emerson's wife Irene, returned to St. Louis taking the Scotts and their children in 1840. In 1843 Dred sued for his family's freedom for illegally being indentured in free territory. Although he lost that first trial, he appealed and in 1850 his family was given their freedom. In 1852, Emerson appealed and the Scotts were again enslaved. Dred Scott appealed that decision and in 1857 the US Supreme Court decided that the Scotts would stay enslaved. Dred Scott v. Sandford was a landmark case that held that neither enslaved nor free Africans were meant to hold the privileges or constitutional rights of United States citizens. This case garnered national attention and pushed political tensions towards the Civil War.[54][53]

A longstanding precedent in freedom suits of "once free, always free" was overturned in this case. (The cases were combined under Dred Scott's name.) It was appealed to the United States Supreme Court. In Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), Chief Justice Taney ruled that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional and that enslaved Africans had no standing under the constitution, so could not sue for freedom. The decision increased sectional tensions between the North and South.

Civil War edit

 
The Wokiksuye K'a Woyuonihan memorial site at Fort Snelling, with a pipestone encased in the center, surrounded by bundles of the four sacred medicines: sage, cedar, tobacco, and sweetgrass.

When the American Civil War broke out the Government commandeered the fort for the War Department as an induction station. At the time Steele was in arrears, having made only one payment.[44] When Governor Ramsey offered President Lincoln 1000 troops to fight the South the volunteers he got were organized at Fort Snelling into a regiment, the 1st Minnesota. More than 24,000 recruits were trained there.[57]

Minnesota units mustered in at Fort Snelling:

In 1860 and 1863 the Minnesota State Fair was held at the fort.[60]

  • In 1865 the Minnesota Central Railroad completed rail line from Northfield to Mendota. There the line crossed the river to Fort Snelling, continuing on to Minneapolis.[61][62]
  • In June 1865 the 10th US Infantry Hq, D, and F Companies returned to the 10th's pre-war post at Fort Snelling.[29] B and H Companies went to Fort Ridgely while A and I Companies went to Fort Ripley.

With the war over Steele submitted a claim of $162,000 for the forts use during the war. He hoped to gain the money's he still owed from the 1857 purchase. In 1873 an agreement was reached giving the Army the fort. In exchange, his debt was cleared and Steele was given title to 6,395 acres of the original Fort Snelling Reservation.[44]

Dakota War edit

On 19 August 1862, after hearing of attacks at the Lower Sioux Agency the day before, Governor Alexander Ramsey immediately went from St. Paul to Fort Snelling to assess military preparedness. Ramsey immediately ordered troops training at or near the fort to be detained from being sent east to fight in the American Civil War. On the same day, he asked his long-time friend and political rival, former Governor Henry Hastings Sibley, to lead an expedition up the Minnesota River to end the siege at Fort Ridgely. Ramsey gave him a commission as colonel and turned over four companies of the newly organized 6th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment to Sibley at Fort Snelling.[63][64]

The fort became the rendezvous point for the state and federal military forces during the Dakota War of 1862.[65] During the war, the 6th, 7th, and 10th Minnesota Regiments did garrison duty at Fort Snelling.[citation needed]

To deal with the uprising, the United States Department of War created the Department of the Northwest, headquartered at St. Paul and commanded by Major General John Pope. Gen. Pope arrived in St. Paul on 15 September, and sent requests to the governors of Iowa and Wisconsin for additional troops. The 25th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment arrived at Fort Snelling on 22 September, the day before the decisive Battle of Wood Lake, and were sent immediately to Mankato and Paynesville. The 27th Iowa Infantry Regiment arrived at Fort Snelling in October, well after the war was over. Four companies stayed at Fort Snelling, while the other six marched north to Mille Lacs and returned to Fort Snelling on 4 November; three days later they were sent to Cairo, Illinois.[65]

 
Dakota internment camp, Pike Island, winter 1862

In November 1862, 1,658 Dakota, all innocent non-combatants, were moved from the Lower Sioux Agency to Fort Snelling, escorted by 300 soldiers under Lieutenant Colonel William Rainey Marshall.[66][67] They were mostly Dakota women and children, but also included 22 Franco-Dakota and Anglo-Dakota men who had not been tried, as well as Christian and farmer Dakota such as Taopi, Chief Wabasha, Joseph Kawanke, Paul Mazakutemani, Lorenzo Lawrence, John Other Day and Snana who had opposed Chief Little Crow III and the "hostile" faction during the war.[63][68]

An encampment was created below the fort on Pike Island. The Dakota had brought their own tipis and household goods with them, and set up more than 200 tipis.[67] The military leaders had a palisade erected around the encampment to protect the Dakota from angry settlers, some of whom had attacked the women and children as they passed through Henderson en route to Fort Snelling.[69][66] Shortly after they arrived, soldiers raped one of the Dakota women.[69] The Dakota wintered there in 1862–63. An estimated 102 to 300 Dakota died due to the harsh conditions, lack of food, measles and cholera.[70][67]

 
Memorial for the Dakota who were interned and died at Fort Snelling

In May 1863, the Dakota who survived were loaded on two steamboats and taken down the Mississippi and up the Missouri River to Crow Creek by the Great Sioux Reservation. Three hundred more died on the way and three to four a day for weeks after they arrived. Some of the Dakota who made it to Crow Creek were forced to move again three years later to the Santee Sioux Reservation in Nebraska. For the women it was an extended period of hardship and degradation.[71] The descendants of the displaced Dakota reside there today. A memorial is outside the Fort Snelling State Park visitor center commemorating all the Native Americans who died during this period.[72] Because of the prevailing attitudes towards all "Indians" the Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) that were living outside Mankato were also sent to Fort Snelling.[73] There, they too were put on riverboats for Crow Creek. They lost 500 along the way and once there, they and the Dakota would lose another 1,300 to starvation.

 
Hanging of Little Six and Medicine Bottle November 11, 1865, Ft Snelling

In October 1863 Major E.A.C. Hatch and his Battalion were ordered from Fort Snelling to retrieve Dakota leaders who had crossed into Canada.[74] Winter set in before they reached Pembina in Dakota Territory. Hatch made an encampment at Pembina, sending 20 men across the border. They encountered and killed Minnesota Dakota at St. Joseph in the Northwest Territory.[74] At Fort Gerry two Dakota leaders were drugged, kidnapped and taken to Major Hatch for a bounty. The killings at St. Joseph caused almost 400 Dakota to turn themselves in to Hatch as well.[74]

When conditions allowed, his Cavalry took the prisoners back to Fort Snelling. The two chiefs were hanged at the fort.[75] They were Little Six (Sakpedan) and Medicine Bottle (Wakanozanzan).[76] Chief Little Leaf managed to evade capture.[74]

The next year four companies of the 30th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment arrived at Fort Snelling with three of them moving forward to Camp Ridgely en route to Sulley's Dakota campaign.[77]

Indian Wars and Spanish–American War edit

Steele had made plans and plotted his purchase to build the City of Fort Snelling.[78] Steele, however, failed to make payments as agreed causing the government to revoke the sale and repossess the fort lands.[79] Placing the Department of the Northwest at Fort Snelling led to the fort's further development in 1866 when the department transitioned to the Department of Dakota.[79] The next year the headquarters of the department moved to St. Paul. The HQ returned to the fort in 1879 and would remain until 1886 when it went back to St. Paul.[79] After the Civil war Minneapolis began to expand into the fort's surroundings.[80]

In March 1869 the 20th Regiment was transferred from Louisiana to the Department of Dakota. Headquarters, band and E Company were posted to Fort Snelling.

 
Bridge linking Ft. Snelling with St. Paul, 1880–1912

The United States Army assigned the 7th Infantry to garrison the fort in 1878 and six companies arrived in September.[81] That year Congress approved $100,000 to be spent on the Department of Dakota and the old fort's walls were torn down for reuse in the new construction.[82] The following October the remaining four companies of the 7th Infantry arrived and took over garrison duties. The six companies that had been the garrison departed to fight the Utes at White River, Colorado. They returned to Fort Snelling in 1880.[81] In November 1882 the 7th was relieved by the 25th Infantry (colored).[83] The 25th's HQ, band and four companies would garrison the fort until 1888 when they were relieved by the 3rd Infantry. During the 1880s, companies of the 7th Cavalry would be at the fort.[23] The 3rd Regiment would remain until 1898. Some of the garrison were sent to Cuba and fought in the Spanish–American War of 1898.[21] During one of the last battles of the Indian Wars, six soldiers of the 3rd Infantry were killed at the Battle of Leech Lake October 5, 1898. Those killed were Major Wilkinson, Sgt. William Butler, and Privates Edward Lowe, John Olmstead (Onstead), John Schwolenstocker (aka Daniel F. Schwalenstocker), and Albert Ziebel. Those men were buried at north end of the post.[84] Ten others were wounded in the battle. Among them were five Minnesotans: Privates George Wicker, Charles Turner, Edward Brown, Jes Jensen, and Gottfried Ziegler.[85] Pvt. Oscar Burkard would receive the last Medal of Honor awarded during the Indian wars for his action on 5 October 1898 at Leech Lake with the 3rd Infantry. He was also from Minnesota.

In 1895 General E. C. Mason, post commandant, called for the preservation of what remained of the old fort, having realized something had been lost with the dismantling of the walls. Nothing came of the preservation proposal, but from 1901 through 1905 Congress would spend $2,000,000 on the Fort Snelling upper post.[79]

In 1901 the 14th Infantry became the garrison followed by the 28th in 1904.[79] From 1905 to 1911 squadrons of the 3rd, 2nd, and 4th Cavalry Regiments were the occupants of the new cavalry barracks on the upper post.[86]

In June 1916 President Wilson had General Pershing in Mexico on the trail of Poncho Villa. To provide border security Minnesota's entire National Guard was activated at Fort Snelling, comprising three Infantry Regiments and one Artillery. A camp was created on the upper post named Camp Bobleter for organizing the activation. Upon returning to Minnesota the 1st Infantry Regiment was re-designated the 135th Infantry. It is the direct descendant of the 1st Minnesota formed at the fort in 1862.[87]

  • Sgt. Charles H. Welch was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions at Little Big Horn in 1876. His award lists his home as Fort Snelling. Welch enlisted in the Army on June 8, 1873, at Fort Snelling, and was assigned to D Company 7th U.S. Cavalry.[88]

World War I edit

 
41st Infantry Regiment insignia with Fort Snelling's round tower emblazoned center

Once the United States entered the war the fort became a recruit processing station. For WWI the 41st Infantry was constituted at the fort in May 1917 and inactivated in September 1921. The army established an officer training school which closed when the war ended.[89] At that time the only building seeing use was the base hospital. It was expanded to 1200 beds and designated General Hospital 29. During the 1918 influenza pandemic it saw extensive use.[89] That hospital would be the forerunner of the VA Hospital at Fort Snelling now. Between wars, the 14th Field Artillery and the 7th Tank Battalion were assigned to Fort Snelling while the base was considered the "Country Club of the U. S. Army".[89]

In 1921 the 3rd Infantry was in Ohio and ordered to report to Fort Snelling with no designated transport. They marched the 940 miles only to have the 2nd and 3rd Battalions inactivated upon arriving at Fort Snelling. The following June the 1st Battalion was inactivated only for a short time. The regiment would remain at Fort Snelling until 1941. Also in 1921 the US Army created the 88th Divisional area in Iowa, Minnesota and North Dakota. Fort Snelling became a Citizens Military Training Camp (CMTC) for the 351st Infantry Regiment of the 88th Division. The Officers of the unit worked with the CCC program at Fort Snelling. When Pearl Harbor happened the regiment's officers were immediately activated for active duty units so that when the 351st was called up it had very few officers to meet the call.

Civilian Conservation Corps edit

In 1933 the Civilian Conservation Corps was created by Executive Order 6101.[90] Fort Snelling was located in Seventh Corps Area of the US Army and the Works Progress Administration(WPA) established a supply depot at Fort Snelling to support CCC camps. A CCC Headquarters Company was stationed at the Fort. Minnesota had two CCC companies that were entirely African American.[90] One of these worked next the Fort in Fort Snelling State Park.[90]

World War II edit

 
Military Railroad Service insignia

During WWII the Fort Snelling military reservation served both the army and navy. The army had an enlistment center there that processed 300,000 enlistees. The War Department chose the base to be the site of the army's Military Railroad Service(MRS) HQ in 1942 and a winter warfare program later. The MRS was closely linked to commercial railroading with multiple Minnesota railroads sponsoring MRS Railroad Operating Battalions.[91] That year the Army created two Railroad Divisions with the Great Northern Railroad sponsoring the 704th.[91] The 1st MRS Division was activated at Fort Snelling (as the 701st) from where it deployed to the Mediterranean(Italy, Southern France, and North Africa). It was commanded by Brig. Gen. Carl R. Gray Jr. of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway.[91] Gen. Gray was responsible for creating a Commendation for Meritorious Service(MRS Certificate of Merit) specific to railroading troops.[92] In January 1943 the 701st Railway Grand Division, sponsored by the New York Central Railroad, was stood up at Fort Snelling.[93] Minnesota Railroads sponsored multiple Railroad Operating Battalions(ROB)s with the Great Northern sponsoring the 732nd ROB.[91][94][self-published source] Even though sponsored by the Great Northern, the 732nd trained at Fort Sam Houston. It landed in France and was one of two spearhead ROBs. The 732nd operated in support of Gen. Patton's 3rd Armored Division and went into Germany with them.[94][self-published source] During the Battle of the Bulge Patton's armor would come to the 732nds trains to refuel.[94][self-published source] The Army positioned field Artillery directly adjacent to the rail lines so that the 732nd delivered ammo directly to the guns.[94] The 757th Railroad Shop Battalion, sponsored by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad, set up operations at Cherbourg. The Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway sponsored the 714th ROB in the Territory of Alaska.

In 1944 the Military Intelligence Service Language School (MISLS) for Japanese language had outgrown its facilities at Camp Savage and it relocated to Fort Snelling. With the move the curriculum was expanded with Chinese. It had 125 classrooms, 160 instructors, and 3000 students. June 1946 would see the fort's 21st and last commencement at the school. The War Department constructed scores of buildings at the fort for housing and teaching during the war.[82][49] The language school was relocated to Monterey, California, in June 1946.[95]

In 1943 the navy opened an air station on the north side of Wold-Chamberlain Field that existed until 1970. That area is now used by reserve units and the Minnesota Air National Guard. WWII Fort Snelling facilities covered 1,521 acres at war's end.

Post-war 20th century edit

The War Department decommissioned Fort Snelling a second time on 14 October 1946. Various federal agencies were allowed to request land parcels from the land that made up Fort Snelling Unorganized Territory. Since the army departed, the majority of the structures fell into disrepair. In 1960, the fort itself was listed as a National Historic Landmark, citing its importance as the first major military post in the region, and its later history in the development of the United States Army.[2][96]

Many acres of fort land have been lost to roads. Construction of the Mendota Bridge ran a state highway across old fort land. More fort land was lost when an Interstate 494 interchange was added as well as access roads to the International Airport, National Cemetery, VA Hospital and bridge into St. Paul.

In 1963 Fort Snelling became headquarters of United States Army Reserve 205th Infantry Brigade, that had units throughout the upper Midwest. In 1994 that ended as a part of force-structure eliminations.

 
Fort Snelling Administration Building on the Upper Post, built 1878

The fort has been reconstructed to replicate its original appearance starting in 1965.[97] Time and use had been hard on the original fort. The walls, barracks and buildings had been removed. There was archaeological work done at the site in 1957–1958 and again in 1966–1967.[97] At that time all that remained of the original fort were the round and hexagonal towers. State archaeologists located the foundations of all that had been demolished allowing them to pin point the structures they reconstructed. The Minnesota Historical Society has since made the original walled fort or "Lower Post" into an interactive interpretive center. It has been staffed from spring to early fall with personnel attired in period costumes. Although restoring the original fort assured its survival, many of the buildings constructed later, composing the "Upper Post", suffered serious disrepair and neglect. Many of them have been demolished.

21st century edit

In May 2006, the National Trust for Historic Preservation added Upper Post of Fort Snelling to its list of "America's Most Endangered Places". Some restoration on historic Fort Snelling continues. Crews removed the flagpole from the iconic round tower and installed it in the ground, a change since its opening as a historic fort.

Legacy edit

USS Fort Snelling (LSD-30) edit

 
The U.S. Navy named an amphibious warfare ship, the USS Fort Snelling (LSD-30_), to honor the fort.

USS Fort Snelling (LSD-30) was a Thomaston-class dock landing ship of the United States Navy. She was named for Fort Snelling at the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers, for many years the northernmost military post in the land of the Dakota and Ojibwe. She was the second ship assigned that name, but the construction of Fort Snelling (LSD-23) was canceled on 17 August 1945.

Fort Snelling (LSD-30) was laid down on 17 August 1953 by Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp., Pascagoula, Miss.; launched on 16 July 1954, sponsored by Mrs. Robert P. Briscoe, wife of Vice Admiral Briscoe; and commissioned on 24 January 1955, Commander H. Marvin-Smith in command.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ "Dred and Harriet Scott in Minnesota | MNopedia". www.mnopedia.org. Retrieved 2023-05-24.
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  5. ^ Feshir, Riham (April 20, 2016). "Historic Fort Snelling named 'national treasure'". MPR News. Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved April 20, 2016.
  6. ^ "Bdote". Minnesota Historical Society. November 4, 2008. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  7. ^ Engstrom, Tim (November 8, 2019). "Is it going to be Fort Snelling or Bdote or both or something else?". The American Legion Department of Minnesota. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  8. ^ Riggs, Stephen Return (1852). A Dakota–English Dictionary.Originally published by the Smithsonian Institution. Expanded versions published by the Minnesota Historical Society Press (1890, 1992), and by Ross & Haines (1968), p. 313.
  9. ^ Riggs, S.R.; Dorsey, J.O. (1893). Dakota Grammar, Texts, and Ethnography. Contributions to North American ethnology. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 164. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  10. ^ a b Meyer, Roy Willard (1967). History of the Santee Sioux: United States Indian policy on trial. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 24–27. ISBN 9780803281097.
  11. ^ Government relations with the Dakota Sioux (1851–1876), University of Montana Dissertation, Kenneth Burton Moore, 1937 [1]
  12. ^ a b c d e Edgerton, Jay (October 8, 1955). "Pike Treaty Was Long Disputed". The Minneapolis Star. p. 6. Retrieved 2022-01-16.
  13. ^ "On the Historical Horizon". Minnesota History. 34 (8): 355. 1955. JSTOR 20175977.
  14. ^ a b Pike, Zebulon (1895). Coues, Elliott (ed.). The Expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike. Vol. 1. New York: Francis P. Harper. pp. 83, 238–240.
  15. ^ Anderson, Gary Clayton (1984). Kinsmen of Another Kind: Dakota–White Relations in the Upper Mississippi Valley, 1650–1852. University of Nebraska Press. p. 82. ISBN 0-87351-353-3.
  16. ^ Forsyth, Thomas (1908). "Journal of a Voyage from St. Louis to the Falls of St. Anthony, in 1819". Wisconsin Historical Collections. 6: 188–189 – via Internet Archive.
  17. ^ Vogel, Howard (2013). "Rethinking the Effect of the Abrogation of the Dakota Treaties and the Authority for the Removal of the Dakota People from their Homeland". William Mitchell Law Review. 39 (2): 538–581.
  18. ^ Čhaŋtémaza (Neil McKay); McKay, Monica (2020). "Where we stand: The University of Minnesota and Dakhóta Treaty Lands". Open Rivers (17).
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Other sources edit

  • Winstead, Tim (2009). "John Taylor Wood: Man of Action, Man of Honor".
    Wilmington, North Carolina: The Cape Fear Civil War Round Table. Retrieved Oct 7, 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Anfinson, John O.; et al. (2003). (PDF). St. Paul District, Corps of Engineers. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2017. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
  • DeCarlo, Peter. Fort Snelling at Bdote: A Brief History (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2017). 96 pp.

External links edit

  • Round Tower, Fort Snelling in MNopedia, the Minnesota Encyclopedia
  • Three Score Years and Ten – Life-Long Memories of Fort Snelling, Minnesota, and other parts of the West, by Charlotte Ouisconsin Van Cleve. Published in 1888, from Project Gutenberg
  • Fort Snelling National Cemetery, Department of Veterans Affairs Official webpage
  • Minneapolis VA Medical Center, Department of Veterans Affairs 2007-06-29 at the Wayback Machine Official webpage
  • Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport Official website
  • National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form – includes description and details on buildings
  • Historic Fort Snelling page of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area's website

fort, snelling, this, article, about, historic, military, fortification, unit, minnesota, state, park, system, state, park, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, unclear, citation, style, references, used, made, clearer, with, different, consistent, styl. This article is about the historic military fortification For a unit of the Minnesota state park system see Fort Snelling State Park For other uses see Fort Snelling disambiguation This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Fort Snelling is a former military fortification and National Historic Landmark in the U S state of Minnesota on the bluffs overlooking the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers The military site was initially named Fort Saint Anthony but it was renamed Fort Snelling once its construction was completed in 1825 Fort SnellingU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkMinnesota State Register of Historic PlacesFort Snelling s round towerLocationFort Snelling Unorganized Territory MinnesotaNearest cityBordering Minneapolis St Paul Mendota and Mendota Heights Coordinates44 53 34 N 93 10 50 W 44 89278 N 93 18056 W 44 89278 93 18056Built1819ArchitectColonel Josiah SnellingWebsiteHistoric Fort SnellingNRHP reference No 66000401Significant datesAdded to NRHP15 October 1966 1 Designated NHL19 December 1960 2 Before the American Civil War the U S Army supported slavery at the fort by allowing its soldiers to bring their personal enslaved people These included African Americans Dred Scott and Harriet Robinson Scott who lived at the fort in the 1830s In the 1840s the Scotts sued for their freedom arguing that having lived in free territory made them free leading to the landmark United States Supreme Court case Dred Scott v Sandford 3 Slavery ended at the fort just before Minnesota statehood in 1858 The fort served as the primary center for U S government forces during the Dakota War of 1862 It also was the site of the concentration camp 4 where eastern Dakota and Ho chunk non combatants awaited riverboat transport in their forced removal from Minnesota when hostilities ceased The fort served as a recruiting station during the Civil War Spanish American War and both World Wars before being decommissioned a second time in 1946 It then fell into a state of disrepair until the lower post was restored to its original appearance in 1965 At that time all that remained of the original lower post were the round and hexagonal towers Many of the important buildings of the upper post remain today with some still in disrepair The historic fort is in the unorganized territory of Fort Snelling within Hennepin County bordering Ramsey and Dakota counties There are now multiple government agencies that own portions of the former fort with the Minnesota Historical Society administering the Historic Fort Snelling site The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources administers Fort Snelling State Park at the bottom of the bluff Fort Snelling once encompassed the park s land It has been cited as a National Treasure by the National Trust for Historic Preservation 5 The historic fort is in the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area a National Park Service unit Contents 1 History 1 1 Bdote 1 2 Land cession treaty 1 3 Frontier post 1 4 Slavery at the fort 1 5 Civil War 1 6 Dakota War 1 7 Indian Wars and Spanish American War 1 8 World War I 1 9 Civilian Conservation Corps 1 10 World War II 1 11 Post war 20th century 1 12 21st century 2 Legacy 2 1 USS Fort Snelling LSD 30 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 References 6 Other sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editBdote edit Main article Bdote Bdote meeting of waters or where two rivers meet 6 is considered a place of spiritual importance to the Dakota 7 A Dakota English Dictionary 1852 edited by missionary Stephen Return Riggs originally recorded the word as mdote noting that it was also a name commonly applied to the country about Fort Snelling or mouth of the Saint Peters 8 now known as the Minnesota River According to Riggs The Mdewakantonwan think that the mouth of the Minnesota River is precisely over the center of the Earth and that they occupy the gate that opens into the western world 9 The confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers also became a place where Native Americans would sign treaties with the United States the 1805 Treaty of St Peters signed by the Mdewakanton Dakota the 1837 White Pine Treaty signed by several Ojibwe bands and the 1851 Treaty of Mendota signed by representatives of the Mdewakanton and Wahpekute Dakota Land cession treaty edit nbsp Lieutenant Zebulon Pike acquired the land for the fort in 1805In 1805 Lieutenant Zebulon Pike signed a treaty he was unauthorized to create known as Pike s Purchase 1805 Treaty of St Peters There were seven Dakota members present with only two signing the treaty Cetan Wakuwa Mani Petit Corbeau and Way Aga Enogee Waynyaga Inazin It ceded 155 320 acres of land in the area 400 km2 10 For an unspecified amount of money later valued at 2 000 The treaty states Article One That the Sioux nation grants unto the United States for the purpose of establishment of military posts nine miles square at the mouth of river St Croix also from below the confluence of the Mississippi and St Peters up the Mississippi to Include the falls of St Anthony extending nine miles on each side of the river 11 Legal scholars historians and the Dakota have long raised questions about the validity of the 1805 treaty 12 13 Although Pike was an army officer he was not authorized to sign a treaty on behalf of the United States nor were there any formal witnesses 12 Pike represented the treaty as having been agreed with the entire Sioux nation but in reality it was only signed by representatives of two Mdewakanton villages 10 From a legal point of view there was insufficient description of the land the signers intended to convey 12 Furthermore there was no consideration or payment terms stated in the treaty 12 Pike wrote in his journal he thought the land was worth US 200 000 but within the treaty itself he left the payment amount blank 14 deferring to Congress to determine the final amount to be paid 15 On April 16 1808 when the U S Senate finally ratified the treaty it approved payment to the Dakota in the amount of only 2 000 14 Payment for the ceded lands only arrived in 1819 when the United States Department of War sent Major Thomas Forsyth to distribute approximately 2 000 worth of goods 16 In 1838 Indian agent Lawrence Taliaferro paid a further 4 000 to try to settle the matter with other Dakota band The issue would was raised in subsequent treaty negotiations in the 1850s 12 In 1863 the US Congress passed an act which abrogated and annulled all treaties with the Dakota people 17 The moral legitimacy of the land title is still disputed 18 Pike Island at the mouth of the Minnesota River was later named after Zebulon Pike 19 Frontier post editFollowing the War of 1812 the United States Department of War built a chain of forts and installed Indian agents from Lake Michigan to the Missouri River in South Dakota These forts were intended to extend the United States presence into the northwest territories following the Treaty of Ghent and the demarcation of the 49th parallel The treaty restricted British Canadian traders from operating in the US and the forts were intended to enforce that as well as keep Indian lands free of white settlement until permitted by treaty The forts were seen as the embodiment of federal authority representing law order for the protection of pioneers and traders 20 The Fort Snelling garrison also attempted to keep the peace among the Dakota and other tribes 21 Also built on army land was the St Peter s Indian Agency at Mendota 22 The Anglo Europeans called the Minnesota River the St Peter s and the Indian Agency would be a part of Fort Snelling from 1820 to 1853 nbsp Camp New Hope 1819Lieutenant Colonel Henry Leavenworth commanded the expedition of 5th Infantry that built the initial outpost in 1819 That cantonment was called New Hope and was on the river flats along the Minnesota River Col Leavenworth lost 40 men to scurvy that winter and moved his encampment to Camp Coldwater because he felt the riverside location contributed to the outbreak 23 The new camp was near a spring closer to the fortification he was constructing That spring would be the source of drinking water to the fort throughout the 19th century The spring held a spiritual significance to the Sioux The post surgeon began recording meteorological observations at the fort in January 1820 The U S Army Surgeon General had made the recording of four weather readings every day a duty of the surgeon at every Army post 24 Fort Snelling has one of the longest near continuous weather records in the country 25 In 1820 Colonel Josiah Snelling took command of the outpost and the fort s construction Upon completion in 1824 he christened his work Fort St Anthony for the waterfalls just upriver That did not last long as it was changed by General Winfield Scott to Fort Snelling in recognition of the fort s architect commander From construction in 1820 to closure in 1858 four army units would garrison the fort the 1st 26 5th 27 6th 28 10th Regiments 29 plus a company from the 1st Dragoons In 1827 the 5th Infantry would be replaced by the 1st Infantry for ten years with the 5th returning in 1837 23 The 5th would garrison the fort until the 1st relieved them again in 1840 In 1848 the 6th Infantry became the garrison 23 The garrison would change again in November 1855 The 10th commanded by Col C F Smith assumed duty Smith would go on to become a major general Colonel Snelling was recalled to Washington leaving Fort Snelling in September 1827 He died the next summer from complications of dysentery and a brain fever In 1827 the first post office in Minnesota started at Fort Snelling with most mail forwarded from Prairie du Chien 30 Colonel Zachary Taylor assumed command in 1828 He observed that the buffalo are entirely gone and bear and deer are scarcely seen He also wrote that the Indians subsist principally on fish water fowl and wild rice 31 While posted to Fort Snelling Col Taylor had eight adult slaves die as well as several minors 31 Along with the construction of the fort an Indian Agency was constructed on the military Reservation opposite the fort at Mendota It was administered by Major Lawrence Taliaferro In 1834 Taliaferro and the fort commandant Major Bliss assisted missionaries Gideon and Samuel W Pond develop the Dakota alphabet and compile a Dakota dictionary 32 Taliaferro also served as the Territorial Justice of Peace until 1838 when the Governor of Iowa named Henry Sibley his replacement 33 The Agency was used to hold court and those incarcerated were sent to Fort Snelling s round tower The town of St Paul also sent its criminals to the tower until it built its first jail in 1851 34 Both Fort Snelling and Fort Ripley provided this civil service for internment of criminals until the territory developed the civil infrastructure needed 34 Major Taliaferro owned 21 slaves one of whom was Harriet Robinson 35 She married Dred Scott with Major Taliaferro officiating at Mendota John Marsh arrived at the fort during the early 1820s He started the first school in the Territory for the officers children Marsh developed a relationship with the Dakota compiling a dictionary of the dialect used by the Mendota tribe He had studied medicine at Harvard without earning a degree He continued his studies under the tutelage of the fort s physician Dr Purcell However Purcell died before he completed the coursework and March moved west 36 Major Plympton became post commander in August 1837 He made determining the actual boundaries of the fort s land a priority doing two surveys After the second he sent troops to evict Pigs eye Parrant from Fountain Cave down river Pigseye s tavern there was the first commercial venture in what became St Paul Parrant gained notoriety for his bootleg liquor business with both the Dakota and the soldiers causing issues for the fort commander 37 The eviction coincided with the arrival of the Catholic missionary Lucian Galtier That year also brought the arrival of Pierre Bottineau the Kit Carson of the Northwest 38 He would serve the fort as a guide and interpreter He could speak French and English Dakota Ojibwe Cree Mandan and Hochunk 38 nbsp Fort Snelling by Colonel Seth EastmanLieutenant Colonel Seth Eastman was commander of the fort twice in the 1840s 39 40 Eastman was an artist He has been recognized for his extensive work recording the Dakota 41 His skill was such that he was commissioned by Congress to illustrate the six volume study of Indian Tribes of the United States by Henry Rowe Schoolcraft The set was published 1851 1857 with hundreds of his works 42 nbsp Inlaid Pipe Bowl with Two Faces collected at Fort Snelling 1833 36From 1833 to 1836 Dr Nathan Sturges Jarvis surgeon was stationed at Fort Snelling 43 During that time he acquired a notable collection of northern plains Native American artifacts now housed at the Brooklyn Museum 43 In 1848 A Co of the 6th U S Infantry was dispatched from Fort Snelling to build Fort Ripley 28 In 1848 the Fort s Military Reservation was declared too big with the lands east of the Mississippi detached and sold That land created much of what became St Paul 44 In the summer of 1849 D Company 1st Dragoons escorted Maj Woods of the 6th Infantry at Fort Snelling to mark a northern boundary line and select a site for a future fortification near Pembina 45 In 1850 E Co of the 6th Infantry was sent south to build Fort Dodge and would garrison the fort until the army closed it and sent E Co to help construct Fort Ridgely 28 In 1850 Alexander Ramsey requested Congress fund five military roads in the Territory Two ran from Mendota at Fort Snelling One followed the Mississippi to Wabasha and the Iowa border The other headed west to the Big Sioux River confluence with the Missouri In 1853 C E and K Companies of the 6th Infantry were tasked with the construction of Fort Ridgely 46 Also in 1853 congress authorized money specifically to mount E Company of the 3rd Artillery to be stationed at Fort Snelling and Fort Ridgely until May 1861 47 1856 Major Edward Canby was fort commander He became a general The only one killed in the Indian wars The town of Canby is named for him 1857 1861 G I and L Companies 2nd Artillery were variously posted to northern forts Snelling Ridgely Ripley 1864 65 The Minnesota Valley Railroad completed line from St Paul to Minneapolis crossing the river at Mendota that passed beneath the Fort Pilings remain of the line s river crossing As the towns of Minneapolis and St Paul grew and with Minnesota statehood before Congress the need for a forward frontier military post had ceased In 1857 with the fort s deactivation looming the garrison was sent to Fort Leavenworth Kansas to join the other units being sent to Utah for what became known as the Utah War 29 With the departure of the 10th Infantry Fort Snelling was designated surplus government property In 1858 when Minnesota became a state the army sold it to Franklin Steele for 90 000 Steele operated the two ferries serving the fort across both rivers at the same time he was the sutler to the fort He also was a friend of the sitting President James Buchanan 48 44 At that time the fort sat on 8 000 acres 32 km2 A small portion of that land was later annexed into south Minneapolis 49 The balance of that original land is now broken into Historic Fort Snelling Interpretive Center 300 acres Fort Snelling State Park 2 931 acres Fort Snelling National Cemetery 436 acres Fort Snelling VA Hospital 160 acres 50 Minnesota Veterans Home 53 acres the Coldwater Spring unit of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area 29 acres 51 the Upper Post Veterans Home Minneapolis St Paul International Airport and the Minneapolis St Paul Joint Air Reserve Station 2 930 acres Fort Snelling watercolor by Lt Sully October 1855 52 Slavery at the fort edit When Fort Snelling was built in 1820 fur traders and officers at the post including Colonel Snelling employed slave labor for cooking cleaning and other domestic chores Although slavery was a violation of both the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 and the Missouri Compromise of 1820 an estimated 15 30 Africans worked as slaves at the fort 53 US Army officers submitted pay vouchers to cover the expenses of retaining slaves From 1855 to 1857 nine individuals were enslaved at Fort Snelling The last slave holding unit was the 10th Infantry Slavery was made unconstitutional in Minnesota when the state constitution was ratified in 1858 54 nbsp Restored quarters believed to have been occupied by Dred amp Harriet Scott 1836 1840 at Fort SnellingTwo women that had lived as slaves at Fort Snelling sued for their freedom and were set free in 1836 One named Rachel was a slave to a Lieutenant Thomas Stockton at Fort Snelling from 1830 to 1831 then at Fort Crawford at Prairie du Chien until 1834 When Rachel and her son were sold in St Louis she sued claiming that she had been illegally enslaved in the Minnesota Territory In 1836 the Missouri Supreme Court ruled in her favor making her a free person 54 The second woman Courtney also sued for freedom in St Louis When the Missouri Supreme Court ruled in Rachel s favor Courtney s slaveowner conceded her case as well and freed Courtney and her son William 54 55 Courtney had another son named Godfrey that remained in Minnesota when she was sent to a slave market in St Louis 56 He is the only known Minnesota runaway slave that ran away from the fort and was taken in by the Dakota 56 He was involved in the Dakota War and was the first defendant on the docket of the military tribunal for hanging 56 The fort surgeon Dr John Emerson purchased Dred Scott at a slave market in Saint Louis Missouri where slavery was legal Emerson was posted to Fort Snelling during the 1830s and brought Dred north with him 53 There Dred meet and married Harriet and had two children as slaves at Fort Snelling from 1836 to 1840 Dr Emerson s wife Irene returned to St Louis taking the Scotts and their children in 1840 In 1843 Dred sued for his family s freedom for illegally being indentured in free territory Although he lost that first trial he appealed and in 1850 his family was given their freedom In 1852 Emerson appealed and the Scotts were again enslaved Dred Scott appealed that decision and in 1857 the US Supreme Court decided that the Scotts would stay enslaved Dred Scott v Sandford was a landmark case that held that neither enslaved nor free Africans were meant to hold the privileges or constitutional rights of United States citizens This case garnered national attention and pushed political tensions towards the Civil War 54 53 A longstanding precedent in freedom suits of once free always free was overturned in this case The cases were combined under Dred Scott s name It was appealed to the United States Supreme Court In Dred Scott v Sandford 1857 Chief Justice Taney ruled that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional and that enslaved Africans had no standing under the constitution so could not sue for freedom The decision increased sectional tensions between the North and South Civil War edit nbsp The Wokiksuye K a Woyuonihan memorial site at Fort Snelling with a pipestone encased in the center surrounded by bundles of the four sacred medicines sage cedar tobacco and sweetgrass When the American Civil War broke out the Government commandeered the fort for the War Department as an induction station At the time Steele was in arrears having made only one payment 44 When Governor Ramsey offered President Lincoln 1000 troops to fight the South the volunteers he got were organized at Fort Snelling into a regiment the 1st Minnesota More than 24 000 recruits were trained there 57 Minnesota units mustered in at Fort Snelling 1st Minnesota April 1861 lineage today 2nd Battalion 135th Infantry 2nd Minnesota June July 1861 lineage today 136th Infantry Regiment 3rd Minnesota Oct Nov 1861 4th Minnesota Oct Nov 1861 5th Minnesota Mar Apr 1862 6th Minnesota Sep Nov 1862 7th Minnesota Aug Oct 1862 8th Minnesota Jun Sep 1862 9th Minnesota Aug Oct 1862 10th Minnesota Aug Nov 1862 11th Minnesota Aug Sep 1864 1st Minnesota Infantry Battalion Aug Sep 1864 1st Minnesota Sharpshooters Company Apr 1864 2nd Minnesota Sharpshooters Company Jan 1862 1st Minnesota Heavy Artillery Nov 1864 today 151st Field Artillery 1st Minnesota Light Artillery Battery Nov 1861 2nd Minnesota Light Artillery Battery Mar 1862 3rd Minnesota Light Artillery Battery Feb 1863 1st Minnesota Cavalry Oct Dec 1862 2nd Minnesota Cavalry Regiment Dec 1863 1st Minnesota Light Cavalry Bracket s Battalion Sep Nov 1861 Minnesota Independent Cavalry Battalion Hatch s Battalion Jul 1863 During the civil war slightly over 100 African Americans approached Fort Snelling to volunteer for military service 57 Minnesota did not have an African American population large enough to field a colored unit as US Infantry units were segregated Those volunteers were put on riverboats to Iowa and Missouri states that had colored units 1st Iowa Infantry Colored 18th United States Colored Infantry Regiment and the 68th United States Colored Infantry 57 The navy had a few volunteers also 58 In 1830 Fort Snelling was the birthplace of John Taylor Wood He served on the Merrimack at the Battle of Hampton Roads during the civil war 59 In 1860 and 1863 the Minnesota State Fair was held at the fort 60 In 1865 the Minnesota Central Railroad completed rail line from Northfield to Mendota There the line crossed the river to Fort Snelling continuing on to Minneapolis 61 62 In June 1865 the 10th US Infantry Hq D and F Companies returned to the 10th s pre war post at Fort Snelling 29 B and H Companies went to Fort Ridgely while A and I Companies went to Fort Ripley With the war over Steele submitted a claim of 162 000 for the forts use during the war He hoped to gain the money s he still owed from the 1857 purchase In 1873 an agreement was reached giving the Army the fort In exchange his debt was cleared and Steele was given title to 6 395 acres of the original Fort Snelling Reservation 44 Dakota War edit Main article Dakota War of 1862 On 19 August 1862 after hearing of attacks at the Lower Sioux Agency the day before Governor Alexander Ramsey immediately went from St Paul to Fort Snelling to assess military preparedness Ramsey immediately ordered troops training at or near the fort to be detained from being sent east to fight in the American Civil War On the same day he asked his long time friend and political rival former Governor Henry Hastings Sibley to lead an expedition up the Minnesota River to end the siege at Fort Ridgely Ramsey gave him a commission as colonel and turned over four companies of the newly organized 6th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment to Sibley at Fort Snelling 63 64 The fort became the rendezvous point for the state and federal military forces during the Dakota War of 1862 65 During the war the 6th 7th and 10th Minnesota Regiments did garrison duty at Fort Snelling citation needed To deal with the uprising the United States Department of War created the Department of the Northwest headquartered at St Paul and commanded by Major General John Pope Gen Pope arrived in St Paul on 15 September and sent requests to the governors of Iowa and Wisconsin for additional troops The 25th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment arrived at Fort Snelling on 22 September the day before the decisive Battle of Wood Lake and were sent immediately to Mankato and Paynesville The 27th Iowa Infantry Regiment arrived at Fort Snelling in October well after the war was over Four companies stayed at Fort Snelling while the other six marched north to Mille Lacs and returned to Fort Snelling on 4 November three days later they were sent to Cairo Illinois 65 nbsp Dakota internment camp Pike Island winter 1862In November 1862 1 658 Dakota all innocent non combatants were moved from the Lower Sioux Agency to Fort Snelling escorted by 300 soldiers under Lieutenant Colonel William Rainey Marshall 66 67 They were mostly Dakota women and children but also included 22 Franco Dakota and Anglo Dakota men who had not been tried as well as Christian and farmer Dakota such as Taopi Chief Wabasha Joseph Kawanke Paul Mazakutemani Lorenzo Lawrence John Other Day and Snana who had opposed Chief Little Crow III and the hostile faction during the war 63 68 An encampment was created below the fort on Pike Island The Dakota had brought their own tipis and household goods with them and set up more than 200 tipis 67 The military leaders had a palisade erected around the encampment to protect the Dakota from angry settlers some of whom had attacked the women and children as they passed through Henderson en route to Fort Snelling 69 66 Shortly after they arrived soldiers raped one of the Dakota women 69 The Dakota wintered there in 1862 63 An estimated 102 to 300 Dakota died due to the harsh conditions lack of food measles and cholera 70 67 nbsp Memorial for the Dakota who were interned and died at Fort SnellingIn May 1863 the Dakota who survived were loaded on two steamboats and taken down the Mississippi and up the Missouri River to Crow Creek by the Great Sioux Reservation Three hundred more died on the way and three to four a day for weeks after they arrived Some of the Dakota who made it to Crow Creek were forced to move again three years later to the Santee Sioux Reservation in Nebraska For the women it was an extended period of hardship and degradation 71 The descendants of the displaced Dakota reside there today A memorial is outside the Fort Snelling State Park visitor center commemorating all the Native Americans who died during this period 72 Because of the prevailing attitudes towards all Indians the Ho Chunk Winnebago that were living outside Mankato were also sent to Fort Snelling 73 There they too were put on riverboats for Crow Creek They lost 500 along the way and once there they and the Dakota would lose another 1 300 to starvation nbsp Hanging of Little Six and Medicine Bottle November 11 1865 Ft SnellingIn October 1863 Major E A C Hatch and his Battalion were ordered from Fort Snelling to retrieve Dakota leaders who had crossed into Canada 74 Winter set in before they reached Pembina in Dakota Territory Hatch made an encampment at Pembina sending 20 men across the border They encountered and killed Minnesota Dakota at St Joseph in the Northwest Territory 74 At Fort Gerry two Dakota leaders were drugged kidnapped and taken to Major Hatch for a bounty The killings at St Joseph caused almost 400 Dakota to turn themselves in to Hatch as well 74 When conditions allowed his Cavalry took the prisoners back to Fort Snelling The two chiefs were hanged at the fort 75 They were Little Six Sakpedan and Medicine Bottle Wakanozanzan 76 Chief Little Leaf managed to evade capture 74 The next year four companies of the 30th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment arrived at Fort Snelling with three of them moving forward to Camp Ridgely en route to Sulley s Dakota campaign 77 Indian Wars and Spanish American War edit Steele had made plans and plotted his purchase to build the City of Fort Snelling 78 Steele however failed to make payments as agreed causing the government to revoke the sale and repossess the fort lands 79 Placing the Department of the Northwest at Fort Snelling led to the fort s further development in 1866 when the department transitioned to the Department of Dakota 79 The next year the headquarters of the department moved to St Paul The HQ returned to the fort in 1879 and would remain until 1886 when it went back to St Paul 79 After the Civil war Minneapolis began to expand into the fort s surroundings 80 In March 1869 the 20th Regiment was transferred from Louisiana to the Department of Dakota Headquarters band and E Company were posted to Fort Snelling nbsp Bridge linking Ft Snelling with St Paul 1880 1912The United States Army assigned the 7th Infantry to garrison the fort in 1878 and six companies arrived in September 81 That year Congress approved 100 000 to be spent on the Department of Dakota and the old fort s walls were torn down for reuse in the new construction 82 The following October the remaining four companies of the 7th Infantry arrived and took over garrison duties The six companies that had been the garrison departed to fight the Utes at White River Colorado They returned to Fort Snelling in 1880 81 In November 1882 the 7th was relieved by the 25th Infantry colored 83 The 25th s HQ band and four companies would garrison the fort until 1888 when they were relieved by the 3rd Infantry During the 1880s companies of the 7th Cavalry would be at the fort 23 The 3rd Regiment would remain until 1898 Some of the garrison were sent to Cuba and fought in the Spanish American War of 1898 21 During one of the last battles of the Indian Wars six soldiers of the 3rd Infantry were killed at the Battle of Leech Lake October 5 1898 Those killed were Major Wilkinson Sgt William Butler and Privates Edward Lowe John Olmstead Onstead John Schwolenstocker aka Daniel F Schwalenstocker and Albert Ziebel Those men were buried at north end of the post 84 Ten others were wounded in the battle Among them were five Minnesotans Privates George Wicker Charles Turner Edward Brown Jes Jensen and Gottfried Ziegler 85 Pvt Oscar Burkard would receive the last Medal of Honor awarded during the Indian wars for his action on 5 October 1898 at Leech Lake with the 3rd Infantry He was also from Minnesota In 1895 General E C Mason post commandant called for the preservation of what remained of the old fort having realized something had been lost with the dismantling of the walls Nothing came of the preservation proposal but from 1901 through 1905 Congress would spend 2 000 000 on the Fort Snelling upper post 79 In 1901 the 14th Infantry became the garrison followed by the 28th in 1904 79 From 1905 to 1911 squadrons of the 3rd 2nd and 4th Cavalry Regiments were the occupants of the new cavalry barracks on the upper post 86 In June 1916 President Wilson had General Pershing in Mexico on the trail of Poncho Villa To provide border security Minnesota s entire National Guard was activated at Fort Snelling comprising three Infantry Regiments and one Artillery A camp was created on the upper post named Camp Bobleter for organizing the activation Upon returning to Minnesota the 1st Infantry Regiment was re designated the 135th Infantry It is the direct descendant of the 1st Minnesota formed at the fort in 1862 87 Sgt Charles H Welch was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions at Little Big Horn in 1876 His award lists his home as Fort Snelling Welch enlisted in the Army on June 8 1873 at Fort Snelling and was assigned to D Company 7th U S Cavalry 88 World War I edit nbsp 41st Infantry Regiment insignia with Fort Snelling s round tower emblazoned centerOnce the United States entered the war the fort became a recruit processing station For WWI the 41st Infantry was constituted at the fort in May 1917 and inactivated in September 1921 The army established an officer training school which closed when the war ended 89 At that time the only building seeing use was the base hospital It was expanded to 1200 beds and designated General Hospital 29 During the 1918 influenza pandemic it saw extensive use 89 That hospital would be the forerunner of the VA Hospital at Fort Snelling now Between wars the 14th Field Artillery and the 7th Tank Battalion were assigned to Fort Snelling while the base was considered the Country Club of the U S Army 89 In 1921 the 3rd Infantry was in Ohio and ordered to report to Fort Snelling with no designated transport They marched the 940 miles only to have the 2nd and 3rd Battalions inactivated upon arriving at Fort Snelling The following June the 1st Battalion was inactivated only for a short time The regiment would remain at Fort Snelling until 1941 Also in 1921 the US Army created the 88th Divisional area in Iowa Minnesota and North Dakota Fort Snelling became a Citizens Military Training Camp CMTC for the 351st Infantry Regiment of the 88th Division The Officers of the unit worked with the CCC program at Fort Snelling When Pearl Harbor happened the regiment s officers were immediately activated for active duty units so that when the 351st was called up it had very few officers to meet the call Civilian Conservation Corps edit In 1933 the Civilian Conservation Corps was created by Executive Order 6101 90 Fort Snelling was located in Seventh Corps Area of the US Army and the Works Progress Administration WPA established a supply depot at Fort Snelling to support CCC camps A CCC Headquarters Company was stationed at the Fort Minnesota had two CCC companies that were entirely African American 90 One of these worked next the Fort in Fort Snelling State Park 90 World War II edit nbsp Military Railroad Service insigniaDuring WWII the Fort Snelling military reservation served both the army and navy The army had an enlistment center there that processed 300 000 enlistees The War Department chose the base to be the site of the army s Military Railroad Service MRS HQ in 1942 and a winter warfare program later The MRS was closely linked to commercial railroading with multiple Minnesota railroads sponsoring MRS Railroad Operating Battalions 91 That year the Army created two Railroad Divisions with the Great Northern Railroad sponsoring the 704th 91 The 1st MRS Division was activated at Fort Snelling as the 701st from where it deployed to the Mediterranean Italy Southern France and North Africa It was commanded by Brig Gen Carl R Gray Jr of the Chicago St Paul Minneapolis and Omaha Railway 91 Gen Gray was responsible for creating a Commendation for Meritorious Service MRS Certificate of Merit specific to railroading troops 92 In January 1943 the 701st Railway Grand Division sponsored by the New York Central Railroad was stood up at Fort Snelling 93 Minnesota Railroads sponsored multiple Railroad Operating Battalions ROB s with the Great Northern sponsoring the 732nd ROB 91 94 self published source Even though sponsored by the Great Northern the 732nd trained at Fort Sam Houston It landed in France and was one of two spearhead ROBs The 732nd operated in support of Gen Patton s 3rd Armored Division and went into Germany with them 94 self published source During the Battle of the Bulge Patton s armor would come to the 732nds trains to refuel 94 self published source The Army positioned field Artillery directly adjacent to the rail lines so that the 732nd delivered ammo directly to the guns 94 The 757th Railroad Shop Battalion sponsored by the Chicago Milwaukee St Paul and Pacific Railroad set up operations at Cherbourg The Chicago St Paul Minneapolis and Omaha Railway sponsored the 714th ROB in the Territory of Alaska In 1944 the Military Intelligence Service Language School MISLS for Japanese language had outgrown its facilities at Camp Savage and it relocated to Fort Snelling With the move the curriculum was expanded with Chinese It had 125 classrooms 160 instructors and 3000 students June 1946 would see the fort s 21st and last commencement at the school The War Department constructed scores of buildings at the fort for housing and teaching during the war 82 49 The language school was relocated to Monterey California in June 1946 95 In 1943 the navy opened an air station on the north side of Wold Chamberlain Field that existed until 1970 That area is now used by reserve units and the Minnesota Air National Guard WWII Fort Snelling facilities covered 1 521 acres at war s end Post war 20th century edit The War Department decommissioned Fort Snelling a second time on 14 October 1946 Various federal agencies were allowed to request land parcels from the land that made up Fort Snelling Unorganized Territory Since the army departed the majority of the structures fell into disrepair In 1960 the fort itself was listed as a National Historic Landmark citing its importance as the first major military post in the region and its later history in the development of the United States Army 2 96 Many acres of fort land have been lost to roads Construction of the Mendota Bridge ran a state highway across old fort land More fort land was lost when an Interstate 494 interchange was added as well as access roads to the International Airport National Cemetery VA Hospital and bridge into St Paul In 1963 Fort Snelling became headquarters of United States Army Reserve 205th Infantry Brigade that had units throughout the upper Midwest In 1994 that ended as a part of force structure eliminations nbsp Fort Snelling Administration Building on the Upper Post built 1878The fort has been reconstructed to replicate its original appearance starting in 1965 97 Time and use had been hard on the original fort The walls barracks and buildings had been removed There was archaeological work done at the site in 1957 1958 and again in 1966 1967 97 At that time all that remained of the original fort were the round and hexagonal towers State archaeologists located the foundations of all that had been demolished allowing them to pin point the structures they reconstructed The Minnesota Historical Society has since made the original walled fort or Lower Post into an interactive interpretive center It has been staffed from spring to early fall with personnel attired in period costumes Although restoring the original fort assured its survival many of the buildings constructed later composing the Upper Post suffered serious disrepair and neglect Many of them have been demolished 21st century edit In May 2006 the National Trust for Historic Preservation added Upper Post of Fort Snelling to its list of America s Most Endangered Places Some restoration on historic Fort Snelling continues Crews removed the flagpole from the iconic round tower and installed it in the ground a change since its opening as a historic fort Legacy editUSS Fort Snelling LSD 30 edit Main article USS Fort Snelling LSD 30 nbsp The U S Navy named an amphibious warfare ship the USS Fort Snelling LSD 30 to honor the fort USS Fort Snelling LSD 30 was a Thomaston class dock landing ship of the United States Navy She was named for Fort Snelling at the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers for many years the northernmost military post in the land of the Dakota and Ojibwe She was the second ship assigned that name but the construction of Fort Snelling LSD 23 was canceled on 17 August 1945 Fort Snelling LSD 30 was laid down on 17 August 1953 by Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp Pascagoula Miss launched on 16 July 1954 sponsored by Mrs Robert P Briscoe wife of Vice Admiral Briscoe and commissioned on 24 January 1955 Commander H Marvin Smith in command Gallery edit nbsp Neglected barracks in the Upper Post last used during World War II nbsp The round tower at Fort Snelling with US flag nbsp Minnesota Historical Society Historic Interpreters firing a cannon at the fort See also editArmy on the Frontier Fort Snelling and the establishment of Minneapolis and Saint Paul Lawrence Taliaferro List of National Historic Landmarks in Minnesota List of the oldest buildings in Minnesota National Register of Historic Places listings in Hennepin County Minnesota Slavery at Fort SnellingPortal nbsp United StatesReferences edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 15 2006 a b Fort Snelling National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Archived from the original on 2008 03 13 Retrieved 2007 10 03 Dred and Harriet Scott in Minnesota MNopedia www mnopedia org Retrieved 2023 05 24 The US Dakota War of 1862 Historic Fort Snelling MNHS Feshir Riham April 20 2016 Historic Fort Snelling named national treasure MPR News Minnesota Public Radio Retrieved April 20 2016 Bdote Minnesota Historical Society November 4 2008 Retrieved January 15 2022 Engstrom Tim November 8 2019 Is it going to be Fort Snelling or Bdote or both or something else The American Legion Department of Minnesota Retrieved 2022 01 14 Riggs Stephen Return 1852 A Dakota English Dictionary Originally published by the Smithsonian Institution Expanded versions published by the Minnesota Historical Society Press 1890 1992 and by Ross amp Haines 1968 p 313 Riggs S R Dorsey J O 1893 Dakota Grammar Texts and Ethnography Contributions to North American ethnology U S Government Printing Office p 164 Retrieved January 15 2022 a b Meyer Roy Willard 1967 History of the Santee Sioux United States Indian policy on trial Lincoln University of Nebraska Press pp 24 27 ISBN 9780803281097 Government relations with the Dakota Sioux 1851 1876 University of Montana Dissertation Kenneth Burton Moore 1937 1 a b c d e Edgerton Jay October 8 1955 Pike Treaty Was Long Disputed The Minneapolis Star p 6 Retrieved 2022 01 16 On the Historical Horizon Minnesota History 34 8 355 1955 JSTOR 20175977 a b Pike Zebulon 1895 Coues Elliott ed The Expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike Vol 1 New York Francis P Harper pp 83 238 240 Anderson Gary Clayton 1984 Kinsmen of Another Kind Dakota White Relations in the Upper Mississippi Valley 1650 1852 University of Nebraska Press p 82 ISBN 0 87351 353 3 Forsyth Thomas 1908 Journal of a Voyage from St Louis to the Falls of St Anthony in 1819 Wisconsin Historical Collections 6 188 189 via Internet Archive Vogel Howard 2013 Rethinking the Effect of the Abrogation of the Dakota Treaties and the Authority for the Removal of the Dakota People from their Homeland William Mitchell Law Review 39 2 538 581 Chaŋtemaza Neil McKay McKay Monica 2020 Where we stand The University of Minnesota and Dakhota Treaty Lands Open Rivers 17 Upham Warren 1920 Minnesota Geographic Names Their Origin and Historic Significance St Paul Minnesota Historical Society pp 169 170 Retrieved 2021 08 22 Fort Snelling in the Expansionist Era 1819 1858 MNopedia www mnopedia org Retrieved 2023 05 24 a b Historic Fort Snelling A Brief History of Fort Snelling Minnesota Historical Society Archived from the original on 2007 05 26 Retrieved 2007 05 30 St Peters Indian Agency Minnesota Family Search The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints March 2015 2 a b c d Old Fort Snelling 1819 1858 The Project Gutenberg Ebook Marcus L Hansen September 2007 pp 21 28 3 History of Weather Observations Fort Ripley Minnesota 1849 1990 Minnesota State Climatology Office DNR Division of Waters St Paul Mn Peter Boulay 2006 pp 9 10 4 Archived 2020 10 31 at the Wayback Machine Annual Climatolocial Summary Fort Snelling MN Year 1820 MN DNR webpage Minnesota Department of Natural Resources 500 Lafayette Road Saint Paul MN 5 The First Regiment of Infantry The Army of the US Historical Sketches of the Line and Staff with Portraits of the Generals in Chief Lt Charles Byrne New York Maynard Merrill and Company 1896 p 401 U S Army Center of Military History website 6 The Fifth Regiment of Infantry The Army of the US Historical Sketches of the Line and Staff with Portraits of the Generals in Chief Lt Charles Byrne New York Maynard Merrill and Company 1896 p 480 U S Army Center of Military History website 7 a b c The Sixth Regiment of Infantry The Army of the US Historical Sketches of the Line and Staff with Portraits of the Generals in Chief Lt Charles Byrne New York Maynard Merrill and Company 1896 p 466 U S Army Center of Military History website 8 a b c The Tenth Regiment of Infantry The Army of the US Historical Sketches of the Line and Staff with Portraits of the Generals in Chief Lt S Y Seyburn New York Maynard Merrill and Company 1896 p 531 U S Army Center of Military History website 9 The Post Office in Early Minnesota Minnesota History Vol 40 No 2 Summer 1966 J W Patterson p 78 MHS website 10 a b Zachary Taylor and Minnesota Minnesota History Vol 30 June 1949 Holman Hamilton p 101 MHS website 11 1834 A Fort Snelling Calendar Minnesota History Fall 1970 Marilyn Ziebarth Minnesota Historical Society St Paul Mn 12 Sibley Henry H 1880 Reminiscences of the Early Days of Minnesota Retrieved August 18 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b The Original Saint Paul Jail Saint Paul Police Historical Society webpage Edward J Steenberg 2020 13 List of slaves owned by Lawrence Taliaferro 1813 Collections Online Minnesota Historical Society Retrieved 17 October 2020 Colbruno Michael Lives of the Dead Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland December 12 2009 Retrieved March 5 2015 This date in Minnesota History Pigs eye Parrant Minnesota Historical Society Society Archives St Paul Mn 14 a b Pierre Bottineau GENi Joe Eickhoff July 2020 Patricia Condon Johnston Seth Eastman The Soldier Artist PBS accessed 11 December 2008 Seth Eastman United States Army Center of Military History December 1 2009 Archived from the original on June 12 2010 Retrieved June 16 2010 Seth Eastman Library History Topics Minnesota Historical Society 2011 accessed 3 February 2011 West Point New York by Seth Eastman with bio US Senate accessed 29 September 2009 a b The Jarvis Collection of Native American Plains Art Brooklyn Museum Brooklyn New York 15 a b c d Sale of Fort Snelling Reservation Letter from the Secretary of War transmitting papers relative to the sale of the Fort Snelling Reservation 12 10 1868 University of Oklahoma College of Law University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons American Indian and Alaskan Native Documents in the Congressional Serial Set 1817 1899 p 107 University of Oklahoma 300 Timberdell Road Norman OK 16 A DRAGOON ON THE MARCH TO PEMBINA IN 1849 Minnesota Pioneer St Paul March 6 1850 Minnesota Historical Society website Minnesota History March 1927 p 63 17 Archived 2020 10 26 at the Wayback Machine On Duty at Fort Ridgely Minnesota South Dakota History South Dakota State Historical Society Paul L Hedren 1977 p 169 18 The Army of the US Historical Sketches of Staff and Line with Portraits of Generals in Chief Third Regiment of Artillery New York Maynard Merrill amp CO Lieut WM E Birkhimer Adjutant 3D U S Artillery 1896 pp 328 341 345 19 Franklin Steele History of Hennepin County and The City of Minneapolis 1881 North Star Publishing p 635 Retrieved December 5 2019 a b Fort Snelling State Park Upper Bluff Reuse Study PDF Minnesota Department of Natural Resources November 1998 Archived from the original on 2008 03 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Our History Minneapolis VA Health Care System U S Department of Veterans Affairs June 2015 20 Friends of Coldwater Green Museum initiative Friends of Coldwater webpage 21 Sully Alfred Fort Ridgely 1855 Minnesota 021338 1955 Tulsa Gilcrease Museum 22 a b c Dred and Harriet Scott in Minnesota MNopedia www mnopedia org Retrieved 2020 06 19 a b c d Enslaved African Americans and the Fight for Freedom Minnesota Historical Society Retrieved 2020 06 19 Woltman Nick May 4 2019 Dred Scott is Fort Snelling s best known slave but there were many others Twin Cities Pioneer Press Retrieved 2022 01 14 a b c Slavery and Freedom on the Minnesota Territory Frontier The Strange Saga of Joseph Godfrey Black Past web site Walt Bachman August 2013 23 a b c The Civil War Historic Fort Snelling Minnesota Historical Society Archived from the original on February 4 2013 Retrieved July 6 2013 Minnesota was Tainted by Slavery Marshall H Tanick MINNPOST online POB 18438 Minneapolis Mn Feb 2019 minnpost com 24 Winstead 2009 Minnesota State Fair timeline Minnesota State Fair webpage Archived from the original on 2020 09 26 Retrieved 2020 10 01 Minnehaha Depot Minnehaha Depot Railroads and the Minneapolis Milling District Minnesota History Summer 2009 Don L Hofsommer Minnesota Historical Society website 25 a b Anderson Gary Clayton 2019 Massacre in Minnesota The Dakota War of 1862 the Most Violent Ethnic Conflict in American History Norman University of Oklahoma Press pp 135 136 233 ISBN 978 0 8061 6434 2 Carley Kenneth 1976 The Dakota War of 1862 Minnesota s Other Civil War St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 87351 392 0 a b Neighbors to the Rescue Wisconsin and Iowa Minnesota History Winter 1979 Edward Noyes Minnesota Historical Society St Paul Mn p 312 26 Archived 2022 07 16 at the Wayback Machine a b Brown Samuel J 1988 Wood Lake and Camp Release Narrative 1 In Anderson Gary Clayton Woolworth Alan R eds Through Dakota Eyes Narrative Accounts of the Minnesota Indian War of 1862 St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press p 223 ISBN 978 0 87351 216 9 a b c Monjeau Marz Corinne L 2006 The Dakota Indian Internment at Fort Snelling 1862 1864 Revised ed St Paul Prairie Smoke Press pp 36 41 55 ISBN 0 9772718 2 X Anderson Gary Clayton Woolworth Alan R eds 1988 Through Dakota Eyes Narrative Accounts of the Minnesota Indian War of 1862 Minnesota Historical Society Press p 141 ISBN 978 0 87351 216 9 a b U S Dakota War s aftermath a dark moment in Fort Snelling history Pioneer Press Nick Woltman May 2019 27 Forced Marches and Imprisonment The U S Dakota War of 1862 Minnesota Historical Society 23 August 2012 Retrieved July 6 2013 Survival At Crow Creek 1863 66 Minnesota History 61 4 Winter 2008 9 Colette A Hyman Minnesota Historical Society website pp 148 60 28 Referenced from the photo Wokiksuye K a Woyuonihan on the right hand side of the page The REMOVAL from MINNESOTA of the Sioux and Winnebago Indians The Record Mankato William E Lass November 8 1862 Minnesota State Historical Society web site St Paul Mn Minnesota History 29 a b c d History of Fort Pembina 1870 1875 University of North Dakota Thesis 8 1968 William D Thomson 30 This Week in History March 3 1968 Manitoba Provincial Historical Society newsgov mb ca The United States Dakota War Trials A Study in Military Injustice Stanford Law Review Vol 43 13 November 1990 University of Minnesota Law School Scholarship Repository Carol Chomsky 31 30th Wisconsin Infantry Wisconsin in the Civil War Wisconsin Historical Society Historical essay Charles E Estabrook 1914 pp 789 792 32 City at Fort Snelling Minnesota Historical Society web site MHS a b c d e Lost Frontier Fort Snelling in the Nineteenth Century Fort Snelling s Buildings 17 18 22 and 30 Their Evolution and Context Charlene Roise Historian and Penny Petersen Researcher Hess Roise and Company The Foster House 100 N 1st Street Minneapolis Minnesota February 2008 p 4 33 Urban Connections Minneapolis USDA Forest Service Retrieved 2007 05 29 a b The Seventh Regiment of Infantry The Army of the US Historical Sketches of the Line and Staff with Portraits of the Generals in Chief Lt A B Johnson New York Maynard Merrill and Company 1896 p 498 U S Army Center of Military History website 34 a b New fort Snelling Visitor Center prepared by Minnesota Historical Society Nov 2009 p 9 35 The Twenty Fifth Regiment of Infantry The Army of the US Historical Sketches of the Line and Staff with Portraits of the Generals in Chief Lt Charles Byrne New York Maynard Merrill and Company 1896 p 698 U S Army Center of Military History website 36 Obituaries St Paul Globe October 9 1898 p 3 Wilkinson Section A 25 Site 6705 Lowe Section A 5 Site 607 Onstead Section A 25 6618 Schwalenstocker Section A 5 Site 644 and Ziebel Section A 5 Site 648 in the National Cemetery Butler was reburied at Palmyra Michigan Minnesota Historical Society St Paul Mn See Holbrook Franklin F Minnesota War Records 1923 amp The Deteriorating Upper Post of Ft Snelling http celticfringe net history upper post htm Archived 2012 02 12 at the Wayback Machine Cavalry Barracks Buildings 17 amp 18 Study State Historic Preservation Office Thomas R Zahn 1993 37 Johnson Jack K 1916 Trial Run on the Mexican Border PDF Military Historical Society of Minnesota 13 Charles H Welch Find a Grave bio 2020 a b c Fort Snelling Minnesota Historical Society website 2020 a b c Civilian Conservation Corps in Minnesota 1933 1942 MNopedia Minnesota Historical Society Linda A Cameron July 2016 38 a b c d Railway Grand Divisions self published source American Rails in 8 Countries The story of the 1st Railroad Service Transportation Corps Special and Information Section Headquarters Southern Line of Communication European Theater of Operations United States Army p 33 39 Railroaders in Olive Drab The Military Railway Service in WWII The Army Historical Foundation National Museum of the United States Army 1775 Liberty Dr Fort Belvoir VA 40 a b c d The Saga of the 732nd Railway Operation Battalion Subject Report Activity Feb Apr 1945 Angelfire website 41 self published source Yamashita Jeffrey T Fort Snelling Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved on July 3 2014 Marilynn Larew March 15 1978 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Fort Snelling PDF National Park Service Retrieved 2009 06 21 and Accompanying 29 images including photos from late 1880s to 1977 6 55 MB a b Reconstructing old Fort Snelling Loren Johnson Minnesota Historical Society St Paul Mn 42 Other sources editWinstead Tim 2009 John Taylor Wood Man of Action Man of Honor Wilmington North Carolina The Cape Fear Civil War Round Table Retrieved Oct 7 2013 Further reading editAnfinson John O et al 2003 River of History A Historic Resources Study of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area PDF St Paul District Corps of Engineers Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2017 Retrieved January 1 2023 DeCarlo Peter Fort Snelling at Bdote A Brief History Minnesota Historical Society Press 2017 96 pp External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fort Snelling Round Tower Fort Snelling in MNopedia the Minnesota Encyclopedia Three Score Years and Ten Life Long Memories of Fort Snelling Minnesota and other parts of the West by Charlotte Ouisconsin Van Cleve Published in 1888 from Project Gutenberg Fort Snelling National Cemetery Department of Veterans Affairs Official webpage Minneapolis VA Medical Center Department of Veterans Affairs Archived 2007 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Official webpage Minneapolis St Paul International Airport Official website NHL summary National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form includes description and details on buildings Historic Fort Snelling page of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area s website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort Snelling amp oldid 1194747154, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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