- Fort Inge
Infobox_nrhp | name = Fort Inge Archeological Site
caption = The site of Fort Inge with Mount Inge in the background.
location = Uvalde County,Texas , USA
nearest_city = Uvalde
lat_degrees = 29
lat_minutes = 10
lat_seconds = 45
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 99
long_minutes = 45
long_seconds = 57
long_direction = W
built = 1849
added =September 12 ,1985
refnum=85002298
governing_body = Uvalde CountyFort Inge was a frontier fort in Uvalde County,
Texas (USA) established as Camp Leona onMarch 13 ,1849 . The fort served as a base for troops assigned to protect the southern overloandmail route from indian raids. The camp was renamed Fort Inge in honor of Lieutenant Zebulon M. P. Inge a West Point officer killed in theMexican–American War .There were two wooden
barracks with thatched roofs that quartered thesoldier s assigned to the fort. There was also a largelimestone building that served ascommissary and later ahospital . The fort was surrounded on three sides by a stacked stone wall added sometime around the Civil War. The wall was dismantled in 1874 and the stone used to build a dam on the Leona River. The wall was relaid along its original lines in 1984.Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte II was posted to Fort Inge in the early 1850s, and his letters from there are preserved by theMaryland Historical Society .The
United States Army garrison ed the fort untilMarch 19 ,1869 , when the garrison was transferred to Fort McKavett. The army recovered materials from the site to use for additions to nearby Fort Clark. Fort Inge then saw use as a camp by the Texas Rangers until 1884.In 1961, the site became the Fort Inge Historical Site County Park. It was added to the
National Register of Historic Places onSeptember 12 ,1985 .Staff Writer." [http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/tx/uvalde/state.html Fort Inge Archeological Site] ."National Register of Historic Places ." Accessed April 17, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-04-17.] The site is located on the Leona River and is dominated by the convert|140|ft|m|sing=on high remains of an extinct volcano named Mount Inge.References
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