- Seavey's Island
Seavey's Island, on which the
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard resides, is located in thePiscataqua River in Kittery,Maine , opposite Portsmouth,New Hampshire . It encompasses convert|278|acre|km2.What is today called Seavey's Island was originally five separate islands which were conjoined to accommodate the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. Colonists originally used the rocky islands for collecting wild berries or drying
fish onfish flake s. WhenSecretary of the Navy Benjamin Stoddert decided to create the first federalshipyard in 1800, he authorized the purchase for $5,500 of Fernald's Island (also called Dennett's Island). The largest of the five, Seavey's Island, would be annexed in 1866 and give the grouping its familiar name. Approved by Congress in 1900, a convert|750|ft|m|sing=ongranite drydock was built in the former gut between Fernald's and Seavey's islands. Clark's, Jamaica and another island were attached to Seavey's.Atop a hill on the southern end of Seavey's Island stood an
earthwork defense called Fort Sullivan, built in 1775 to supplementFort William and Mary andFort McClary in the protection of Portsmouth Harbor during the Revolution and, later,War of 1812 . After 1815 it was abandoned, then reactivated from 1861 until 1865 during theAmerican Civil War as an 11 gun, 8 inch Rodman naval battery. Another early battery was to the west on Henderson's Point. But onJuly 22 ,1905 , the point was blown up in what was then the largestdynamite explosion ever attempted. Because it projected convert|540|ft|m into the Piscataqua River channel, Henderson's Point created a navigational hazard forwarship s visiting the navy yard. Consequently, acofferdam was constructed, behind which convert|220000|cuyd|m3 of rock and convert|50000|cuyd|m3 of soil were excavated. Explosives were detonated to remove the rest, with debris flying convert|170|ft|m in the air. Within seconds, the river was widened by convert|350|ft|m.In 1908, the
Portsmouth Naval Prison was completed on the southern side of Seavey's Island at the former site of Camp Long, astockade named forSecretary of the Navy John Long, where 1,612prisoners of war from theBattle of Santiago de Cuba were confined from July 11 to mid-September 1898 during theSpanish-American War . Camp Heywood, a Marine camp named after ColonelCharles Heywood , was located just north of the naval prison. It was occupied after the 1st Battalion's return fromCuba in late August untilSeptember 21 , 1898. According to theNational Trust for Historic Preservation , the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard has 62 buildings listed on theNational Register of Historic Places .Seavey’s Island was the subject of a border dispute between New Hampshire and Maine in 2001, in which New Hampshire asserted that the island lay within the borders of New Hampshire. The State of New Hampshire brought suit against Maine in the Supreme Court, but the Court dismissed the case in 2002, leaving ownership of the island with Maine.
References
* Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Museum (Building 31)
* [http://www.fas.org/man/company/shipyard/portsmouth.htm History of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard]
* [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/diglib/legacies/NH/200003288.html Brief History of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard]
* [http://www.geocities.com/nhfortress/Fort_Sullivan/history.html History of Fort Sullivan]
* [http://www.geocities.com/naforts/me4.html#sullivan Brief History of Fort Sullivan]External links
* [http://www.ports.navy.mil/ Portsmouth Naval Shipyard & History]
* [http://www.mainemuseums.org/htm/museumdetail.php3?orgID=260 Kittery Historical & Naval Museum]
* [http://www.portsmouthathenaeum.org/ Portsmouth Athenaeum]
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