- Fort Holmes
Fort Holmes was a fortified
redoubt located on the highest point ofMackinac Island . Originally built in 1812 by British forces during theWar of 1812 , the redoubt was improved by that army throughout the course of the war (1812-1814) to help defend the adjacentFort Mackinac from a possible attack by theU.S. Army .The British named the redoubt "Fort George" and reinforced it with cannon, a
blockhouse , and a magazine forgunpowder and other munitions. However, Fort Holmes never functioned as an independent military fortification. It was always a dependent outpost of nearby Fort Mackinac.When United States armed forces reoccupied Mackinac Island in 1815 under the terms of the
Treaty of Ghent , they took possession of Fort George. They surveyed and measured their prize, which they renamed Fort Holmes, in honor of MajorAndrew Holmes , a casualty in the 1814Battle of Mackinac Island . However, the American army soon abandoned Fort Holmes. The earthworks and buildings of the former redoubt slowly eroded and disappeared over the course of more than a century.In the 1930s, as part of efforts to fight the nationwide
Great Depression , a corps of CCC workers were assigned to Mackinac Island. Using the original 1810s American survey and plans, they rebuilt Fort Holmes to its War of 1812 appearance.As of 2008 most of the reconstructed buildings of Fort Holmes have again disappeared, except for the timbered gateway to the interior of the redoubt. The redoubt's earthen walls also survive. Many visitors come to the fort site for a view of theStraits of Mackinac , much of which is visible from this lookout point approximately 310 feet above the surface ofLake Huron .References
* Brian Leigh Dunnigan, Fort Holmes [Reports in Mackinac History and Archeology: No. 10] (Mackinac State Historic Parks, Mackinaw City, Mich.) [http://www.mackinacparks.com/books/books--museum-publications_113/fort-holmes_141/] .
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