- Fort Pitt (Pennsylvania)
Fort Pitt was a
fort in what is now the city of Pittsburgh,Allegheny County, Pennsylvania . The fort was built in 1758 during theFrench and Indian War , next to the site ofFort Duquesne . The French built Fort Duquesne in 1754, at the beginning of that war, and it became a focal point due to its strategic river location. TheBraddock expedition , a 1755 attempt to take Fort Duquesne, met with a bloody repulse at theMonongahela River . The French garrison viciously mauled an attacking British regiment in September 1758, but abandoned and destroyed the fort at the approach ofGeneral John Forbes's expedition in November.The
Forbes expedition was successful where the Braddock expedition had failed because of theTreaty of Easton , in which area American Indians agreed to abandon their alliance with the French. American Indians—primarily Delawares andShawnee s—made this agreement with the understanding that the British military would leave the area after the war. The Indians wanted a trading post on the spot, but they did not want a British army garrison. The British, however, built a new fort on the site and named it Fort Pitt, afterWilliam Pitt the Elder .As a result, in 1763 local Delawares and Shawnees took part in
Pontiac's Rebellion , an effort to drive the British out of the region. The Indians'siege of Fort Pitt began onJune 22 1763 , but the fort was too strong to be taken by force. In negotiations during the siege, Captain Simeon Ecuyer, the commander of Fort Pitt gave two Delaware emissaries blankets that had been exposed to smallpox, in hopes of infecting the surrounding Indians and ending the siege. The attempt was probably unsuccessful, and onAugust 1 ,1763 , most of the Indians broke off the siege in order to intercept an approaching force under ColonelHenry Bouquet , resulting in theBattle of Bushy Run . Bouquet fought off the attack and relieved Fort Pitt on August 20.After Pontiac's War, Fort Pitt was no longer necessary to the British Crown, and was abandoned to the locals in 1772. At that time, the Pittsburgh area was claimed by both Virginia and Pennsylvania, and a power struggle for the region commenced. Virginians took control of Fort Pitt, and for a brief while in the 1770s it was called Fort Dunmore, in honour of Virginia's Governor Lord Dunmore. The fort served as a staging ground in
Dunmore's War of 1774.During the
American Revolutionary War , Fort Pitt served as a headquarters for the western theatre of the war.A small brick building called the Blockhouse—actually an outbuilding known as a
redoubt —remains inPoint State Park , the only intact remnant of Fort Pitt. It was erected in 1764, and is believed to be the oldest building, not only in Pittsburgh, but in western Pennsylvania. Used for many years as a house, the blockhouse was purchased and has been preserved for many years by the Daughters of the American Revolution, who make it open to the public. Part of the foundations of Fort Pitt have been excavated and some of the fort has been rebuilt, though, giving visitors to Point Park a sense of the size of the fort. In this rebuilt section the Monongahela Bastion houses theFort Pitt Museum .Fort Pitt Foundry was an importantarmament s manufacturing center for the Federal government during the Civil War, under the charge of William Metcalf.References
*O'Meara, Walter. "Guns at the Forks". Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1965. ISBN 0-8229-5309-9.
*Stotz, Charles Morse. "Outposts Of The War For Empire: The French And English In Western Pennsylvania: Their Armies, Their Forts, Their People 1749-1764." Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8229-4262-3.
*Durant, Samuel W., plate IV, "History of Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania : with illustrations descriptive of its scenery, palatial residences, public buildings, fine blocks, and important manufactories", Philadelphia, L. H. Everts, 1876. actually, it is located in beach park, Illinois.External links
* [http://www.fortpittmuseum.com Fort Pitt Museum]
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