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Fort Gadsden and Negro Fort

Map of Fort Gadsden, also showing the location of the original "Negro Fort".

Fort Gadsden Union Flag

A Union Jack on the site of the original British fort.

Fort Gadsden Plaque

A plaque marks the location of the fort's powder magazine.

Fort Gadsden is located in Franklin County, Florida, on the Apalachicola River. The site contains the ruins of two forts, and has been known by several other names at various times, including Prospect Bluff Fort, Nicholls Fort, British Post,[1] Negro Fort, African Fort, and Fort Apalachicola. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places, the Fort Gadsden Historic Site is located in Apalachicola National Forest and is managed by the U.S. Forest Service. It was named a National Historic Landmark in 1972.[2]

Original fort[]

During the War of 1812, the British hoped to recruit the Seminole Indians as allies in their war against the United States. In August 1814, a force of over 100 officers and men led by a lieutenant colonel of Royal Marines, Edward Nicolls, was sent into the Apalachicola River region in Spanish Florida, where they began to aid and train local Indians.[3] Although Nicolls claimed he rallied large numbers of Indians, his efforts bore little fruit in terms of actual fighting, and the completion of the war ended his mission a few months after his arrival.[4] In late November 1814, Major Uriah Blue, commanding a 1000 man force of Mississippi Militia, Chickasaw[5] and Choctaw warriors, left Fort Montgomery to seek out and to destroy the Red Stick Creeks. Present among the force was Creek War veteran Davy Crockett[6] Being unfamiliar with the territory, and being short of provisions, Major Blue's force did not find the fort, and returned to Fort Montgomery on 9 January 1815.[7][8]

Before Nicolls left, however, he built a fort at Prospect Bluff, 15 miles above the mouth of the Apalachicola and sixty miles below U.S. territory, which he equipped with cannon, guns, and ammunition.[9][10] The fort, originally known as the British Post, served as a base for British troops and for recruitment of ex-slaves into the new Corps of Colonial Marines, and as a rallying point to encourage the local Seminole Indian tribes to attack the United States. When the British evacuated Florida in the spring of 1815, they left the well-constructed and fully armed fort on the Apalachicola River in the hands of their allies, about 400 fugitive slaves,[11] including members of the disbanded Corps of Colonial Marines, and a number of native Indians.[12][13] News of the "Negro Fort" (as it came to be called) attracted as many as 800 black fugitives who settled in the surrounding area.

In September 1815, US Indian Agent Benjamin Hawkins sent a group of 200 men to attack the fort at Prospect Bluff. The attack failed, thereby lulling the inhabitants of Prospect Bluff into a false sense of security [14]

Under the command of a black man named Garson and a Choctaw chief (whose name is unknown), the inhabitants of Negro Fort launched raids across the Georgia border. The fort, located as it was near the U.S. border, was seen as a threat to Southern slavery. The U.S. considered it "a center of hostility and above all a threat to the security of their slaves."[15] The Savannah Journal wrote of it:

It was not to be expected, that an establishment so pernicious to the Southern States, holding out to a part of their population temptations to insubordination, would have been suffered to exist after the close of the war. In the course of last winter, several slaves from this neighborhood fled to that fort; others have lately gone from Tennessee and the Mississippi Territory. How long shall this evil, requiring immediate remedy, be permitted to exist?[16]

Seminole Wars[]

In early 1816 the U.S. built Fort Scott on the west bank of the Flint River in Georgia for the purpose of guarding the Spanish-American border. Supplying the fort, however, was a problem; to take materials overland required traveling through unsettled wilderness. Major General Andrew Jackson, the military commander of the southern district, preferred supplying Fort Scott by boat over the Apalachicola River in Spanish territory, which had the advantages of being both easier and of providing a likely casus belli for destroying the Negro Fort. As expected, when a naval force attempted the passage on July 17, 1816, it was fired on by the Negro Fort, and four U. S. soldiers were killed.[17]

Ten days later, Andrew Jackson ordered Brigadier General Edmund P. Gaines at Fort Scott to destroy the Negro Fort. The American expedition included Creek Indians from Coweta, who were induced to join by the promise that they would get what they could salvage from the fort if they helped in its capture. On July 27, 1816, following a series of skirmishes, the American forces and their Creek allies launched an all-out attack under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Duncan Clinch, with support from a naval convoy commanded by Sailing Master Jarius Loomis.

The two sides exchanged cannon fire, but the shots of the inexperienced black gunners failed to hit their targets. A "hot shot" (a cannonball heated to a red glow) from the American forces entered the opening to the fort's powder magazine, igniting an explosion that was heard more than 100 miles (160 km) away in Pensacola, and destroyed the fort, killing all but 30 of 300 occupants.[18] Garson and the Choctaw chief, among the few who survived the carnage, were handed over to the Creeks, who shot Garson and scalped the chief. Other survivors were returned to slavery.

The Creeks salvaged 2,500 muskets, 50 carbines, 400 pistols, and 500 swords from the ruins of the fort, increasing their power in the region. The Seminoles, who had fought with the blacks, were conversely weakened by the loss of their allies, and Creek involvement in the attack increased tension between the two tribes.[19] Seminole anger at the Americans for the fort's destruction would contribute to the breakout of the First Seminole War a year later.[20]

Spain protested the violation of its soil, but according to historian John K. Mahon, it "lacked the power to do more."[21]

Rebuilt fort[]

In 1818 General Jackson directed Lieutenant James Gadsden to rebuild the fort, which he did on a nearby site. Jackson was so pleased with the result that he named the location Fort Gadsden.

During the American Civil War, Confederate troops occupied the fort until July 1863, when an outbreak of malaria forced its abandonment.

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. Life of Andrew Jackson. James Parton, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1880. p. 393. [1]
  2. British Fort at National Historic Landmarks Program
  3. British and foreign state papers Volume 6, pg 434 Ambrister's Commission from Vice Admiral Cochrane: 'Whereas, I have thought fit to send a Detachment of the Royal Marine Corps to the Creek Nations, for the purpose of training to arms, such Indians and others as may be friendly to, and willing to fight under, the Standard of His Majesty: I ..appoint you as an Auxiliary Second Lieutenant, of such Corps of Colonial Marines...Given under my hand and seal, at Bermuda, this 25th day of July, 1814'[2]
  4. The Royal Gazette, Bermuda, 22 April 1815 page 3: 'It is stated, upon very high authority, that there are about 10,000 Creek Indians ready to join our cause.' Perhaps such exaggerated figures were used by Cochrane to justify more resources being deployed on the Gulf Coast. [3]
  5. Crockett, David, A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett of the State of Tennessee; University of Nebraska Press; ISBN 0-8032-6325-2
  6. Jones, p130
  7. Rucker, Brian R. (January 1995). "In the Shadow of Jackson: Uriah Blue's Expedition into West Florida". http://www.jstor.org/stable/30150453. 
  8. "The Forgotten Campaign in the Wake of Jackson, By Chris Kimball". http://www.southernhistory.us/. http://www.southernhistory.us/majblue.htm. Retrieved 7 January 2013. 
  9. Sudgen, p299, mentions that 3 six-pounder cannon were disembarked for the fort in November 1814
  10. Sugden, p300, states that 2 further six-pounder cannon were disembarked for the fort in January 1815
  11. American State Papers: Foreign Relations: Volume 4, pg 551 has the testimony of a Royal Marine deserter from the Fort, sworn at Mobile on 9 May 1815, advising 'the British left, with the Indians, between them three and four hundred negroes, taken from the United States, principally Louisiana'
  12. American State Papers: Foreign Relations: Volume 4, pg 552 Letter from General Gaines dated 22 May 1815 'P.S. I learn that Nicholls[sic] ..is still at Appalachicola, and that he has 900 Indians and 450 negroes under arms'
  13. ADM 1/508 Letter from Admiral Cochrane to General Lambert dated 3 February 1815 'a coloured corps has been organised of from 300-400 men...number of indians amounts to nearly 3000 men'. There are no other accounts to corroborate the large number of native Indian warriors.
  14. Owsley & Smith, p107
  15. Mahon, History of the Second Seminole War, pg. 23.
  16. Savannah Journal, June 26, 1816, quoted in Aptheker, American Negro Slave Revolts, pg. 31.
  17. Casualties: U. S. Navy and Marine Corps Personnel Killed and Wounded in Wars, Conflicts, Terrorist Acts, and Other Hostile Incidents, Naval Historical Center, United States Navy.
  18. Aptheker, 259.
  19. Mahon, 23.
  20. Mahon, 24.
  21. Mahon, 23-24.

References[]

Further reading[]

  • Skip Horack. The Eden Hunter, Counterpoint, 2010. (A novel inspired by the assault on the Negro Fort.)

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Fort Gadsden and the edit history here.
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