Online Encyclopedia

FORT NIAGARA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 635 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FORT

NIAGARA  , an
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American fortification, on the E. side and at the mouth of Niagara
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river, opposite the
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Canadian
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village of Niagara, or Niagara-on-the-Lake . Fort Niagara has a reser- Queen Victoria, extends along the
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bank of the river for 22 M. vation of 288 acres, with fairly
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modern equipments, several historic buildings of the time of French and of
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British possession, in one of which, the old
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magazine (1757), William Morgan was imprisoned in 1826 . Fort Niagara was long, especially during the French occupation of
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Canada, one of the most important forts in North
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America, being the key to the
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Great Lakes, beyond Lake Ontario . " This immense extent of inland navigation," says Parkman, " was safe in the hands of France so long as she held Niagara . Niagara lost not only the lakes but also the valley of the
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Ohio was lost with it." Rene Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, wintered here in 1678-9, built his
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ship the "Griffon," and established a trading
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post and Fort Conti, destroyed not long afterwards . Fort Denonville, built in 1687 by Jacques Rene de Bresay,
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marquis de Denonville, governor-general of Canada, in his cruel
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campaign against the
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Iroquois, was abandoned in 1688, after the garrison, commanded by
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Pierre de
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Troyes (d . 1687), had been wiped out by an epidemic . The first Fort Niagara, to be so named, was built in 1725-1727 at the instance of Charles le Moyne, 1st baron of Longueil (1656-1729), and became a very important military and trading post; the fort was rebuilt by Francois Pouchot (1712-1769) in 1756, but in
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July 1759, after a siege of about sixteen days, it was surrendered to
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Sir William Johnson by Pouchot, who wrote a Memoir upon the
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Late War (translated and edited by F . B . Hough; 2 vols., 1866) . On the 14th of September 1763 a British force marching from Fort Schlosser (about 2 in. above the Falls; built 1750) to Fort Niagara was ambushed by Indians, who threw most of their captives into Devil's Hole, along the Niagara river . In July 1764 a treaty with the Indians was signed here, which detached some of them from Pontiac's conspiracy .

Joseph Brant, John Butler, and, in general, the Indians of north-western New York favouring the British during the American War of Independence, made Fort Niagara their headquarters, whence they ravaged the frontier, and many
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loyalists and Indians took
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refuge here at the time of General Sullivan's expedition into western New York in 1779 . The fort was not surrendered to the
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United States until August 1796 . In the War of 1812 it was bombarded by the guns of Fort George (immediately across the river in the
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town now called Niagara, then Newark 1) on the 13th and 14th of
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October 1812; was the starting-point of the American expedition which took Fort George on the 27th of May 1813; and on the 19th of December 1813 was surprised and taken by assault—most of the garrison being killed or taken prisoners—by British troops under John Murray (1774--1862), who had previously retaken Fort George . After the close of the war, on the 27th of March 1815, Fort Niagara was restored to the United States, and a garrison was kept there until 1826 . The fort was regarrisoned about 1836 . :' . See F . H . Severance, Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier (
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Buffalo, 1903), Parkman's
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works, especially Montcalm and Wolfe (2 vols., Boston, 1884), and The Conspiracy of Pontiac (2 vols., Boston, 1851), and a pamphlet by Peter A . Porter, A Brief
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History of Old Fort Niagara (Niagara Falls, 1896) .

End of Article: FORT NIAGARA
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