Fort Depuy | |
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Shawnee on Delaware in Monroe County, Pennsylvania | |
![]() Fort Depuy in 2023 | |
Coordinates | 41°01′19″N75°10′54″W / 41.02194°N 75.18167°W |
Type | Fortified homestead |
Site history | |
Built | 1756 |
In use | 1756–1758 |
Battles/wars | French and Indian War |
Garrison information | |
Past commanders |
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Garrison | 18-26 men plus officers |
Designated | 1945 |
Fort Depuy, sometimes referred to in contemporary documents as Depui's Fort, Dupui's Fort, and various other spellings, is a fortified homestead located in Shawnee on Delaware, a village in Smithfield Township. It was one of many forts in Colonial Pennsylvania built in 1755 and 1756 during the French and Indian War following a series of attacks on local communities by Native Americans in December 1755. The fort never saw military action and was garrisoned from early 1756 until February 1757. After this, the fort was used only intermittently until the garrison was withdrawn to participate in the Forbes Expedition in May 1758. The fort was formally returned to the Depuy family in 1763.
At the beginning of the French and Indian War, Braddock's defeat at the Battle of the Monongahela left Pennsylvania without a professional military force. [1] Lenape chiefs Shingas and Captain Jacobs launched dozens of Shawnee and Delaware raids against British colonial settlements, [2] killing and capturing hundreds of colonists and destroying settlements across western and central Pennsylvania. [3] In late 1755, Colonel John Armstrong wrote to Governor Robert Hunter Morris: "I am of the opinion that no other means of defense than a chain of blockhouses along or near the south side of the Kittatinny Mountains from the Susquehanna to the temporary line, can secure the lives and property of the inhabitants of this country." [4] : 277
In December 1755, a series of attacks on people in the area east of what is now Stroudsburg had terrified the population, who then demanded that the Pennsylvania government provide military protection. On 10 December, a war party of about 200 Native American warriors attacked the Hoeth family farm and killed Frederick Hoeth, his wife, and seven of their eight children. [5] : 226 The next day, warriors set fire to Daniel Brodhead's Plantation, and attacked and burned farms belonging to the Culvers, the McMichaels, and the Hartmanns. [6] The Moravian mission at Dansbury was also destroyed. [7] : 450 A number of settlers died when they were trapped inside burning buildings. Over 300 people fled to Bethlehem and Easton. [4] : 138 In an account of the attacks from the Union Iron Works in Jersey, dated 20 December, 78 people are listed killed and about 45 buildings destroyed. [8] : 569–572 On 25 December, the Provincial Commissioners reported that "The Country all above this Town, for 50 Miles, is mostly evacuated and ruined, excepting only the Neighbourhood of the Dupuy's, five Families, which stand their Ground." [5] : 271
In response to these attacks, the Pennsylvania Legislature placed Benjamin Franklin and James Hamilton in charge to erect a chain of forts along the Blue Mountain in the Minisink region. [9] [10] [4] : 300
The fort was the fortified homestead on the farm of Nicholas Depuy (1682-1762), a French Huguenot who arrived in 1727 and purchased 3,000 acres from the Minsi Indians, a phratry of the Lenape tribe. The purchase included fertile land along the northwest bank of the Delaware River, as well as two large islands, Shawano and Manwalamink. Depuy built a log farmhouse on a bluff overlooking the river, in about 1734. This was replaced with a larger stone building in 1755. [11] Because of its elevated position near a river, overlooking the district below and the roads to Easton and Bethlehem, colonial authorities felt that it would be "an admirable place of defence and refuge." [4] : 310
In 1755 Benjamin Franklin proposed that the Depuy home, because of its strategic location along the Delaware River, be commandeered to serve as a fort. [11] [12] Nicholas was living there with his son Samuel at the time and agreed to allow the troops to live in his home, although he insisted that they pay for rum and other supplies. Depuy was employed for a time as a commissary for the Pennsylvania provincial military. [4] : 310
In December 1755, Captain John Trump and Captain Isaac Wayne were sent by the Provincial Commissioners to fortify the homestead. [11] [13] The stockade was intended to provide protection for local settlers during Native American attacks. They were soon joined by Captain Jacob Wetterholt, who arrived with a garrison of 26 men, and they constructed a stockade around the building, placing swivel guns at each corner. [5] : 272
On 22 January 1756, Samuel Depuy wrote to a friend in New Jersey about the decision to turn over his home to colonial authorities:
Major William Parsons visited the fort on 12 June 1756 and reported: "Samuel Dupui has a large commodious Stockado Fort round his House with 4 Swivels, one at each Corner; but the Fort is much exposed to a high Hill on the Land Side." [5] : 272 The fort also served as a commissary base for the other forts in the area. [4] : 310
On 24 June 1756, Commissary General James Young visited the fort and reported: "Came to Saml Depues, Musterd that Part of Captn Weatherholts Compy that are Stationd here, a Lt. and 26 men all regularly Inlisted for 6 Months as are the rest of his Compy. Round Depue's house is a Large but very Slight, and ill Contriv'd Staccade with a Sweevle Gun Mounted on Each Corner." [5] : 272
Captain Wetterholt and most of the garrison were transferred to Fort Hamilton in September, and in November the captain's younger brother, Lieutenant Jacob Wetterholt, returned with a garrison of 18 men. They were sent back to Fort Hamilton in early February, 1757. The fort was garrisoned only occasionally during the rest of that year, until February, 1758 when a garrison of 23 men under the command of Ensign James Hughes was reported. On 2 March 1758, the fort was inspected by Colonel James Burd, who wrote: "This is a very fine Plantation, Situate upon the River Delaware...There is a pretty good Stockade here & 4 Sweevells mounted & good accommodation for soldiers. Reviewed this Garrison and found here 22 good men." [5] : 274
On 8 May 1758, Deputy Governor William Denny ordered the garrison to march to Bethlehem in preparation for the Forbes Expedition. The fort was briefly reoccupied in 1760 and again at the start of the Pontiac's War in 1763, and later that year it was returned to the family, and to its function as a farm. [11]
In 1785, Samuel Depuy built the stone house that stands on the site today, near the site of his father's original home. He named the house "Manwalamink", after the nearby island. In 1898, the Depuy family sold the home to Charles Campbell Worthington, a New York businessman who built the Inn and Gatehouse. [14] The site of the original stockade is slightly southwest, and no signs remain. [15]
The Shawnee Inn & Golf Resort is located on the site of Depuy's farm. [16] : 69
A historical marker commemorating Nicholas Depuy was placed in Smithfield Township in 1947 by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. It is on River Road near DePuy Drive. [17]
Kittanning was an 18th-century Native American village in the Ohio Country, located on the Allegheny River at present-day Kittanning, Pennsylvania. The village was at the western terminus of the Kittanning Path, an Indian trail that provided a route across the Alleghenies between the Ohio and Susquehanna river basins.
Fort Loudoun was a fort in colonial Pennsylvania, one of several forts in colonial America named after John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun. The fort was built in 1756 during the French and Indian War by the Second Battalion of the Pennsylvania Regiment under Colonel John Armstrong, and served as a post on the Forbes Road during the Forbes expedition that successfully drove the French away from Fort Duquesne. The fort remained occupied through Pontiac's War and served as a base for Colonel Henry Bouquet's 1764 campaign. In the 1765 Black Boys Rebellion, Fort Loudoun was assaulted by angry settlers, when their guns were confiscated after they destroyed supplies intended for Native Americans. The garrison retreated to Fort Bedford and the fort was abandoned.
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Fort Shirley was a military fort located in present-day Shirleysburg, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1755 by George Croghan and later maintained by the Province of Pennsylvania during the French and Indian War. Fort Shirley was part of a defensive line of forts built in Pennsylvania during 1755 and 1756, at the start of hostilities with the French and their allied Native Americans. Although two French and Native American war parties were sent to capture it, Fort Shirley was never attacked. The fort served as the launching site for the Kittanning Expedition in September 1756, after which it was abandoned.
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