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− | + | [[Image:Outsidemcree.PNG|thumb|right|270px|Confederate troops outside Fort McRee]] | |
− | + | '''Fort McRee''' was a bent elliptical military fort located at the eastern tip of [[Perdido Key]], near [[Pensacola Pass]]. Significantly damaged during the [[Civil War]], the fort was essentially abandoned and left to the the elements. There are little or no remnants of the fort visible today. | |
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− | '''Fort McRee''' was a bent elliptical military fort located | ||
− | == | + | ==Construction== |
− | The fort was designed in [[1829]] by [[Wikipedia:Simon Bernard|Simon Bernard]]. Ironically, the man for whom the fort would be named in [[1840]], Army engineer Colonel [[Wikipedia:William McRee|William McRee]], had resigned his commission in [[1819]] in protest after Bernard was appointed to a high position in the Army Corps of Engineers.<ref name="coleman">Coleman, James C. (1988). Fort McRee, The Castle Built on Sand. Pensacola Historical Society.</ref> | + | The fort was designed in [[1829]] by [[Wikipedia:Simon Bernard|Simon Bernard]]. Ironically, the man for whom the fort would be named in [[1840]], Army engineer Colonel [[Wikipedia:William McRee|William McRee]], had resigned his commission in [[1819]] in protest after Bernard was appointed to a high position in the Army Corps of Engineers.<ref name="coleman">Coleman, James C. (1988). Fort McRee, The Castle Built on Sand. Pensacola Historical Society.</ref> |
− | + | Construction took place between 1834 and 1839, and as was the case with Pensacola's other area forts, was overseen by [[William Henry Chase]]. | |
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− | Construction took place between 1834 and 1839, and as was the case with Pensacola's other area forts, was overseen by [[William Henry Chase]] | ||
==[[Civil War]]== | ==[[Civil War]]== | ||
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On [[January 10]], [[1861]], Florida became the third state to secede from the Union. Shortly thereafter, the commanding Union Army officer in Pensacola, Lieutenant [[Adam J. Slemmer]], decided to abandon Forts Barrancas and McRee and consolidate Union forces at [[Fort Pickens]]. Slemmer explained his decision as strategically necessary: | On [[January 10]], [[1861]], Florida became the third state to secede from the Union. Shortly thereafter, the commanding Union Army officer in Pensacola, Lieutenant [[Adam J. Slemmer]], decided to abandon Forts Barrancas and McRee and consolidate Union forces at [[Fort Pickens]]. Slemmer explained his decision as strategically necessary: | ||
{{cquote|I called on Commodore [[James Armstrong|[James] Armstrong]] (Union Commanding Officer of the [[Navy Yard]]) ... He had received orders to cooperate with me. We decided that with our limited means of defense we could hold but one fort, and that should be [[Fort Pickens]], as it commanded completely the harbor and the forts and also the navy yard.|20px|20px|"Pensacola in the Civil War." ''Florida Historical Quarterly'', Vol. IX, No. 2, 1978.}} | {{cquote|I called on Commodore [[James Armstrong|[James] Armstrong]] (Union Commanding Officer of the [[Navy Yard]]) ... He had received orders to cooperate with me. We decided that with our limited means of defense we could hold but one fort, and that should be [[Fort Pickens]], as it commanded completely the harbor and the forts and also the navy yard.|20px|20px|"Pensacola in the Civil War." ''Florida Historical Quarterly'', Vol. IX, No. 2, 1978.}} | ||
− | Slemmer's men destroyed over 20,000 pounds of gunpowder at Fort McRee, spiked the guns at [[Fort Barrancas]], and evacuated 51 soldiers and 30 sailors to Fort Pickens.<ref name="PICW">"Pensacola in the Civil War." ''Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. IX, No. 2, 1978.</ref> On [[January 12]], rebel troops from Alabama and Florida occupied Fort McRee, as well as the Navy Yard and Fort Barrancas. | + | Slemmer's men destroyed over 20,000 pounds of gunpowder at [[Fort McRee]], spiked the guns at [[Fort Barrancas]], and evacuated 51 soldiers and 30 sailors to Fort Pickens.<ref name="PICW">"Pensacola in the Civil War." ''Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. IX, No. 2, 1978.</ref> On [[January 12]], rebel troops from Alabama and Florida occupied Fort McRee, as well as the Navy Yard and Fort Barrancas. |
At 10:00 AM on the morning of [[November 22]], [[1861]], the Union batteries at Fort Pickens opened fire on the Confederate steamers docked at the Navy Yard wharf. The steamers escaped the line of fire with minimal damage, but the Confederate guns at Forts McRee and Barrancas returned fire. The Union ships ''[[Wikipedia:USS Richmond (1860)|USS Richmond]]'' and ''[[Wikipedia:USS Niagara (1855)|USS Niagara]]'' soon moved closer to shore and joined the Union barrage, firing primarily at Fort McRee. Union guns shot off the flagstaffs at both McRee and Barrancas. Confederate general Braxton Bragg called the artillery battle "grand and sublime," and wrote that "the houses in Pensacola, ten miles off, trembled from the effect; and immense quantities of dead fish floated on the surface of the lagoon, stunned by the concussion."<ref name="Davis">Davis, William Watson. [http://books.google.com/books?id=YlIpAAAAYAAJ ''The Civil War and Reconstruction in Florida.''] New York: Columbia University, 1913.</ref> | At 10:00 AM on the morning of [[November 22]], [[1861]], the Union batteries at Fort Pickens opened fire on the Confederate steamers docked at the Navy Yard wharf. The steamers escaped the line of fire with minimal damage, but the Confederate guns at Forts McRee and Barrancas returned fire. The Union ships ''[[Wikipedia:USS Richmond (1860)|USS Richmond]]'' and ''[[Wikipedia:USS Niagara (1855)|USS Niagara]]'' soon moved closer to shore and joined the Union barrage, firing primarily at Fort McRee. Union guns shot off the flagstaffs at both McRee and Barrancas. Confederate general Braxton Bragg called the artillery battle "grand and sublime," and wrote that "the houses in Pensacola, ten miles off, trembled from the effect; and immense quantities of dead fish floated on the surface of the lagoon, stunned by the concussion."<ref name="Davis">Davis, William Watson. [http://books.google.com/books?id=YlIpAAAAYAAJ ''The Civil War and Reconstruction in Florida.''] New York: Columbia University, 1913.</ref> | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
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{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
{{stub}} | {{stub}} | ||
[[Category:Forts]] | [[Category:Forts]] |