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Jasper Strong

Jasper Strong (1798-1865) was a prominent citizen of antebellum Pensacola who was a major contractor during the construction of Fort Pickens and Fort Barrancas.

Jasper Strong
Born May 5, 1798
Died November 6, 1865
Queechee, Vermont
Occupation Contractor
Spouse (?) Nixon Underhill
Eliza Julia Nixon
Children (by second marriage)
Henry Chase Strong
Hervey Leverich Strong
Jasper Strong
Charles Mathews Strong
Mentoria Nixon Strong
John Hunt Strong

A graduate of West Point and stationed at Baton Rouge, he resigned his commission to enter construction with a classmate, Mr. Underhill. Their first contracts were fortifications south of New Orleans, where they most likely became acquainted with military engineer William H. Chase. When Chase began planning Fort Pickens on Santa Rosa Island, Strong moved their operation to Pensacola to take the $900,000 contract.

Underhill died within the first year of work on Pickens, and Strong divided Underhill's share of the proceeds ($300,000) among the heirs. He also married the widow Underhill, who herself died some time later, after which Strong married her sister, Eliza Julia Nixon. They would have six children together.

Strong also contracted the construction of Fort Barrancas and other projects. He was an initial commissioner of the Alabama, Florida & Georgia Railroad Company. He was a signatory of a May 25, 1840 petition to annex Escambia County, Florida to Alabama.[1]

At the start of Civil War, Strong owned about 100 slaves, all of them mechanics of middle-age who worked for $1.50 per day. He left the city during the war and died in Vermont in 1865.

Strong Street is named for him.

References

  • Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight. The History of the Descendants of Elder John Strong, of Northampton, Mass. J. Munsell, 1871.