Fort Bigham
Fort Bigham (sometimes referred to as Bigham's Fort; renamed Fort Bingham after 1760) was a privately built stockaded blockhouse fort constructed in 1754 near present-day Honey Grove in Tuscarora Township, Juniata County, Pennsylvania. It was built by Samuel Bigham on his land to protect his family and neighbors from Indians. In June, 1756 the fort was attacked and the people in it, mostly women and children, were all captured or killed. The fort was largely destroyed. It was rebuilt in 1760 and abandoned in 1763. HistoryConstruction and locationSamuel Bigham (1717-1804) arrived in the area from Ireland around 1742 and applied for a 100-acre land grant in Juniata County in February, 1755.[1]: 27–31 At that time, he had already built the fort near his homestead in late 1754, with the help of his neighbors John and James Gray and Robert Hoag, to protect his family and neighbors from Indian raids which were becoming increasingly frequent in the months leading up to the French and Indian War.[2]: 68 One source describes the fort as "nothing more than a log cabin fitted with loopholes for defense."[3]: 34 Another source refers to it as "a strong block-house and small stockade."[2]: 68 It is possible that Bigham constructed a fortified cabin, then built his fort around it. The fort was located on the Traders' Path leading from Cumberland County, past Fort Robinson in Perry County, through Bingham's Gap to the fort in Juniata County, and continuing westward through Franklin County to Fort Shirley at Aughwick township in Fulton County.[4]: 232–233 As tension rose between the British, the French, and local Native American tribes, Bigham ordered "a quarter-cask of powder and seventy-five pounds of lead"[5]: 598 which was delivered to him on 7 April 1756.[6]: 556 Soon afterwards, for safety reasons, Bigham took his family and moved to York County, and was not present when the fort was attacked.[1]: 38 Destruction, 1756The fort was attacked and destroyed by French soldiers and Indians on 11 June 1756. Reportedly the Indians were Lenape warriors from Kittanning led by Tamaqua, often referred to as "King Beaver."[2]: 787 [7] French correspondence shows that Ensign Pierre-Louis Boucher Niverville de Montizambert was ordered by Governor-General Vaudreuil to attack Fort Shirley, but when he arrived with seven French soldiers and 20 Indians, they decided that the fort was too well-defended, and chose to assault Fort Bigham instead.[6]: 124 The report adds that they "returned with 18 prisoners and five scalps."[1]: 38–41 There is no definitive account of the numbers of dead or of those captured. The Pennsylvania Gazette of 12 June 1756 reported the following account of the fort's destruction:
On 24 June the Gazette published the following list of those killed or captured:
AftermathTroops conducted a forty-five man scouting party over the area up the Susquehanna River to Fort Augusta, and back down through the area to just west of Fort Bigham, but did not find the enemy.[8] George Woods, (father-in-law of Pennsylvania senator James Ross), was captured during the assault and taken with other captives to Kittanning, the Lenape staging area for raids on English settlements. After running the gauntlet, Woods was adopted into the tribe. He reportedly bargained with his captors to pay an annual fee of ten pounds of tobacco for life, in exchange for his freedom. Eventually Woods was taken to Fort Pitt and released.[2] Francis and Margery Innis and their three children were taken to Fort Duquesne and were sold separately to French traders. Francis and Margery managed to work for their freedom and were able to return to Pennsylvania in 1759.[9]: 122 They were reunited with two of their children (the youngest having drowned)[9]: 257 at the release of captives brokered by Colonel Henry Bouquet in 1764.[10]: 286–87 Hannah Gray and her daughter Jane were taken to Canada and sold, but Hannah escaped and returned to Pennsylvania to find that her husband John had died. When Colonel Bouquet arranged for the release of captives in 1764, Hannah's daughter was not among them.[10]: 286–87 Samuel Bigham sold his land in 1760, left Pennsylvania and died in North Carolina in 1804.[1]: 41, 86–88 Rebuilding and destruction, 1760-1763Samuel Bigham sold his land to an Indian trader named Ralph Sterrett. Sterrett rebuilt the fort in 1760 because he also needed a secure location for his family and neighbors, and renamed it Bingham's Fort. According to tradition, on one occasion Sterrett provided food and hospitality to an Indian whom Sterrett saw wandering alone on the road. Years later, at the start of Pontiac's War in early 1763, Sterrett was surprised to see this same man approaching the fort. Sterrett asked him what he wanted, and the Indian reminded him of Sterrett's kindness to him, then warned him that a large band of warriors was approaching the fort "with a determination to scalp and burn all the Whites."[1]: 40 Sterrett and his family and 80 neighbors left immediately. The warriors found the fort empty but burned it anyway. The fort was not rebuilt.[11]: 586–592 LegacyA stone marker was placed near the site of the fort on 12 June 1934 by the Juniata County Historical Society.[1]: 38–41 The inscription states:
A historical marker was erected in Mifflintown in 1947 by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.[13] External linksReferences
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