Fort Lebanon
Fort Lebanon (known after July 1757 as Fort William) was a Pennsylvania stockade fort built in December 1755 and designed to provide protection for settlers' families during the French and Indian War. However, Native American war parties often attacked nearby farms and killed settlers, disappearing before the fort's troops could respond. The garrison was sometimes fewer than 25 men as troops were transferred for temporary duty elsewhere, meaning that the fort had little manpower for patrols or to pursue attackers. The fort was renamed Fort William in mid-1757. In May 1758, the garrison was transferred and the fort was never re-occupied.[1]: 305–313 HistoryAt the beginning of the French and Indian War, Braddock's defeat left Pennsylvania without a professional military force.[2] Lenape chiefs Shingas and Captain Jacobs launched dozens of Shawnee and Delaware raids against British colonial settlements,[3] killing and capturing hundreds of colonists and destroying settlements across western and central Pennsylvania.[4] 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."[5]: 557 ConstructionFort Lebanon was located just northeast of present-day Auburn, Pennsylvania, at the forks of the Schuylkill River and was intended to guard a gap in the mountains, cut by the river, that Native Americans used when travelling into Eastern Pennsylvania. Although there was no nearby township, over a hundred families had recently settled in the area and needed protection.[6] The fort was built in three weeks under the supervision of Captain Jacob Morgan, at about the same time as Fort Northkill, in December 1755.[7] The fort was 100 feet square with 14-foot-high stockade walls and a barracks, 30 feet by 20 feet, with a storeroom inside. A 12-foot-square gunpowder magazine had a cellar for the safe storage of powder. Two other buildings were later added for the refuge of settlers' families, and the fort was constructed so that a spring flowed through it, for fresh drinking water. Major William Parsons visited the fort in May 1756 and wrote:
Commissary General James Young visited the fort in June 1756 and wrote:
At the time, the fort was one of the largest in the defensive chain east of the Susquehanna River.[1]: 307 Military historyThe settlements around the fort were frequently attacked during 1756. On March 6 1756, the Pennsylvania Gazette reported:
Attacks continued during the summer months and farmers in the fields were vulnerable, therefore Lieutenant Colonel Conrad Weiser ordered Captain Morgan to post sentries to protect the people during harvest Time.[1]: 307 In October, the garrison at Fort Lebanon was reduced to 22 when 19 men were sent to Fort Augusta. Fort Northkill had a garrison of only 9 men and an officer. On November 3, a child was taken, and two men were killed, and three persons were killed and three taken captive near Fort Lebanon, but the garrison was too depleted to mount an effective response, even though the fort had been built to protect the civilian population. On November 4, Captain Morgan wrote to Governor Denny, requesting reinforcements:
James Read wrote to Colonel Weiser the same day that "By a Gentleman who left Fort Lebanon yesterday afternoon, I hear that Sixty Women and Children have fled into it for Refuge, and several Families have come further into the Settlements, with their Household Goods & Stock."[7] On November 26, ten men were transferred from Fort Augusta back to Fort Lebanon, for a total garrison of 32 soldiers.[1]: 310 In May 1757 Captain Morgan and 30 men were sent to Fort Augusta for three months, and Captain Busse at Fort Henry took command of Fort Lebanon. Colonel Weiser sent reinforcements to Fort Lebanon in June, but a sergeant and 9 men were sent in July to stand guard during a conference at Easton. Native American war parties continued to attack local farms, killing two or three people at a time and taking children. Troops sent out to pursue the attackers found only the warriors' tracks. Regular patrols failed to prevent these attacks. In July the decision was made to change the fort's name to Fort William, probably in honor of Prince William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, son of King George II.[1]: 310–11 On September 19 1757, the Hochstetler farm at the Northkill Amish Settlement was attacked and burned,[8] and there is no record of a response from the fort. On October 1, the farms of the Spatz family and the Degler family were destroyed, and six members of the Spatz family were killed.[9]: 23–24 Forty soldiers and two lieutenants from the Royal American Regiment were sent from Reading to protect the other farms.[10]: 901–02 In late September, Governor Denny ordered Fort Northkill to be abandoned.[1]: 317 In January, 1758, Adjutant Jacob Kern reported that "Capt morgans Company being 53 men and all in Good order this fort is of Little Service to the Country." Colonel James Burd visited Fort William in February and reported: "Reviewed the Garrison & found 53 good men but diffitient [deficient] in Dissipline...no Arms fitt for use, no Kettles nor tools." The decision was made soon after this to abandon the fort.[1]: 310–11 AbandonmentBy mid-1758, British forces started gaining control of the French and Indian War and Indian attacks in the Blue Mountains of Pennsylvania were subsiding. On May 11, Deputy Governor William Denny ordered the troops stationed at Fort William to join British military units as they were advancing on French outposts.[1]: 331 By 1896 only the dried-up streambed and a depression in the earth left over from the gunpowder magazine were still visible.[7] MemorializationA stone monument with a brass plaque was erected near the site of the fort on Fort Lebanon Road in 1913 by the Mahantongo Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution of Pottsville, Pennsylvania.[11] It was rededicated in 2023.[12] A historical marker was placed at the intersection of Pennsylvania Route 895 and Fort Lebanon Road, in Auburn, Pennsylvania, in 1949 by the Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission.[13][14] External links
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