In 1753 Gov. Dinwiddie of Williamsburg, Va. sent Col. George Washington to Fort LeBoeuf, to protest the French occupation of islands claimed by the British. On his return, Washington recommended that a fort be built at the forks of the Ohio. Dinwiddie sent 40 men to do the job: work had not progressed very far when they were surprised by French and Indians who came down the Allegheny. The British force surrendered and were allowed to depart.
|
The building of Fort Pitt began soon after, in 1758. The British government had long before decided that this site on the "Forks of the Ohio" whould be the most elaborate fort in North America. Fort Pitt was enclosed by a stockade, and surrounded by a moat. Stone was cut, and brick was made on the site, and timbers were shaped at Saw Mill Run on the Ohio. The fort covered 22 acres, which today would be most of Point State Park. The blockhouse, which afforded the soldiers further protection, was built in 1764. It commanded most of the Allegheny side of the fort. There were 2 underground passages; one connecting it with the fort, and one leading out to the Monongahela river. By 1800 the fort was abandoned, and in 1805 the site was purchased by Gen. James O'Hara. It eventually passed into the hands of his grand daughter, Mary Croghan Schenley, who, in 1892 deeded it to the Pittsburgh Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Presently, it is maintained by the Fort Pitt Society of Daughter of the American Revolution of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.
|