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Fort Pickens

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Design and construction: fix ref
{{Infobox Military Structure
|name=Fort Pickens
|image=Pickens.png
|caption=Lithograph of Fort Pickens, c. 1860s
|location=[[Santa Rosa Island]] at [[Pensacola Pass]]
|type=Pentagonal fort
|built=[[1829]]-[[1834]]
|builder=
|materials=
|size=
|used=1834-1947
|demolished=
|controlledby=United States (1834-1947)
|armament=
|garrison=
|currentcommander=
|commanders=
|occupants=
|battles=[[Battle of Santa Rosa Island]]
|events=[[Civil War]]
|status=Decommissioned
|ownership=[[National Park Service]]
|visitors=
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Battery Cooper
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Battery 234
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Battery Pensacola
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Battery Payne
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Battery Trueman
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Batteries Cullum, Sevier & Van Swearingen
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'''Fort Pickens''' is a pentagonal historic United States military fort on [[Santa Rosa Island]], at the entrance to [[Pensacola Bay]]. It is named after [[Wikipedia:American Revolutionary War|American Revolutionary War]] hero [[Andrew Pickens]]. The fort was completed in [[1834]] and remained in use in some form until [[1947]].
 
Fort Pickens is currently part of the [[Gulf Islands National Seashore]], and as such, is administered by the [[Wikipedia:National Park Service|National Park Service]]. The '''Fort Pickens Area''' encompasses the western seven miles of Santa Rosa Island, including the fort itself as well as numerous auxiliary batteries.
 
==Design and construction==
The Fortifications Bill of 1828 was signed into law by President John Quincy Adams on [[May 24]] of that year. It allocated $50,000 for the construction of fortifications at Pensacola. A supplemental appropriation the following year allocated another $55,000.<ref name="Bearss">Bearss, Edwin C. [http://palmm.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/uwf%3A3960#page/1/mode/1up ''Historic Structure Report, Fort Pickens''.] U.S. Department of the Interior, 1983.</ref>
 
The land on the western end of Santa Rosa Island on which the proposed fort was to be located was owned by [[Henry Michelet]]. On [[May 28]], [[1828]], the United States purchased 1,181 acres from Michelet for the sum of $4,000. On [[June 4]], [[1829]], a contract with [[Underhill and Strong]] for construction of the fort was approved by Chief Engineer [[Wikipedia:Charles Gratiot|Charles Gratiot]] of the Army Corps of Engineers.<ref name="Bearss" />
 
[[Image:Fort Pickens map 1861.png|thumb|right|1861 sketch of the fort]]
French engineer [[Wikipedia:Simon Bernard|Simon Bernard]] was appointed to design Fort Pickens. The fort is pentagonal in shape with walls 40 feet high and 12 feet thick.<ref>Kaiser, Harvey H. ''The National Park Architecture Sourcebook.'' Princeton Architectural Press, 2008.</ref> Construction on Fort Pickens lasted from [[1829]] to [[1834]], with 21.5 million bricks being used to build the fort. Much of the construction was done by slave labor.
 
Fort Pickens was the largest of a group of forts designed to fortify Pensacola's harbor. Fort Pickens supplemented [[Fort Barrancas]], [[Fort McRee]], and the [[Navy Yard]]. Located at the western tip of Santa Rosa Island, just offshore from the mainland, Pickens guarded the island and the entrance to the harbor. Its construction was supervised by Colonel [[William H. Chase]] of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Ironically, during the [[Civil War]] some years later, Chase was later appointed by the State of Florida to command its troops and seize for the South the very fort he had built.
 
==Civil War==
[[Image:Fort-pickens.jpg|thumb|right|Engraving of wartime Fort Pickens]]
'''By the time of the Civil War, Fort Pickens had not been regularly occupied since the [[Wikipedia:Mexican–American War|Mexican–American War]]. However, Lieutenant [[Adam Jacoby Slemmer]], in charge of United States forces at Fort Barrancas, determined that Fort Pickens''' is was more defensible than any of the other posts in the area. His decision to abandon Fort Barrancas was hastened when, around midnight of [[January 8]], [[1861]], his guards repelled a pentagonal historic group of local men intending to take the fort. Some historians suggest that these were the first shots fired by United States forces in the Civil War. Shortly after this incident, Slemmer destroyed over 20,000 pounds of gunpowder at Fort McRee, spiked the guns at Barrancas, and evacuated about eighty troops to Fort Pickens. Despite repeated Confederate military fort threats to it, Fort Pickens remained in Union hands throughout the Civil War. ==Late 19th century==The famous Apache Indian chief [[Wikipedia:Geronimo|Geronimo]] arrived at Fort Pickens on [[Santa Rosa IslandOctober 25]], [[1886]], where he was imprisoned along with several of his warriors until May [[1887]]. Their families were held at [[Wikipedia:Castillo de San Marcos|Fort Marion]]. During the late 1890s and early 1900s, new gun batteries were constructed at Fort Pickens. These batteries were part of a program initiated by the Endicott Board, a group headed by a mid-1880's Secretary of War, William Endicott. Instead of many guns located in a small area, the image most people have of a fort, the Endicott batteries are spread out over a wide area. This system used dispersement and concealment for protection from naval gunfire, which was more accurate and powerful than in the entrance past. The use of the modern, powerful weapons eliminated the need for the concentration of guns that was common in the Third System fortifications. At Fort Pickens, one such battery was constructed physically inside the fort, while other similar concrete batteries were constructed to the east and west as separate facilities. The ruins of these later facilities are also included in the Gulf Islands National Seashore complex. On [[June 20]], [[1899]], a fire in Fort Picken's Bastion D reached the bastion's magazine, which contained 8,000 pounds of powder. The resulting explosion killed one soldier and obliterated Bastion D. The force of the explosion was so great that bricks from Bastion D's walls landed across the bay at Fort Barrancas, more than one and one-half miles away.<ref>[http://fcit.usf.edu/FLORIDA/photos/military/picken/picken.htm http://fcit.usf.edu/FLORIDA/photos/military/picken/picken.htm]</ref> On [[January 30]], [[1903]], five tons of condemned dynamite were detonated near the fort, about a mile away from the battery. The resulting explosion created a hole "large enough to hide a house" on the beach and was felt across Pensacola Bayin the city, cracking plaster and shattering windows.<ref>"Dynamite shook Pensacola." ''New York Times'', January 31, 1903</ref> ==Hurricane Ivan==[[Image:Pickens-ivan.jpg|thumb|right|Extensive flooding after Hurricane Ivan]]In September [[2004]], [[Hurricane Ivan]] battered the Gulf Islands National Seashore, causing extensive flooding, the destruction of a number of buildings, and a large number of felled trees. Despite the extensive damage, the actual fort "held its ground during the hurricane with only minor damage."<ref>[http://www.nps.gov/archive/guis/FLA/Hurricane%20Ivan/Hurricane.html http://www.nps.gov/archive/guis/FLA/Hurricane%20Ivan/Hurricane.html]</ref> Portions of Fort Pickens Road washed out in the hurricane, and vehicular access to Fort Pickens was not restored until early 2009. ==Batteries==A number of weapons emplacements were constructed in and around Fort Pickens throughout the years.===Battery Pensacola==='''Battery Pensacola''' was constructed in [[1898]] on a portion of the parade ground within Fort Pickens. At the battery were mounted two 12-inch rifles on disappearing carriages capable of firing 1,070 lb. shells approximately 8 miles.<ref name="NPS">[http://www.nps.gov/archive/guis/extended/FLA/History/Battery.htm National Park Service - Gulf Islands National Seashore]</ref> The battery was declared surplus in [[1933]] and its guns were removed in [[1934]]. It is named after <ref name="Quesada">de Quesada, Alejandro M. ''A History of Florida Forts: Florida's Lonely Outposts.'' The History Press, 2006.</ref> ===Battery Van Swearingen===[[WikipediaImage:American Revolutionary Vanswearingen.jpg|thumb|right|A portion of Battery Van Swearingen]]'''Battery Van Swearingen''' was activated on [[June 29]], [[1898]]. Two 4.7-inch Armstrong guns were mounted on pedestal carriages. These were replaced with 3-inch rapid fire guns during World WarII.<ref name="NPS" /><ref name="Quesada" /> ===Batteries Cullum and Sevier===[[Image:CullumSevier.jpg|thumb|right|American Revolutionary Batteries Cullum and Sevier]]'''Battery Cullum''' and '''Battery Sevier''', completed by [[1898]], housed four 10-inch rifles on disappearing carriages. Although these structures appear to be one large complex, they are two separate structures.<ref name="NPS" /> After World WarI, the batteries were declared surplus and two of the guns at Battery Cullum were removed. However, in [[1921]], the War Department reversed that decision and installed two new 10-inch guns at Cullum. Between [[1922]]-[[1923]], a new power station was constructed at Cullum/Sevier. In [[1942]], the 10-inch guns at Batteries Cullum and Sevier were removed. They were replaced in [[1943]] by three-inch rapid fire guns.<ref name="Quesada" /> Due to deterioration, the battery structure has been declared unsafe and is enclosed by a fence to bar access. ===Battery Worth===[[Image:Batteryworth.jpg|thumb|right|Battery Worth]]Completed in [[1899]], '''Battery Worth''' housed eight 12-inch mortars in two gun pits. Although the battery lost half its armament in [[1918]] hero in accordance with the War Department policy to reduce weaponry mounted in the nation's older emplacements, the other four mortars remained active until [[Andrew Pickens1942]]. The fort battery became essential for Army-Navy defense activities in the 1940s by housing the Fire Control Switchboard Room, Harbor Entrance Control Post and the Harbor Defense Command Post.<ref name="NPS" /> The Battery Worth area now hosts a picnic pavilion, restroom facilities, and outdoor shower. ===Battery Payne===Completed in [[1904]], '''Battery Payne''' featured two model 1902 3-inch rapid fire guns.<ref name="NPS" /> ===Battery Trueman===Completed in [[1905]], the design and function of '''Battery Trueman''' was identical to that of Battery Payne. Battery Trueman was completed positioned on the western end of Santa Rosa Island, north of the harbor entrance. The two 3-inch guns at Battery Trueman were relocated to Battery Cullum in [[18341943]] and remained .<ref name="NPS" /> ===Battery Cooper===Completed in [[1906]], '''Battery Cooper''' mounted two model 1903 6-inch guns on disappearing carriages. During World War I, the guns were removed for use on railway mounts in some form France. In 1937, four emplacements for 155mm guns were constructed around Battery Cooper and designated Battery GPF, remaining part of the Harbor Defense Project until April 1945 when it was disarmed.<ref name="NPS" /> ===Battery Langdon===[[Image:Batterylangdon.jpg|thumb|right|Battery Langdon in [[19471942]]. ]]'''Battery Langdon''' was completed in 1923 and mounted two 12-inch guns, en barbette. Construction on the battery had begun during World War I but was delayed due to a lack of manpower. The battery is named in honor of [[Loomis L. Langdon]], a man who was stationed at Fort Pickens is currently part on three occasions. In [[1861]] Langdon commanded a battery of the 10-inch seacoast mortars at Fort Pickens; in [[Gulf Islands National Seashore1874]], he served as an artillery captain at the fort; and in 1885 he returned as sucha lieutenant colonel in charge of the 2nd U.S. Artillery. Langdon was in command when Geronimo was held in the fort.<ref name="NPS" /> ===Battery #234===[[Image:Batt234.jpg|thumb|right|Battery #234]]Plans for '''Battery #234''' were developed in the early 1940s in response to the buildup to World War II. However, is administered by the time Battery #234 was completed in [[Wikipedia1943]], the war's tide turned in favor of the Allies and the battery was never activated.<ref name="NPS" /> ==Other images==<gallery>Image:Overview-ft-pickens.jpg|"Scenes in and around Fort Pickens"Image:Bombardment-fort-pickens.jpg|Bird's eye view during bombardmentImage:Reinforcement-fort-pickens.jpg|Reinforcement of Fort PickensImage:Bombardment-fort-pickens-2.jpg|"The two bombardments of Fort Pickens"Image:Fort-pickens-bombardment.jpg|Scenes of Fort Pickens after bombardmentsImage:Fort-pickens-bh.jpg|Boat-house and landing at Fort PickensImage:National Park ServiceInside-fort-pickens.jpg|National Park Service]]Casemate battery at Fort PickensImage:Wilsons-zouaves.jpg|Wilson's Zouaves in Fort Pickens</gallery> ==References=={{reflist}}
{{stub}}[[Category:Forts]]