Fort James (South Dakota) Explained
Fort James |
Location: | Hanson County, on the James River. |
Controlledby: | Private owner |
Built: | 1865 |
Used: | 1865-1867 |
Materials: | stone & wood |
Garrison: | - 6th Iowa Volunteer Cavalry
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Module: | Embed: | yes | Fort James (39HS48) | Added: | March 15, 1984 | Refnum: | 84003290 |
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Fort James was a cavalry fort built in 1866 in Dakota Territory. It was soon decommissioned and its site now is in the state of South Dakota. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
History
In 1835 and 1857, the United States signed treaties with the native nations in western Minnesota and northern Iowa that obligated the federal government to provide food to these peoples. However the Civil War prevented it from fulfilling its these obligations and corrupt Indian agents and traders skimmed off what little came into the reservations. Starving, a handful of Dakota warriors raided farms for eggs and other supplies, killing 5 settlers. This broke Dakota inertia, bringing young warriors out to begin raiding along the Minnesota River Valley. Although no fighting took place in Dakota Territory, people of all ethnicities fled into it for refuge.[1] In 1863 disturbances near Yankton, South Dakota, alarmed settlers and the territorial authorities assigned units of soldiers to scout and patrol the area.[2]
As a result, Fort James was founded on the west bank of the James River at its confluence with Firesteel Creek. It was first established in September 1865 by Captain Benjamin King, 6th Iowa Cavalry, as Fort La Roche or Fort Des Roche, on the orders of Brigadier General Alfred Sully.[3] Built as protection from outbreaks of Native American aggression, its detachments of troops were there to make prospective settlers feel safe.[4] [5] The soldiers were the first non-Sioux to settle in the county and non-Sioux civilian settlement didn't begin until 1872, six years after the fort was abandoned.[6] It was also known as Camp Near Firesteel Creek and only became known as Fort James after its decommissioning.[7]
The fate of the fort
Its log and stone quadrangle served to protect stagecoaches and settlers for roughly a year before it was decommissioned on October 6, 1866. Settlers who came later scavenged most of the fort's materials for their own constructions.[8] In 1872 a reporter from the Yankton Press noted the massive walls of the abandoned fort still standing as he travelled up the James River.[9] When Hanson County was organized, old Fort James became the first temporary county seat and was known as Rockport.[10]
Television Coverage
Fort James was the subject of an episode of the PBS TV archaeology series Time Team America.[11]
References
- Lee, Robert, Fort Meade, the peace keeper post on the Dakota Frontier, 1878-1944, Old Fort Meade Museum & Historic Research Association, 1987.
- Osburn, James D., Stewart, Ken R. and Wendt, Lonis R. Fort Pierre-Deadwood Trail: Then & Now, Cheyenne River Press, 2008.
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Sundstrom, Ph.D. . Linea . 2018 . South Dakota State Plan for Archaeological Resources 2018 Update . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240131035007/https://history.sd.gov/docs/Complete_State_Plan_withFigures.pdf . January 31, 2024 . January 31, 2024 . South Dakota State Historical Society . 348.
- Book: Schell, Herbert Samuel . History of South Dakota . 1975 . Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press . Internet Archive . 978-0-8032-0851-3 . 85.
- Web site: 1916 . State Department of History . South Dakota Historical Collections, Illustrated with Maps and Engravings . https://web.archive.org/web/20210310100019/http://sdsdl-montage.auto-graphics.com/ . March 10, 2021 . 2024-01-31 . sdsdl-montage.auto-graphics.com . State Department of Publishing . 533 . Pierre, South Dakota.
- Web site: Sundstrom, Ph.D. . Linea . 2018 . South Dakota State Plan for Archaeological Resources 2018 Update . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240131035007/https://history.sd.gov/docs/Complete_State_Plan_withFigures.pdf . January 31, 2024 . January 31, 2024 . South Dakota State Historical Society . 712.
- Book: Karolevitz, Robert F. . Challenge : the South Dakota story . 2000 . Sioux Falls, SD Brevet Press . Internet Archive . 978-0-88498-031-5 . Pages 82 and 85.
- Book: Robinson, Doane . History of South Dakota . B. F. Bowen & Co. . Internet Archive . 1904 . 400.
- Web site: South Dakota Forts . live . https://archive.today/20240131042710/https://www.northamericanforts.com/West/sd.html%23james . January 31, 2024 . 2024-01-31 . www.northamericanforts.com.
- Book: Roberts, Robert B. . Encyclopedia of historic forts : the military, pioneer, and trading posts of the United States . 1988 . New York : Macmillan ; London : Collier Macmillan . Internet Archive . 978-0-02-926880-3 . 730.
- Book: Robinson, Doane . History of South Dakota . 1904 . B. F. Bowen & Co. . Internet Archive . 978-0-598-27657-5 . 252 . en.
- Book: Goodspeed, Weston Arthur . Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota . 1904 . Weston Historical Association . 264 . en.
- Web site: Fort James - Time Team America - PBS. Fort James - Time Team America - PBS.