Fort Stansbury Explained

Fort Stansbury was a frontier outpost created during the Seminole War (1835—1842), and also used during the Civil War. The fort was located in current Wakulla County, Florida, in between Tallahassee and Wakulla Springs. It was headquarters for the U.S. 3rd Infantry Regiment. Its construction would have been typical of other forts built at the time, utilizing blockhouses and made from split pine trees. According to a contemporary account, of the 600 man garrison, a third became sick due to fever, dysentery, and other illness.[1] The fort was occupied from, at the latest, September 1840, and abandoned by around April 1843. It was under the command of Lt. Colonel Ethan Allen Hitchcock from October 1842 until January 13, 1843.[2] [3] [4] Despite there being no record of an artillery unit posted to the fort, the discovery of a jacket button belong to the Artillery Corps indicates that the fort may have been equipped with cannons or other large guns.

References

30.2448°N -84.3197°W

Notes and References

  1. Olsen . Stanley J. . A Seminole War Fort Site in Northern Florida . American Antiquity . April 1965 . 30 . 4 . 491 . 2 May 2023.
  2. http://www.floridamemory.com/collections/callbrevardpapers/index.cfm?txtBox=1&txtFolder=4&GoAhead=1 Call-Brevard Papers, Florida State Archives
  3. Hitchcock, Ethan Allen; Croffut, William Augustus, Fifty years in camp and field: diary of Major-General Ethan Allen Hitchcock, U.S.A., G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1909
  4. Web site: The 3rd Regiment of Infantry . 2009-04-04 . 2021-06-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210628231600/https://history.army.mil/books/R%26H/R%26H-3IN.htm . dead .