
Fort Delaware - aerial view

Fort Delaware.
'Fort Delaware' is a harbor defense facility built in
1859 on
Pea Patch Island in the
Delaware River. During the
American Civil War, the
Union used Fort Delaware as a
prison for
Confederate prisoners of war. The fort and the island currently belong to the
Delaware Division of Parks and Recreation.
History
In
1794, the
French military engineer Pierre Charles L'Enfant was surveying for defensive sites. He identified an island that he called ''Pip Ash'' "as an ideal site for the defense of the prize of American commerce and culture".
[1]
The island that L'Enfant called Pip Ash was locally known as Pea Patch island. This island was mostly unaffected by humanity with one exception. Dr. Henry Gale, a
New Jersey resident, used Pea Patch as a private hunting ground. Gale was offered $30,000 for the island by the
US military, but he refused. The military was determined to get the island, so they appealed to the Delaware state legislature, which seized the island from Dr. Gale on
May 27,
1813.
Construction of the fort and the Civil War

''Fort Delaware, Delaware'' by
Seth Eastman (1808-1875), painted 1870-1875
Construction of a fort on Pea Patch island began in
1819. A fire destroyed much of the work in
1831.
Major Richard Delafield asked for $10,000 to tear down the remaining structure the
following year. The structure was torn down in
1833.
Major Delafield desired to "erect a marvel of military architecture on Pea Patch." The present structure was erected between
1848 and
1859, becoming the largest fort in the United States at the time.
During the
Civil War, beginning in 1862, the island became a prison for captured Confederates and local Southern sympathizers. They were housed not in the fort itself but in wooden barracks that soon covered much of the island. Most of the Confederates captured at
Gettysburg were imprisoned there. By August 1863, there were 12,500 prisoners on the island; by war’s end, it had held some 40,000 men. The conditions were predictably notorious, and about 2,900 prisoners died at Fort Delaware.
The fort was also used to organize and muster troops from the first state.
Ahl's Heavy Artillery Company was organized there for garrison duty and served there during its entire service.
The Fort Today
Delaware acquired the Fort from the United States government in
1947 after
the Pentagon declared it a "surplus site".
[2] Today, 'Fort Delaware State Park' encompasses all of Pea Patch Island, including the Fort. Transportation to the island is provided via
ferry. Once at the island, visitors are brought to the fort on a
jitney. Tours and special programs are available to visitors. For example, visitors may see one of the fort's
cannons fired. There are workers who
reenact the roles of people who were at the Fort during the American Civil War.
Beach erosion affecting Pea Patch Island was recognized as a potential threat to the Fort in
1999. The
United States Army Corps of Engineers erected a 3,500 long
seawall during the Winter of 2005-2006 which now protects the historical Fort site and a
migratory bird rookery, considered to be the largest such habitat north of
Florida.
2
Each year in the second week of June, there is an "Escape from Fort Delaware" triathlon, where entrants follow in the footsteps of the 52 escapees from the Civil War Prison. A boat shuttles the athletes out to Fort Delaware, a Civil War re-enactor fires a musket to start the race, the swimmers jump into the Delaware River, and swim back to land and then do the bike and run events, finishing on the town green in
Delaware City, Delaware.
References
★
Parts of the article adapted from a Senate website, a product of the US Government
★
History of Ft. Delaware
Notes
1. Fort Delaware - History
2. Fort Delaware saved from watery fate
External links
★
Fort Delaware's Site
★
Fort Delaware Society
★
Escape from Fort Delaware triathlon