Everything about Fort Kaskaskia totally explained
Fort Kaskaskia State Historic Site is a 200-acre (0.8 km²) park near
Chester, Illinois on a blufftop overlooking the
Mississippi River. It commemorates the vanished frontier town of
Old Kaskaskia and the support it gave to
George Rogers Clark in the
American Revolution.
An earthen redoubt
The village of
Kaskaskia, Illinois was founded at the mouth of the
Kaskaskia River as a missionary post by the
Jesuits in 1703. Soon afterwards, settlers from the
Quebec and
Louisiana regions began to trickle towards the rich, alluvial farmland of the central Mississippi Valley. They built a village and agricultural settlement around the location of the Jesuit mission, a half-circle of bottomland cradled by the Kaskaskia River and by an
oxbow of the Mississippi.
French-speaking pioneers were noted throughout North America for their comparative fairness towards
Native Americans. However, as the Kaskaskia settlement grew throughout the 1700s, the local Indians, members of the
Illini Confederacy, may have realized that there might not be enough space for everybody. The French settlers raised
Fort Kaskaskia around 1759; the fort stood atop the bluff that looked down upon the frontier village
(External Link
). "Fort Kaskaskia" isn't technically a "
fort", but an earthen
redoubt. Frontier settlers throughout Woodland North America often built such redoubts as defensive moves during times of threat from Native Americans.
In 1763 the French ceded the Illinois country, including Kaskaskia and the redoubt, to Great Britain. The British didn't use the redoubt and left Kaskaskia almost defenseless. Kaskaskia continued to exist as a French-speaking village on the Mississippi River frontier.
A key strategic location
In early 1778,
George Rogers Clark, eager to defend what was western
Virginia and the
Kentucky country from attacks by Native Americans allied to the British, led a tiny force down the
Ohio River. Clark hoped to achieve a strategic coup by linking his expeditionary column with the French-speaking settlements of the Mississippi Valley.
Clark and his men marched overland from
Fort Massac, near the present-day
Metropolis, Illinois, to Kaskaskia. They avoided being sighted by the British or their Native allies and arrived at Kaskaskia on
July 4,
1778. Most of the Kaskaskia townspeople welcomed them.
After facing a threat from a British force at
Vincennes, Indiana, Clark and his men used Kaskaskia as their jumping-off place to capture Vincennes in early 1779. The Americans controlled Kaskaskia and its redoubt throughout the rest of the war, and won legal control of the territory in the 1783
Treaty of Paris.
Kaskaskia, Illinois
Following the war, Kaskaskia was part of the United States and became slowly
Americanized.
Lewis and Clark stopped here in 1803 and recruited many of the professional
hunters and
sharpshooters that accompanied them to the
Pacific Ocean in their fateful 1804-06 expedition.
The village served as the only capital of
Illinois Territory in 1809-1818, and briefly (1818-1820) as the first capital of the new
U.S. state of
Illinois following Illinois's admission to the Union on
December 3,
1818.
Pierre Menard, a wealthy
fur trader who lived across the Kaskaskia River from Kaskaskia at the bottom of the Fort Kaskaskia redoubt, was elected the new state's first
Lieutenant Governor.
Disaster and new life
During much of the 1800s and especially after the
American Civil War, the Mississippi River cut through many of its former oxbows and shortened its channel considerably.
In 1881, during a flood, the moving water of the Mississippi "discovered" a much smaller, parallel riverbed, the mouth of the Kaskaskia. Kaskaskia's bed was a few feet lower than the Mississippi's bed, so the whole river shifted to the new watercourse, cutting across the head of a former oxbow to do so.
For the village of Kaskaskia, the river's new course was disastrous. Their village had been by the waterfront of the much smaller river; now the mighty Mississippi was swallowing the town up.
Even the village
cemeteries were at risk.
In an emergency operation, 3,000
graves of the departed of Kaskaskia were
exhumed and the remains reburied atop the bluff to the east, at the site of old Fort Kaskaskia. The state of Illinois agreed to maintain the site forever as a memorial to the vanished historic village.
The fort today
Fort Kaskaskia is a
campsite and
picnic area overlooking the Mississippi River. The remains of the 18th-century redoubt can be vaguely traced in the earth. The prominent Kaskaskia cemetery recalls the 1881 flood.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Fort Kaskaskia'.
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