"FORT LOUDOUN" Tennessee, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Nevada Desert Rat
N 35° 35.769 W 084° 12.177
16S E 753403 N 3942759
First English fort west of the Appalachian / Great Smokey Mountains, Eastern USA.
Waymark Code: WMXFK
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 11/04/2006
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Jake39
Views: 114

Fort Loudoun played a significant role in helping England secure the trans-Appalachian region of the American colonies from France during the Seven Years War, or as it is known in America, the French and Indian War. As the first planned English fort in the "Overhill" country, Fort Loudoun for a while, helped ally the powerful Cherokee Nation to the English cause and block further French penetration of the area from the Mississippi River Valley.

Named after John Campbell, the fourth Earl of Loudoun, the English Commander-in-Chief in North America from 1756 to 1758, Fort Loudoun had its inception from colonial Governor James Glen of South Carolina who saw the need for a fort among the Cherokee as early as 1746. However, it was not until the term of Governor William Henry Lyttelton, in October 1756, that actual construction of the fort began.

Under the direction of William Gerald DeBrahm as engineer-in-charge, Fort Loudoun was painstakingly built in the wilderness during the winter of 1756-57. The garrison, under the able command of Captain Raymond Demere, was composed of 90 English regulars and 120 South Carolina militiamen. In August of 1757, Raymond Demere relinquished command of the post to his brother Paul.

Tragedy befell the fort in less than two years. A breakdown in relations between the English and the Cherokee began in the spring of 1758 on the Virginia frontier and eventually led to the execution of 23 Cherokee at Fort Prince George in South Carolina in late 1759, and contributed to the surrender of Fort Loudoun. This breakdown, coupled with increasing attempts by the French to completely destroy the Cherokee-English alliance, brought violence to the southern frontier by early 1760.

With Cherokee sympathy now decidedly anti-English, the Cherokee laid siege to the fort beginning in March of 1760. The Indians effectively cut the fort's supply line east through the mountains to Fort Prince George. As a result, by June rations were reduced to one quart of corn per day divided among three persons. Although both South Carolina and Virginia mounted efforts to relieve the siege, neither effort succeeded. On August 6th, with their situation hopeless, Paul Demere asked the Cherokee for terms of surrender. On the morning of August 9th, the garrison left the fort with a party of 180 men and 60 women and children. The next morning at sunrise, the Cherokee attacked the garrison's camp, killing all the officers except one and between 20 and 30 other persons. The survivors were taken as slaves, with most eventually ransomed by South Carolina and Virginia.

Located at the confluence of Nine Mile Creek and the Little Tennessee River across from Fort Loudoun, Tellico Blockhouse built in 1794, marked a significant turning point in United States-Indian policy. In the period before the Blockhouse and its sister fort at Southwest Point were built, the frontier was defended by local militia units who made punitive raids deep into the Cherokee Nation in retaliation for its raids upon white settlements. What official policy existed was based upon an "eye for an eye." With the creation of the Territory South of the Ohio River in 1790, and under the humane direction of Secretary of War Henry Knox, the Federal government pursued a policy of civilizing the Indian population.

While the Blockhouse was a military fort, its primary purpose was to protect the Cherokee from continued white advances into the valley. Also, in 1796, the United States built a trading post adjacent to the Blockhouse to dispense supplies to the Cherokee. In addition, the Blockhouse complex served as the primary location for the War Department's Indian agent until 1801 in what is today East Tennessee.

The Blockhouse served as the site where several important treaties were negotiated. The first Tellico Treaty, signed in October of 1798, required that the Cherokee cede all lands from above the Little Tennessee River to the Clinch River to the Federal government. The second treaty, signed in 1805, allowed the United States to gain title to all the land that is present-day Middle Tennessee. This treaty also spelled the beginning of the end of the Blockhouse. The 1805 treaty called for the removal of the garrison.

Hours of Operation

Visitor's Center: 8:00 am to 4:30 pm
Park: 8:00 am to sunset
The year the "Fort" was constructed or started.: 1756

Name of "Country" or "Nation" that constructed this "Fort": English North American Colony - South Carolina

Was this "Fort" involved in any armed conflicts?: Yes it was

What was the primary purpose of this "Historic Fort"?: Used for defence of a border or land claim.

Current condition: Recreated at higher elevation at original location due to reservoir on Little Tennessee River

This site is administered by ----: Tennessee State Parks

If admission is charged -: 0.00 (listed in local currency)

Open to the public?: Restricted or by appointment only.

Official or advertised web-page: [Web Link]

Link to web-site that best describes this "Historic Fort": [Web Link]

Link if this "Fort" is registered on your Countries/ State "Registry of Historical Sites or Buildi: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
  • Please post a photo if you visited this "Waymark" and describe your impressions of your visit or anything that might be of use to future visitors or viewers that hasn't been included in this 'Waymark'.
    A "Visited" only will be deleted A.S.A.P.
  • Search for...
    Geocaching.com Google Map
    Google Maps
    MapQuest
    Bing Maps
    Nearest Waymarks
    Nearest Historic Forts
    Nearest Geocaches
    Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
    Recent Visits/Logs:
    Date Logged Log User Rating  
    Team Geologynut visited "FORT LOUDOUN"  Tennessee, USA 01/14/2019 Team Geologynut visited it