
Fort Defiance Camping and RV Park - Cairo, IL
Posted by:
YoSam.
N 36° 59.041 W 089° 08.407
16S E 309528 N 4095239
Called "Fort Defiance State Park" on the sign, because once it was, but not anymore.
Waymark Code: WMM2VR
Location: Illinois, United States
Date Posted: 07/11/2014
Views: 3
County of park: Alexander County
Location of park: US-62/US-51, southern tip of Illinois, Cairo
Phone: 618-734-9344
191 acres along the Ohio River on the eastern edge of the state
16 camp sites, no toilets or showers, but electricity at 8 sites
All registrations are honor system, drop fees in box
"Once called "probably the ugliest park in America, the park no one wants" by the Chicago Tribune, Fort defiance became the park that the people saved. A grassroots organization of Cairo citizens, Operation Enterprise, leased it from the state to renovate and maintain.
"The park overlooks the constant meeting of the vast Ohio and Mississippi rivers, Refusing to merge, the Ohio waster become a blue ribbon rippling far down the brown Mississippi currents. Gulls wheel above the placid barges and tugs navigating the point. In the Spring, the Mississippi may churn and grind with northern ice. The demarcation between the two rivers is an ever-fascinating and changing phenomenon.
"Fort Defiance, known as Camp Defiance during the American Civil War, is a former military fortification located at the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers near Cairo in Alexander County, Illinois. The strategic significance of the site has been known since prehistoric times with archaeological evidence of warfare dating to the Mississippian era. It is the southernmost point in the state of Illinois. Fort Defiance Park, formerly a State Park, is owned and maintained by the city of Cairo. At 279 feet (85 m) elevation, Fort Defiance Point is Illinois' lowest point." ~ Wikipedia
Fort Defiance, the Civil War post commanded by General U.S. Grant, guarded the confluence and became the supply base for the western thrust into the Confederacy. Over the past century, the rivers have caused the point to extend southward over a mile from the fort's original site." - Southern Illinois Regional Tourism Council
Many different points of view and opinions can be read here: State Parks Wikipedia Trip Advisor
Great River Road Topix