For
centuries, cannons fired devastating iron balls at ships made of wood, and it
was sufficient to build armed forts to guard the principal harbors, rivers, and
naval yards of the United States. That used to be our Homeland Security.
For
this purpose, the Army Corps of Engineers built over forty masonry forts
between 1817 and 1870. Fort Pickens is the largest of four such forts built to
defend Pensacola Bay and its navy yard. Begun in 1829 and completed in 1834, it
was named in honor of Major General Andrew Pickens of the South Carolina
militia, who fought with distinction in several Revolutionary War battles and
led campaigns against the Cherokees, who called him "Wizard Owl."
Fort
Pickens was one of only four forts in the South that were never occupied by
Confederate forces during the Civil War, thanks to a heroic stand by Lieutenant
Adam Slemmer with one company of artillery and a few sailors, aided by one U.S.
Navy ship, the Wyandotte. The day
after the first action of the Civil War in 1861, when Fort Sumter in
Charleston, SC was taken by the Confederates, Fort Pickens was reinforced to prevent
the Confederates from ever controlling Pensacola Bay and using the Pensacola
Navy Yard.
The
most infamous Confederate assault on the bay area was led by General Richard
Anderson in a night attack on the camp of the 6th New York Infantry
Regiment about a mile east of the fort on October 9, 1861. In a two-day
retaliation, Federal artillery from Fort Pickens, along with the USS Richmond and USS Niagara, bombarded Confederate positions at Forts Barrancas and
McRee, the navy yard, and several independent batteries spread along the bay
shore. Almost 5000 shot and shells were fired at Confederate positions, causing
heavy damage that led to Confederate withdrawal from Pensacola Bay.
By
the end of the Civil War more revolutionary changes had occurred: rifled cannon
and ironclad warships could overpower harbor defenses, making even brick and
stone forts less effective. However, no such weapons were available to the Indians, when
in the 1880s, Geronimo and other members of the Chiricahua-Apache tribe were
prisoners at Fort Pickens.
Over
time every new naval threat was countered by new defenses: the atomic bomb
finally made national defense by harbor fortification obsolete, and Fort
Pickens closed in 1947. The fort was a Florida State Park until the fort was
closed for safety concerns in 1971. Following the creation of Gulf Islands
National Seashore and extensive repairs by the National Park Service, the fort
was reopened in 1976.
Now
seagulls call where powerful weapons shook the earth and defended our country.
Whether you’re a devotee of history—especially military history—or someone who
enjoys the natural beauty of the Gulf Shore, Fort Pickens can be a memorable
retreat.
Visit
Fort Pickens (part of Gulf Islands National Seashore) at Pensacola Bay. The
grounds are open 7 am to 10 pm daily. The Visitor Center has seasonal hours:
March-October from 9:30am-5pm and November-February from 8:30 am-4 pm.There are
200 campsites and one group tent site. Note that Fort Pickens road is subject
to flooding. Call 850-934-2656 or go to www.nps.gov/FortPickens.
All photos are courtesy of Gulf Islands National Seashore