Ohio History Journal

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THE SANDUSKY FORTS

THE SANDUSKY FORTS.

 

 

 

BY CHARLES A. HANNA, NEW YORK.

Several addresses on "Old Fort Sandusky," and the in-

scriptions on the monument erected last spring near the site of

one Sandusky Fort, were printed in the October, 1912, number

of the Ohio Archaeological and Historical Society's Quarterly.

Some of these addresses and inscriptions are so full of in-

accuracies, misleading statements, and incorrect inferences, that

they should be corrected.

The bronze tablet on the west face of the Harrison-Perry

Embarkation Monument-erected under the direction of the Ohio

Historical Society-reads as follows:

"FORT SANDOSKI. 1745-1748. 1750-1751. 1761-1763. The First

Fort built by White Men in Ohio, erected by British Traders from Penna.

and Va., in 1745, under the protection of the Huron Chief, Nicolas; and

destroyed by him after his defeat by the French in 1748, prior to his

removal to the Illinois Country.

"Rebuilt by British in 1750, and 'usurped by the French in 1751.'

Again rebuilt by British soldiers in 1761, after the surrender of Quebec

and French Sovereignty in America." etc.

The tablet on the south face of the monument recites that

DeLery landed near the spot on which the monument stands,

"and discovered the ruins of the Old Fort, Fort Sandoski, 1745-

1748, 1750-1751."

The first and only Fort erected near this spot, or on the

north shore of Sandusky Bay, was built by the French in the

winter of 1750-1751, as stated in John Pattin's Narrative (Wis.

Hist. Colls., xviii, 145), and in DeLery's Journal of 1754

(Wilderness Trail, ii., 168). The Britsh never built a fort on

the north side of Sandusky Bay. No fort on either side of the

bay was built by the British in 1750.

The first British Sandusky Fort was built on the south side

of the Bay by a Company of British soldiers and artisans under

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