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Castle Pinckney

Castle Pinckney
Castle Pickney1.JPG
View of Castle Pinckney, 1861
Castle Pinckney is located in South Carolina
Castle Pinckney
Castle Pinckney is located in the US
Castle Pinckney
Nearest city Charleston, South Carolina
Coordinates 32°46′25″N 79°54′41″W / 32.77361°N 79.91139°W / 32.77361; -79.91139Coordinates: 32°46′25″N 79°54′41″W / 32.77361°N 79.91139°W / 32.77361; -79.91139
Built 1808
Architect Unknown
Architectural style Other
NRHP Reference # 70000574
Added to NRHP July 16, 1970

Castle Pinckney was a small masonry fortification constructed by the United States government by 1810, in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina. It was used very briefly as a prisoner-of-war camp (six weeks) and artillery position during the American Civil War. It was named to the National Register of Historic Places in 1970.

Located on Shutes Folly, a small island about one mile off the Charleston shore in the harbor, the fort was built over the ruins of an older fortification called "Fort Pinckney". The original log and earthen fort, named after the Revolutionary War hero Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, was built beginning in 1797 and was intended to protect the city from a possible naval attack when war with France seemed imminent. Completed in 1804, it saw no hostilities and was virtually destroyed by a severe hurricane in September of that year. A replacement brick-and-mortar structure called "Castle Pinckney" was erected in 1809–1810 and was garrisoned throughout the War of 1812, but it saw no action during the two-and-a-half-year conflict. Afterwards, Castle Pinckney was abandoned and fell into disrepair.

Two decades later, a sea wall was completed and the fort was re-garrisoned during the Nullification Crisis of 1832, when President Andrew Jackson prepared to collect a controversial tariff using military force if necessary. After that brief period of activity, the fort again fell into disuse and was primarily a storehouse for gunpowder and other military supplies.


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