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Fort Ninigret

Fort Ninigret
Fort Ninigret in Charlestown RI.jpg
Fort Ninigret in 2008
Fort Ninigret is located in Rhode Island
Fort Ninigret
Fort Ninigret is located in the US
Fort Ninigret
Location Charlestown, Rhode Island
Coordinates 41°22′52″N 71°38′54″W / 41.38111°N 71.64833°W / 41.38111; -71.64833Coordinates: 41°22′52″N 71°38′54″W / 41.38111°N 71.64833°W / 41.38111; -71.64833
Built 1637
Architect Dutch West India Company
NRHP Reference # 70000004
Added to NRHP April 28, 1970

Fort Ninigret is a historic fort or trading post site at Fort Neck Road in Charlestown, Rhode Island, purportedly built and occupied by either Indians or early European settlers in the seventeenth century. At its 1883 Dedication, Commissioner George Carmichael, Jr. referred to it as "the oldest military post on the Atlantic coast."

Archaeological excavations have shown that people lived on Fort Neck long before the Europeans arrived, although this was never a large village. But around 1620, many Niantic people (cousins and allies of the larger Narragansett tribe) settled at this place, growing corn, making wampum (shell beads used as money by the Europeans), and trading with the Dutch and the English for such things as beads, pipes, and copper kettles. By the 1630s, the Niantics had a young and powerful sachem named Ninigret, for whom the fort was later named.

Some historians have alleged that the fort was built by the Dutch West India Company or by Portuguese explorers prior to 1637 (in addition to the earlier trading post on nearby Dutch Island). One of the first printed references to Dutch forts in Rhode Island was Samuel Arnold's 1858 History of the State of Rhode Island. According to amateur historian Manuel da Silva:

"The fort is rectangular with the corners terminating in five-sided bastions, except for the one facing the water. It measures 152 feet long (from bastion to bastion) and 137 feet wide. The angles of the bastions are approximately 130 degrees. No one doubts that the style in which the fort is built clearly shows the influence of European civilization."

In 1921−22 a European sword and cannon were found, along with many other grave goods, at an Indian cemetery near the site, which some people believe adds credence to the theory that this was a European fort. The artifacts are now in the possession of the Rhode Island Historical Society.

King Philip's War (1675–76) cemented English rule over most of the Indian lands of Rhode Island, but a reservation encompassing much of today's Charlestown was set aside for the tribe. Many Narragansetts had joined Ninigret's people for safety, and soon the name "Niantic" fell out of use. At Fort Ninigret, tribal members lived in wigwams into the 18th century. Nearby stood the European-style house of the sachems, who sold off tribal property to Englishmen to pay their debts. By the 19th century, Fort Neck was the last piece of land held in common by the Narragansett Tribe that had access to salt water.


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