*** Welcome to piglix ***

Fort Popham

Fort Popham Memorial
Fort Popham and the Atkins Bay arm of the Kennebec River.jpg
Fort Popham and the Kennebec River
Fort Popham is located in Maine
Fort Popham
Fort Popham is located in the US
Fort Popham
Nearest city Phippsburg, Maine
Coordinates 43°45′18″N 69°47′01″W / 43.75500°N 69.78361°W / 43.75500; -69.78361Coordinates: 43°45′18″N 69°47′01″W / 43.75500°N 69.78361°W / 43.75500; -69.78361
Built 1861 (1861)
Architect US Army Corps of Engineers
NRHP Reference # 69000012
Added to NRHP 1 October 1969

Fort Popham is a Civil War-era coastal defense fortification at the mouth of the Kennebec River in Phippsburg, Maine. It is located in sight of the short-lived Popham Colony and, like the colony, named for George Popham, the colony's leader.

During the American Revolution a minor fortification stood on this site; in 1808 the federal government built a small battery to accommodate guns on field carriages on this location as part of the Second System of fortifications that guarded the coast. These forts and batteries were built shortly after the passage of Thomas Jefferson's Embargo Act of 1807, which prohibited all exports from the US as an attempt to exert pressure on Britain and France, which had been taking actions against US shipping. The first use of some of these forts was to enforce the embargo. The embargo was deeply unpopular in New England and had severe economic effects there; the situation ultimately led to the War of 1812. It was felt that these forts were built as much to enforce the embargo as to defend the country, and they were derisively known as "embargo forts". The battery is mentioned in the Secretary of War's reports on fortifications for December 1808 and December 1811. It was called the "Battery on Hunnewell's Point" or the "Georgetown Battery" (at the time Georgetown included Phippsburg). In 1811 it was described as "An enclosed work, with a battery of six heavy guns mounted, a small magazine, and wooden barracks for 40". The battery remained manned until 1815 and saw minor action during the War of 1812. After the war four of the guns were relocated to a new battery at Cox's Head, north of Fort Popham on the west bank of the Kennebec. This was a brick fort with barracks for 105 men.


...
Wikipedia

...