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Fort Stevens (Oregon)

Fort Stevens
Warrenton, Clatsop County, Oregon
Fort Stevens Oregon.JPG
Type Military base
Site information
Controlled by United States Army
Condition Preserved
Site history
Built 1863
In use 1863-1947
Materials Concrete, steel
Battles/wars World War II attack
Events
Fort Stevens
Fort Stevens (Oregon) is located in Oregon
Fort Stevens (Oregon)
Fort Stevens (Oregon) is located in the US
Fort Stevens (Oregon)
Location Fort Stevens State Park, Hammond, Oregon
Area 542 acres (219 ha)
Built 1863 (1863)
NRHP Reference # 71000678
Added to NRHP September 22, 1971

Fort Stevens was an American military installation that guarded the mouth of the Columbia River in the state of Oregon. Built near the end of the American Civil War, it was named for a slain Civil War general and former Washington Territory governor, Isaac Stevens. The fort was an active military reservation from 1863–1947. It is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The fort was constructed in 1863-64 during the Civil War as an earthwork battery on the south shore of the mouth of the Columbia River, and was known as the Fort at Point Adams. It was later Fort Stevens in 1865, in honor of the former territorial governor of Washington, Isaac I. Stevens who had been killed in action. Fort Stevens was the primary military installation in what became the Three Fort Harbor Defense System at the mouth of the Columbia River. The other forts were the Post at Cape Disappointment, later Fort Cape Disappointment and later Fort Canby, built at the same time as Fort Stevens, and Fort Columbia, built between 1896 and 1904. Both are on the Washington side of the river. The fort was meant to defend the mouth of the Columbia from potential British attack during the Pig War of 1859 and subsequent ongoing regional tensions through 1870 in the San Juan Islands, and was important during the 1896-1903 Alaska Boundary Dispute, when British-American tensions again were and the two countries were on the brink of war.

In 1906, the crew of the sailing ship Peter Iredale took refuge at Fort Stevens, after she ran aground on Clatsop Spit. The wreck is visible today, within the boundaries of Fort Stevens State Park.


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