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Fort Sullivan (Maine)

Fort Sullivan
Fort Sullivan, Eastport, Maine 2012.jpg
Fort Sullivan (Maine) is located in Maine
Fort Sullivan (Maine)
Fort Sullivan (Maine) is located in the US
Fort Sullivan (Maine)
Location Moose Island; barracks, 74 Washington St., Eastport, Maine
Coordinates 44°54′27″N 66°59′19″W / 44.90750°N 66.98861°W / 44.90750; -66.98861Coordinates: 44°54′27″N 66°59′19″W / 44.90750°N 66.98861°W / 44.90750; -66.98861
Area 1.8 acres (0.73 ha)
Built 1808
NRHP Reference #

70000081

Added to NRHP January 26, 1970

70000081

Fort Sullivan (briefly Fort Sherbrooke) was a 19th-century military fortification in Eastport, Maine. It lay opposite New Brunswick, Canada, and served as an important coastal defense for the easternmost United States of America during the 19th century. As part of the establishment of New Ireland during the War of 1812, British Commodore Sir Thomas Hardy, 1st Baronet conquered the fort in 1814 and renamed it Fort Sherbrooke after John Coape Sherbrooke, the Governor of Nova Scotia.

In 1808, the United States Army decided to build a fort in Eastport, Massachusetts (now Maine), to protect against possible threats from Britain and other European powers then engaged in warfare. In 1808 or 1809, Major Lemuel Trescott oversaw the construction of the garrison atop Clark's Hill in the village. The fort contained a four-gun circular earthwork, a wooden blockhouse, and barracks. Fort Sullivan reportedly took its name circa March 1813.

During the War of 1812, in an effort to establish New Ireland, the British forced the American garrison to surrender Fort Sullivan to a British fleet under command of Commodore Sir Thomas Hardy, 1st Baronet, on 11 July 1814. British naval forces ultimately took control over the entire coast east of Penobscot Bay, renaming it New Ireland. Even after the war, Britain claimed that Moose Island, Maine, (including Fort Sullivan and the entire village of Eastport) lay on the British side of the border separating United States of America from their loyal colony of New Brunswick and so left eight hundred troops in the fort, which they renamed Fort Sherbrooke after John Coape Sherbrooke, to hold the territory. The British demanded that the inhabitants of Eastport take oaths of allegiance to their crown; some complied, others evaded, and many removed to undisputed American territory. Through negotiations with the British in 1817, Americans renounced their claims to larger islands farther east and regained control over Eastport on 30 June 1818.


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