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North Carolina Baptist Assembly

Fort Caswell Historic District
Fortentrancebw.JPG
Entrance to original Fort Caswell
North Carolina Baptist Assembly is located in North Carolina
North Carolina Baptist Assembly
North Carolina Baptist Assembly is located in the US
North Carolina Baptist Assembly
Location 100 Caswell Beach Road, near Caswell Beach, North Carolina
Coordinates 33°53′28″N 78°01′41″W / 33.89111°N 78.02806°W / 33.89111; -78.02806Coordinates: 33°53′28″N 78°01′41″W / 33.89111°N 78.02806°W / 33.89111; -78.02806
Area 760 acres (310 ha)
Built 1838 (1838), 1898-ca. 1941
Built by U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps; Bernard, Simon
Architectural style Colonial Revival, Queen Anne
NRHP Reference # 13001025
Added to NRHP December 31, 2013

The North Carolina Baptist Assembly is a Christian retreat owned and operated by the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina, the state's largest denomination. The grounds of the retreat, on the eastern end of Oak Island, is the former site of Fort Caswell, a military base that was occupied by various branches of the U.S. armed forces for most of the period between 1836 and 1945. Most people still call the Baptist Assembly Fort Caswell.

The original fort, named after former governor Richard Caswell and completed in 1836 at a cost of $473,402, was fortified with both brick walls and large earthworks in a pentagonal design. Fortified with over 61 gun emplacements, it guarded the mouth of the Cape Fear River, and was a key in the defense of Wilmington an important port 20 miles upriver and, at the time, the state's largest city. When the issue of secession was debated in 1861, it was seized twice by a group called the "Cape Fear Minutemen", who were subsequently ordered by Governor John Willis Ellis to return it to the keeper of the fort, the only man stationed there by the U.S. Army at the time.

When the state finally seceded, the new Confederate Army made it, along with nearby Fort Fisher, the key to arguably the most elaborate defensive system in the world at the time (Fort Fisher guarded the other inlet to the Cape Fear River). This system, along with swift blockade runners, kept Wilmington's port open longer than any other. No fewer than six plans were devised to capture the fort, but its imposing defenses and the Frying Pan Shoals just offshore deterred them; the Union Army then diverted its attention to Fort Fisher. After a massive Union assault captured Fort Fisher on January 15, 1865, orders came to spike Fort Caswell's guns, burn the barracks, and explode the magazines. On January 17, the magazines were ignited, exploding approximately 100,00 pounds of powder (reports at the time state that the blast could be heard as far as 100 miles away in Fayetteville). As a result of the explosion, one whole wall of the fort was destroyed. Amazingly, at no time during the Civil War was any soldier stationed at Caswell killed by enemy fire; however, several died of disease and one deserter was executed by firing squad. The loss of the Confederacy's last port was a major factor in Robert E. Lee's decision to surrender at Appomattox.


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