Fort Andrew/Gurnet Fort | |
---|---|
Gurnet Point,Plymouth,Massachusetts | |
Fort Andrew's earthworks andPlymouth Light | |
Site information | |
Type | Coastal defense |
Owner | private |
Controlled by | US Coast Guard |
Open to the public | seasonal with lighthouse |
Condition | earthworks remain |
Location | |
Coordinates | 42°00′19″N70°35′58″W / 42.005172°N 70.599517°W /42.005172; -70.599517 |
Site history | |
Built | 1776 |
In use | 1776–1869 |
Materials | earthworks |
Battles/wars | American Revolutionary War War of 1812 American Civil War |
Fort Andrew is a former fort built asGurnet Fort in 1776 for theAmerican Revolutionary War onGurnet Point inPlymouth,Massachusetts. It became a federal fort and was rebuilt in 1808, and again in 1863 during theCivil War when it received its current name. It is named forJohn A. Andrew, governor of Massachusetts 1861–1866.[1] In 1863Fort Standish was built nearby onSaquish Head. After the war, the federal government declared Fort Andrew an inactive military reservation in 1869. The reservation was sold in 1926 and mostly became private property, except for the US Coast Guard light station. AWorld War IIfire control tower was built on the parapet of the old fort.Plymouth (Gurnet Point) lighthouse is also on Gurnet Point, and was moved inside the fort's earthworks to protect it frombeach erosion in 1997–1998.[2]
Gurnet Fort was built in 1776 for the American Revolutionary War, via a resolution of theMassachusetts General Court of June 3, 1776.[1] It had six guns and a 60-man garrison, almost half from nearbyDuxbury. The guns weresmoothborecannon, including three 12-pounders, two 9-pounders, and one 6-pounder. The lighthouse was first built in 1768, thus preceding the fort.[3] In 1776,HMS Niger briefly engaged Gurnet Fort while searching forpatriotprivateers.Niger grounded but was soon refloated. One ofPlymouth Light's two beacons at the time was destroyed, but there were no other casualties.[2][4]
Gurnet Fort was rebuilt with five guns in 1808 as part of the federalsecond system of U.S. fortifications. As with many federal forts prior to the 1890s, it does not seem to have had an official name in this era. It appears in thesecretary of war's reports on fortifications dated December 1808 and December 1811. In 1808 it is mentioned as "the old work on Gurnet head, near Plymouth, has been repaired, and platforms in front". In 1811 the entry reads: "At the Gurnet Point, the entrance of the harbor; the old fort has been repaired with stone and sods, mounting five heavy guns...".[5] One source states the fort was further rebuilt during theWar of 1812 to accommodate 42-pounder guns, the largest the United States had at that time.[1]
In 1863 during theCivil War the fort was rebuilt and renamed Fort Andrew, with the rebuilding designed and supervised by Major Charles E. Blunt of theUnited States Army Corps of Engineers. It could accommodate four guns plus three not mounted, with abombproof shelter and twomagazines.[6] The seven guns installed during the Civil War consisted of four eight-inch (203 mm)smoothbores and three 32-pounderrifledpieces. An eighth piece at Fort Andrew was a "light field piece", possibly a 6-pounder field gun or similar.[7]
Through two separate transactions, one in 1808 and another in 1870, the government acquired the 11.9 acres (48,000 m2) that constituted Fort Andrew. In 1927, the War Department transferred the property to theU.S. Department of Treasury for use as a US Coast Guard Station.[2] The use of the site prior to the government's acquisition is unknown, but it currently contains a residential area, a Coast Guard facility, and a lighthouse.[7]
Researchers (presumably in the 1990s or 2000s connected with theFormerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS) program) uncovered no information pertaining to the facilities and activities of Fort Andrew (FUDS Site No. D01MA051400) prior to the Civil War. In 1863, the military rebuilt the fort and placed seven coastal defense weapons at Fort Andrew. By 30 June 1867, the fort possessed an additional light field piece installed on a temporary firing platform, which was removed by April 1880. A records search uncovered no information pertaining to the operation of the fort after 1880. The INPR indicates that the Department of Treasury acquired the land for the US Coast Guard in 1927, ending its use by the War Department, except for a 1.7-acre (6,900 m2) tract that the War Department used for a fire control tower in World War II. Documents located by the research team did not mention the use of any CWM at this site.[7]
The lighthouse remains within the fort's earthworks. The World War II fire control tower was demolished at some time postwar. The fort is only accessible to the public during seasonal open houses at the lighthouse.[2]