Everything about Fort Donelson totally explained
Fort Donelson National Battlefield preserves
Fort Donelson and
Fort Heiman, two sites of the
American Civil War Forts Henry and Donelson Campaign, in which
Union General
Ulysses S. Grant and Admiral
Andrew Hull Foote captured three forts, opened two rivers, and received national recognition for victories in February 1862, the first major Union victories of the war. The main unit of the park, in
Dover, Tennessee, commemorates the
Battle of Fort Donelson. Fort Heiman in nearby
Calloway County, Kentucky, was a Confederate battery in the
Battle of Fort Henry. Fort Donelson hosted one of the most influential battles in American history
History
The most vulnerable area in the
Confederate defensive line in the Western Theater was the state of Kentucky. The
Tennessee and
Cumberland Rivers were potential avenues for a Union invasion through the state and into Tennessee and beyond. But since Kentucky had declared itself neutral in the conflict, defensive works couldn't be built within the state without alienating the local population.
Two engineers detached from the 1st Tennessee Infantry, Adna Anderson and William F. Foster, set to work in earnest on
May 10,
1861, to find suitable ground just inside the Tennessee border to simultaneously cover the two rivers. They then focused on surveying possible sites along the Cumberland River, looking at the high ridges and deep hollows near the Kentucky border. In mid-May, on the west bank of the river not far below the town of Dover, Anderson laid out the water battery of Fort Donelson twelve miles (19 km) from the Kentucky line. The new fort was named in honor of Gen. Daniel S. Donelson, who, along with Colonel
Bushrod Johnson of the Corps of Engineers, approved of the site. Construction was begun by a large force of men brought from the nearby Cumberland Iron Works.
Administrative history
The site was established as
Fort Donelson National Military Park on
March 26,
1928. The
national military park and
national cemetery were transferred from the
War Department to the
National Park Service on
August 10,
1933. The park was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places on
October 15,
1966. It was redesignated a national battlefield on
August 16,
1985. Public Law 108-367 (
October 25,
2004) increased the authorized boundary of the national battlefield from 551.69 acres (2.23 km²) to 2,000 acres (8.09 km²). On
October 30,
2006, Calloway County transferred the Fort Heiman site to the Park Service. Fort Heiman had been listed on the National Register on
December 12,
1976.
Park today
The park preserves much of the original battle site, including the river batteries and the eroded remains of the fort itself, but the area in which the
Confederate States Army assaulted on
February 15,
1862, is largely in private hands, occupied by residential development. The Cumberland River was dammed in the 1960s and this area is currently referred to as Lake Barkley. It covers an area roughly similar to the original river while at flood stage, as it was during the battle.
Cemetery
Fort Donelson National Cemetery, at 15.34 acres (62,080 m²), contains 670 Union dead, reinterred in 1867. There are also numerous veterans from later wars. The cemetery is presently unavailable for further burials.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Fort Donelson'.
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