| THE
BUILDING OF THE FORT
The early
settlers of Estherville were
keenly aware of the
resentment of the Indians.
They had arrived in a region
only recently clouded by the
Spirit Lake massacre, with
only the small stockade on
the Des Moines river, manned
by soldiers from Fort Dodge,
to remind the Indians that
their possession of the
region was challenged. In
late August, 1862, (five
years after the Spirit Lake
massacre) no occurrence in
the village could have been
less anticipated than the
appearance of a fifteen year
old boy who strode into
Estherville with devastating
news. The Santee Sioux had
taken the warpath and were
killing white settlers
throughout southwest
Minnesota. The boy's entire
family had been killed, and
he himself was suffering
from a severe gunshot wound
in his left shoulder. The
boy had lived in Belmond,
Minnesota, a small
settlement about ten miles
up the Des Moines River from
present day Jackson. The boy
had walked about thirty
miles down the Des Moines
River before reaching
safety.
Meanwhile, several of the
surviving families at
Belmond had barricaded
themselves in a single
cabin. For two days a
constant fusillade of
gunfire took place between
these settlers and the
Indians. Finally the Indians
drew off to assist in Little
Crow's attack on Fort Ripley
and New Ulm. Shortly after,
scouts from Spirit Lake and
Estherville rescued these
families and escorted them
to safety in Iowa. Luckily,
none of them were killed or
seriously injured.
After
hearing the news of the
uprising, messengers were
sent to all the inhabitants
in and around Estherville.
For mutual protection, most
families then moved into the
schoolhouse on the public
square in Estherville.
Despite a severe shortage of
guns, powder, percussion
caps, and the like, the
settlers prepared for the
worst. The next day a
company of volunteers was
organized under the command
of Ruel Fisher. This company
set off to Minnesota to lend
assistance. They were
horrified at the scenes they
encountered. After burying
some fifteen people, they
returned to Estherville and
made further preparations
for its defense. A messenger
was sent to Des Moines with
an appeal for help.
Word of
the peril in the Northern
tier of Iowa counties had
already arrived at Gov.
Kirkwood's office. A special
session of the legislature
was called, the result of
which was the creation of
the Northern Border Brigade
under the command of Col.
James A. Sawyer. Five
companies of cavalry were to
be formed. Company A, made
up of residents of Emmet,
Kossuth, Palo Alto, and
Humboldt counties was
assigned the defense of
Estherville and the West
branch of the Des Moines
River. William H. Ingham of
Algona was elected captain.
Prior to
taking command of Company A,
Ingham and William B. Carey
set off for Minnesota to
examine the situation. They
found persons everywhere
either frantically trying to
escape, or preparing for
defense. They arrived in New
Ulm to find only the
business houses, a large
hotel, and a brick building
to mark its location. The
blackened ruins of homes,
and the bullet-marked
buildings, showed plainly
the effect of the two
different attacks made by
the Sioux for its capture.
The town had been completely
abandoned except for a
Captain Dane and a squad of
cavalry. Ingham and Carey
traveled with a detail of
soldiers for a short period,
then set off for home
without serious incident,
arriving in Algona on
September 2nd.
Work did
not officially begin on Fort
Defiance in Estherville
until November, 1862. By
spring the following year, a
stockade 126 feet square had
been completed. The fort
included a block house,
captain's quarters and
residence, commissary, guard
house, a well and a large
barn. The fort was
surrounded on three sides by
planks eight feet long and
four inches thick. The south
side contained a sod wall
eight feet high and four
feet thick. The fort was
located on the East side of
the river where the Fort
Defiance Professional
Building now stands. The oak
and walnut used to construct
the fort was obtained from
the woods on the West side
of the river.
The fort
was occupied by company A
until April of 1864. About
the only excitement of note
during that period was a
near mutiny over the poor
food. In April, 1864, the
fort was transferred to I
Troop, U.S. Cavalry. Soon
after, this unit was sent
west to fight Indians, and
the fort became a stopping
point for settlers on their
way west. Eventually area
settlers stripped the fort
of its lumber and today many
of the homes and barns in
Emmet County contain
materials from the fort.
THE FORT AND EARLY
ESTHERVILLE
Fort
Defiance was one of the last
forts on the frontier
incorporating a passive
defense. Most forts
constructed subsequent to
the 1860's were without
walls, with the idea that
troops without such
protection would be more
alert, and more inclined to
assume active operations
against an enemy. They would
also be less prone to a
siege.
Fort
Defiance had served its
purpose in protecting the
Iowa frontier. Occasionally
it was used as a residence
by settlers who were
building homes on their own
claims. For a year the
former officers' quarters
housed the county's first
newspaper, the Northern
Vindicator.
Persons
who desire to know more
about the Fort are invited
to visit the Emmet County
Historical Society Museum at
1720 3rd Ave. South in
Estherville.
FORT DEFIANCE STATE PARK
This park
of 50 acres is located in
Emmet County near
Estherville in the Des
Moines river valley. A small
stream flows through the
valley. This stream is the
outlet of Four Mile Lake,
which has an area of 185
acres.
Large
amounts of drift material of
the Wisconsin drift sheet
may be seen. The slopes of
hills and land adjacent to
the stream are covered with
such trees as bur oak,
pignut hickory, green ash,
hard maple, slippery and
American elms, and hop
hornbeam, plum, crab, and
red haws; also such shrubs
as sumac, buck brush, hazel,
bittersweet, strawberry
bush, wild rose, and such
herbaceous plants as
bloodroot, rue anemone,
hepatica, blue and yellow
violets, goldenrods and
asters. Many birds nest in
this park, the more common
being meadowlark, robin,
nuthatch, and blue jay.
Wildlife
is abundant with a large
population of deer. An
evening drive through the
park in early spring before
the trees have leafed out,
will usually produce
sightings of some of the
deer inhabitants.
The Iowa Department of
Natural Resources maintains
a campground, picnic areas,
a shelter house, walking and
horse trails in the park.
They also have a permanent
home in the park for the
park ranger. |