Inscription
General William Henry Harrison ordered the construction of Fort Winchester at the beginning of October 1812 and it was completed October 15. The fort served as a forward observation post and supply depot for the American army during the War of 1812. Until Fort Meigs was completed in 1813, Fort Winchester was the front line against the British and their Indian allies. During the siege of Fort Meigs, Fort Winchester was a rendezvous point for the troops of General Green Clay and those of Colonel William Dudley. Fort Winchester outlined the shape of a parallelogram, measuring 600 by 300 feet in size. Blockhouses anchored the four corners of the fort and within its stockade were storehouses and a hospital.
[Side B]: Captain George Croghan, later the hero of the siege of Fort Stephenson, was one of the post’s commanders. Colonel Richard M. Johnson, credited with the death of the great Shawnee chief Tecumseh at the Battle of the Thames, trained his Kentucky Mounted Regiment here. The Army abandoned the post in the spring of 1815, after the war in the Northwest ended. Shortly thereafter, settlers inhabited the old fort. These included William Preston, a veteran of Gen. Anthony Wayne’s army and the Robert Shirley family. Benjamin Leavell and Horatio Phillips’ plat of Defiance’s grid of streets from 1822still followed in the 21st centuryoutlines the boundaries of Fort Winchester. The fort’s west wall was near Washington Street and the east wall near Jefferson. The north wall was near First Street and the south wall near Third.
Location
Sources
More markers in Defiance
Archibald Worthington / Worthington’s Cemetery
Archibald Worthington (1818-1895) was a freed slave from Virginia, a Civil War veteran, and prominent landowner in Highland Township.
Winchester’s Camp No. 2 / Preston Island
Defiance, OH
After completing Fort Winchester, Brigadier General James Winchester ordered his troops to cross to the north side of the Maumee River.
Winchester’s Camp No. 3/Fort Starvation / The Old Kentucky Burial Grounds
Camp No. 3 was located about six miles below Fort Winchester on the north side of the Maumee River.
Evansport
Evansport is named after brothers Amos and Albert G. Evans who, with Jacob Coy, had the village surveyed next to the Tiffin River on...
Tale of Ensign James Liggett / Major Adam Charles Muir, 41st Regiment of Foot
After American militia troops forcibly ended the 1812 siege of Fort Wayne, General James Winchester’s Army of the Northwest marched down...
